At the moment, if you want to edit documents on your iPhone, there are pretty much only two contenders:
Quickoffice
Docs-to-Go.
It doesn't look as if either have quite thought through how and why people would need on-the-go document editing.
If you can afford an iPhone, you likely have a computer. With a big screen. And a real keyboard too. So are you going to be doing all your word-processing on your iPhone - er, no.
Which means you'll be wanting to do a couple of things: synchronise different versions, and send the documents to people (after all, if you're using your iPhone rather than your main machine, its likely because you are out of the office and in a hurry.
At the moment, Docs-to-Go allows you to synchronise, but not send, and Quickoffice allows you to send but not synchronise.
You're not going to be writing docs from scratch, but if you're on the train and go "oh **** they misspelled the client's name all the way through" you can do a quick update right there. Or move paragraphs around, or toss in boilerplate, etc etc.
That's what I used to do on my old Palm. And sweet monkey jesus, it was slow.
I find the blackberries to be vastly superior in most areas as well, but I must admit that the iPhone is coming along very nicely indeed.
If/when they manage to do proper multitasking of applications (I was hoping they would do this with the 3GS) as well as well as a 'calendar today' function on the main screen I might seriously consider trying one out :o)
Well done Mark. A couple of points, if you'll allow. Apple haven't "caught up", DataViz have. As a third party app it's not as if Blackberrys had this functionality out of the box. Mine didn't. Finally when, using your logic did Blackberry catch up with Palm? Or do they start from scratch now that they have released the Pré?
DataViz Documents To Go 1.0
Colonel Panic
Not very useful #
Posted Saturday 27th June 2009 15:06 GMT
At the moment, if you want to edit documents on your iPhone, there are pretty much only two contenders:
Quickoffice
Docs-to-Go.
It doesn't look as if either have quite thought through how and why people would need on-the-go document editing.
If you can afford an iPhone, you likely have a computer. With a big screen. And a real keyboard too. So are you going to be doing all your word-processing on your iPhone - er, no.
Which means you'll be wanting to do a couple of things: synchronise different versions, and send the documents to people (after all, if you're using your iPhone rather than your main machine, its likely because you are out of the office and in a hurry.
At the moment, Docs-to-Go allows you to synchronise, but not send, and Quickoffice allows you to send but not synchronise.
Both need to try harder.
Mark Dowling
has been on Blackberry for a while now #
Posted Saturday 27th June 2009 23:56 GMT
nice of Apple to catch up I suppose :)
http://www.dataviz.com/products/documentstogo/blackberry/techspecs.html
Gene Cash
@Colonel Panic #
Posted Monday 29th June 2009 08:48 GMT
You're not going to be writing docs from scratch, but if you're on the train and go "oh **** they misspelled the client's name all the way through" you can do a quick update right there. Or move paragraphs around, or toss in boilerplate, etc etc.
That's what I used to do on my old Palm. And sweet monkey jesus, it was slow.
Anonymous Coward
@Mark Dowling #
Posted Monday 29th June 2009 08:48 GMT
I find the blackberries to be vastly superior in most areas as well, but I must admit that the iPhone is coming along very nicely indeed.
If/when they manage to do proper multitasking of applications (I was hoping they would do this with the 3GS) as well as well as a 'calendar today' function on the main screen I might seriously consider trying one out :o)
At least if they ever include a JVM.
Troll, because Java a sore point :(
Simon Banyard
@Mark Dowling #
Posted Monday 29th June 2009 08:58 GMT
Well done Mark. A couple of points, if you'll allow. Apple haven't "caught up", DataViz have. As a third party app it's not as if Blackberrys had this functionality out of the box. Mine didn't. Finally when, using your logic did Blackberry catch up with Palm? Or do they start from scratch now that they have released the Pré?