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Gdrive & Google’s Writely

23 January 2008 0 views No Comment

Hush! is on march. Would you be scared? Nope, did you say?

The extraordinary interest that generates in what it is up to is stupendous, and was no exception. Nobody knows for sure it would be , but the name persisted. And very soon, a pattern seems to have emerged. According to pundits, shortly plans to come out with ‘ hard disc’. Now what’s that?

The webcast

It all started on an innocuous morning (March 2), but special for those who wanted to attend the planned webcast of ‘ Day [http://investor..com/webcast.html]’. As is normally the case with these days, all eyes were firmly glued to the presentation. In attendance was one Greg Linden of Seattle, who quickly pieced together apparently disparate information that provided (slides 19, 20 & 31 according to Linden) on that day, and this is what he has to say [http://glinden.blogspot.com/2006/03/in-world-with-infinite-.html]:

Quote— Slide 31 says that ’s philosophy to new product development is “no constraints” and that they initially ignore “ power, , , and .”

Gdrive

Slide 20 says (in the notes) that plans to “get all the worlds information, not just some.”

And slide 19 (in the notes) talks about how their work is inspired by the idea of “a world with infinite , , and power.” They say that “the experience should really be instantaneous”. They say that they should be able to “house all user files, including: emails, web history, pictures, bookmarks, etc and make it accessible from anywhere (any device, any platform, etc)” which leads to a world where “the copy of your data will become your Golden Copy and your local-machine copy serves more like a cache”. And, they say that they want “transparent personalization” that uses user “data to transparently the user’s experience … implicitly.” –Unquote

Unlimited

It was a fair guess that might be planning to offer hard disc that would have unlimited capacity, as well as capacity. Linden’s remarks would perhaps have gone largely unnoticed for the simple reason that there are just too many -related analyses out there. What happened was just the opposite. ’s forthwith withdrawal of the PPT file lent credence to Linden’s claim (and adding fuel to speculative fire too).

In a way, is a fairly old concept. Box., Xdrive and a host of others offer good value for , and are apparently quite successful. The basic idea is you never have to loose sleep over possible loss of your data and files. No matter if you travel frequently, and to odd places. Your files are intact, properly taken care of, and produced in a jiffy wherever whenever you need them.

plans

But ’s plan does add a new dimension. What immediately comes to mind is ’s offer wouldn’t simply be just another piece. Since is known to position its products after supposedly long sequence of research and diligence, it may well be that , if so named, will be a super-offer. As and when that comes into being, it may knock out the bottom of many competitors. That may be the reason why removed the PPT file posthaste, as if to guard a grand secret from prying eyes. Remember, not long back, and agreed to test [http://www.crn.com/sections/breakingnews/breakingnews.jhtml?articleId=179101543] a pre-installed package of on . Isn’t that more than a precursor of larger things to come? Your guess is as good as mine.

Writely acquired

Compared to conjectures above, this is a more solid indication of ’s plans. has very recently acquired [http://writely.blogspot.com/2006/03/-yep-.html] (March 9) Writely’s ‘The Web Word ’. An Upstartle product, Writely easily allows sharing, storing, editing, (and what not!) your documents in .

Taking a holistic view of the foregoing, it seems certain that is indeed planning to launch a product that would potentially be a rival of ’s soon-to-be-launched Live [http://officelive..com/] (now in beta). But, according to many web-watchers, ’s product may be much more bigger in scope than Live.

Figuring out how the of web will unfold is a dicey . As I have told in a previous column, (and other as well) has the advantage of collating huge data on users’ search behavior over a long period. It is to ’s credit that thus far it has been able to remain ahead in the race to capitalize on them.

A freelance web designer and content writer, and an avid web watcher, Partha Bhattacharya owns and operates WebInfo, a free hot web marketing and webmaster resources. Ideal for both start- and regulars alike. Dealing mostly on current topics, Partha’s is a good primer to understand tricky issues on search engine marketing.

By Partha Bhattacharya

: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Partha_Bhattacharya

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