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Microsoft Office Web Apps Enters The Cloud

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Microsoft yesterday announced the launch of an 'invite only' preview of Office Web Apps, the long-anticipated competitor to Google Apps. A public beta is expected to follow later this year.



The Office Web Apps Technical Preview program will include lightweight, web versions of MS Word, MS Excel, MS PowerPoint, and One Note (OneNote and other apps, along with further integration with Office 2010, will be available later) and can be accessed through Windows Live.


The Technical Preview is available in English and Japanese, with additional languages to be added later.

A Microsoft spokesperson said the early Technical Preview program is designed to collect additional customer feedback prior to the broad release of the service before the official launch next year. Office Web Apps will be available for PCs and Macs and will be able to run on Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari, he said.

The full feature set for Office Web Apps will be available in the first half of 2010, and offered in three ways, according to Microsoft. Windows Live customers will have access to Office Web Apps on Windows Live SkyDrive. Office Web Apps will be available to Office 2010 volume licensing business customers, hosted with Microsoft SharePoint Server on-premises. Also, businesses will have access to Office Web Apps through Microsoft Online Services.

A recent study showed that around one in five organizations use Google apps to some extent. Though most of the times, this is in conjunction with MS Office, it does show that organizations are waking up to the flexibility that web-based productivity suites provide. Google's efforts have of course been hampered due to inhibitions on the part of IT managers, but a recognized brand like Microsoft Windows 7 might find getting acceptance easier.

Office Web Apps could provide Microsoft with the opportunity to knock Google out of competition in the office productivity solutions space. Of course it depends on how good a product Microsoft has created and what kind of value proposition they will be providing to consumers.

Source: cxotoday.com

Google To Release New Web Browser, Plans To Gain Share

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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc has rolled out a new version of its Chrome Web browser and a version of the Mac browser for mainstream users will be available within months, as the company moves to double Chrome's market share.
Almost exactly one year into Google's high-profile entry into the browser market dominated by Microsoft Corp, the Internet search giant is a distant No. 4, with a market share of roughly 2.8 percent.

Google Updates Browser For Google, Chrome is more than simply a browser, but part of a grand strategy to create a new Web-based operating system that could one day challenge Microsoft control of the computer software market.

The Internet search company is readying a battery of updates, along with efforts to forge new distribution partnerships it hopes will soon make Chrome a much more significant player.

"If at the two-year birthday we're not at least 5 percent (market share), I will be exceptionally disappointed. And if at the three year birthday we're not at 10 percent, I will be exceptionally disappointed," Chrome Engineering Director Linus Upson said.

He noted the internal goals are even more aggressive than doubling share every year.

A much-anticipated Mac version of Chrome, currently only available for testing, will be released by the year's end, Google Product Management Vice President Sundar Pichai said recently during the same interview with Reuters at Google's headquarters in Mountain View, California.

Version 3.0 of Chrome for PCs, released on Tuesday, brings improvements to the browser's interface, including faster performance and "themes" that allow users to customize how the browser looks.

Analysts say Chrome's focus on performance has won it fans among the technologically savvy, but say the company needs to do more as it strives to broaden the product's appeal beyond the 30 million users Google currently claims.

"For people that care about it (speed), they've already made that switch," said Forrester Research analyst Sheri McLeish. "By and large, it's a high hurdle to get people to pick-up and change technology they've been using for a while."

According to market research firm Net Applications, Internet Explorer had roughly 67 percent of the worldwide browser market in August, while the Mozilla foundation's Firefox had 23 percent and Apple Inc's Safari browser had 4 percent.

The fact that Microsoft's Internet Explorer comes pre- installed on Windows PCs is another key obstacle facing Chrome, said Gartner analyst Ray Valdes.

Google recently signed a deal with Sony Corp to pre-install Chrome on certain Sony PCs, allowing it to reach a potentially new pool of users. Pichai said Google is talking with all the major PC manufacturers about similar deals, although he declined to provide any details.

While the Chrome browser does not contribute any revenue to Google -- which generated nearly $22 billion in revenue last year -- the product plays an important strategic role at the company.

In addition to Google's oft-cited credo that anything that improves the online experience will ultimately benefit its Internet advertising business, Google also sees Chrome as an important plank in developing online software such as email and word processing, which it refers to as "Apps," or applications. The software is free to consumers, but Google sells enterprise- grade versions to corporations.

Sorces : reuters.com (Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Andre Grenon)

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