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All Apple Iwork 2014--2017 šŸŽ Exclusive Deal

By the end of 2017, iWork had completed its transformation from a rewritten, feature-thin suite into a mature, cloud-native productivity platform. It never beat Microsoft Office in market share, but it didn’t need to. For millions of Apple users, iWork became the default—not because it was the most powerful, but because it was the most pleasant to use.

By 2014, the suite became free for new Mac and iOS device purchasers, positioning it as a core part of the Apple ecosystem to compete with Microsoft Office and Google Workspace.

While Microsoft Excel remains the undisputed king of heavy data crunching, the updates to between 2014 and 2017 cemented its status as the All Apple iWork 2014--2017

Popular features that had been removed during the 2013 rewrite—such as leader lines in pie charts and global font replacement—were finally reintroduced.

| App | Version | Key New Feature | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pages | 5.2 | Real-time collaboration (beta) | | Numbers | 3.2 | Improved pivot table-like categories | | Keynote | 6.2 | Remote control via iPhone (iOS) | By the end of 2017, iWork had completed

More importantly, arrived. A user could start writing a newsletter in Pages on their iPhone during a commute and walk into their office, where a small icon would appear on their Mac’s dock. Clicking it would instantly transfer the exact state of the document to the desktop. This fluidity was the "killer feature" of iWork in 2014, finally justifying Apple’s ecosystem lock-in for productivity enthusiasts.

In the end, iWork between 2014 and 2017 wasn’t about catching up to the past—it was about quietly building the future of personal productivity. By 2014, the suite became free for new

Apple repositioned Pages as a serious :