On TechRepublic: Five super-secret features in Windows 7
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

February 18th, 2009

Google's back-pedal--or expansion--into offline is OK with me

Posted by Sam Diaz @ 3:16 am

Categories: Cloud computing, General, Google, Web 2.0

Tags: Google Inc., Google Gmail, E-mail Providers, Cloud Computing, Internet, Sam Diaz

When Google announced last week that it was opening Google calendar to offline access for Apps customers, I couldn’t help but shake my head and chuckle. Just a few weeks earlier, it had been Gmail that was released into the offline world - for all customers, not just those using Apps. And not quite a year ago, it was Google Docs.

For several years, I’d been hearing the folks at Google talk about life in the cloud, about how a computer that wasn’t connected to the Internet was a computer that wasn’t really working. And, now, here they were slowly back-pedaling to bring those online apps into the offline world. Had Google spoken too soon and jumped the gun on an all-online solution?  I was fully prepared to sit down over the weekend and hammer out a post to give them some friendly ribbing.

But then, over the weekend, I found myself without a connection (we were visiting family out of town) and suddenly needing to take a look at a file that I knew was in my Gmail inbox. I had already accepted that I was going to have to go out in the rain and find a WiFi hotspot to get this document. But then I remembered that I had installed offline access a few weeks back, so I opened my laptop, launched the offline version of Gmail, grabbed the file and was in business.

OK, that’s great and all - and it turned out to be a happy ending over the weekend - but how am I now supposed to give Google any grief over its expansion into offline when the mantra for so long was online, online, online?

I guess I can’t.

I’m a fan of working in the cloud and am actually looking forward to the days when all of our content - whether family photos or insurance policies - will be securely stored somewhere on the Internet, only a few clicks away from appearing on a network-connected screen in the kitchen or the living room. But for now, there are still plenty of instances and situations - like an afternoon at Grandma’s house or on a cross-country flight to a business meeting - where there may be no Internet connection.

If Google seriously wants to attract more business customers away from a client-based Outlook world to a browser-based Gmail world, then it can’t just get them to switch from one to the other cold-turkey. It has to give those customers a taste of both worlds, a transition from old school to new school. Offline access is one of the ways it can do that.

Google still has a ways to go to get it all right. Offline calendar, for example, only allows users to read from, not write to, their offline-access calendars. But it’s a good start toward building a mainstream cloud.

Also see: Google recruits resellers to land more business users for Apps

Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz is a senior editor at ZDNet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email Sam Diaz

Subscribe to Between the Lines via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 12 Talkback(s)
You've been able to get gmail offline for ages...
It's been possible to get your gmail into your mail client via POP3, IMAP or whatever and read it all offline for years.

So now they are making it possible to turn your web browser into a mail ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: james.faction Posted on: 02/22/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
The future is hybrid.  CobraA1 | 02/18/09
Very good points, but, do not forget the performance boost, and reduced  DonnieBoy | 02/18/09
Not to mention  dragosani | 02/18/09
Google has the perfect plan  daengbo | 02/20/09
Also about improving performance, AND making up for flaky connections  DonnieBoy | 02/18/09
RE: Google  mr1972 | 02/18/09
Finally, you got it. Microsoft was right = software services is the key  psilva11 | 02/18/09
This is very different than a locally installed shrink-wrap application.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/09
First, with offline functionality, you do not need universal access to the  DonnieBoy | 02/18/09
no need for it--hook up to livemail or thunderbird  hansonjb | 02/19/09
Google offers nothing new  jorjitop | 02/19/09
You've been able to get gmail offline for ages...  james.faction | 02/22/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

  • Thought-provoking progressive ideas on diverse topics that intersect with technology, business, and life, and matter to the world at large. Visit SmartPlanet
  • More from IBM
  • Innovate your business' process model, play against the market, compete against others on our scoreboards and WIN! Try INNOV8 2.0: A BPM Simulator
  • Enabling Real-World Business Transformation through IBM Service Management Read the EMA Analyst Report
Click Here