I have tried to do some actual work using the Word mobile and I find it so poorly featured and clumsy that I just use the online version in a browser instead (I have an iPad so I can open a kinda-sorta desktop browser). Which also is frustrating compared with the desktop app.

I'm getting this message when I occasionally try to access Word online on my desktop on Microsoft Edge: "Sorry, Microsoft Word Mobile Viewer ran into a problem opening this document in a browser. To view this document please open it in the desktop version of Microsoft word compatible application." Image below:


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It usually fixes itself if I try again after a few hours but it's happening more and more frequently, and for longer periods of time. I'm accessing this on the latest Microsoft Edge browser on a Windows 11 desktop. This occurs for all Word documents that I have created and that have been shared with me. This DOES work if I open documents in desktop Word application, and on Chrome/Firefox. This only occurs on the Edge browser. I get similar messages for PowerPoint and Excel when this error is occurring. Edge seems to think my desktop computer is a mobile device and trying to open documents in a mobile version.

Do you want to add a picture to that Word document while you're on the go? Luckily, you can insert images easily on the Word mobile apps for Android and iOS, and this wikiHow article will show you how.

Second issues are regarding editing itself.

Let's assume I am working in the "copy of foo-01" of before, or in any brand-new created Word file.

If I use the rotor positioned on Lines, flicking up and down does not read line by line; it lets cursor stay on the same line. This is the first.

Then, input Braille screen gives me no audible feedback on what I'm writing, I'm forced to use traditional virtual qwerty and consequently I'm much slower to write. This of Input Braille comes with most recent Word update.

Then, hardware keyboard. I have a Bluetooth Logitech k380 connected both with iPhone and iPad.

Well, with Microsoft Word I do not manage to edit the file using traditional editing modes, that is, turning quicknav off and use option+shift+arrows to select words, or shift+arrows to select characters, and so on.

Review: The panel that opens when you tap this is particularly useful for a document that you are collaborating with other people on. You can scroll through the Review panel to go over and respond to comments made by collaborators. Spell-check and word-count tools are here, too.

Word count is pretty basic and important. It is frustrating to see info in docs and the forum that makes me think word count should be somewhere in the mobile app when the reality appears to be the opposite.

Hello all - could appreciate some help with this. 


I'm trying to force 'Customer' to be a single word on mobile. Fixes I found online recommended HTML injections (like and ) but it looks like HubSpot removes these when I save the email. The rest of the email is responsive, but this particular word is just not cooperating.

Which would stop the word break as they're looking for. It wouldn't be usable with dynamic content, as Anton points out, the content could break the container. But in this specific instance as the word "Connections" isn't wrapping then the smaller word "Customer" shouldn't break the container.


Getting email to work across platforms is of course...the worst, especially when you want custom stuff. So again, I'd generally agree with Anton that the simplier you can keep it the better!

Hello! Thanks for the tip! It looks like these push 'Customer' onto another line even on the web version, though. Is there a way to make the change only on the mobile version, or am I just implementing this wrong?

For example: Outlook online is completly different than Outlook on Windows, different than Outlook on OSX... and Gmail - run. If you love your life - don't try to optimize something custom(modules or so) for Gmail. It's the worst thing on earth. I've spend several weeks working non-stop on optimizing a drag&drop email just for Gmail. And when you think "yay - it's working". Better check the Gmail app on your mobile and realize you're far from done

Without the mobile view, it is nearly impossible to read or edit Word files on a phone. Starting with my Note 8, the button that turns mobile view on or off would randomly disappear. I searched Google and read countless posts that never helped. I reinstalled the app, reset my phone and everything in between.

late 15c. (Caxton), "capable of movement, capable of being moved, not fixed or stationary," from Old French mobile (14c.), from Latin mobilis "movable, easy to move; loose, not firm," figuratively, "pliable, flexible, susceptible, nimble, quick; changeable, inconstant, fickle," contraction of *movibilis, from movere "to move" (from PIE root *meue- "to push away"). Sociology sense of "able to move into different social levels" is by 1927. Mobile home "large trailer permanently parked and used as a residence" is recorded by 1936. Mobile phone is by 1983.

early 15c. in astronomy, "outer sphere of the universe" (the primum mobile), from mobile (adj.); the artistic sense "abstract sculpture consisting of parts suspended so as to move," associated with Alexander Calder, is by 1939, perhaps a shortening of mobile sculpture (1936). Now-obsolete sense of "the common people, the rabble" (1670s, short for Latin mobile vulgus) led to mob (n.). Middle English had moble, moeble (mid-14c.) "movable goods, personal property," from Old French moble, meuble, from the Latin adjective, but in 16c. this was replaced by furniture.

1680s, "disorderly part of the population, rabble, common mass, the multitude, especially when rude or disorderly; a riotous assemblage," slang shortening of mobile, mobility "common people, populace, rabble" (1670s, probably with a conscious play on nobility), from Latin mobile vulgus "fickle common people" (the Latin phrase is attested c. 1600 in English), from mobile, neuter of mobilis "fickle, movable, mobile" (see mobile (adj.)).

Problem I'm having is that we can't edit Word or Excel documents from the mobile apps, even though I think we should be able to. Am I incorrect on this? Do I need to change something in O365 somewhere?


The Review tab has spell check, proofing and language options, word and smart lookup from the references group, commenting, track changes, and options to view the changes in the document.

A mobile device (or handheld computer), also referred to as a digital assistant (or DA), is a computer small enough to hold and operate in the hand. Mobile devices typically have a flat LCD or OLED screen, a touchscreen interface, and digital or physical buttons. They may also have a physical keyboard. Many mobile devices can connect to the Internet and connect with other devices, such as car entertainment systems or headsets, via Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular networks, or near-field communication. Integrated cameras, the ability to place and receive voice and video telephone calls, video games, and Global Positioning System (GPS) capabilities are common. Power is typically provided by a lithium-ion battery. Mobile devices may run mobile operating systems that allow third-party applications to be installed and run.

By 2010, mobile devices often contained sensors such as accelerometers, magnetometers and gyroscopes, allowing the detection of orientation and motion. Mobile devices may provide biometric user authentication, such as face recognition or fingerprint recognition.

Strictly speaking, many so-called mobile devices are not mobile. It is the host that is mobile, i.e., a mobile human host carries a non-mobile smartphone device. An example of a true mobile computing device, where the device itself is mobile, is a robot. Another example is an autonomous vehicle.

Accompanied refers to an object being loosely bound and accompanying a mobile host, e.g., a smartphone can be carried in a bag or pocket but can easily be misplaced.[2] Hence, mobile hosts with embedded devices such as an autonomous vehicle can appear larger than pocket-sized.

The most common size of a mobile computing device is pocket-sized, but other sizes for mobile devices exist. Mark Weiser, known as the father of ubiquitous computing,[3] referred to device sizes that are tab-sized, pad, and board sized,[4] where tabs are defined as accompanied or wearable centimeter-sized devices, e.g. smartphones, phablets and pads are defined as hand-held decimeter-sized devices. If one changes the form of the mobile devices in terms of being non-planar, one can also have skin devices and tiny dust-sized devices.[2] Dust refers to miniaturized devices without direct HCI interfaces, e.g., micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS), ranging from nanometers through micrometers to millimeters. See also Smart dust. Skin: fabrics based upon light emitting and conductive polymers and organic computer devices. These can be formed into more flexible non-planar display surfaces and products such as clothes and curtains, see OLED display. Also, see smart device.

Although mobility is often regarded as synonymous with having wireless connectivity, these terms are different. Not all network access by mobile users, applications, and devices needs to be via wireless networks and vice versa. Wireless access devices can be static and mobile users can move between wired and wireless hotspots such as in Internet cafs.[2] Some mobile devices can be used as mobile Internet devices to access the Internet while moving, but they do not need to do this and many phone functions or applications are still operational even while disconnected from the Internet. 2351a5e196

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