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Apple introduced "Handoff," a feature that allowed a user to start writing a report on their iPhone during a commute and instantly pick up where they left off on their Mac upon reaching the office. 2016–2017: Real-Time Collaboration
The iWork for iCloud beta gained significant momentum, allowing users to edit documents directly in a browser without needing a Mac, making it a truly cross-platform tool.
Following the massive "ground-up" rewrite in late 2013, 2014 was focused on feature restoration design consistency Yosemite Integration:
The launch of , allowing multi-user simultaneous editing across Mac, iOS, and PC. 2017 Desktop Feature Parity & Mobile Power all+apple+iwork+20142017
to ensure that whether you were working on an iMac or an iPhone, the fonts, styles, and layouts remained identical. 2014–2015: The Move to the Cloud This period saw the maturation of iWork for iCloud
For the first time, Apple prioritized ensuring that a document created on a Mac would look and behave identically on an iPad or a web browser. 2. Strategic Shift to Free Distribution
: Apple added Interactive Charts (including new bubble charts), allowing users to create multi-stage visual narratives. This period also saw major overhauls to the Instant Alpha tool for image editing directly inside documents, and vastly improved export filters to handle Microsoft Office formats ( .docx , .xlsx , .pptx ) seamlessly. Apple introduced "Handoff," a feature that allowed a
All Apple iWork 2014-2017: The Transformation of Pages, Numbers, and Keynote
Numbers abandoned the traditional "endless grid of cells" layout paradigm used by competitors, focusing instead on visual, multi-table canvas structures. Design with iWork on Mac - Apple Support
In 2015, iWork focused on keeping pace with Apple’s hardware innovations, specifically for the iPhone 6s and the new iPad Pro. 2017 Desktop Feature Parity & Mobile Power to
Real-time collaboration, which became a staple, allowing multiple users to edit the same document. 1. Apple Pages (2014-2017)
Following a controversial 2013 redesign that stripped away many advanced legacy features to ensure cross-platform compatibility with iOS and iCloud, Apple spent 2014 fulfilling its "road-map" to re-introduce lost functionality. Key 2014 Milestones: By April 2014, critical tools like default zoom settings "view-only" sharing options , and improved AppleScript support were restored. Continuity & Yosemite: The release of OS X Yosemite in late 2014 introduced