Office Suites for IPad?

I have a keyboard for my iPad. Now I want to use it to write essays, with footnotes and junk. Apple is really trying my patience by not having something readily available that can completely handle and edit MS Office or Open Office files.

Does such an App exist?

Pages?

Quickoffice is one such application, although I haven’t used it on my iPad (which I mostly use for playing games).

Documents to Go. I’ve been using them since the Palm days, and it’s just awesome on the iPad.

My problem with all of aforementioned, with all thanks for posting though, is that none of them, AFAICT, have support for footnotes/endnotes. That’s a big one for me. I shelled out fifteen bucks for quick office last week and I’m not prepared to buy another word processor until someone can offer assurances that I would have better success with the notes!

If this is something I want to use for school, that’s simply not a negotiable point. :slight_smile:

I know that Documents to Go supports at least viewing them. I’ve never tried editing or creating them, though.

There’s always the option to VNC to your desktop machine, and then you literally have every full-scale application that exists at your fingers.

I have splashtop, as well as a free VNC client. Does VNC work remotely? I.e., from somewhere other than my home router?

I bought pages and got it to work. It lets me view footnotes, it lets me cut, copy, and paste them, but not insert new ones…wtf, Apple? :dubious:

Does Google Docs let you do footnotes? It is free and browser-based.

If you set up port forwarding correctly, it does. I tend to do VNC via ssh and do everything through that single port.

It does these ugly blue hyperlink ones, and they don’t look right when you export them. :frowning:

I found that Instant Housecall is a little simpler because you don’t have to do any messing with the router. It uses VNC technology. I recently used it to help my dad with a computer problem at church. If he can figure it out…

You just sign up, and the service handles the forwarding. It may be slower than a true VNC connection, but it sure is easier, and you don’t have to use port forwarding, putting a perpetual hole in your firewall.