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February 22, 2007

It's Official: Google Takes on Microsoft Office, Servers

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Over the past few years, Google has repeatedly denied that it ever intended to take on Microsoft in the lucrative market for office productivity software. But this week the online search giant delivered a shot across Microsoft's bow, delivering an Internet-based suite of productivity services that does just that.

Dubbed Google Apps, the new suite of services combined previously available email, instant messaging, calendaring, word processing, and spreadsheet solutions with an affordable corporate-oriented licensing scheme that vastly undercuts Microsoft's more expensive but dramatically more powerful offerings. Google's offering will likely be of most interest to cash-strapped smaller companies, but Google is clearly aiming for the high-end as well.

Google is offering two versions of Google Apps. A free version will be ad-supported and include 2 GB of email storage space, while Google Apps Premium, priced at $50 per user per year, will provide 10 GB of email storage space. Both versions of the suite include Gmail email, Google Calendar and Google Talk instant messaging capabilities that are tied to custom domains as well as access to the Google Docs (word processing) and Google Spreadsheets Web-based productivity services and Page Creator, a Web-based Web page creation tool.

Analysts say that Google Apps is the most potentially damaging competition to Microsoft Office since Lotus fielded its office productivity suite in the mid-1990s. But Google is taking a different approach than Microsoft's traditional competitors: Instead of providing a yet another desktop-based office productivity suite that mimics Microsoft Office, Google's services are only available via the Internet. This ties into Google's strengths and exposes a weakness in Microsoft's strategy: Though the software goliath offers both desktop software and Internet-based services, it has done nothing to move the core capabilities of Microsoft Office to the Web.

For Microsoft, the ramifications of Google's offerings are immense: While few of Microsoft's biggest customers will likely move to Google, many smaller companies are sure to test the waters, lured by Google's low pricing. But Microsoft still retains some important advantages: The Office applications work offline and are far richer and feature-packed than Google's offerings, and Google's ability to support corporations is a big question mark. But this first version of Google Apps is obviously just the first shot in what promises to be an interesting battle. We can expect Google to expand its services and Microsoft to begin offering more compelling Web-based Office solutions.

For more information about Google Apps, please visit the Google Web site.

End of Article



Reader Comments
This may attract a few of the Mom and Pop businesses out there, but no large corporation will trust Google to provide applications and data storage, let alone poke holes in the corporate firewalls to allow the connectivity.

Even some of the Mom and Pop's will balk at this...after all, Google is the company that owns MySpace, and a good many parents already don't like them just for that reason.

Also, the support structure comes to mind...imagine this...Good old Bob at the local Mom and Pop grocery store in small town Montana is creating next week's ad to be put in the local Mom and Pop newspaper(you know the one...David Letterman features stories from them all the time). All of a sudden, the cable modem dies because George cut a line while digging a ditch a mile outside of town and Bob gets some 404 type error in Internet Exploder. What does he do? Who does he call? He'd be better off using Open Office if he is looking for a MS Office alternative. It is a good fit in situations like this and for the basic home user.

--tayme

tayme February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


agreed. no corporation of any size should trust Google with their information, considering their insidious [non-]privacy policy. where will it end? selling corporate trade secrets to the competition to make billions more?

MUAHAHAHAHAH!

XP

Waethorn February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Funny, I thought Fox owned MySpace.

stevejobs February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"...I thought Fox owned MySpace."

I could be wrong. I thought that I read somewhere that Google had acquired it.

tayme February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


News Corp. (Fox) owns MySpace. Good acquired Youtube.

bonchsucks February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Oops, I can't type. I meant, Google acquired Youtube.

bonchsucks February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Small companies, especially those that already advertise through the AdSense program will probably jump at this opportunity. Most of the bigger ones definitely won't trust Google with their information. Anyway, it looks like this may dent MS's share.

shark47 February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


likely someone mistook the "powered by Google" line beside the search bar.

XP

Waethorn February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


You are probably right...the only time I see MySpace is over my kid's shoulder...I must have assumed, and we all know what that does ;-)

--tayme

tayme February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


There's a disturbing secret as to what (Office) is really all about.....I won't get into it, but do some math and some heady research and maybe you will catch my drift.....even you will find it rather disturbing, as pro (Microsoft) as you seem to appear.

shark47 February 22, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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