Who is and what does Google Presentations want? If you’ve
missed the news on the presentation held this spring by Eric Schmidt, Google
CEO, at the Office 2.0 Expo in San
Francisco or you’ve just ignored all
speculations regarding Goggle’s intention to offer a web alternative to
Microsoft’s Office suite, then it is very possible that you don’t know what
Google Presentations is.
Let’s start with the beginning. In April at Tech Office 2.0 Eric
Schmidt used a beta version of Google Presentations to display its slides. He
said that Google Presentations is based on the technology developed by Tonic
System, a company which has acquired by Google earlier this year.
Today Google announced that the new Google Presentations
feature is available online at http://docs.google.com,
of course as a beta. Also the service that offered Web-based alternatives to Microsoft
Word and Microsoft Excel previously known as Google Documents&Spreadsheets
was renamed to Google Docs.
Google Docs is part of Google Apps which has been available
as a free service since August 2006. Beside Google Docs, Google Apps includes the
large storage-capacity service Gmail, Google Calendar (shared calendaring),
Google Talk, which is an instant messaging client, and the Start Page feature
for creating a customizable home page on a specific domain.
Earlier this year, in February, Google introduced Google
Apps Premier Edition, a service aimed primarily to small and medium businesses,
for an annual fee of $50. Unlike the free version, Google Apps Premier Edition offers
10 GBs of storage per user, APIs for business integration, 99.9 % uptime, 24x7
support for critical issues and advertising is optional.
But the lacking of an equivalent for Microsoft PowerPoint
was considered by many analysts a weak point of Google Apps. With today’s
announcement it seems that the problem has been solved.
But is Google Presentations a threat to Microsoft PowerPoint?
The short answer is “Hard to say”
In April when he was asked the same question, Eric Schmidt
said: "We don't think it competes with Microsoft, because it doesn't have
all the functionality of Office. It's a different way of sharing information,
more casual, and a better fit to how people use the Web."
Writing about Google Presentations on The Official Google Blog,
Attila Bodis, Software Engineer said that it’s all about sharing and
collaboration.
“Maybe more than any other type of document, presentations
are created to be shared. But assembling slide decks by emailing them around is
as frustrating as it is time-consuming. The new presentations feature of Google
Docs helps you to easily organize, share, present, and collaborate on
presentations, using only a web browser.” he wrote.
So let’s take a quick look at the service. Using Google
Presentations you can create an online presentation or if it is necessary, you
can even modify (of course, to a certain point) one that you have already
created using Microsoft PowerPoint. Alike the other applications of the Google
Docs, Presentations offers too all the basic functions you need, but little to
nothing beside that.
If you’ve worked at least a few minutes with one of the
applications included in the Google Docs, Documents or Spreadsheets) then it
won’t take you any longer to get used with Google presentations. You can import
photos from your hard disk, you can edit fonts, the arrangement of the text,
the fonts you use, the colors, the background of the presentation and other
small details. Google Presentations is even offering a small package of predefined
themes, so you can choose the one that suites your needs.
To open a new presentation it is enough to select the
Presentation option from the menu where just Document and Spreadsheet used to
appear. From this step it is enough to follow the menus, which are simple and
clear and if you know exactly what you want to say, in a few minutes your
presentation will be ready.
The result of your work can be saved as ZIP and it is
obvious that you can copy it onto your computer. You can use a PPT file (the extension
that defines presentations created with Microsoft PowerPoint) as a start point
for your presentation because Google Presentations is able to import such files
from your hard drive without any problems as long as they aren’t password
protected or larger than 10 MB. But you can’t save your presentation as PPT
file. But if you have a presentation in which you used all the bells and
whistles offered by Microsoft PowerPoint (such as animation, transition effects
or sound) don’t hope to find them in Google Presentation. Remember I said
basic? Even I don’t miss the animations or transition effects the lack o
possibility to add sound to a presentation is rather annoying, but let’s hope
that in a future version..who knows…
Google Presentations offers also Revisions, which are
intermediate saves of your presentation, in caseyou need to restore a
presentation to its previous status or track the changes that were made.
But the facility that is really interesting and even unique
concerns another aspect, the online collaboration. And only when you hit the
Start Presentations button things begin to turn really interesting. You can
choose to invite those whom you want to see the presentation, it is enough to
send them a link and within a few seconds, you can construct your own online
auditorium, which will be permitted to comment about you presentation through
Google Talk. By hitting the Share button you can create quickly invite people
as viewers or collaborators. The people you define as collaborators may edit
your presentation or even invite more people, if you decided to give them that
level of access. Of course, thanks to integrtation with Gmail you can define
your collaborators from your contacts list.
The simplicity and the efficiency with which Presentations
make this possible couldn’t even be equaled by Microsoft and its PowerPoint.
Of course I could tell you now about how Google is planning
to take Microsoft’s place in the field of Office applications, about how the
software-as-a-service will soon become more important than the classic Office
suites that need to be installed or about how some people don’t feel
comfortable to leave their presentations on Google’s servers.
But all these are theories and are more or less important.
What you ought to keep in mind is that Google offers you the ideal tool that
helps you get involved your colleagues, friends, partners or whoever you want
in the process of creating a presentation.
All is simple and it happens instantly, all you need is a
browser and an Internet connection.
So if you really have to do a presentation…go work!