Now that it's out of preview, Office 365 users in 213 markets will get access to Sway. Early testers include teachers who've used Sway for building class lessons, artists using it for their personal portfolios and musicians like Daria Musk, who documented the creation of a song on the service (embedded above). Microsoft also added the ability to co-edit Sways with others, based on user feedback.
WHAT IS THE MICROSOFT SWAY APP WINDOWS 10
You can take photos, video and notes from a Windows 10 or iOS device (an Android app is coming soon) and plug them into a Sway presentation later on. Sure, you could make a stylish web page or a well-designed presentation in plenty of other apps, but Sway's big draw is its ease of use. Sway's new integration with Docs also gives you one place to share all of your presentations (you can also embed them right into any web page). The online Sway editor can do everything that the Windows 10 and iOS apps do, and it also has the benefit of being accessible by any platform with a web browser. The Sway Windows 10 app should make it easier for users of the new OS to build and manage their projects, though Microsoft reps were clear that Sway isn't moving away from its focus on the web. In many ways, it's also like a modern Content Management Service like those offered by Squarespace and Medium, allowing you to just plug in content and get a beautiful final product. Much like Edge, the company's new Windows 10 browser, it's as if Microsoft went back to the drawing board and came up with a new type of presentation app for our multi-device age.
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In a nutshell, Sway lets you create stylized presentations that are easily viewable across phones, tablets and computers. That's a surprising amount of progress for an app that initially seemed like a less capable PowerPoint for the web.
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On top of that, Sway is also one of the services Microsoft has integrated into Docs, its new online document sharing service. Today, Microsoft announced that it's bringing the app out of preview mode (the company's designation for a beta test), and it's launching a dedicated Sway app for Windows 10. Sway, Microsoft's app for building well-designed presentations on the web, is beginning to seem like more than just a mere experiment.