Hello George, Your Mac comes with Mail for your e-mail, Safari for the internet, Calendar for your calendars, Contacts for your address book, Messages for sending SMSs, TextEdit for basic word processing, iTunes for media, and many other programs.
The Apple equivalent of Office consists of Pages for word processing, Numbers for spreadsheets and Keynote for presentations. You can read and write documents in Word format using TextEdit but you do not get all the features by any means. However, for reading Word documents, TextEdit is the most convenient. Cheers, Anne On 1 Feb 2013, at 10:02, George Cham <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks, so if pages opens word documents, does it open excel as well? > And if microsoft office is not required, does the Mac come with an email > program? > <--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net ---> To reply to this post, please address your message to [email protected] You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Mac-Access forum at either the list's own dedicated web archive: <http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/mac-access/index.html> or at the public Mail Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>. Subscribe to the list's RSS feed from: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> As the Mac Access Dot Net administrators, we do our very best to ensure that the Mac-Access E-Mal list remains malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and worm-free. However, this should in no way replace your own security strategy. We assume neither liability nor responsibility should something unpredictable happen. Please remember to update your membership preferences periodically by visiting the list website at: <http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/mac-access/options/>
