Posted on 06/21/2006 9:51:39 PM PDT by george76
Users are reacting to Google's new online spreadsheet with a big yawn. Is the company searching for a strategy?...
Can there be too much of a good thing? Some Google watchers are beginning to think so.
Leading technology bloggers' reactions to Google Spreadsheets, which allows users to build and share simple Excel-like spreadsheets on line, have ranged from lukewarm to hostile.
Critics are assailing Google's latest offering for having several technical weaknesses.
And, more significantly, they're beginning to question whether Google's long-term strategy in the arena of Web-based software applications is good for the company, for users, and for the Web.
"When is the last time Google released a product that really changed our lives?" asked Michael Arrington...
unlike Microsoft Excel, Google Spreadsheets can't create charts and graphs, and it lacks some of Excel's mathematical capabilities, such as array multiplication.
"It's not an Excel killer," writes Computerworld columnist Richard Ericson. "If you're a financial analyst responsible for consolidating large budget spreadsheets, you're not going to adopt Google Spreadsheets.
Need a chart? Stick with Excel. Ditto for graphics (such as WordArt) or PivotTables."
(Excerpt) Read more at technologyreview.com ...
Google is evil - or at least it's founders are.
Hey, look at that--people realizing that Google doesn't offer anything truly useful besides searching!
lol. You are so right.
Funny!
I started my own private blog, where I do random google searches and post them (Web, Images, Groups, News, etc)
Note: I didn't spam my stupid site
Google stock is a joke. It's grossly overpriced, the P/E is almost 70. They 1.4 billion in net income, less than 1/10 the size of Microsoft, and their stock is over $400 a share. Fear is the only thing keeping that stock afloat.
What price are you shorting at?
You need to fire your IT guys. Spam can easily be filtered on any email system, yes even Microsoft Exchange. We use Exchange and after I purchased and installed Brightmail, our rate of spam hitting the Inbox dropped significantly.
It definitely deserves condolences, from a design and features standpoint. Without getting into a rant, let's just say they could do GMail much better, and with a UI that didn't completely blow.
From what you've described, anything would've been better than your corporate network.
I thought Netscape was going to be the universal desk-top 12 years ago with web-based applications. I wonder what ever happened to Netscape?
Why is there any option other than pornography?
I'm not short on Google, although I wouldn't doubt it's in one of my funds.
I don't think it's about what it is now. I think it's about what it can be. I could see a lot of possibilities in embedding a spreadsheet like this in a web page. Running this as an applet could be cool.
EPIC says it violates both its subscribers' and non-subscribers' privacy.
http://www.epic.org/privacy/gmail/faq.html
Like the Neanderthal, Netscape was out-evolved by another line of descent.. Firefox..
Both came from Mozilla... ( which is still around ) but Netscape was so focused on fighting with Microsoft, they lost sight of what the internet was all about..
I started browsing the internet with Netscape, but reverted to Mozilla..
Then I found Firefox, and have never looked back..
You can certainly tell the difference on this thread between the people who write code and those that maintain it.
Note, I do neither (finance operations geek) but I can tell the difference. Netscape may have been right, just with bad timing - that happens a lot. Microsoft got a lot of their Window's GUI interface from Xerox. Right concept, bad timing.
This is a load of crap. Google has some of the best software on the web. Gmail is my primary mail account now. It absolutely rocks. Everything Microsoft is doing is a reaction to Google.
I agree Gmail rocks.
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