I don't know much about the phone but my question is: will this phone be able to open Office mobile or Microsoft Office documents? I currently own a WM phone with 6.1 but I would like to know if i create documents on Word, or excel or power point on my computer...will the Htc G1 be able to open and edit the documents.
Open: yes. Edit: soon.
I think so.
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Try Google Docs. It works ok with Word, PowerPoint, and Excel files. There are limitations, but give it a shot
Google docs (docs.google.com) should work from within the android browser... this let's you open/edit/export a variety of different productivity formats.
Meow.
What I'm really really crossing my fingers for is a port of Sun OpenOffice. Being written in Java (and done extremely well) a slimmed down port should not be out of the question. This could give us word, excel, and powerpoint read/write capabilities, if not more![]()
I can open a Word file in Docs but when I do this the document is always jumbled. Any tips?
ANDROID... CHANGE YOU CAN BELIEVE IN!!!
Discontent Buffets the Nation;
Bush Craters, Obama Benefits
Obama in Drivers Seat Amid Economic Worry
ANALYSIS by GARY LANGER
Oct. 13, 2008
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A tornado of economic discontent is buffeting the nation, sending satisfaction with the country's direction to a 35-year low, George W. Bush's approval rating below Richard Nixon's worst – and Barack Obama, boosted by economic empathy, to his best-yet advantage in the presidential race.
In this latest ABC News/Washington Post poll, a record 90 percent of Americans say the country is on the wrong track, while only 23 percent approve of the job President Bush is doing.
(ABC Graphic)
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Given the global economic crisis, a record 90 percent of registered voters say the country is seriously off on the wrong track, the most since this question first was asked in 1973. At 23 percent, Bush's job approval rating has fallen below Nixon's lowest; it's a point away from the lowest in 70 years of polling, set by Harry Truman in early 1952. Bush's disapproval, meanwhile, is at an all-time record – 73 percent.
Click here for a PDF with charts and full questionnaire.
Powered chiefly by the public's economic concerns, Obama leads John McCain by 10 points among likely voters, 53-43 percent, in this ABC News/Washington Post poll. Though every race is different, no presidential candidate has come back from an October deficit this large in pre-election polls dating to 1936.
Still, Obama's lead depends upon a shift in basic partisanship that will need to stand the test of turnout come Nov. 4. And while movable voters – those who haven't definitely made up their minds – have inched down to 13 percent, that's still more than enough to change the shape of the race.
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Losing Traction, McCain Seeks Game-Changer in Final Debate
Given the critical elements at play, attention to the contest is extraordinary. Ninety-two percent of registered voters are following the election closely, 59 percent "very" closely – both mid-October records in ABC and ABC/Post pre-election polls back to 1988.
WOE – Economic concerns are paramount. Nearly nine in 10 registered voters are worried about the economy's direction; nearly seven in 10 are worried about their own family finances. Fifty-five percent call the economy the single most important issue in their vote, with all other mentions in the single digits.
Reflecting these economic worries, just 44 percent of Americans are confident they'll have enough money to carry them through retirement, down sharply from a high of 69 percent three years ago. At the same time, the public's economic concerns are long-running – consumer confidence hit a 22-year-low back in May – and not directly related to the stock market crash. As in the past, people are keeping the market in perspective; just 16 percent say it's hurt them "a great deal." (See separate analysis.)
As first evident in an ABC/Post poll three weeks ago, Obama holds the reins on economic woe. Registered voters trust him over McCain to handle the economy by 53-37 percent. Obama holds his largest lead yet, a remarkable 30-point margin, in better understanding the economic problems Americans are having, 58-28 percent. He leads McCain by about as much, 59-31 percent, in trust to help the middle class, and by 11 points on taxes, two prime points of contention in the last presidential debate.
WIND – The economy is not the only wind at Obama's back. McCain's receiving blowback for what's perceived as negative campaigning; registered voters by 59-35 percent say he's been mainly attacking Obama rather than addressing the issues. Obama, by contrast, is seen by an even wider margin as issue-focused. (See separate analysis)
This is prolly a bad example, but what happens is the fonts are all messed up.
ANDROID... CHANGE YOU CAN BELIEVE IN!!!
I cant seem to edit or complete the google docs excel spreadsheet via the g1 phone browser? Any help would be appreciated. Also I tried the help function without and answer.
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