Google to Offer Online PowerPoint Rival

By Ed Oswald | Published April 17, 2007, 4:11 PM

Even though Google continues to claim that its online productivity suite is not intended to compete with Microsoft's Office product, its latest addition is beginning to raise eyebrows.

The Mountain View, Calif. company disclosed Tuesday that it is about to release a presentation and slide show tool in the coming months. The product would join its word processing software, released last August, and its spreadsheet application, launched in October.

Technology acquired from its buy of Tonic Systems will be used in developing the new application, engineering director Sam Schillace, who said the company hopes to release the product by the summer.

Confirmation of the existence of an application came first from CEO Eric Schmidt during a presentation the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, when he revealed the slides were created on the product. But as before, he continued to deny that Google was attempting to compete with Microsoft and Office.

"We've already freed those of you working in teams from the burdens of version control and email attachment overload when going back and forth on word processing and spreadsheets," Schillace said. "It just made sense to add presentations to the mix."

TechCrunch's Michael Arrington said he expected the latest application to be added into an offering for small businesses by Google called "Google Apps for Your Domain." That offering already matches (if not exceeds) currently-offered services from Microsoft.

On Google's claims that the offering was not a threat to Microsoft, Arrington said that was "complete spin."

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

The irony is that if MS sues them for anti-trust, they would be admitting guilt for what they did in the 90's with the browser wars. The shoe is on the other foot.

Score: 0

|

What did they do in the "browser wars"?

I'm sorry, but anyone who claims that IE killed netscape just wasn't in the industry at the time, or just wasn't paying attention.

Netscape killed itself with horrible management, a complete inability to communicate effectively with its employees, and failure to listen to it's customers. It's just that no-one noticed until a competing product showed up. It didn't have to be IE. It could have been anyone able to market to a large percentage of users.

People were dying to jump ship. Same thing happened when FF showed up. MS, thankfully, got their s*** together quickly and fought back.

Netscape just fell over and died.

Score: 0

|

nice...for nostalgia I am still holding onto my Netscape CD :D. People are always quick to lay some sort of blame instead of actually knowing. My current favored browser, IE...anyone elses is their choice! hehe

Score: 0

|

well, the word ane excel online are surprisingly useful in sharing docs for non-business use.

For business use, you sort of get caught in the whether it's secure or not question.

Score: 0

|

I've been trying to make them all work for a business environment, but the suite lacks so many basic features. Features that were in Lotus 123 more than 10 years ago. I wouldn't recommend it for anything more than casual home use. The suite is nowhere near powerful enough to suffice for basic business needs.

Score: 0

|

Breakthrough: AMD and Intel settle antitrust dispute, reach new cross-license agreement

UPDATED Only exclusionary business practices, not some rebates, may be covered by a new agreement on Intel's future business conduct.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile now available in browser, iTunes' App Store still not

You can now check out what Windows Marketplace for Mobile has to offer without a Windows Phone.

Microsoft damage control after marketer claims Win7 inspired by Mac

Have you ever said anything you wish you could take back? Ever? No? Not even once? Well then, you won't sympathize with a mid-level Microsoft manager today.

Facebook for iPhone developer goes from Apple supporter to 'I quit!' in 3 months

Fed up with Apple's App Store policies, the developer of Facebook for iPhone has bailed on the iPhone.

PS3, Xbox to soon get Twitter, Facebook integration

Both Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3 will integrate with Facebook in the near future.

The iTunes App Store at 100,000: Can we stop counting, already?

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Is a six-digit number truly reflective of a healthy applications ecosystem? Or is it another type of bloat?

Analysis: The end of business-by-litigation?

The AMD v. Intel case ended neither with a bang nor a whimper, but almost with a song. Is it catchy enough for the rest of the PC world to sing in perfect harmony?

The agreement: Intel and AMD 'wipe the slate clean'

As the Securities and Exchange Commission document shows, AMD did indeed make some compromises in favor of Intel, especially with regard to conduct.

EC still holds Intel accountable even after AMD settlement

Though the future of relations between AMD and Intel may be peaceful now, the EC believes Intel may still owe restitution for its past conduct.

Boxee's first official hardware to premiere December 7

Boxee's elegant freeware multimedia manager software will soon have its own hardware

Bing vs. Google rematch on video search

After Microsoft folds some old MSN Video features back into Bing, do they add to the search engine's functionality or take away?