, and then, in the top right of your Microsoft 365 home page, click Install Office. Microsoft Office includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Skype for Business, and Access (Windows only). Install Microsoft Office: Microsoft Office is available for installation on Windows and macOS computers.Microsoft 365 offers several options for accessing Microsoft Office applications: (Do not click anything on the sign-in pages other than Next and Sign in.) When prompted, confirm your identity with Duo Two-Step Login, and then choose whether to stay signed into your Microsoft 365 account. If you see a "Sign in" prompt, enter your IU username followed by (do this no matter what your email address is), and then, at the password prompt, enter your IU passphrase. To access Microsoft 365, from a supported web browser, go to Microsoft 365 at IU Some Microsoft 365 features will not be used with Indiana University's deployment of Microsoft 365. Microsoft OneDrive at IU: Personal cloud storage for more, see About Microsoft OneDrive at IU.Office Online: Cloud-based versions of popular Microsoft Office apps.Office Mobile apps: Scaled-down, touch-optimized versions of Microsoft Office for your smartphone or tablet.Microsoft Office for Windows and macOS: The newest desktop versions of the Microsoft Office suite.The subscription entitles you to use the software as long as your IU computing accounts are active you are not entitled to use the software after you leave IU. Your IU Microsoft 365 subscription allows you to install Microsoft Office on up to five personal computers (Windows and macOS), five tablets (Windows, iPad, and Android), and five phones. Microsoft 365 is a subscription-based service that allows IU students, faculty, and staff to use the newest versions of Microsoft Office on their personal Windows and macOS computers, via the web with Office Online apps, and on their smartphones and tablets with Office Mobile apps. The app also is meant to simplify the process of making quick notes, signing PDFs and transferring files between devices.If you buy a personal Microsoft 365 subscription from Microsoft, and later get a subscription through the university, IU cannot refund the cost of your purchase from Microsoft. Microsoft also integrated its Lens technology into this app to make it easier for users to convert images into Word and Excel documents, scan PDFs and capture whiteboards.
Microsoft's goal in creating these lightweight, combined Office apps was to address the needs of users for whom full versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint on their mobile devices was overkill in terms of features and download size. That app also was a lightweight bundle of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Microsoft's Office mobile app was codenamed "Union": This app was similar to - but, according to Microsoft - different from the unified Office app that Microsoft made available to Samsung Galaxy usersĀ a couple of years ago. (Users with mobile devices with screens smaller than 10.1 inches can create and edit documents without signing into a Microsoft subscription.) On an iPad 10.1-inch (or larger), a subscription is required to create and edit documents, as is outlined in the App Store description. To unlock more than basic functionality, users will need to subscribe to Microsoft 365 personal ($6.99 per month) or Microsoft 365 Family ($9.99 per month). The Office app is a free download from the App Store. The new Office app for iPad requires iOS 13.0 or later.
Microsoft made the unified Office app available for iOS and Android last February.
The Office app also allows users to create PDFs, convert screenshots to PDF or PPT insert notes into PDFs and more. The Office app, like its iPhone, Windows and Android complements, is meant to provide some of the most-used features from Word, Excel and PowerPoint, along with some related capabilities. Microsoft officials said earlier this month to expect this app to show up in the App Store, but didn't say when that would happen. Microsoft's Office app - a single app combining Word, Excel and PowerPoint features - is available for iPads from the Apple App Store as of today, February 16.