

You can duplicate and delete slides of different formats, and in the Slide Picker section, you can use the Edit view to rearrange the document’s slides. Whether this achievement will be enough to push a new wave of business users toward smartphone adoption is an open question, especially since the software is, at least for now, hindered by a dearth of features, and is tricky to work with.īut for those who want to create a rough draft of a presentation, or who worry about their laptop crashing on the eve of a big business meeting, Documents To Go offers the ability to cobble together a passable piece of work on the phone. Building PowerPoint documents from start to finish had been the last frontier for mobile users of Microsoft Office files, who previously could create and edit only Word documents and Excel spreadsheets on the iPhone. Now, though, you can create basic PowerPoint presentations on iPhones, Androids and BlackBerrys, as long as you have Documents To Go Premium ($17 on Apple and $15 on BlackBerry on Android the “Full Version” is $15).

As smartphones become the world’s go-to computing device, many business users are lagging, partly because of the phone’s limited ability to work with Microsoft Office documents.
