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June 19th, 2007

The Gears that could 'augur the death of Microsoft'

Posted by David Berlind @ 4:38 am

Categories: General, IT Management, Legal, Office 2.0, Personal Technology, Software Infrastructure, Web technology

Tags: Google Inc., Google Apps, Operating System, API, David Berlind

In Focus » See more posts on: Google Office

In his recent commentary at Slate.com, Harry McCracken notes that Google’s Gears could be the technology that ‘augurs the death of Microsoft.’ Writes McCracken:

A week ago, I ceremoniously yanked out my MacBook’s Ethernet cable and toggled off the Wi-Fi. Once I was positive the machine was cut off from the Internet, I added a task to my online to-do list. It worked. I sat back and smiled, agog—I had just seen the future of software.

I wrangle my to-dos with a Web service called Remember the Milk. Compared with a bloated behemoth like Outlook, it’s a streamlined, fun-to-use wonder. Rather than sitting on one PC’s hard disk, RTM lives on the Web, where it’s available on every computer I use. Up until that day, though, it had the same overwhelming problem as every other Net-based service on the planet: It was … well, Net-based. No Internet connection, no to-do list.

But now Remember the Milk has added support for Google Gears…..

McCracken goes on to question the sense in spending $500 for a future version of Microsoft Office if Google Apps was (Google Apps is a branded service) roughly comparable, not haunted by the so-called offline problem, and free. The truth is that to get the most out of Google Apps, many business will probably opt for the $50 per seat per year price because, among other things, it enables dipping into Google’s network of third party solution providers (many of which, like the thousands of apps that helped to make Windows what it is today, will really make the Google Apps platform useful to the masses). $50 is the cost of a single support incident with Microsoft Office. $50 per year for a user of Google Apps includes free telephone support. (If Google Apps takes off, the company may have to do a “WordPerfect” though….a company that eventually had to charge real money for its once free, and legendary phone support.)

McCracken eventually reaches the same conclusion that I have….that “Office will surely leave its desktop roots behind for the Web at some point in the not-too-distant future.” He also points out how Web apps, once they’re offline, render the operating system moot. This cuts very much to the chase of why Doug Gold and I refer to the event we produce (Mashup Camp, the next one is this July in Silicon Valley) as the “unconference for the uncomputer.”

More than anything else, operating systems are collections of APIs that make it so developers can do what once required thousands of lines of code with one line. Things like accessing the network or putting a window on screen (at a certain location with certain color scroll bars and a certain title). But to install an API into the general distribution of traditional operating system like Windows, the Mac, or even Linux requires the say-so of a handful of people. Not so with the Internet which, like operating systems, is also quickly turning into a collection of APIs (a good hunk of which are for Google’s applications). In fact, barely a day goes by where another API doesn’t show up on the Net — one that’s available to all developers. This is drawing developers in droves to the mashup ecosystem of software where they can draw upon multiple APIs from multiple sources to produce unique and innovative applications.

Toss in the cross-platform nature of those apps, since they run in a browser (which in turn means they run on any OS without modification) and, as McCracken points out, all the inequities between something like the Windows and Mac versions of Office go away. The traditional computer as we know it is simply becoming a point of access to our data and information. The naysayers who once hung their hat on the offline problem (as though it were insurmountable) now talk about how no one will store their data with a service because it’s too risky. Hackers could get at it or worse, some privacy invading court or Congress could require the service to turn over the data. (Who do you want defending your data — your lawyers or theirs?) Meanwhile, companies are flocking to services like Salesforce.com with the one dataset that’s their lifeblood: their customer data.

Sun was right (although it may not have been Sun that brought the vision across the finish line). The network is the computer. The uncomputer.

David Berlind has been Executive Editor at ZDNet since 1998 and has been a technology journalist since 1991. Although he can't respond to all e-mails, he reads them all. You can reach David at david.berlind AT cnet.com. If you don't want the content of your e-mail to turn up in a blog entry, make sure you say so. To the extent that most e-mail he receives looks to sway his opinion about something, he usually looks to pass those points of view onto ZDNet's audience members for their consideration . For disclosures on David's industry affiliations, click here.
  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 35 Talkback(s)
Google sells ads - not software
That's how they got so big - their "apps" are about as useful as a pre-Lotus spreadsheet - why would I want this stuff on my local machine? Funny, but when I search for "application" Google gives me 7... (Read the rest)
Posted by: devils_advocate Posted on: 06/26/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Well written  RickyF | 06/19/07
Nice anecdote  markbn | 06/19/07
Just another attack on rich client computing  P. Douglas | 06/19/07
This is really a whole lot different. With this model, the application and  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
What??  markbn | 06/19/07
Well, given that Linux is modular, and anything that is not needed can be  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
At that point we will not need Linux+OpenOffice anymore  markbn | 06/20/07
In one form or another you will...  TtfnJohn | 06/20/07
Maybe 10 years from now  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/19/07
Time waits for nobody. Yes, MS would like it to be another 10 years  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
You sound like a mainframe person well into the PC revolution.  B.O.F.H. | 06/19/07
Are those real years or internet years? Makes a big difference - NT  raycote | 06/19/07
Debate  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/19/07
There's a place for both.  anthony@... | 06/19/07
Absolutely!!  JLHenry | 06/21/07
What a JOKE!  GeiselS@... | 06/19/07
That's interesting  anthony@... | 06/19/07
Reality  frgough | 06/19/07
Still, you read all the time about credit cards hacked at companies that  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
Tsk, tsk DonnieBoy  Confused by religion | 06/19/07
There are probably a lot more than 1 million zombies out there, but even  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
Secure Too  Stephen Wheeler | 06/19/07
Most of the problems you are talking about are due to flaky Internet  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
The data is still not secured  jfp | 06/19/07
Google and others Will sell "behind the firewall" appliances, similar to  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
end of planned obsolescence  reedjjjr | 06/19/07
Another similar product that is needed: a caching server on-site, so that  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
Or not. Google's vulnerability.  Anton Philidor | 06/19/07
The cost of delivering applications on-line is a whole lot cheaper than the  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
Stop This Talk of Competition, It's Been Decided...  dhettinger | 06/19/07
Could Gears be extended into a central data recovery system? NT  raycote | 06/19/07
Well, Gears is open source, so all kinds of things might be added.  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
The King is Dead ...  debater | 06/19/07
Google has the data replicated on many different servers, so, for your last  DonnieBoy | 06/19/07
Google sells ads - not software  devils_advocate | 06/26/07

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