Mary,

If it’s anything like my iPhone 6s then it’s great,

I’ve been running office 365 on my ipHone for more than a year now and it works 
great with voiceover, I’ve only just put it on my iPad mini but it’s still very 
accessible.



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Wednesday, 23 March 2016 4:03 PM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Smaller iPad Pro can use Microsoft Office for free, while larger iPad 
can't

I wonder how accessible this is on the iPad on with voiceover.
Mary

Smaller iPad Pro can use Microsoft Office for free, while larger iPad can't
Macworld  /  Mark Hachman


[Image removed by 
sender.]<http://www.macworld.com/article/3047152/ios/smaller-ipad-pro-can-use-microsoft-office-for-free-while-larger-ipad-cant.html#tk.rss_all>

Here’s one point Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller didn’t make in calling the 
new 9.7-inch iPad the ultimate PC 
replacement<http://www.pcworld.com/article/3046422/ipad/apple-trolls-windows-users-launching-smaller-ipad-pro-as-ultimate-pc-replacement.html>:
 if you buy it, you won’t have to pay for an Office 365 subscription to use 
Microsoft’s iOS Office apps.

But if you buy the larger, 12.9-inch model, you will. Why? Because of the 
vagaries of Microsoft’s mobile Office strategy.

Almost a year ago, Microsoft attempted to distinguish what defined a mobile 
experience, and what devices would typically be used on the go. The idea, 
according to Microsoft, was that the company wanted to charge Office 365 
licensing fees for those users who were using Office at a desk, performing 
productive work. Microsoft views mobile apps as more appropriate for light 
editing, rather than document creation.

What Microsoft settled on to divide mobile and desktop 
users<http://www.pcworld.com/article/2900830/microsoft-office-will-be-free-for-screens-under-10-inches.html>
 was screen size: specifically 10.1 inches. Anything smaller than that and 
users can pretty much do anything they want with the appropriate iOS, Windows, 
or Android app, including creating, editing, or sharing documents. But if 
you’re using the Office apps on a device whose primary screen is larger than 
10.1 inches, Microsoft won’t let you create a new document, just edit and view 
an Office document created elsewhere.

That means that, if you define productivity as access to Microsoft’s excellent 
Office apps for 
iOS<http://www.pcworld.com/article/2111900/microsoft-office-for-ipad-review-finally-true-productivity-on-your-tablet.html>,
 the smaller iPad Pro is actually more productive than the larger version.

If you’re worried that Microsoft may erase this distinction, you probably 
shouldn’t be. One of the foundations of Microsoft’s Continuum 
plan<http://www.pcworld.com/article/2916481/microsofts-continuum-turns-windows-10-phones-into-tiny-full-blown-windows-pcs.html>
 is to allow its Lumia phones to plug into a Display Dock and essentially run 
the free mobile Office apps on a desktop monitor. Close the licensing loophole, 
and one of Continuum’s advantages disappears.

Why this matters: Windows users may have many reasons to believe that the iPad 
Pro pales in comparison to the Surface 
tablets<http://www.pcworld.com/article/3046678/hardware/5-reasons-why-the-97-inch-ipad-pro-cant-be-a-pc-replacement.html>,
 but Office compatibility isn’t one of them. It’s worth noting that even the 
smallest $499 Surface 3 clocks in a 10.7 inches on the diagonal, meaning that 
Microsoft charges every Surface user for an Office subscription if you want to 
create an Office document—$70 per year for an Office 365 Personal subscription. 
Provided you buy the smaller $599 iPad Pro, that savings will pay for itself in 
about 18 months.


Original Article: 
http://www.macworld.com/article/3047152/ios/smaller-ipad-pro-can-use-microsoft-office-for-free-while-larger-ipad-cant.html#tk.rss_all


Sent from my iPhone
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