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Hands on: Google Spreadsheets

Posted by Hemos on Mon Jun 12, 2006 09:50 AM
from the reviewing-the-offerings dept.
feminazi writes "Google spreadsheets are more powerful than you might think, according to Richard Ericson. The free, Web-based service doesn't currently offer encryption, but the clean interface has standard drop-down menus, icons and buttons (just when MS is switching to "ribbons"). You can use it to work with existing files and "Formatting is simple, direct and fast. ... Sort, does precisely what you'd expect." Most importantly, it has most of Excel's functions -- including some that aren't listed or documented." We covered the launch of this program last week.

Related Stories

[+] Google Launches Online Spreadsheet System 485 comments
Accommodate Students writes "In a move that is sure to cause even more discussion of Google's intentions to go head-to-head with Microsoft in the Office Suite arena, they have launched a spreadsheet. AP is reporting this as 'Google further invades its rival's territory.' You can share spreadsheets with other users and can chat while you're editing -- multiplayer spreadsheets! It can read both CSV and XLS formats." More from the article: "Google is targeting Office, which generated $2.95 billion in sales and $2.09 billion in profit in Microsoft's third quarter ended March 31. Microsoft plans a new release this year and is trying to get Office into more consumers' hands at a cheaper price while persuading businesses to buy higher-priced versions."
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  • spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Funny)

    by Douglas Simmons (628988) * on Monday June 12 2006, @09:51AM (#15516847)
    (http://assambassador.com/)
    Anybody nervous that Google may be letting their eye off the ball (their original business model) by going off on these tangential projects?
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:4, Funny)

      by Gulthek (12570) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:53AM (#15516864)
      (Last Journal: Thursday April 25 2002, @09:03PM)
      Why nervous? Oh no, a successful company is continuing to expand?

      Why should anyone be nervous when a company continues to do what it does well?
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MrSquirrel (976630) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:56AM (#15516879)
      What about when Sears created the Discover card (which is now its own company and Sears' future looks gloomy) or when the Wright brothers built a flying machine in their bicycle shop. It's a fundamental of business -- change is fact: you can either be part of it or watch it happen. Google is simply applying their resources to expand the productivity they offer the average user. I like it.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ceejayoz (567949) <cj@ceejayoz.com> on Monday June 12 2006, @09:58AM (#15516893)
      (http://ceejayoz.com/ | Last Journal: Monday June 05 2006, @06:14AM)
      I'm betting they're doing it to make Microsoft take their eye off Google's ball - search and contextual ads.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Nested (981630) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:04AM (#15516934)
      Although not their original business model, selling contextual ads has by far been their most succesful. In that sense, this new app supports that objective nicely.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Insightful)

      by icepick72 (834363) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:17AM (#15517011)
      No because Google has money has the money to waste. Not all the employees can be focused on search and advertising. Belive me, they have enough resources on search and advertising to not be dropping the golden ball.
      Anyways, if they do drop the ball, somebody else will be happy to replace them. No worries there either ... unless you have Google stock.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Mr. Underbridge (666784) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:40AM (#15517656)
        No because Google has money has the money to waste. Not all the employees can be focused on search and advertising. Belive me, they have enough resources on search and advertising to not be dropping the golden ball. Anyways, if they do drop the ball, somebody else will be happy to replace them. No worries there either ... unless you have Google stock.

        I'd agree, except that their search hasn't improved in years, and they still haven't figured out how to(or just don't want to) get rid of the useless Made For Adsense (R) pages that are clogging searches these days.

        [ Parent ]
      • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Interesting)

        by hackstraw (262471) * on Monday June 12 2006, @01:20PM (#15518367)
        (http://www.spamgourmet.com/)
        No because Google has money has the money to waste.

        Give me a break. Google is simply different than most companies in this world. Waste? Yeah, that is why they picked a freely available operating system and still to this day use cheap OTS diskless servers so that they can save money. That is why every employee spends 20% of their time working on side projects. Oh, and those side projects have created things like gmail, and I would assume this spreadsheet program as well.

        Waste and haste are not in the Google mantra. They leave stuff in beta status forever. They have tons of little side projects like Google trends [google.com] Google sets [google.com], the list goes on and on.

        These guys are NOT the typical wasteful dot bomb guys of the late 90s. Most of those guys are out of business, Google seems to be doing pretty good.

        [ Parent ]
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Insightful)

      by WickedLogic (314155) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:19AM (#15517020)
      (Last Journal: Tuesday October 01 2002, @11:49AM)


      Google provides a services which is somewhat hard to do well (search). It makes money by selling ads (mainly) and services around what it does well (search). The more content there is, the harder it will be for google to have competition that will be able to sprout up, due to data glut.

      Remove the expensive cost of content tools, and more people can create more content, which they will WANT to search through. At the same time, remove your supposed competitors major source of revenue by fulfilling a need it would not, software that works, is light weight, and is free/cheap (good enough). This isn't just a smart move, it's about a shift in technology to provide people what they want and moving them toward benefiting your business model (designed to make money around what people want).

      Want to see another point you may have missed? (major speculation) Telco's limit content in a tiered system, google buys a little more dark fiber and lights it up. Starts a local isp business through techies who don't want a tiered net, and act as partners in a 'mashup' of reselling google network access. Us local techies not liking telco or nsa habits of late, serve as local wifi resellers via mesh networks to solve the 'last mile' problem. All the time, solving our consumer problems and generating ad revenue for google.

      Google has smart people doing smart things solving real problems with simple and very obvious solutions. No, I don't work for google, but if their looking... grin.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Insightful)

      by I Like Pudding (323363) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:19AM (#15517021)
      (Last Journal: Friday March 31 2006, @10:51PM)
      Anybody nervous that Google may be letting their eye off the ball (their original business model) by going off on these tangential projects?

      No, most people are psyched about it. Long term R&D is something that is hardly encouraged anymore due to quarterly earnings pressure (*cough* HP *cough). Google, on the other hand, actually schedules programmers to work on side projects of their own design. They hire very smart people to think up the Next Big Thing so that they can exploit it. Contrast this with Microsoft expansion policy: throw massive amounts of cash at heavily entrenched markets, then fail to generate any profit. I much prefer Google's method to Microsoft's "send more men over the top" WW1-style attrition.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin (Score:5, Interesting)

      by alucinor (849600) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:31AM (#15517114)
      (Last Journal: Sunday February 05 2006, @06:11PM)
      Their mission is to organize the world's information and make it accessible to everyone. But Google doesn't really "organize information" so much as provide an organized view of information -- and that means creating user interfaces. Of course, this is what worries Microsoft, because as of now, they're the most common interface people use to bridge the gap between humans and technology, but search engines and portals like Google and Yahoo are quickly becoming the most common and important interfaces.

      So I'm sure Google wants to experiment with and learn as many interface models as possible, since different information requires different kinds of organization and presentation. As far as I'm concerned, they've nailed email and maps, though still have a ways to go with many of their other services.

      (As an aside, we can probably expect more integration of these services in the future. Google probably keeps all the data created via its services in a form similar to the Semantic Web -- just a proprietary version of it. I suspect that just as the relatively high level of integration provided by Microsoft applications raised people's expectations and led to a new era of cooperation between the non-MS tech companies, so also the level of integration Google's services provide for the web will be the driving factor that leads to increased collaboration in the Semantic Web: the push for a neutral commodity platform.)
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by mpower1 (Score:1) Monday June 12 2006, @10:32AM
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by mlk (Score:1) Monday June 12 2006, @10:46AM
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by nelsonal (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @10:59AM
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by x2A (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @11:05AM
    • Google's eye IS on the ball (Score:4, Interesting)

      Think of it... all of the Google Spreadsheet files are stored on THEIR servers. When you open up your files, just like with GMail, the content will be searched for keywords and relevant AdWords will be displayed on the page. It's not that way now, but it's coming.

      And who is to say that Google won't index those files to create a marketing profile of you?

      The more of your data Google owns, the more sophisticated their profile of you becomes.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by darcfx (Score:1) Monday June 12 2006, @01:09PM
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by bmk67 (Score:1) Monday June 12 2006, @07:11PM
    • Re:spreading themselves thin by riprjak (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @09:46PM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • The key to this being an "Excel Killer" is not that it needs to be able to do everything (or even most) of what Excel can do. Most people barely use probably 2% of Excel's capabilities, and don't even know how to use much of the other 98%.

    The key to putting some hurt onto Excel sales, and MS Office in general is for Google to offer things like this that are "good enough" for the mass of home users that use 2% of Excel's product offerings. I personally have started using this for a couple personal spreadsheets that I have, where the network availability is more useful than having the whiz-bang Excel features.

    Let's not forget that Google has also purchased Writely, which may be a "good enough" web based word processor to start attracting the mass of people who use Word as a fancy notepad.exe with spell-check. I don't need a heavy duty Word processor for most of what I do, and many other home users don't either. Writely is not yet available for users to register, unless they got in pre-Google.

    While the Writely and Google Spreadsheets combo are not "killer apps" in terms of features, they may have enough functionality to put a serious dent in the very low end of Microsoft's user base.
  • Google Base Are Belong To Us? (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by patio11 (857072) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:53AM (#15516858)
    Sorry, couldn't resist. The page is slashdotted before any comments.
  • Undocumented functions? (Score:5, Funny)

    by DikSeaCup (767041) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:56AM (#15516878)
    (http://ericdives.com/ | Last Journal: Monday June 12 2006, @12:11PM)
    "... it has most of Excel's functions -- including some that aren't listed or documented."

    Does that include vulnerabilities that act as infection vehicles for viruses/worms?

  • Why no ODF? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by thebdj (768618) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:58AM (#15516888)
    (Last Journal: Sunday August 06 2006, @10:39PM)
    I am really wondering about this. I mean I am sure it is on the list of things to do, but I would think the OpenDocument Format would have been a bit easier to implement then working with XLS would have been. Granted more people use Excel then OOo, but I still find it strange that ODF wasn't in the list of early supported file formats.
  • One missing feature... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by vishbar (862440) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:09AM (#15516962)

    When I was at work, I decided to give Google Spreadsheets a shot (it wasn't for anything critical, just some simple calculations). I noticed one feature that, surprisingly, was not implemented--as far as I know, Google Spreadsheets can't merge cells vertically. Cells can only be merged horizontally. I ended up having to use Excel because of this one tiny missing feature. However, it's still in beta, and I am really impressed with what they've done. It's the second-coolest AJAX app out there (the first being Meebo [meebo.com]).

    Keep up the good work, Google!

  • Problems importing (Score:4, Interesting)

    by SamMichaels (213605) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:13AM (#15516983)
    TFA mentions you lose some formatting...but I've had a ton of problems importing XLS. The majority of the time it adds random characters to the cells.

    Overall, I agree that it'll be a cool app. Right now it's just very beta and not usable in the real world so it's difficult to give a real review.
  • Chasing The Long Tail (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WombatControl (74685) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:15AM (#15516998)
    (http://blogtk.sourceforge.net/)

    Google's doing this in a rather smart way, IMHO...

    They're not chasing Excel's market. Nobody's going to be using this for business-critical applications, and this won't challenge the corporate market for Office. What Google is doing is chasing the long tail [wikipedia.org] of the market - the people who might want to use a spreadsheet, but have no need for Excel. Let's face it, for a quick and dirty budget, a team roster, or a simple document, Excel is more than overkill.

    What Google Spreadsheets has that Excel doesn't is simple collaboration -- no need to install SharePoint servers or any of that other Microsoft lock-in garbage required. Just add a few emails to a field and you're done. That is ideal for a whole host of simple, small projects. Say you're running a small business and want to have online schedules -- would you use Excel and some expensive Microsoft server setup, or just make a simple spreadsheet with Google and share it amongst your employees? It seems pretty easy to guess which one is the easiest and least painful option to someone without an IT budget.

    Google knows that if they try to compete with Office, they'll get crushed. So they're not doing that at all. Google Spreadsheets isn't an enterprise app, it's a quick and dirty system for simple tasks -- and it excels at being what it is. By capturing that long tail of users who don't need Excels features and won't pay Excel's price, Google can pick up a sizeable user base. The real question is what Google intends to do with those users and how they'll turn this into a revenue generator.

  • by jeswin (981808) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:15AM (#15517000)
    (http://www.process64.com/jeswin)

    When I read the post, the first thing that occured to me was Mark Lucovsky Post, about Shipping Software [blogspot.com]. It was one of the reasons why he quit Microsoft.

    Shipping Software. That's what its about now. Anyway, it does not mean Microsoft is standing still though. It is just that they have chosen to do it another way. Google looks at AJAX powered, HTML based applications. Firefox downloads help too, it isnt surprising they are offering $1 for every Firefox referral. Microsoft will depend on .Net, XAML and IE for application delivery. No doubt they will be more capable, compared to HTML. But only if you overlook the lockin. Ahh.. i dont know. But yes, online Word will not be far off.

  • Enter the Ribbon (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 12 2006, @10:16AM (#15517003)
    I had no idea what a "Ribbon" was so I googled it, and found this page: Jensen Harris: An Office User Interface Blog [msdn.com] which neatly summarises a ribbon:

    One of the core components of the new user experience is something we call the "Ribbon." The Ribbon is a strip across the top of the window that exposes what the program can do.

    Following that description was an image which apparently shows a ribbon. I'm still having difficulty grasping where the ribbon starts and other user interface controls end because the image appears to be almost entirely full of user interface controls.

    The webpage went on to say: "One of the concepts behind the Ribbon is that it's the one and only place to look for functionality in the product. If you want to look through Word 2003 to find an unfamiliar command, you need to look through 3 levels of hierarchical menus, open up 31 toolbars and peruse about 20 Task Panes. It's hard to formulate a "hunting" strategy to find the thing you're looking for because there's no logical path through all of the UI."

    Well, this is one of those Duh! statements. There's no logical path through the User Interface because Microsoft has no strong conceptual model of the document or the application functionality. Therefore functions are placed almost at random within the menus, toolbars and task panes.

    Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought the menus were supposed to expose all the application functionality. "Ribbons" sound to me as though they are merely replacing menus. Perhaps they have more flexible layout.

    Overall it seems to me like Microsoft is implementing Ribbons as yet more eye candy to attract people to upgrade. The talk of increased usability is merely lip service, misdirection from the fundamental problem that I have with Microsoft's user interfaces. The page mentions that "most people don't click on an unlabeled 16x16 icon". Microsoft's at fault here for their feature-driven requirements. It seems to me that a requirement of Microsoft user interfaces (particularly Word and Excel) is that every possible piece of screen real estate needs to have some function: either an icon or clicking with the mouse will do something. That makes the interface incredibly busy - not good for newbies, perhaps not necessary for experienced users.

    • Re:Enter the Ribbon by guy-in-corner (Score:1) Monday June 12 2006, @10:40AM
    • Re:Enter the Ribbon (Score:4, Informative)

      by PPGMD (679725) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:50AM (#15517286)
      (Last Journal: Monday September 06 2004, @08:46PM)
      Commenting on something you haven't used, how very slashdot of you.

      I have the Office 2007 Beta, yes the Ribbons are different from the old version, but after a couple of days of working with them, they became natural, one benefit is that they are very flexible so you can have a very similar GUI between all the applications, something Office hasn't always had. Sure it's not a single reason to upgrade (heck I use Crystal 8.5 for some of my work, it has a horrendous GUI), but it's a nice upgrade to be had, and I am sure somewhere there is a menu where you can turn it back to the old style.

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Enter the Ribbon by I'm Don Giovanni (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @11:42AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Enter the Ribbon by pherthyl (Score:3) Monday June 12 2006, @06:57PM
    • Re:Enter the Ribbon by RzUpAnmsCwrds (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @10:40PM
  • 20% (Score:1, Insightful)

    by MatrixCubed (583402) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:16AM (#15517006)
    (http://odyssey-project.com/)

    According to [searchenginewatch.com] these [eightypercent.net], this useful application is potentially something that evolved based on smaller projects and a common code-base.

    Admittedly, I've never used a spreadsheet for more than its basic functions (organizing data in columns for personal finances or some of the homebrew programming projects I work on), but if X% of Excel users are only utilizing Y% of the program's capabilities (where Y is a significantly small percentage of the program's full feature-set), any company can come along, produce a simple app which elegantly handles the most-sought-for features, and voila, competitor. From what I've seen of the managerial staff at work, the only thing Google Spreadsheets is missing to be a 'real' (read: truly useful for aforementioned X% of users) spreadsheet app, is a chart wizard.

  • When we expect an Open Source clone of these technologies at sourceforge? Less than one year and half?

  • No thanks! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by kimvette (919543) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:21AM (#15517040)
    (http://kim.biyn.com/)
    I'll stick with keeping spreadsheets on my own hard drive and servers, created with OpenOffice.org and Microsoft Excel.

    Thanks, but no thanks Google. I do use gmail for personal stuff but I do not and will not use hosted office suites. I have no desire for you to know how much I weigh, what my client lists are, how much I spend, my DVD and CD collections, or anything else I might use a spreadsheet for.
    • Re:No thanks! by Gulthek (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @10:36AM
      • Re:No thanks! by kimvette (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @11:31AM
    • Re:No thanks! by Maximum Prophet (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @12:19PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • already using it (Score:1, Informative)

    by carlosGames (943841) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:22AM (#15517044)
    I'm using it to manage the world cup scores which are shared with another ppl I know, and the spreadsheet is cool I really didn't expected it to support formulas but It Does and i'm using them :)
  • ... And is doing it pretty sucsessfully. Nearly every project they try has been fairly sucsessful, with many being very sucsessful (Gmail and Google Video) And I, for one, welcome our new Google overloards, and have been for years.
  • The real story (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ndansmith (582590) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:24AM (#15517061)
    (http://ndansmith.net/)
    I think the bigger story here is that Google appears to be building an entire web-based office suite to go toe to toe with Microsoft (and OO.o?). They already have a mail client, word processor (Writely), and spreadsheet. What's next?
  • by Chas (5144) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:29AM (#15517102)
    (http://www.evilnet.net/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 30 2006, @12:30PM)
    I want my effin' easter eggs!
  • The Lawyers Love This (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Doomedsnowball (921841) <doomedsnowballs@yahoo.com> on Monday June 12 2006, @10:30AM (#15517105)
    Working a bit in litigation support, I know that a significant amount of time and money is spent trying to make excel spreadsheets presentable as evidence in a courtroom (Arthur Anderson anyone?). There is an entire industry supported by excel being a whopping pile of crap to work with. If a better alternative were to take the market, it would definitely be championed by a world full of corporate lawyers. And I'm sure the lack of privacy is making the NSA positively bubbling with anticipation.
  • Can't deal with large spreadsheets? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by kiscica (89316) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:31AM (#15517112)
    (http://www.3fhac.com/ajk.html)
    I thought it might be interesting to import into Google Spreadsheets the database I keep of my movie collection. That's about 2,000 lines long, by a few columns, but first I just tried a single column of titles. Nothing fancy -- just a sorted list. I made a .csv file and uploaded it -- it was only about 50K, so that step was plenty fast.

    When I tried to actually open the imported spreadsheet with Google Spreadsheet, however, it just hung. I waited about an hour then killed Firefox. Tried twice with the same result.

    That was with 2,000 lines; I guess I'm not going to be trying the application out with my 30,000-line book collection database or my 25,000-line record collection database any time soon :-) A pity, 'cause having these online from anywhere I can get to Google was an intriguing idea (although I have my own site for that). My impression of Google Spreadsheet is "neat, but basically toy." I don't use Excel very often either, but I do know it has no trouble with spreadsheets that are tens of thousands of lines long (nor would I expect any modern standalone spreadsheet to).

    Kiscica
  • Desktop replacement ready? (Score:3, Informative)

    by dtsazza (956120) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:32AM (#15517120)
    FTS:
    Most importantly, it has most of Excel's functions -- including some that aren't listed or documented.
    I'd be quite interested in knowing what those undocumented functions are. Then, after I've been enlightened, I'd like to know how many people actually use them.

    I mean, you've all heard the 80-20 (or 90-10, depending who you ask) law - and it's a valid point that there are many people still running Office 97, since it does everything they need from it. Makes you wonder whether it was really worth Google's while including these features - I guess anyone that uses them is likely to really need them, and is a power-user likely to trust Google as their primary(/only) spreadsheet app?

    For the moment, Web 2.0 stuff is undoubtedly cool and useful (Google's own Maps and GMail both good examples of both), but I wouldn't really want to rely on it. It'd be like only having a mobile phone - most of the time you don't miss a landline, but when you need to make an emergency call, you don't want to be without one. Anyone else feel the same?

    (Don't get me wrong, for casual stuff like writing birthday letters this'd be great - I'm thinking of the people running businesses off it here.)
  • No Clippy! (Score:2)

    by Chas (5144) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:40AM (#15517210)
    (http://www.evilnet.net/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 30 2006, @12:30PM)
    Awwww crap! The deal's off! I'm the one person in the omniverse that actually uses it!

    [Doctor Evil] No. Not really.
  • by ACQ (966887) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:46AM (#15517247)
    Let's see... -I have a "free" copy of Office2K3. -I can use the free Google Spreadsheet that relies upon my internet connection. -I have a free installation of OpenOffice. I do love what Google's doing, but until I can install it locally (without the worry of spyware/malware/ads/tiny strippers), I won't feel 100% at ease using it.
  • by Dot Solipsism (972171) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:48AM (#15517265)
    Is Google even trying to keep secret their intentions to create an OS independent computing platform. I imagine their end goal is a Google OS appliance, perhaps even being touted as being "OS free."
  • Trolling for Feds (Score:1, Troll)

    by Sporkinum (655143) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:48AM (#15517272)
    I wonder what would happen if you set up a spreadsheet with assorted illegal drugs, prices, and people. How about weapons and ammo, porn, etc? No real information, obviously, but just to trigger the all seeing eyes that want to get in everyones lives.
  • Tried it... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Bluesman (104513) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:52AM (#15517303)
    (http://drblast.blogspot.com/)
    Just last week I was wishing there were an online spreadsheet so I could organize some simple budgets from the thousand different computers I use. I love having my gmail account because it's a decent enough mail client that I can access from anywhere and doesn't require any maintenance on my part.

    But the spreadsheet was just not ready for prime time. The limitations of a browser hacked to do what really should be done by a local app really showed. Even the most basic things didn't work as expected (copy/paste buttons instead of working shortcuts? No thanks.)

    What would be ideal would be enough easily browsable online storage so that I could work on my spreadsheet locally and save it online. There's no way for Google to make money off such a thing, though, so I don't see it happening. (And yes, I know about the gmail-based filesystem that Linux has.)

    I really wish we'd get away from the idea that all of these apps have to be implemented in a browser over HTTP. There's a reason nobody ever developed a GUI toolkit that works like that -- and it's because it's a horrible mess, and makes simple things hard and hard things impossible.

    Unfortunately, with the way people are diving head-first into AJAX because it's the latest thing, I'm sure we'll be stuck with it forever.

    Next stop -- an AJAX web browser. Mostly feature complete.

  • I can use this! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rueger (210566) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:59AM (#15517358)
    (http://www.threesquirrels.com/)
    I'm working with team in another country right now. We've been emailing Excel sheets back and forth to track a variety of issues. This is a tool that is perfect for our needs.

    We don't need super encrypted security, but we do need an easy way to keep our work in sync. We really don't want to start installing new tools for just one project.

    Google has winner on their hands with this one. It's good enough for many jobs, simpler than Excel, and makes sharing a spreadsheet simple and fast.
  • Better than Apple? (Score:3, Funny)

    by LFS.Morpheus (596173) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:00AM (#15517372)
    (http://www.wuputah.com/)
    Well, anything is better than the current Apple spreadsheet offering [about].
  • by k1980pc (942645) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:36AM (#15517622)
    Google is trying to distract microsoft in a big way. Some small apps and strategically done publicity will have the whole world raving about "the Office Killer" from Google. It will surely hurt MS's core competency. At the same time it will also divert MS and others from concentrating on Google's USP, search.
    Not that I'm saying google spreadsheet is an eye wash. I have used it and I liked it. But it is not an excel killer. More akin to my cousin's final semester project. Cute, Usable but not an office alternative for vast majority of users - not unles it has macros ( yeah, I know they are the next in security threat after /bin/laden) and charts and all other frills.
  • Still no Java (Score:2)

    by timeOday (582209) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:46AM (#15517684)
    I get the impression the google spreadsheet is implemnted in Ajax-type technologies? I don't get it; surely Java is ideally suited to implementing an online spreadsheet. All these years later [novell.com], I'm still waiting for a decent online office suite, and for the life of me I can't figure out why nobody has really delivered. (Hello, Sun, are you there?) I'll admit I've been out of web development for several years, but AJAX strikes me as a mess of weak tools like javascript. Is it really the best choice for serious application development?
  • this is google (Score:1)

    by kurtis25 (909650) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:46AM (#15517689)
    I'm not sure this strays from Google's business model. It makes their job easier; they want to organize the world's information. Their products make sense under this, if they can help you create the information they can more easily organize it. They don't have to deal with Microsoft formats or lotus apple format if you use Google format it's easy for Google to organize what you wrote. If they store it it's easier for them to find it and organize it. Also I strongly believe Google is a social project. They want to see how information is used and spread. Their invite a friend system seems usable for tracking how and where invitations spread. How did the first 500 users get gmail? Who did they pass it to? This is a way to refine and redefine the internet landscape. If they can predict who the power groups are they can use them to pass on viral information. Google can create something then watch it spread across the internet in a predicted pattern. That information would be valuable to anyone. They need to create the ability to create information to organize. Then they want to predict information and connections.
  • Gooxel (Score:2)

    Can it open or save Excel spreadsheets?

    The most important feature of any office app is its ability to use the vast amount of existing data, mostly stored in Microsoft format. That's Microsoft's second most powerful self-perpetuating monopoly abuse, after pure momentum.

    Google has unprecedented access to computer power, smart people and example files, without the baggage of backwards compatibility to any of its own proprietary formats. Their most powerful feature would be freely interconverting all the office docs (including Excel) stored around the Net to other formats, including open formats. Slap just about any GUI that puts PEMDAS algebra in cell grids on that engine, and they've got a winner.
    • Re:Gooxel by Doc Ruby (Score:2) Monday June 12 2006, @03:29PM
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  • I Always Use... (Score:2)

    by Nom du Keyboard (633989) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:50AM (#15517726)
    it has most of Excel's functions -- including some that aren't listed or documented.

    I always use unlisted, undocumented functions...
    ...as soon as I can find out about them.

  • ...but virtually impossible to run under the bandwidth that I use. I applaud google for doing this, but we need bandwidth! What's the solution? Google starting to use some of that dark fibre they have to force local ISPs to actually have competition.
  • Corporate Usage and the missing link (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Bucc5062 (856482) on Monday June 12 2006, @12:14PM (#15517887)
    Having just gone through a company forced seminar on data security and what not to allow outside the wall of the building, the missing link in the release of this tool is security. Many of the users of Excel are corporate employees or business owners. As one of the corporate un-washed mass I tried out googlesheets using made up data, then an existing spreadsheet. Only after I opened the file did I remember to ask the question, where is this data going? When tried a save I noticed that it was not saving to my local disc as default, but to a remote server.

    In my test case I did not use a file that had sensitive data, but I did start to ponder the question of how secure is the data I save. if governments can troll for data then what protects any data I store outside my business laptop or desktop? While the spreadsheet is an amazing tool for personal use, it would take but one leak, one crack which leaks even seemingly innocent company data to kill this as a viable web tool. Were Google to offer strong encryption as default then I would feel better about using this web tool (or any other) to share and access data on field trips, or when working with teams across the country. Till then, as per our company policy I will continue to utilize client based office tools, email sensitive files with encryption, or use sneaker mail.

    As to Google's effort I say kudos. Of course it does not have all functionality out of the box, but it is better then the other web based, server-side excel like application out there.....Oh that's right, there was none. A great tool that will only get better, and when they can secure the data to the level that companies will trust, they *will* get the strong attention of Microsoft who has fattened on the Corporate largesse resulting from over-charging MS Office. In fact, if Google would sell or charge a corporation to run googlesheets from inside a corporate WAN/LAN at a competitive price, if Google provided 90% of the functionality that current excel users in corporate world use, if upgrades occurred in one spot not across countless workstations, and they did this at a cost the was drastically less then a Corporate License from MS for office....game over.
    • Ha! by misleb (Score:2) Tuesday June 13 2006, @12:21AM
  • by sweetnjguy29 (880256) on Monday June 12 2006, @12:22PM (#15517938)
    (Last Journal: Friday March 24 2006, @12:46PM)
    Another great online spreadsheet service is Numsum. They are located at http://numsum.com/ [numsum.com]

    I haven't tried out google's spreadsheets yet, but I can tell you why online spreadsheets are the way to go...they allow people to share mathematical ideas and calculations easily.

    For example, I created a spreadsheet that compares various hourly rates for contract workers. http://numsum.com/spreadsheet/show/20511 [numsum.com] -- its not perfect, but it allows anyone, including someone without any technical knowledge, access to quick and easy information. There are Ebay spreadsheets, Business Spreadsheets, etc, available free of charge. Imagine how powerful that can be!
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Google is doing what they are destined to do. Think about it for a minute.

    With an online Spreadsheet, Word Processor (writely), E-Mail, and Web Page Editor on top of supporting a Web Browser that runs on just about all of the most popular platforms (Firefox Of Course) Most home users will no longer need to have Office installed, or even Windows at that.

    I know many people who are happy using Wordpad to do word processing, and just use Excel for simple things like their check book, lists of stuff, and such. Well... Writely and Google Spreadsheet fit the bill, Gmail can effectively be a replacement for Outlook to MOST USERS (not all) Gmail for domains, no more need for Exchange server, Google hosts it... Google Pages... replace Frontpage and IIS at the same time.

    Now that this all comes together think about this. Got a computer with Firefox, Mozilla, or a recent release of Netscape? If you don't... you can for FREE. Now think about this. Dell starts shipping Google software preinstalled on their machines...(yeah, you read it here) They already have a portal with Google. How hard would it be to sell their entry-level systems with links to these applications as their Office suite? Piece of cake! They have just replaced MS Works, or that Word Perfect Demo that came with my machine at work... for free, through an alliance they have already made.

    How much of a jump is it to offer a Linux box with the same thing... no problem at all..it all works.

    That is how Google can make Microsoft Irrelevant, and Microsoft knows this, so they see Google as their biggest threat.

    Just another conspiracy, or are the facts too irrefutable to ignore?

    My 2 cents..
  • by nickleaton (966500) on Monday June 12 2006, @12:35PM (#15518016)
    I have a decent play with it. It's ok, and there are quite a few bugs and annoyances. Some can be fixed, some can't.
    1. Lots of beta gui issues - all fixable
    2. Slow
    3. Import works well
    4. No named ranges - fixable
    5. Sharing isn't all it is cracked up to be. I can't see a way of sharing the sheet with the public.
    6. API to the sheet. For example, create a little compound interest calculator. How do you embed that in a web page? Would be great and I suspect they can do it.
    7. Lack of VBA. Major issue. The great thing about Excel is just what you can make it do. Even just writting your own functions makes a big difference. I doubt they can fix this.
    8. Integration. It is all stand alone. This is where it really fails. Almost all non trivial spreadsheets involve consolidating and publishing data. They won't be able to solve this.
    Nick
  • by billtom (126004) on Monday June 12 2006, @12:52PM (#15518130)

    What worries me a bit in all these wonderful things coming out of Google is that there is never any way for users to pay Google for them.

    Why would I want to pay, if I can get it for free? Because money changing hands is a very good way for consumers to signal their interest to producers. As long as we simply can't pay Google for things like Gmail, Earth, Picasa, etc. we have very little influence over whether Google continues with these products and over which products Google focuses their efforts on. You could argue that the advertising is a way; but I use Gmail all the time, but I've never clicked on an ad in Gmail. So as far as Google is concerned, maybe this means I don't like Gmail.

    I mean, the whole situation calls into question whether these things can even be considered products. In fact, Google's primary product is actually you and me and the customer is advertisers. And, as TV has shown us, this model where the "products" are incidental produces very mixed results for the users.

  • Analogy (Score:2, Funny)

    by peterfa (941523) on Monday June 12 2006, @01:25PM (#15518401)
    Google is just peeing on Microsoft's fire-hydrant.
  • by Stakesauce (881087) on Monday June 12 2006, @01:36PM (#15518471)
    I gave it go and tried to upload a spreadsheet that we tend to email around the office - so there are old outdated copies everywhere! It wasn't particularly a complicated spreadsheet but Google failed to upload it.

    Well, it didn't fail to upload it as much as the little status circle continued to spin throughout the night as I just let it run.

    The next day I closed out the browser and gave up on this product. Please - do more testing before you release it.
  • by bberens (965711) on Monday June 12 2006, @01:45PM (#15518556)
    ThinkFree.com has a free online office suite (built with applets) that writes to the native MS file types fairly well. It's a bit slow to load (being an applet) but you get a free 1GB account which isn't indexed by Google. It's worth checking out for anyone interested in online storage of their docs. Nope, don't work for them. :)
  • by nerph (686592) on Monday June 12 2006, @01:49PM (#15518585)
    From the article...
    For example, there is no Find command
    Am I the only one who finds this ironic?
  • by technopinion (469686) on Monday June 12 2006, @02:19PM (#15518824)
    (http://www.greatdealsclub.com/)
    Is here [geekmix.com]
  • Tested (Score:2, Informative)

    by J4nus_slashdotter (953890) on Monday June 12 2006, @04:25PM (#15519775)
    (http://www.ofep.be/ | Last Journal: Wednesday June 07 2006, @12:03PM)
    I tested it and it works good. I couldn't load a 'big' excel or csv file (1.5 Mb) but I wrote a bug report with the online tool. I think that this kind of online application had a lot of potential. Coming soon, many applications will be ported online thanks to AJAX and the webservices (.net, RoR, JSP/JSF, SOAP,..).
  • no Safari support (Score:2)

    by boomerny (670029) on Monday June 12 2006, @06:06PM (#15520372)
    in case it hasn't been mentioned yet, this release does not support Safari
  • by CrkHead (27176) on Monday June 12 2006, @09:44PM (#15521364)
    Selling tinfoil hats. After reading these comments there seems to be a market for them.

    Really, this is a playground copy of the application. If it generates interest it will be developed. If it does not generate interest the devloper(s) will do something else on Fridays.
  • by mikaellennryd (932079) on Tuesday June 13 2006, @02:43AM (#15522379)
    I have tried google spreadsheets and it can't open any of the office 2000 excel files that I have at work and display them properly.
    It get height and width all wrong, plus inserted pictures (logotypes) are removed. The pages I write are a bit smaller then A4 paper, just so it's easier when to print it. With google spreadsheets I get 2-3 pages when I print, in excel I get 1.
    Test your documents like I did, before you use it fully. It's still a beta, it will hopefully get a lot better then it is now.
  • Instead of giving you the actual HTML of your spreadsheet, it displays a duplicate of your spreadsheet in a seperate window/tab. This duplicate cannot be edited. The URL for this thing is the most long-ass URL I've ever seen and doesn't give any indication that it's an HTML file. Geesh, I was hoping to be able to use this to get spreadsheet clippings into my website.
  • by kYsis (696094) on Monday June 12 2006, @10:10AM (#15516971)
    What's the point then? People use excel to do this right?
    [ Parent ]
  • I'm with you. I have no intention of ever using any of these newfangled "web apps" - nothing like the security of someone else storing all your data, and without encryption on top of that.

    I'll stick with programs that run on my computer and can't be sniffed, packet-snooped or wiretapped (so long as I unplug the ethernet cord and it still works!), thank you very much.
    [ Parent ]
  • by x3rc3s (954149) on Monday June 12 2006, @11:10AM (#15517441)
    I don't know. I have been playing around with the demo for Quantrix Modeler [quantrix.com] and I think I like it a lot more than Excel.
    [ Parent ]
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