Just as with the prior version of Pages and Word, I think Apple has been careful not to come out with a direct replacement for Excel. There's room for both products in this market.
"numbers" appears to be desktop publishing w/ intelligence for limited data sets vs. a "traditional" spreadsheet application. anyone thinking apple was going to directly compete w/ ms office a year into the 5-year guarantee of continued ms office development was kidding themselves. "numbers" is prolly for a target market, not intending to takeover the market.
niche app? maybe. enterprise worthy? prolly so for some functions and markets, but certainly not a 100% replacement for "traditional" spreadsheet apps. "home" spreadhseet app? prolly so.
if it runs faster and better than neooffice, and supports odf files, i'm in.



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