Download Squad First Look and Gallery: Apple iWork '08 in the spotlight

One of the overriding and important features has always been the Microsoft Office compatibility, and Pages '08 continues this, not only with the older DOC formats as with older versions, but also full read/write compatibility with the Microsoft Office Open XML format (beating the Microsoft MacBU by nearly 6 months - whilst the Microsoft team has beta converters out, there's been no way to edit OOXML files straight out of the box until now). In addition to this (obvious, but pleasantly surprising) feature, there's the ability to, in Word-compatible formats, track your changes. As someone who's used Pages for a fair amount of product documentation, it's fantastic to see this arrive as, much to my own sadness, not everyone is running a Mac.
In a pass to the recently-delayed Microsoft Office for Mac 2008, there's even a ribbon-esque context sensitive Formatting bar that allows you to format text so very easily (in fact, this very post was written in Pages '08). To top off what appears to be a very well thought out, and mature, upgrade there's 140 templates to spur on whatever project you might want to start in Pages.



So what else is there that's new? The user interface throughout the three applications. The look and feel of the trio has been dramatically improved, honed and seemingly re-thought about. The splash screens are stunning, and the Formula inspector in Numbers was certainly a pleasant surprise. The integration with iLife is, whilst expected, refreshing. Looking at iWork '08, even just this evening, it would appear that Apple has created a product that may well render Office for Mac semi-irrelevant. An expensive option that business users will require, but one that is overkill for the average Mac user. Whilst creating a consumer-friendly office, is arguably what iWork has always been about, that's not to say Office and iWork aren't competitors.
iWork beats Office when you look at costs. It beats Office on user interface, not simply because the shipping version of Office for Mac is now four years old, and it also beats it for sheer simplicity and ease of use. Whilst hard-core Excel users may not find it meets their most technical needs (as a casual user of Excel, that's something I rarely encounter), that's not to say you can't try and find out, for Apple is even offering a 30-day trial of the software which you'll want to see. Are the gloves off in the Mac OS X office-software arena? Yessir. It seems it's game on, and that can only be good for us all wanting to share Word, Powerpoint and Excel documents, whatever our platform of choice. We've put together a gallery of shots of the new version of iWork, which we'd recommend you check out!