Microsoft to offer Office Web apps for free

David Flynn14 July 2009, 8:46 AM

Microsoft borrows a page from Google’s playbook with free and paid-for versions of its Office Web apps online suite, but also offers DIY hosting on your own server.


In a clear sign of just how much Google has changed the desktop computing game, Microsoft has bowed to the inevitable and will make the online version of its Office suite free.

The Web-based versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote – which Microsoft promises will run in competing browsers such as Firefox and Safari, and support smartphones such as the iPhone and BlackBerry – are being decoupled from the forthcoming Office 2010 suite so that no purchase of Microsoft software is needed to use the Office Web service.

That said, some mobile functions may require Office Mobile 2010 and of course Microsoft will promote Office 2010 as the perfect desktop companion to the lightweight online apps.

Office Web will be available in a free ‘basic’ version as part of its Windows Live service and no doubt also through the Office.com domain which Microsoft purchased earlier this year it bought from a ‘virtual office’ company for an unnamed sum.

Companies which sign up for an annual licence for the Office 2010 Standard suite will also be able to host Office Web on their own server (using SharePoint Server) for no extra charge, or buy a subscription to access the Web apps through Microsoft’s own data centres.

While today is also the kickoff for the invitation-only Office 2010 Technical Preview program – a wider public beta will follow later this year, prior to a launch in the first half of 2010 – that trial doesn’t include a sneak peek at the Office Web apps.

Microsoft says these won’t debut until August, which is also when the company takes control of the Office.com domain which earlier this year it bought from a ‘virtual office’ company for an unnamed sum.

The company will also trim the number of versions of Office 2010 from eight editions down to five, including ditching the Office Ultimate pack, although pricing has yet to be announced.

Three consumer versions will be offered at retail. Office Home and Student includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. Office Home and Business adds Outlook, while Office Professional throws Access and Publisher into the mix.

Business customers will be able to buy site-wide licences for Office Standard, which includes Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, OneNote and Publisher, and also lets the company host the Office Web apps on their own server. The Professional Plus edition adds Access, InfoPath, SharePoint Workspace (formerly Groove) and the Microsoft Communicator instant messaging program.

You can see previews of the Office 2010 apps, Office Web and Office 2010 Mobile at www.microsoft.com/office/2010. (The lass in the Office Web clip seems to have popped a few Valium to calm her nerves before recording her demo.)


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Tin (Senior Forumologist):

Home and Business edition, eh? So they've wised up to all the business customers buying home and student from Harvey Norman?

14 July 2009, 9:11 AM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (Senior Forumologist):

Quoting Tin:
business customers .......... from Harvey Norman?

Shudder? I guess theoretically it could be possible.




14 July 2009, 9:47 AM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

The Big Baboo (User):

Web Apps? What do they think I am? A spider :) I'm still using Office 2000 and when I start using Linux I'll be moving over to Open Office and other assorted stuff on that OS :) Hiya "Tin" Hows it going :)

14 July 2009, 9:38 AM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

The Big Baboo (User):

Oooo :( They want me to install that blasted "Silverlight" program so I can watch their movie. Hullo I had it installed when I was using Google maps and it didn't work properly then :( So I'm not using it again.

14 July 2009, 9:42 AM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Aubrey (Advanced member):

What would be the advantage in using an MS branded web app for documents etc?

I use GoogleDocs with documents created originally in MSWord, OpenOffice, AbiWord and several other "traditional" wordprocessors as well as HTML editors. It also handles spreadsheets (simple ones at the moment), presentations, graphics and pdf documents. All this happens seemlessly and there seems to be no difference based on the original editor (Thanks to both open standards and reverse engineering, I guess).

The fact that anyone can access the API and produce useful (or totally useless) add-ons for Google apps means that improvements flow continually and all the apps seem to interact really well (Gmail+GoogleDocs is a very useful combo that gets better all the time).

How would an MS product differentiate itself? Or would they rely on market force like always?

14 July 2009, 2:59 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Senior Forumologist):

Quoting Aubrey:
Or would they rely on market force like always?


I thought that's all MS do these days. It's not like they're making quality software.

14 July 2009, 3:16 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

The PikeMaster (User):

So true if only the prices were the REAL value.

14 July 2009, 8:14 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jammit (User):

Bahhhhh Humbug. Tired of Microsoft and their rubbish.

They don't seem to have any scruples about dumping buggy software onto the market and saying - "You sort it out"....

Well WTF? No way. I am soooooooooo sick of having Microsoft dump the highest price and the lowest quality software on the market.

Their originality is limited to stealing everyone else's ideas and then using anti-trust techniques to force it on to the market and make it stick by making everyone play the product lock in game through incompatabilities with everything on the market - including backward compatibility with it's own.

I am right into "try before I buy" and Office 2007? What? Pay for that? Your Kidding right? I wouldn't use it even if it was pirated and cracked! - So in the bin it goes.

My ONLY complaint about Open Office is, "I wish it had "paint and air brushing" in the drawing program.

I also wish I had the time and brains to write the coding so I can share it with everyone else and everyone can benefit.

I don't care if Microsoft brings out Office 10 on a deluxe double dimple butt plug - I am not using it.

And the PR "Introduction to MS ORRIFICE 10" what? They now expect YOU to download their MS Video product called Sliverbite; I mean Silverlight, just to watch a crappy vid - Don't you morons at microsoft get it? I prefer to watch all web content on the player of my own choice - thank you very much.

14 July 2009, 7:48 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

TV Bis (User):

The same old mob - all upset with the big bad boogie MS. Starting to get a bit boring.............

14 July 2009, 8:07 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (Senior Forumologist):

Quoting TV Bis:
Starting to get a bit boring.............

Waiting to buy whatever the hell Microsoft dishes up at whatever price they choose, must be so much more satisfying. hell you don't even have to think.


15 July 2009, 12:45 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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