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Mac OS X  |  Design / Graphics  |  Other Design / Graphics  |  Apple iWork 09

Apple iWork 09

Apple iWork 09 - 9.0.2

Productivity suite: Pages, Keynote, Numbers

All Time: (3.1)
This Version: Not rated (0.0)
Current Version: 9.0.2
Release Date: 2009-05-28
License: Update
Downloads (this version): 2,809
Downloads (all versions): 50,505
Price: $79.00

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

What's new in this version:

This update improves reliability when saving some iWork documents and when playing some presentations more than once per Keynote session.

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.5 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.5 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.4 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.4 PPC

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Feedback Summary:

This Version:
Overall Rating: Not rated (0.0) Features: Not rated (0.0) Support: Not rated (0.0)
Ease of Use: Not rated (0.0) Quality / Stability: Not rated (0.0) Price: Not rated (0.0)
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Apple iWork 09 Commentary"Caution" No locking cells - Version: 9.0.2, 5/29/2009 12:31PM PST

h.toelle
So far I have only used the Numbers portion of this package due to time constraints. But not having the feature of locking cells is in the opinion of some reviewers and many users a real drawback. I would whole heartedly agree, further I sincerely hope that Apple will re-instate this feature in a future release.
It is note worthy, users like myself have been able to almost entirely replicate this feature by using some creative techniques found right in Numbers along with its ability to produce shapes. Although it does not cure it entirely, what remains uncured in most cases is likely not that important.

More information on this may be found at the Apple forums.
Or Google
"Apple's Numbers no locked cells "

Also Might I suggest contacting Apple let them know of your feelings. The more they hear the more apt they are do act.
Thank you for your attention
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Apple iWork 09 Review'09 is the Office replacement - Version: 9.0.2, 5/28/2009 05:15PM PST

(2 of 3 users found this comment useful)

iayork
OK, that's not quite true, but iWorks '09 is the first release for which that's not a ridiculous statement. Very briefly, I find Pages much nicer than Word, Numbers about equal to Excel (I use both, depending on my needs), and Keynote not quite as useful as PowerPoint. (This is true for both Office '08 and '04.)

I use Pages to write scientific papers and documents. I need moderately fancy layout capabilities (to incorporate graphics into my documents) and aside from that I need it to stay out of my way. Pages loads much faster and is much more responsive than Word, and it's more stable. Incorporating graphics into my documents is so much easier than Word I can't begin to tell you how much time I've saved. Importing and exporting from and to Word is seamless (occasionally there are notes that something didn't import perfectly, but I can rarely spot the difference even when it's flagged). Exporting to Word on the fly -- directly to email, for example -- is effortless and completely solves the problem of collaboration. In earlier versions of iWorks I had problems with references and bibliographies, but Bookends (from Sonny Software) works fine with '09. (I understand Endnote does as well, but haven't tried it.) I only fire up Word these days when I forget and double-click on a doc instead of the faster right-clicking and opening in Pages.

Numbers has finally grown up. I couldn't use the previous version because it couldn't do a number of things (error bars and trend lines were the two worst, as I recall) but they're now working fine. There are still a couple problems -- Excel imports CSV and tab-delimited files much better -- but Numbers' workflow and model seems much more sensible now that I'm used to it. Again, Numbers launches faster and is more responsive and stable than Excel. I use Numbers for about 80% of my charting/spreadsheet needs.

Keynote, I rarely use, though it's certainly not bad. PowerPoint seems a little more versatile, and though Keynote probably has better templates and transitions, I don't use templates or transitions much. Powerpoint is nicer for exporting in different formats (e.g. as notes) which is important since it lets me output my lectures as notes very easily.

All in all, the package as a whole is as useful as Office. Depending on your specific needs you might have some requirement for an Office feature that's not present in iWorks, but for the vast majority I think iWorks would be at least as function, and I think for almost everyone it's going to be faster, more responsive, and just easier to use.
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Apple iWork 09 ReviewKeynote & Numbers -good Pages - bleh. - Version: 9.0.1update1, 5/20/2009 10:52PM PST

(1 of 6 users found this comment useful)

rubaiyat
I have tried so hard to like Pages. There is probably no program I have worked harder at trying get it do what it is supposed to do.

Unfortunately it is Apple's muddled shot at a DTP program, sort of, oh and a Word Processor, sort of. As in the movie "The Fly" the two seem to have had the worst of each others DNA fused. Full of bone headed ideas about user interaction which go to show why no-one else is reinventing the wheel to put several corners on it. All poorly support by useless Help and a really poorly written User Guide.

At face value it looks OK. Nice looking interface with <i>very</i> good templates. Scratch the surface and try to do real work and you find the mess beneath.

It has a crazy split between "Word Processing mode" and "Layout mode" because the Apple programmers didn't have a clue how to just get it to do both. Odd unannounced functions fail in one or the other. Strangest of all the Word Processor has the somewhat primitive Master Pages and Layout has none. The Layout mode is the more shambolic of the 2 with so many things that don't work it would be hard to list them all.

The Spelling checker in both has to be one of the worst implemented of any program I have ever seen. It is constantly confounding users and seems mostly to just not work. Period.

WARNING TIM ROBINSON: Do not take anything produced from this to a commercial printer. This is strictly for your desktop printer.

WARNING: Do not believe Apple's assurances of compatibility with Ms Office. To give this its technical definition, that is largely a lie. So much does not work either opening or saving to Word that it is just better avoided and only used as a last resort.

WARNING: Be prepared to spend a lot of time finding out how to do things and what has gone wrong. Again! The documentation and Help plain suck.

As this is a review of iWork I have to say that Keynote and Numbers are both great products.

Pity Pages lets the suite down and leaves Apple users still without a decent Word Processor or Database since Apple terminated AppleWorks.
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