

Still, you can’t buy a standalone copy of the Polaris app like you can with Office Home and Student 2016 (which costs $150, the equivalent of almost two years of Office 365 Personal). But anything graphic-intensive, such as a Slide document, will eat up that limit fast.įrom a pricing standpoint, however, it’s a great deal. Even the Polaris Office “Pro” version, at $5.99 per month, is cheaper than Microsoft’s Office 365 Personal option, which costs $6.99 per month.

POLARIS OFFICE PRO PLUS
While 60MB is nothing in terms of photos or apps, it’s still a pretty big number where Word files are concerned-some of my stories are just 20KB in size, and this blog post in Word (the text plus the embedded graphics, but without headers, comments, or embedded scripts) comes out to 279KB. Lee said that of the beta users who’ve encountered this, between 30 to 40 percent agree to pay. After that, according to Polaris vice-president of marketing John Lee, a popup will appear, restricting you to viewing documents unless you begin paying $3.99/month or $40 per year. You can “use” up to 60MB of files per month on Polaris Office, for free. The difference is that Polaris charges you on a use basis. But if you want to use the app on a regular basis, Polaris asks you to pay. The same goes for Polaris Office: You can look at any Office document you want, for free. If you want to actually buy a cone, it will cost you. Visit an ice cream parlor, and chances are the person behind the counter will offer you a free taste.

Polaris Office’s Slide, which can open and edit Microsoft.
