And allow them to be opened up and accessed and altered or changed later?
Yes I know I am mixing two religions here, but I am trying to convert all the way over, but I cannot do it unless I can work....and I need this to work!
And allow them to be opened up and accessed and altered or changed later?
Yes I know I am mixing two religions here, but I am trying to convert all the way over, but I cannot do it unless I can work....and I need this to work!
Documents to Go
Thank you ok when I get this app i can download and edit these documents correct? And where are the documents stored? In a My Documents type location....
The App Store. You should have the icon for it on your iPad.
I don't use Documents to Go, but I believe you can use it with Dropbox. This is a good combo, since it would leave your files available on both the computer and your portable devices. Otherwise the documents will be stored locally on the iPad, only available to Documents to Go, until you sync them back to the computer to use. You easily end up with multiple versions of each document.
Hold in mind that any iPad app you use, including Documents To Go, is not 100% Office compatible. Keep the documents simple without the fancy tricks and you should be ok.
Edit: Looks like only the more expensive Premium version has direct support for Dropbox.
I just setup dropbox.. I actually like it a lot!
Thanks again, I use a web based e-mail connection so I can always recapture the documents from my web based e-mail on my laptop and download there as well.
I guess to your 2nd point I need to know can I alter Power point and do the documents stay in word, excel, and PP form or do they convert something similar?
The files remain in Office format. There is detailed information on the companies website which is linked on the app page in the app store
What USBill said. I only mentioned the compatibility issue because some people expect extended features like embedded documents to work.
Dear Newport,
Another possibility, to those already mentioned, are the Apple 'Office' apps - 'Pages' (Word compatible), 'Numbers' (Excel compatible) and 'Keynote' (PowerPoint compatible). All of these apps will read 'native' Office format - including the .docx, .pptx, .xlsx format - and edit and export them in .doc, .xls, .ppt or PDF format. Documents can be imported using email attachments (from where Pages, Numbers and Keynote can open them directly) or from the Apple 'MobileMe' server. If you have the latest OS, then you can print the document directly too. As other contributors have pointed out, these are 'stripped down' full-size apps, so there are some limitations in what they can do or display. Nevertheless, I've used them for some months now and they seem reliable given these restrictions.
You can find out more here
Apple - iPad - Create beautiful documents with a tap.
Apple - iPad - Innovative spreadsheets in just a few taps.
and here
Apple - iPad - Powerful presentations at your fingertips.
There's also extensive on-line help
Tim
Scotland