<p>With the introduction of Office 365 Home Premium last year, Microsoft radically changed the way it delivers Office to consumers. Instead of just offering an Office suite that includes a varied number of applications priced anywhere from $140-$400, the software maker wagered you'd pay $100 per year to get access to all of the Office apps and the right to install them on up to 5 PCs, plus extra Skype minutes and OneDrive storage.</p><p>The addition of Skype and OneDrive isn't just a frill. Driven by competition from Google Apps, Microsoft's new approach to Office focuses on making your documents available to you everywhere and facilitating easy collaboration and file sharing.</p><p>So now that we're one year into this new era of Microsoft Office, how is the suite doing? How well do the desktop, Web, and mobile apps work together to keep you productive no matter where you are?</p><p>To find out, we adjusted our workflow to rely solely on Office 2013, Office Online and Office Mobile for Android (Office 365 Home Premium subscription required). Here's how we found the current state of Office collaboration for working together in real time, maintaining a canonical version of your collaborative document, and editing files on the go.Simple sharing and live collaboration</p><p><a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/2105861/one-year-later-microsoft-offices-collaboration-tools-are-still-a-work-in-progress.html">Keep reading...</a></p>