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Who needs MS Office for iOS and Android? CloudOn's here now

<b>commentary</b> Microsoft's much-rumored Office app for iOS and Android may not pop up until later next year. But CloudOn's Office app fills the bill quite nicely.

Lance Whitney Contributing Writer
Lance Whitney is a freelance technology writer and trainer and a former IT professional. He's written for Time, CNET, PCMag, and several other publications. He's the author of two tech books--one on Windows and another on LinkedIn.
Lance Whitney
2 min read
CloudOn&apos;s Office app.
CloudOn's Office app. Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET

Those of you waiting for Microsoft to unveil a version of Office for iOS or Android should stop waiting and take CloudOn's Office app for a spin.

Reports of Microsoft bringing Office to the iPhone, iPad, and Android devices have been in the wind for the past year.

Initial rumors pointed to a launch date of last November. The timeframe then slipped to last month. And now an alleged Microsoft road map suggests that a mobile version of Office won't appear until later next year.

The head of the Microsoft Office division recently suggested that iOS and Android users try Microsoft's SkyDrive app. But that app lets you only open your Office documents on SkyDrive. You can't actually edit them.

Instead, I rely on CloudOn's free Office app to create and edit documents on all of my mobile devices. CloudOn is available as an iOS app that supports the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch. It's also up for grabs in the Google Play store for Android smartphone and tablet users.

CloudOn's app supports Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. You can create and revise files from all three applications, either locally or from a cloud-based service. CloudOn offers access to Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, and Microsoft's own SkyDrive.

Thanks to an update to the app from last December, you can open and edit any Office document stored on SkyDrive. Assuming you've set up SkyDrive to sync with your local documents, any changes you make to a file are automatically propagated both locally and online. That's the same benefit that an Office app from Microsoft would presumably provide.

The interface itself offers the familiar Ribbon interface first introduced with Office 2007. You won't find all of the commands and features found in the full desktop version of Office, but all of the core ones are in place.

My only gripe with the interface is that the space for your actual document shrinks dramatically when you tap on the screen to segue into edit mode.

The Ribbon and the keyboard take up most of the space, leaving little left for your file. But you can still focus on revising just one section or paragraph at a time.

The big selling point for me is the synchronization with SkyDrive. I don't know what Microsoft has in store for its mobile Office app, assuming it ever launches. But CloudOn's Office app works. It's free. And it's here now.