Traditional editions As with previous versions, Office 2013 is made available in several distinct editions aimed towards different markets. All traditional editions of Microsoft Office 2013 contain at least
Word,
Excel,
PowerPoint and
OneNote and are licensed for use on one computer. Five traditional editions of Office 2013 were released: •
Home & Student: This retail suite includes the core applications Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. •
Home & Business: This retail suite includes the core applications Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote plus
Outlook. These new subscription offerings were positioned as a new option for consumers wanting a cost-effective way to purchase and use Office on multiple computers in their household.
Office RT A special version of Office 2013, initially known as Office 2013 Home & Student RT, is shipped with all
Windows RT devices. It initially consisted of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. In Windows RT 8.1, the suite was renamed Office 2013 RT and Outlook was added. The edition, while visually indistinguishable from normal versions of Office 2013, contains special optimizations for
ARM-based devices, such as changes to reduce battery usage (including, for example, freezing the animation of the blinking cursor for text editing during periods of inactivity), enabling touch mode by default to improve usability on tablets, and using the graphics portion of a device's
SoC for hardware acceleration. Windows RT devices on launch were shipped with a "preview" version of Office Home & Student 2013 RT. The release date for the final version varied depending on the user's language, and was distributed through
Windows Update when released. Office RT modifies or excludes other various features for compatibility reasons or resource reduction. To save disk space; templates, clip art, and language packs are downloaded online rather than stored locally. Other excluded features include the removal of support for third-party code such as macros/
VBA/
ActiveX controls, the removal of support for older media formats and narration in PowerPoint, editing of equations generated with the legacy Equation Editor,
data models in Excel (PivotCharts, PivotTables, and QueryTables are unaffected), searching embedded media files in OneNote, along with
data loss prevention, Group Policy support, and creating e-mails with information rights management in Outlook. As the version of Office RT included on Windows RT devices is based on the Home & Student version, it cannot be used for "commercial, nonprofit, or revenue-generating activities" unless the organization has a volume license for Office 2013 already, or the user has an Office 365 subscription with commercial use rights.
Windows Store apps Alongside Office RT, free versions of OneNote and the Lync client were made available as
Windows Store apps. The OneNote app, originally known as
OneNote MX, contains a limited feature set in comparison to its desktop version, but is also optimized for use on tablets. The OneNote app has since received several major updates, including camera integration, printing abilities, and multiple inking options. Universal Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint apps were released in 2015.
Office Mobile Windows Phone 8 ships with an updated version of the
Office Mobile suite, consisting of mobile versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. In comparison to their
Windows Phone 7 versions, the new versions add an improved Office Hub interface that can sync recently opened and modified documents (including changes to documents stored via Office 365 and SkyDrive), a separated OneNote app with additional features (such as voice notes and integration with the new "Rooms" functionality of the OS), and improved document editing and viewing functionality. In June 2013, Microsoft released a version of Office Mobile for
iPhone; it is similar to the Windows Phone version, but originally requires an Office 365 subscription to use. A version for
Android smartphones was released in July 2013; it, too, originally needed Office 365 for use. Apps for
iPad and
Android tablet computers were released in March 2014 and January 2015, respectively. These, along with their
smartphone equivalents, have been made free for personal use, though certain premium features have been
paywalled and require Office 365, which includes licensing of the apps for business use.
Windows 10 Mobile that was released in December 2015 included new Office apps, more in line with their iPhone and Android equivalent, and making use of the "universal app" platform pioneered.
Comparison ;Remarks: :1 The
Windows RT versions do not include all of the functionality provided by other versions of Office. :2 Commercial use of Office RT is allowed through volume licensing or business subscriptions to Office 365. However, it's currently unavailable though subscription. :5 Professional Plus edition on the retail channel is/was available with MSDN subscription or via Microsoft Home Use Program. ==System requirements==