Google launches Google Spreadsheets
Back in March Google turned some heads with its purchase of Writely, a collaborative web-based word processor. Yesterday it made waves again with Google Spreadsheets, a web-based app whose purpose isn't necessary to explain. Google Spreadsheets is no Excel-killer by any means, but from the ten minutes or so of poking around I've done, it seems a lot nicer than any of its web-based competition like ajaxXLS, Numbler, iRows, or WikiCalc. Like those others, it's naturally full to the brim with Ajax, but I think what sticks out most is how responsive it is and how easy it is to use coming from years of being trained by Excel. There is a bit of JavaScript lag, but not enough to bug me, and the most common Excel keyboard shortcuts are all present. It of course has the requisite import and export features for both .XLS and .CSV files, plus a nice Export HTML function, and you can invite people via e-mail to view or edit your spreadsheets. Google Spreadsheets will have little draw for people who just use Excel to keep track of, say, personal expenses, but if you need easy web-based collaboration in a tidy package and can forego some-well, almost all--of Excel's more advanced features, Google Spreadsheets is worth checking out.
It's been noted many places that Google now has almost an entire Office-alike (sans PowerPoint) in its collection: Gmail/Google Calendar vs. Outlook, Writely vs. Word, Google Spreadsheets vs. Excel, Google Base vs. Access. What they have is a long way from being an Office-killer--in fact, it seems more like a hodge-podge of unconnected tools rather than a suite, and I think integrating these disparate tools is high on Google's to-do list. Whether they're really looking to usurp Microsoft's Office throne is still pretty unknowable in my opinion, but I do hope they're going somewhere with all of this.













Comments
2
Subscribe to commentsMarc OrchantJun 7th 2006 3:10PM
Jordan - unitl they are capable of articulating a roadmap that explains all the time and money they're dumping into these random shots, we'll all be wondering where they're going.
SpenceJun 7th 2006 5:27PM
Oh you KNOW they're going somewhere with all of this. Until Gmail came out, I was a Yahoo! mail user through and through. But over the lifespan of my Yahoo! mail account, I saw features like mail forwarding and POP access slowly migrate to the paid service. Gmail, on the other hand, has continued to add features that have no reason not to be included in a free mail service, as well as some that you would expect to cost a few bucks, all with resounding acclaim from the community. And all of the features that make Gmail great have one thing in common: integration.
Although there is a distinct feeling that each Google product is its own project, there is also foreshadowing of all of them coming together in a suite. For instance, Gmail can detect when an email contains an event and will let you add that event to Google Calendar with a simple click.
If there's one thing I've learned about the guys over at Google, it's that the question is not, "If?" it's, "When?".