Office Web Apps Get Makeover
        
        
        
        		Microsoft announced some new milestones for its  browser-based Office Web Applications last Thursday.
The applications, which are simplified versions of Excel,  OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word that run in supported Web browsers, have been used  by more than 20 million people since launch, according to Microsoft's  announcement. The free Office Web Apps, which were rolled  out in June, already can be accessed in the United   States and Canada. They are available in  English, French, and Spanish languages. 
Last Thursday, Microsoft announced an expanded availability.  Office Web Apps are being rolled out to seven additional countries, including Australia, Austria,  Belgium, France, Germany,  Russia, and Switzerland.
Microsoft used survey data of Office Web users and found  that the majority of them create Word documents. Overwhelmingly, those  documents are created first on premises-installed Microsoft Office software and  then uploaded to SkyDrive, which is a 25 GB storage and document-sharing space  in the Internet cloud that Microsoft offers to users for free.
Office Web App users can now embed Excel spreadsheets or  PowerPoint presentations on the Web. The Office Web Apps create the code to be  copied and pasted to a Web page. Once the embedded apps are running, those  documents can be interactive for site visitors. For instance, viewers visiting a  Web site can add data to an embedded Excel spreadsheet and see the results  calculated online. In addition, document creators can alter a spreadsheet or  presentation offline, and those changes will automatically be synced and  uploaded to the embedded online version.
The new features were demonstrated by Evan Lew, senior  product manager for Office Web Apps, in a Microsoft-produced  video. Lew said that Office Web App users also get access to more than  200,000 royalty-free photos and graphics from Office.com that can be used on  Web pages. He  showed that embedded Excel sheets now enable formulas to be  copied across a row or column. PowerPivot tables can also be produced online in  embedded Excel spreadsheets.
Another feature for Word Web App users is that printing can  now be done from the edit mode, rather than just from the view mode. Documents  on the user's desktop can now be opened from SkyDrive. 
Office Web Apps are free to consumer users who have signed  up for a Windows Live ID, but Microsoft has a different concept for business  users. Businesses need licenses for Microsoft Office and SharePoint or they can use the free SharePoint Foundation. Alternatively, organizations need to subscribe to a service from Microsoft or  its partners to have access to Office Web Apps. Microsoft describes some of  those details in footnotes here.
Office Web Apps will work in conjunction with installed  Office productivity suites, enabling both offline and online editing, storage  and access to documents. The installed Office versions that will work with  Office Web Apps include Office 2003 and more current editions running on  Windows. 
Microsoft has  also announced that Office for Mac 2011, expected to be released late next  month, will have support for Office Web Apps. The Mac version will not include  OneNote, however.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.