Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Apple
  4. News

Apple tries to catch up to Google Docs with latest iWork collaboration tools

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple announced some exciting products today, but one of the most interesting announcements was a little overshadowed. Apple has long been a supporter of education, as Tim Cook pointed out in today’s keynote, and one part of today’s announcement will undoubtedly be of interest to students but is pretty big news for enterprise Mac users.

Apple’s iWork suite is going to go head-to-head with Google and Microsoft with its new real-time collaboration features. The iWork suite — Pages, Numbers and Keynote — are finally getting a feature that will put iWork into direct competition with Google Documents, and of course Microsoft’s Office 365. iWork’s real-time collaboration tools were even demoed live on stage.

Recommended Videos

Yep, you can work on documents, spreadsheets, and Keynote stacks with co-workers or classmates in real-time.

The collaboration tools were designed with education and business in mind, but Apple played up the education angle during the keynote, bringing out VP Susan Prescott to discuss the education-facing offerings. Apple revealed the new feature in a brief on-stage demo, which showed a few people working on a Keynote stack.

Of particular interest for iPhone and iPad owners, the new collaboration tools will be cross-platform. You’ll be able to collaborate on documents from your iPhone, from your iPad, or from your Mac.

Naturally, Apple was a little coy when it came to a release date, stating that the collaboration features will be coming to iWork’s Pages, Numbers and Keynote “soon,” but shied away from any concrete release dates.

It’s been a big year for Apple’s education tools, with the release of Apple Classroom and the massive success of Apple’s education outreach efforts — which VP Susan Prescott highlighted during the announcement of the iWork collaboration tools.

Apple’s contribution to President Obama’s ConnectED initiative has been extended to 114 schools, including classroom and device support for 4500 teachers, to whom Apple has donated MacBooks and iPads for use in the classroom.

Jaina Grey
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jaina Grey is a Seattle-based journalist with over a decade of experience covering technology, coffee, gaming, and AI. Her…
ASUS Zenbook Duo UX8407AA review: Two screens finally earned their place in my bag
Two machines are definitely better than one, but on the same laptop? Asus nailed it, but you must be willing to pay for the convenience.
ASUS Zenbook Duo has two displays

See at Amazon

Two displays on a laptop once sounded like an elaborate solution waiting for the right problem. ASUS has spent the past few generations steadily proving otherwise. After using the latest Zenbook Duo (2026) UX8407AA for over two weeks, I started arranging my daily routine around that second display. 

Read more
How Claude helped my 65-year-old dad finally ditch his handwritten ledgers
AI has a lot to answer for, but this one small win is hard to argue with, at least for me.
Claude app on iPhone

My dad has owned a small business for as long as I can remember, and for just as long, he's kept his books the old-fashioned way. Every sale gets written down by hand so he can file his taxes later. The problem is that his accountant needs this data in Excel, and my dad, who didn’t grow up around computers, has never learned how to use it.

For years, his workaround was paying someone to manually type his handwritten entries into a spreadsheet. It worked, but it was adding additional cost to his business, which he wanted to avoid, but couldn't.

Read more
AI’s energy tax was already concerning. Research says AI agents are over hundred times worse
AI agents could consume 136 times more energy than today's AI, study finds
AI agents

The AI industry's soaring electricity demand has already become a growing concern for governments, utilities, and technology companies. But a new study suggests the next generation of artificial intelligence could make that problem significantly worse.

Researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) have published what they describe as the first comprehensive analysis of the energy cost of AI agents - AI systems capable of reasoning, planning, and completing tasks autonomously. Their findings show that these systems can consume up to 136.5 times as much energy per query as conventional generative AI models, raising fresh questions about whether the infrastructure supporting tomorrow's AI is ready for what's coming.

Read more