Office Live Workspace beta goes public

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published December 10, 2007, 11:10 AM

Since October, Microsoft has been busy working to hang its Office shingle in "the cloud," where users can save documents somewhere to the Web. Now it's ready for the general public to try out the cloud.

The consumer side of Microsoft's hosted service strategy steps up to the next gear this morning, as it unveils the official beta of its Office Live Workspace service to the general public. Unlike its Office Live Web-based applications, the Workspace service creates a Web location for storing traditional Office documents, as a way of ensuring portability.

As Microsoft's Office Live Services product manager Jacob Jaffe told BetaNews last October, the company is also marketing the service as a low-end collaboration tool -- a kind of poor person's SharePoint. "If you invite me to collaborate with you on a document," he told us at the time, "even if I don't have Office installed, I can still view that document in the way that you've intended it to be viewed. I can even comment on that document."

Registered users will notice one little addition to the "Save As" column along the left side of their Office dialog boxes: an Office Live Workspace icon, where they have direct access to their online workspace without invoking an FTP client or a browser. While those latter two tools certainly aren't foreign to most computer users, there's an entire market of less skilled users whom Microsoft is directly targeting this time.

Notice the carefully populist approach taken by Microsoft consumer product manager Kirk Gregersen, in this excerpt from a prepared Q&A released by Microsoft this morning: "We've seen that if people are working on a document and have to go to the browser to upload, many just can't get over that hump. So we've learned you have to make it super easy for people to do things like get their documents from Office to the Web, as well as to save work back to the Web with one-click if they're making edits."

Microsoft will be taking suggestions from general beta testers through its dedicated Office Live Workspace Community forum, which was also launched this morning.

Comments

The "add-on" doesn't even save the toolbar location properly!

Score: 0

|

Silverlight 3 goes live on Microsoft's servers

Microsoft's answer to Adobe's Flash is (unofficially) here, with prospects of higher-speed, higher-resolution video and for the first time, 3D.

Three Android phones on the way from T-Mobile in 2009

T-Mobile's myTouch 3G, launched Wednesday, will be followed by two more Android phones later this year, but neither of them will be HTC's Hero.

Best Buy-brand TVs to get TiVo

A new alliance will place the retailer's own brand alongide the manufacturers, and could also lead to future partnerships on services.

LTE still lacks a voice

The 4G Wireless standard that Verizon hopes to show off before this year is out is still at a loss for (spoken) words.

Data sharing among online advertisers: Is sanity in sight?

Lockdown with Angela Gunn In the middle of a 15-page plea not to get regulated, a spark of smart thinking.

T-Mobile's strategy to combat Apple's iPhone with Android

With a trio of Android phones now in the pipeline for 2009, T-Mobile hopes to break the iPhone's emerging stranglehold.

EC's Reding: Government should act as broker for media downloads

If Internet media services don't step up and build an attractive way for users to start paying for downloads, a commissioner says, government may do the job instead.

Sony TVs get Netflix, still no PS3

Though it's coming in behind LG, Samsung, and Microsoft, Sony will begin to offer Netflix streaming, too.

Google Chrome OS: Too little, too early

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Don't start the revolution just yet, says Carmi, who isn't so certain Chrome OS will be the "Windows Killer."

GAO pen test brings the hammer down on federal rent-a-cops

But are the computers to blame for the contract-guard fiasco at FPS?

What's Next: Chrome OS will have at least some friends in high places

Also: South Korea takes another round of DDoS abuse, and Neelie Kroes and Steve Ballmer may shake hands before she exits stage left.

Report: Evidence of further creativity with Windows 7 upgrade prices

A ZDNet blogger did some serious digging for clues as to a reported price break on multiple Windows 7 Home Premium licenses, and may have found it.