Pages gets another welcome feature, the ability to use facing pages with different headers, footers and objects on left and right-facing pages. The own miserly 5GB of free iCloud space has been upped to 200GB for the education space too. The iWork apps also get real-time collaboration with documents stored in Box, the cloud-based file storage service, but only in High Sierra. We’re particularly impressed by the Smart Annotation feature, which enables you to anchor handwritten comments and proofing marks to the appropriate bit of text: if the text moves, so do they. Pages, Numbers and Keynote all benefit from Apple Pencil (and the new Logitech Crayon) support, and it goes beyond being able to scribble or write on the screen – although of course you can do that too.