| App Store category: Productivity | |
| Current price: $9.99 | Our rating: 7/10 |
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Exclusively designed for the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch, Keynote makes creating a world-class presentation — complete with animated charts and transitions — as simple as touching and tapping. Use full-screen view to present on your iPad, iPhone or iPod touch. If you’re presenting to a large audience, connect your device to a projector or HDTV and preview your slides and notes using the presenter display.
Keynote available in the App Store
Keynote Screenshots
Best Reviews on Keynote
tabletpcreview.com:
Apple Keynote for iPad Review
Intro: Keynote for iPad is part of the iWork Office Suite for iPad, which aims to turn this tablet computer into a productivity tool for mobile professionals. Keynote allows you to create, edit, and share multimedia presentations with graphics, animations, and charts...
Final words: Like Pages and Numbers, Keynote is very slick and polished. Whether or not it will meet your needs depends on your purpose. If you're a casual or home user who wants to create and share some fun presentations on the go, you'll likely be pleased. If you're a business professional who wants to review presentations on the road or share them with others in intimate meetings, using the iPad as a shared display, Keynote will work well for you. If you're a true power user, you may be disappointed by the lack of features, the occasional import/export hiccups and the relative lack of advanced features.
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Read full review at tabletpcreview.com
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Keynote Video Review
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More Reviews on 'Keynote'
macworld.com:
Keynote Review - Presentation app improves on the iPad, struggles on smaller screens
Intro: When Apple introduced Keynote for the iPad last year, it did a terrific job translating the desktop application’s functions to the tablet’s multi-touch interface. But the iPad imposed limitations that made the iOS version less-than-ideal for creating or editing presentations on the go...
Final words: Keynote will become an excellent presentation tool for iPad users. On smaller iOS devices, the small screen will remain a substantial hindrance until fold-out displays debut. For the time being, Keynote is worth having on your iPhone or iPod touch when you don’t have a better alternative.
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Read full review at macworld.com
macobserver.com:
Keynote for iPad is Necessary and Sufficient
Intro: The Keynote app for the iPad is a necessary addition to the suite of apps for most users. Even if one is not often preparing formal presentations, it’s a great way to collect and manage information from the photo library — or view already created content in, say, PowerPoint (.PPT, .PPTX, .PPS, .PPSX) It doesn’t have the power of its big brother on the Mac, but it doesn’t need to. It is supremely sufficient...
Final words: Some day, perhaps in 2014, when we’re all using fourth generation iPads for content creation, Keynote for iPad version 5 will be super robust. But not today. If you understand the scope and limitations of this app, you won’t be disappointed. However, if you pour over it, stressing it to the limits, and expecting the same robustness you get out of the Mac version you may be disappointed. Except for file transfers, I think Apple hit the sweet spot with this first version.
/macobserver.com/
Read full review at macobserver.com
appchronicles.com:
KEYNOTE FOR IPAD REVIEW: SERIOUSLY LACKING
Intro: I use Microsoft PowerPoint every week at work. As such, I have a very specific idea of what a good presentation app should bring to it. In reviewing Keynote, the presentation arm of Apple’s iWork for iPad suite, I began with a single question: how well could Keynote work as part of my daily routine? Unfortunately, the answer to that question is “not very well.” Keynote is a gorgeous program marred by some severe flaws...
Final words: In the end, I have to judge this not only on its standalone merits, but also on its usefulness to the vast majority of people who may want to use it. And that majority will probably need it to export in PowerPoint format before they ever find this app useful. Sure, it can read PowerPoint files, but there are cheaper options for that. Until Keynote can play nice with PowerPoint, it isn’t a useful productivity app for many of us; and until it becomes more fully featured, especially in the terms of creating and applying new and consistent formats across slides, its use as a presentation creator in general is limited. For now, I cannot recommend Keynote for iPad to anyone who uses PowerPoint in their daily affairs. But I will eagerly be looking out for future updates.
/appchronicles.com/
Read full review at appchronicles.com
bestappsite.com:
Keynote for iPad
Intro: One of my hopes for the iPad is that I would use it for presenting my photography to clients, friends and family members. While the built-in Photos App is great for doing basic slideshows, you can do so much more with Keynote including adding text, graphics, movies, sounds and wide variety of transitions and builds...
Final words: Although I have all three iWork Apps (Keynote, Pages and Keynote), Keynote is my favorite by far and certainly the one that I'll use the most of the 3. I do wish that there was WiFi support for wireless document transfers then I'd gladly give it a 5!
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techradar.com:
Apple Keynote (iPad) review - How can a piece of software be so powerful yet so limited?
Intro: While Apple's new iWork suite (three separate productivity apps) for the iPad is an impressive technical and usability achievement for a mobile device, it quickly begins to frustrate...
Final words: We had hoped it would at least be a decent player for Mac-created presentations that you could make last-minute edits to on the way to a meeting, but it's not even there yet.
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knowyourmobile.com:
Keynote for iPad review
Intro: Keynote is Apple's equivalent to Microsoft PowerPoint and is specially developed to work well on the iPad thanks to the large display and touch screen accuracy. Keynote is one of the three applications in Apple's iWork suite, along with the Word-like Pages and Excel-like Numbers. All work amazingly well, but that's not surprising as they're developed by Apple...
Final words: Like all Apple developed applications for the iPad, Keynote is massively intuitive and simple to use. The most complicated part is making it look good, but that's more down to artistic ability than the application's functionality.
/knowyourmobile.com/
Read full review at knowyourmobile.com





