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Google Apps to take on PowerPoint

Slimy   on 17 April 2007 - 22:47 · 8 comments & 4211 views

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Google CEO Eric Schmidt announced the web search giant will be adding a presentations application to Docs & Spreadsheets. Docs & Spreadsheets will now feature a word processor, a spreadsheet, and a presentations application, but Schmidt said the suite isn't a direct competitor to Office because Docs & Spreadsheets doesn't have all of Office's functionality. Instead, it's more focused on Web collaboration than Office, which is a desktop-centric product. Collaboration, Schmidt said, "is the killer application." Docs & Spreadsheets is free, unlike Office. The presentations application will be delivered in the U.S. summer timeframe, said Jonathan Rochelle, product manager of Google Docs & Spreadsheets. He expects that as soon as it becomes available, the presentation application will also become part of Google Apps, the company's communication and collaboration suite for organizations. Google Apps includes Gmail and other hosted services, including Docs & Spreadsheets. Google Apps has a free version and fee-based version.

Google decided to add a presentations component to Docs & Spreadsheets as a result of user demand, Rochelle said, adding that Google isn't providing details of the application's features and functionality yet. The presentations component will have import and export capabilities for Microsoft's PowerPoint, in the same way that the word processor and spreadsheet applications have those capabilities for Office's Word and Excel, respectively, said Rajen Sheth, product manager in Google's enterprise unit. Google also announced it has acquired Tonic Systems, a company based in San Francisco and Melbourne, Australia, that has technology to create presentations and converting documents.

News source: InfoWorld

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 8 additional comments
#1 mattrobs on 17 Apr 2007 - 22:54
It better be well designed. The last thing we need is more half-arsed-looking presentations.
#2 Express on 17 Apr 2007 - 23:10
I am not enthusiastic about the online apps idea.
This seems like one more avenue to gather information about its users and built-up the database about individuals.
(1 reply) #3 Galley on 18 Apr 2007 - 00:15
It seems to me that only Apple's Keynote is good enough to be the basis of a critically-acclaimed documentary.
#3.1 QuarterSwede on 18 Apr 2007 - 18:50
I was thinking along the same lines.
#4 +CrimsonRedMk on 18 Apr 2007 - 01:13
You know, if someone made this as a dowwnloadable client that could save both on the users' HD and the Internet, or a combo of both...that would be AWESOME! hint hint**
#5 guruparan on 18 Apr 2007 - 07:31
Spending some amount to get Office 2007 is far more better than wasting bandwidth to do my idiotic powerpoint 97 like presentation in web..
#6 C_Guy on 18 Apr 2007 - 14:51
LOL, yeah because their Excel killer did SO well...

This is getting sad. How about you stick to what you do best Google and stop embarassing yourself.
#7 cloudstrife13 on 18 Apr 2007 - 17:12
I thought Google was already doing this in other ways, I remember reading something about them having a bunch of employees go to help out openoffice.

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