Google Rolling Out Richer Web Apps
        
        
        
        		Google has updated its codebase, adding features to its Google  Docs online suite of applications that make them richer and more collaborative. 
		The updates were announced Monday at Google's Atmosphere  cloud computing event held at the company's headquarters in Mountain View,  CA. Google claimed in its company  blog that it has tapped into "faster JavaScript processing" in  newer or modern browsers with the codebase updates. One effect of the increased  speed is that Google Docs can handle large spreadsheets with performances that "feel  like desktop applications," according to Dave Girouard, president of  Google Enterprise.
		Google has been working on the rewrite to its codebase  "over the last year," according to Anil Sabharwal, product manager  for Google Apps, in an enterprise  blog post. The improvements may help build the case for organizations  considering moving to cloud-based productivity apps from traditional  on-premises productivity solutions, such as Microsoft Office. Google's online  applications have tended to lack the rich features found in Office.
		To accommodate the changes, Google will have to temporarily remove  offline support for Google Docs, starting on May 3, 2010, according to  Sabharwal. Offline support will continue to work for Gmail and Google Calendar,  Sabharwal added. Google plans to update Google Docs with an improved HTML  5-based version of offline support.
		Many of the new Google Docs improvements make them more on  par with the kind of functionality seen in Microsoft Office Web Apps. Google added  a margin ruler for documents, along with improvements in image placement and  bullets. Spreadsheets have the sort of formula editing bar seen in Microsoft  Excel, along with feature improvements such as autocomplete and columns that  can be dragged.
		Document collaboration is improved with the new codebase  update. Google Docs now supports "up to 50 simultaneous editors." Changes  get refreshed and can be seen in near real time during a collaboration session,  according to Google. The company also plans to add a collaboration capability  for drawings and diagrams, which users will be able to access "over the  next few days," according to the official Google blog. 
		It's unclear if the collaboration improvements are related  to Google's acquisition  of DocVerse, announced last month, although DocVerse's technology helped  enable collaboration using Microsoft Office files.
		Google plans to describe more about the improvements in a  Webinar on April 20 at 9:00 a.m. Pacific Standard Time or 12:00 p.m. Eastern  Standard Time. Those wanting to tune in can sign up via the enterprise blog  linked above.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc.