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June 6, 2006 8:03 AM PDT

Google Spreadsheets collaboration tools are better than Excel's, but not its features

Posted by Rafe Needleman

Google's online spreadsheet is going into limited beta today. As of this writing, nobody I know has actually used with the service, however screenshots are up on Google's site, and we can tell a few things.

For one, this is no competitor to Excel, neither to the current version nor to the Excel we'll see in Office 2007. The simple interface reminds me more of a very early Excel, or Lotus 1-2-3, than a modern spreadsheet. For people who occasionally need to compute a grid of results, it looks like it will be extremely useful, but for spreadsheet jockeys who need Excel's multiple-page calculations, cross-tab features, and programmability, it looks like Google will come up short.

However, as a tool for collaboration, Google Spreadsheets is going to walk all over Excel. Google will have a built-in chat client and allow simultaneous editing of a sheet. This will allow two (or more) people to put their heads together on numbers even if they are not sitting next to each other. Also, since Google Spreadsheets will save your work on its own servers, you won't have to worry about sending your file around to other people--any authorized user will be able to pull it up online. The online storage may dissuade people who want to use the product to work on sensitive financial data, though.

Google Spreadsheets is much like Writely, Google's online word processor. Functionally, it's simple and does not compete with the rich feature set of existing traditional software. However, it uses the Web to offer something that software cannot: great collaboration features and Web-based file storage. Also, it's free. So while neither Writely nor Google Spreadsheets are likely to woo professional users of Microsoft Office, more casual users may find the tools very useful, and certainly more cost effective.

We will update this opinion as we learn more.

Screenshot credit: Google

Originally posted at ComingSoon
Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.

TalkBack
8 messages

Sharing spreadsheet data

Taking a spreadsheet and putting it in the cloud is marginally better than email (and not that different than SharePoint). What people want is to update a cell in their desktop spreadsheet and then have that change show up, at the cell level, in another person's spreadsheet without leaving Excel. Add to it versioning so you can tell what's changed plus retain the ability to change the data model (like with a spreadsheet), then you make users and IT happy. This can only be done with a database technology-- not an "online" spreadsheet
by jbkuppe (See profile) - October 29, 2008 2:55 PM PDT

give google more information

the next thing you know the IRS shows up at your door step

Luke Chou
www.shanghaiguide.com
www.ddsclub.com
by ddsclub (See profile) - June 6, 2006 8:14 PM PDT

Google Magic

Don't take Google lightly. They are revolutionizing many things. This online spreadsheet is just the first for them. They would change it for better tomorrow.

After all they are the only people who can make Bill Gates run !!!
by ramnathl (See profile) - June 6, 2006 8:06 PM PDT

And I should trust my data to Google...yeah right.

Why would anyone with any data worth putting on a spreadsheet trust that their data will be secure on Google. Not just from prying eyes while entering but also prying government eyes as well as Googles own employees.
by fred dunn (See profile) - June 6, 2006 12:53 PM PDT
5 out of 5 users found this comment helpful | 1 comment

Price pressure

If nothing else the mere threat of a Google rival to Excel will put downward pressure on Microsoft.
by dburdon (See profile) - June 6, 2006 12:11 PM PDT

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