Office 365 on your Lumia

Published by Ian Delaney on July 19, 2012

word 2013

Office 365 is Microsoft’s online, cloud-based version of the regular Office suite that most… well, office workers spend a large proportion of their day with. The online version is a good product, which replicates almost every part of the offline Office suite’s functionality as an online app.

Unlike some competing online productivity suites, Office 365 commands a monthly subscription fee, but that also buys you a 99.9% uptime SLA and similar assurances regarding security and back-up. If you’re serious about your work, those will count for a lot more than the fairly trivial fee. For most small and medium businesses, it’s a lot more safe and secure than their current arrangements are likely to be.

Looking forward, the newly announced Office 2013 is, in some respects, closer to Office 365 than the traditional set of offline applications. I’m typing this on the preview release of MS Word 2013 now and note that, by default, I’m saving to remote servers using SkyDrive/Office 365 rather than my local hard disk. Of course, you can still save locally and the apps still work without an internet connection but, like everything else, it’s edging into the Cloud.

But back to now, Office 365 and your Lumia phone.

What’s the point? Well, firstly and most vitally for me, everything you create or receive is available now, wherever you are, from your phone, or from any other computer. And it’s far from just Windows Phone and PC: Office 365 is accessible from PCs, Macs, iPhone, Android phones, Symbian phones and BlackBerries as well as Windows Phone.

So that opens up the second, rich area where Office 365 wins out over the traditional desktop Office: collaboration. The system was practically built for multiple authors, review processes and generally avoiding having multiple copies of the same document flying around in emails.

If it’s on your Office 365 server, they’ve already got the document on their phone, computer or whatever. Bye bye attachments. To be fair, you’ll probably still need to poke them to have a look, though – we can’t change human nature!

Here, again, the phone component is really strong. Let’s say I am writing a blog post and someone else needs to review what I’ve produced. I can share the document with them, and they can create comments and edits right from their phone.

Go to the next stage: I get their feedback but I’m out and about. Uniquely for an office product on mobile, I believe, I can see changes and comments. By the time I get to another computer, I know exactly what needs to be done.

If you work in a team, it’s definitely worth a try. There is, as usual, a free trial available.

Comments

  • peteralfonso

    Is this compatible with symbian? as i have bought the 808 PureView yesterday. Very good and stable phone.

    • http://conversations.nokia.com Ian Delaney

      Yes, I believe so – providing you have the new office for Symbian apps installed – they’re a free upgrade if they aren’t already installed.

  • Auðunn Baldvinsson

    This looks cool.
    How about the new version of Office MS announced this week.  Will that be available on the WP7 Lumia devices, perhaps with a updated Office hub?   That would be awesome.
    I have a sneaky feeling it won’t because it seems we Lumia owners  have been abandoned by MS along with other WP7 customers.

    BTW  Nokia, the latest update for Lumia 800 (internet sharing, camera extras) is not available yet on my device.   Why does it take so long to distribute this update to all users?

    • http://conversations.nokia.com Ian Delaney

      I was using the latest preview of the new office to write this and it worked faultlessly with my Lumia.

  • http://twitter.com/HailMarxism fred sparrow

    I concur. Makes google docs look “obsolete” :)

    • http://www.clubnokiard.com/ Frankie Bloise

      Google Docs is obsolete, is open office in a browser. I was comparing Gdocs and Office Live (in skydrive). GDocs ended up breaking the tables in the file I was editing :( Same file was edited just fine in Office.

  • http://www.facebook.com/kristine.theriault Kristine Theriault

    This would come in handy for my business setup. I’m currently using Bitrix24 intranet software and it does integrate with Office. This comes into play with the example above and that phone integration is huge right now. I can manage and share files from anywhere with all my employees, and create security levels for my different employees.