The first thing to note is that iWork is quite a big package so you'll need at least 1.2GB of disk space free to ensure it works properly. Also you'll need at least 20 minutes for it to install. If you've used iWork '08, then you won't notice much difference in iWork '09 but it still retains the elegance and usability that make it a worthy competitor to MS Office. The three main components of iWork are Pages, Numbers and Keynote. Pages allows you to create professional looking brochures, flyers, reports and resumes quickly and easily. Numbers allows you to write formulas for spreadsheets that many users may find easier than the dreaded Excel. Keynote is perhaps the star of the suite though allowing you to create very impressive presentations with less fuss than in Powerpoint.

It says something that Al Gore's 'An Inconvenient Truth' was produced using Keynote. IWork '09 also introduces some dramatic new cinematic style transitions which make them look even slicker. Professional templates do the hard work All three apps come pre-installed with hundreds of templates which do a lot of the hard work for you. The difference with iWork and MS Office is that iWork offer intelligent hints and tips as you build your creations which again takes much of the hard work out of it. Note that if someone sends you a document produced in MS Office, it's not a problem as iWork can open them with no hassle. Furthermore, you can share projects very easily uploading it onto iWork.com. By Anonymous iWork superior to MS Office.

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Fantastic programs! Much more versatile, easy to use, and stable than MS Office. The programs have good in tegration and very equal user interfaces. They have excellent handling of graphics, tables, and animated objects. Yoon eun hye drama. The formatting functions of text in Pages are extremely easy to use. WIth Numbers you can create calculations with stunning graphics so it looks more like a nice presentation. Keynote is an awesome presentation program.

All features in iWork are superior to MS Office. If you rates iWork low, you have not exerted yourself to learn the iWork programs.

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Pros: Layout features. Text-formatting in Pages. Cons: In Pages: creating of index is missing reviewed on August 28, 2013. Articles about iWork.

Apple iWork is a suite of applications for office work that is compatible with both Apple iOS and OSX platforms. The office suite comprises of the application Keynote; a program used to make presentations, Pages; an application used for creating documents, and the spreadsheet application Numbers. The iWork suite of applications is thought to be made with the prosumer market in mind with simplified features found in Microsoft Office for Mac, or the open source Libre Office software.

The iWork applications also have touch screen support and compatibility with the iCloud software. Common Components Products in the iWork suite of applications have some common components which come from them sharing a similar application programming interfaces like Cocoa and other APIs. Among these common APIs are the multi-lingual spell checker application used in Safari and Mail.

Other common design features include the color picker, grammar checking system, and the find/replace application. Also common among all iWork applications is the underlying document called the ‘canvas’ which is a generic container type of document that is used to provide a layout and storage mechanism in the Apple applications. Each application in the Apple iWork suite uses the canvas as a background and then places its own components on it to create a different program. In the Pages application for instance, the large text box is the central feature in the application when it is first opened, but this can then be altered by the user in any way they like. Similarly in Numbers, the spreadsheet application, the app opens with a grid of cells like a typical spreadsheet but the user again has a lot of freedom to play around with the data on the canvas. The iwork model is thought to be based on the earlier Apple designed OpenDoc which had a similar underlying document engine, along with a single on-disk format.