Abstract: In the world of Windows, Microsofts mighty Office suite has few (if any) serious competitors. Things are very different for Mac users, with Apples iWork bundle presenting a delightfully different take on word processing, number-crunching and present...
Attractive and intuitive interfaces, Solid new features for image editing, page layout and printing, Applications integrate well with each other, with iWeb, and with Apple iLife, Reads Microsoft Office 2007 files
Lacks an email application, Pivot tables and Visual Basic macros not supported
Although Microsoft Office 2007 offers deeper features, particularly for number crunchers, Apple iWork 08 is a strong Mac productivity package and a pleasure to use.
Attractive and intuitive interfaces, Solid new features for image editing, page layout and printing, Applications integrate well with each other, with iWeb, and with Apple iLife, Reads Microsoft Office 2007 files
Lacks an e-mail application, Pivot tables and Visual Basic macros not supported
Although Microsoft Office 2007 offers deeper features, particularly for number crunchers, Apple iWork 08 is a strong Mac productivity package and a pleasure to use. ...
Abstract: Claris, now theres a name from the past. Apple used to develop Claris branded software for its machines and Macs would invariably come with a basic suite of office tools Times have changed and Apple now prefers to brand everything "i" so its iWork an...
Published: 2008-01-28, Author: Mark , review by: pcworld.co.nz
Abstract: With its 08 release, Apple's iWork has finally grown up into a fully-fledged suite. For the bargain basement price of $109 you'll get Pages, a word-processor/page layout application, and Keynote, which is like PowerPoint but with more – and increasingly c...
Good value for money, easy to use, genuinely useful templates, imports and exports to Word/Excel/PowerPoint, integrates nicely with OS X
Pages and Numbers lack some of the high-end features of Word and Excel, can’t export Open XML documents Min specs: 500MHz G4 or later, 512MB RAM, 1GB disk space, OS X 10.4.10
For £55, it’s hard to fault iWork ’08. Keynote thrashed PowerPoint back in 2003, and it just keeps getting better, Pages isn’t a Word-killer, but it’s a good low- to mid-range word processing alternative. Numbers, however, may well...
Users comfortable with Microsoft Office may find it takes time to get used to Apple iWork '08. Advanced Word and Excel users, especially those who rely on specialised features and functions, will probably find Apple Pages '08 and Apple Numbers '08 to ...
The new Numbers spreadsheet software rounds off this suite, which offers attractive and intuitive interfaces, Solid new features for image editing, page layout and printing, Applications integrate well with each other, with iWeb and with Apple iLife, A...
Lacks an email application, Pivot tables and Visual Basic macros not supported, Lacks live, inperson tech support
Although Microsoft Office 2007 offers deeper features, particularly for number-crunchers, Apples iWork 08 is a strong Mac productivity package and a pleasure to use...