• Technology Ratings
  • Desktop Computer Ratings
  • Digital Camera Ratings
  • Laptop Ratings
  • Smartphone Ratings
  • Tablet Ratings
  • Printer Ratings
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Forum Login
  • Media Kit
TabletPCReview.com
  • HOME
  • REVIEWS
    • ALL REVIEWS
    • Tablet PC Reviews
    • eReader Reviews
    • TOP BRANDS
    • Apple Tablet PC Reviews
    • Samsung Tablet PC Reviews
    • Motorola Tablet PC Reviews
    • HP Tablet PC Reviews
    • Dell Tablet PC Reviews
    • Lenovo Tablet PC Reviews
    • RECENT REVIEWS
    • Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 Review
    • The latest in Samsung's pen-based tablet line, the Galaxy Note 8.0 matches a medium-sized screen wit...

    • HP ElitePad 900 Review
    • The HP ElitePad 900 is an enterprise-grade tablet aimed at flexibility with a slew of accessories an...

  • NEWS
    • FIND NEWS
    • All Tablet PC News
    • Tablet PC News Archives
    • NEWS CATEGORIES
    • Apple iPad News
    • Google Android News
    • Windows Tablet News
    • eReader News
    • BlackBerry News
    • RECENT NEWS
    • Google Drive for Android Gets Card UI, Better Scanner
    • Google's popular cards feature plays a prominent role in a newly updated Google for Android app. Goo...

    • AMD Bringing Out Temash Processors Designed for Windows Tablets
    • Intel has some new competition for tablet processors --AMD has just unveiled a new series of x86 chi...

  • SHOP
    • SHOP
    • Tablet PC Price Search
    • COMPARE
    • Android Tablets
    • Windows Tablets
    • iPad (IOS) Tablets
    • webOS Tablets
    • Blackberry OS Tablets
    • eReader Tablets
    • POPULAR PRODUCTS
    • Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0
      Amazon Marketplace $369.99Amazon $379.99C.J. Banks $399.99
    • SEE ALL POPULAR TABLET PCs
  • DISCUSSIONS
    • TABLET PC DISCUSSIONS
    • See All Tablet PC Forums
    • POPULAR FORUMS
    • What Tablet PC Should I Buy?
    • Apple/iOS Forum
    • Hewlett Packard Forum
    • Lenovo (IBM) Forum
    • Software Forum
    • RECENT DISCUSSION
    • » General info:Selecting a good tablet or stylus for sketching
    • » "What Tablet PC Should I buy?" I filled in the form?
    • » Tablet to Replace Texbooks
    • » Tablet for annotating PDFs (presently Apple ipad vs. Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1)
    • » Which one of them is better
  • VIDEO
    • TABLET PC VIDEOS
    • View All Tablet PC Videos
    • RECENT TABLET PC VIDEOS
  • APPS
  • ACCESSORIES
  • DEALS
  • BUSINESS

OnLive Desktop Review

By Matthew Elliott, TabletPCReview Staff | | 9430 Reads
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
Email this article Print Discuss      Tweet

If you find that your iPad is becoming more than just an entertainment device and something you are actually using to get work done, then you might want to give OnLive Desktop a whirl. This free app provides a cloud-based Windows 7 PC, letting you create and edit Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents. Most impressively, the app delivers a virtual Windows 7 environment and these three core Office apps without requiring any previous Microsoft purchase. Also, the app requires nothing in the way of setup beyond signing up for a free OnLive account.

OnLive Desktop

Along with the app's simplicity comes a few limitations, such as the inability to open docs in your Dropbox account or any doc not previously uploaded to OnLive Desktop's sync folder. And you won't find Internet Explorer or any other Web browser, though iPad users need only to exit the app and launch Safari to browse the Web. For its intended utility of letting you manipulate basic Office apps on the iPad, OnLive Desktop works well.

If the name OnLive sounds familiar, it's because this app comes from the same folks who pioneered cloud gaming with the OnLive gaming service, which is available for Android tablets now and coming soon for iOS. For this business app, OnLive simply stripped away the games and granted access to the Windows desktop.

Setup and Interface

Before you can use the app, you will need to sign up for an OnLive account. When you launch the app, you'll need to log in with your username and password. You can check a box for the app to remember your information, but the app requires you to hop through the sign-in screen each time you launch it. OnLive describes the app's access as "as available," and I was occasionally denied access during the course of this review. Subsequent attempts after an initial denial were, thankfully, almost always successful.

OnLive Desktop Error

Once you've logged in to OnLive Desktop, you'll see a sparse Windows 7 desktop. Along the left side of the screen are desktop icons for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, along with the Recycle Bin and a Getting Started PowerPoint file. Along the right are three icons: a shortcut for your synced documents, a Windows 7 Touch Pack folder with three touch games and Surface Collage, and a Samples folder with music, photo, video, and Office files. Along the bottom of the screen is the Windows 7 task bar with shortcuts to the three Office apps, the keyboard, Surface Collage, Paint, sticky notes, and the calculator. Windows Media Player is also on board for playing music or video files, and Windows Photo Viewer takes care of your photo-viewing needs. And that's about it. You can't install any new applications, you can't change the wallpaper, and you won't find standard Windows items such as the Control Panel.

OnLive Desktop supports multi-touch gestures, but only in certain spots. For example, you can pinch to zoom and rotate images using the Surface Collage application and the Windows Photo Viewer, but you can't reverse pinch on the calculator to increase its size to make tapping its keys easier. You can initiate a right-click either by the one-finger tap-and-hold method or by doing a quick tap-and-hold with one finger and then tapping with a second finger. And unlike in standard (non-touch) Windows 7, to launch an app or open a document or folder with OnLive Desktop requires not a double click, but a single tap.

Office Apps

The three Office apps -- Word, Excel, and PowerPoint -- are fairly easy to use, but for lengthy Word docs or expansive Excel sheets, you'll want to employ a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse. OnLive Desktop uses the Windows onscreen keyboard, which I find isn't nearly as easy to type on as the standard iPad keyboard. To improve the Windows onscreen keyboard, I suggest you trade out the default Float setting, which gives you a small keyboard you can drag around the screen. Tap the Tools menu option at the top of the keyboard and then choose Docking > Dock at the bottom of the screen. This will give you a keyboard that runs from edge to edge, with slightly larger keys than the floating keyboard.

OnLive Desktop uses the cloud and doesn't store any files on your iPad. With the free account, you get 2GB of online storage space (a Pro account is coming soon that will cost $9.99 a month and provide 50GB of space, the ability to add additional Windows applications, Web browsing, and priority access - iPhone and Android versions are also in the works). Any document you save is stored on OnLive's servers, which you can access from the Documents folder on the desktop of OnLive Desktop.

OnLive Desktop Office

OnLive Desktop should not be confused with a remote desktop app. You can't, for instance, access any files you haven't already uploaded to OnLive. OnLive's Web client makes easy to upload files from any Internet-connected Mac or PC, but if you forget to upload a file, you won't be able to get to it from your iPad. Also, OnLive Desktop does not support iOS's Open In feature, which prevents you from using OnLive Desktop to open any documents saved via Dropbox or another iOS app.

  

Email this article Print Discuss      Tweet
Most Recent News

Google Drive for Android Gets Card UI, Better Scanner
AMD Bringing Out Temash Processors Designed for Windows Tablets
Apple iOS 7 Will Probably Be Unveiled June 10
Related Articles

OnLive Desktop App to Bring Windows 7 to Apple iPad
Microsoft OneNote for Apple iPad Review
OnLive for Tablets Review: Console Gaming On the Go?

Our Most Popular Tablet PC Reviews

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0

    Amazon Marketplace $369.99
    Amazon $379.99
    C.J. Banks $399.99

    Galaxy Note 8.0
  • HP ElitePad 900

    Amazon Marketplace $682.80
    Amazon $659.00
    HP Direct $699.00

    ElitePad 900
  • Dell Latitude 10 Tablet

    Amazon Marketplace $499.49
    Rakuten.com Shopping $492.99
    Rakuten.com Shopping $500.22

    Latitude 10 Tablet
  • Microsoft Surface RT

    Best Buy $599.99

    Surface RT
  • Razer Edge

    Best Buy $1299.99

    Edge
Powered by Shopping.com

Partner Resources

  • Shop Sony Deals!

Today's Promotions

  • Mobile Convergence Comes Home with Higher-Speed, Lower-Cost.
    Click here to learn how Sony Business Store can help you increase your Business Productivity.
  • Uncompromising Gaming Performance
    For a limited time save $100 on the award-winning MSI GT Series gaming notebooks. Redefine your gaming experience.
  • Countdown to COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2013
    COMPUTEX TAIPEI joins the ICT greats who are out to set the trend. To make IT happen, this is the place to see and be seen.
  • ULTRA SMART. ULTRA AFFORDABLE. ULTRABOOK.
    Lenovo Ultrabooks are a statement in style, mobility and productivity. Choose your favorite color and get going. Advertisement
  • Improve Business Productivity
    Make it easier to work remotely or from home. Click to learn more about Emerging Tech For SMB sponsored by Sony Business Store. Advertisement
  • Rugged and reliable Panasonic Toughbook® mobile computers.
    Designing mission-critical tools for the mobile user is how we're engineering a better world.

MORE FEATURED Tablet PC CONTENT

  • Apple iPad mini Review
    The iPad mini is Apple's first attempt at making a smaller tablet to compete with the 7-inch crowd. How did it do?
  • Apple iPad mini vs. Google Nexus 7
    The iPad mini is Apple's slimmer option to the already popular tablet. Considering that the new device is smaller, it is a direct competitor to the Google Nexus 7. So how do the devices match up?
  • Amazon Vs. Google Play: Which Reigns Supreme?
    Amazon and Google built their respective tablets, the Kindle Fire and the Nexus 7, around their content services. But which service has more to offer?
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 Review
    The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is an Android tablet that emphasizes drawing and other stylus-focused features. Here, we take it for a test drive.
  • BlackBerry PlayBook Review
    RIM is walking the fine line between enterprise and consumer tablet with its BlackBerry PlayBook.
  • Tips for Tablet Shopping this Holiday Season
    Some say we're living in the Post-PC Era, when tablets and phones are replacing desktops and laptops. We have suggestions for people who want to join in.
  • Google Nexus 7 Review: Welcome The New 7-Inch Champ
    The Google Nexus 7 has arrived, and with it comes a new standard for consumption tablets: a low price point combined with high-end specs to offer the smoothest media experience possible.
  • Google Android 4.1 vs. Apple iOS 6: Head to Head
    We take a hands-on look at the latest operating systems from Apple and Google, comparing them feature by feature. Good reading for those trying to pick their first tablet.
  • Making Sense of Tablet Specs: A Technology Cheat Sheet
    Pop quiz: What's the difference between a tablet running Android Gingerbread 2.3 with Sense and a tablet with Honeycomb 3.1 and TouchWiz? What's display ppi? What's a dual-core processor? Find out in this tablet cheat sheet, designed to help consumers decipher spec jargon.
  • Technology Guide
  • Desktop Review
  • Digital Camera Review
  • Notebook review
  • BrightHand
  • TabletPCReview
  • Printer Comparison

TechTarget publishes more than 100 focused websites providing quick access to a deep store of news, advice and analysis about the technologies, products and processes crucial
to the jobs of IT pros.


TechTarget Corporate Web Site |  About Us |  Advertising |  Media Kit  |  Site Map |  Contact Us |  Submit Review |  RSS Feeds |  Jobs

All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2000 - 2013, TechTarget |  Read our Privacy Statement