One major addition to the suite is, a Web-based collaboration tool that allows users to share documents created in any one of the three iWork applications. One interesting note: The updates are largely application-specific, unlike the iWork ’08 release, which included general interface updates across all three apps. While the updates may not wow current iWork users, each application got some worthy changes, easily justifying the US$79 price tag on iWork ’09 - or the $49 charge if you’re buying it along with a new Mac. All three applications in the suite - the Pages word processor, Numbers, and Keynote, Apple’s presentation app - received notable updates, but they tended to fine-tune and complement the existing feature set rather than introduce radical changes. By contrast, this year’s move to iWork ’09, unveiled at last month’s Macworld Expo, feels much more evolutionary than revolutionary. The last time Apple updated its iWork productivity suite, it included a number of revolutionary advances over previous versions - especially the inclusion of the Numbers spreadsheet application.
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