![]() Apple might have made iWork not cost anything to download, but since the products only work on devices they manufacture and sell, the “price” is rolled up into the cost of purchase for the user. It allows (bad) companies to act unaccountably (because good companies don’t do such things to begin with), and promotes the bad behavior of apologists like you. And yes, Apple “forced” the updates on users, by various methods: lack of interoperability between versions, App Store limitations, automatic update “feature”, et al.īut getting back to the “ITS FREE” thing…this is just unhelpful. The bugs were introduced ex post facto, and pushed down paying customers’ throats (as literally as can be done in the digital realm). The bugs in the desktop versions are unacceptable, mostly because a LARGE number of people had PAID for those apps in the past. Ugh, therein lies the problem with making software “free”, folks like you then start to tell people not to complain about it.įirst off, the OP was speaking about the bugs in the desktop versions of the apps, which are not, nor should be considered, “beta”. Last month, iWork for iCloud gained an improved design and new sharing options. Even with these improvements, Apple still calls the software beta apps, but perhaps we will learn more about the future of iWork for iCloud at the upcoming Worldwide Developers Conference in early June. Numbers has added exporting to CSV (which allows easier integration with Microsoft Excel), and Keynote has gained the ability to show or hide slide numbers. Pages has also gained exporting to ePub support, improvements to tables, and object layering. The trio of applications also now have the ability to create 2D and interactive charts with formatting improvements and make more color changes. The 1GB file size is vastly improved over the earlier 200MB per document limit and the 10MB image file limit is double the previous limit of 5MB. This 100 number is up from the previous limit of 50 simultaneous users.Īpple has also improved file storage on iWork for iCloud, allowing individual documents to be 1GB in size and allowing for individual image sizes of up to 10MB. ![]() Apple introduced collaboration with iWork for iCloud last year, and the feature matches Google Drive’s ability to allow multiple people to work on a single file simultaneously. The new collaboration features allow for over 100 people to collaborate on a single file in either Pages, Keynote, or Numbers. iWork includes the Pages word processor, Keynote presentation maker, and Numbers spreadsheet manager, and it is likely that supporting apps for iOS and OS X will become available in the near future… > Quite outside the question, but I couldn't resist to mention it: his real name is Pierre Chatelier.Apple today has enhanced its iWork suite of iCloud apps to include much improved collaboration, new document options, and more file storage. > What version of OS X are you using? Pierre Chachatelier has a beta version of LaTeXiT that is supposed to work better with Mavericks available at. I found this link ( ), downloaded and installed the keynote 4 plugin hoping it would fix things, but it did not. I guess I need to install the link back plugin. But with fresh equations this does not work: when I drag-and-drop onto latexit, only the pdf image of the equation is pasted but not the source. With older keynote files that contain latexit equation I can drag-and-drop the pdf image of the equation to paste the image and the source in the latexit window. > Since I did a fresh install on one of my computers my workflow between keynote and latexit is partially broken. > On Apr 1, 2014, at 8:06 AM, Themis Matsoukas wrote: On Apr 1, 2014, at 8:36 AM, Franck Pastor wrote: Next message: latexit-keynote linkback. ![]()
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