Google is clearly making a play for the enterprise using small to medium businesses as a beachhead.
It has been noted here that the world's most widely used database is Microsoft Excel. This is because enterprise software is about top-down control of workflow and processes -- it's solidified corporate policy/politics! As a result, enterprise software sucks. In order to work around maladapted restrictions imposed by enterprise software, the most productive workers take their processes and automation into spreadsheets like Excel, where they can adapt quickly to changing conditions. Often, the most successful of these processes are then built into enterprise applications, to become the new status quo.
Google wants small and transitional medium sized businesses to outsource much of their IT to them and to run their spreadsheets on Google's apps. Google hopes that this will allow them to do with ad-hoc processes in spreadsheets what they did with web links: organize and unify a huge collection of disparate linkages to create value. When a company has all of its spreadsheets in Google apps, users will be able to link data in disparate spreadsheets. This network of links will be subject to analysis. New business processes will be absorbed from the ad-hoc spreadsheets into the enterprise more quickly and efficiently. This will have tremendous value to companies, especially small and medium sized ones, some of which will grow into giant conglomerates. If this works, Google stands to dwarf the achievements of Microsoft.
EDIT: This remote desktop stuff is just a selling point in support of larger goals.
I don't subscribe to your theory that the wide adoption of Excel as a database system is due to corporate politics. My experience (mostly in smaller companies of <1000 people) has shown that people use Excel because of low barriers (easy to learn), quick results, empowerment, and ownership. Corporate politics certainly plays a role in some environments, but if you eliminated politics, Excel would still dominate.
After using them heavily for several years, I have sadly come to the conclusion that Google Docs and Spreadsheets are toys. Every time I try to get "serious" work done in them, I run into a show-stopping missing feature or performance bottleneck that leads me back to booting up a vm with Office installed.
Nobody in enterprise will take the Google office suite seriously unless there are some serious additions to performance and features.
Linking data from disparate spreadsheets sounds good in theory, until you find that trying to use any non-trivial dataset will break Google spreadsheets, your browser, or both.
With your Ubuntu solution, does the computer you're logging into remotely have to be on? Do you have to know its IP address? I haven't used it before.
The advantage with this is to connect you probably simply visit chromeos.google.com (or something) and log-in. You don't have to worry about the IP address of the machine you're using or firewalls or anything like that.
Isn't Google just giving all these win32 apps a new lease on life? Forget HTML5. Just buy some Windows servers and move your win32 app to the cloud instead. It's the most practical thing to do if Google wants their OS running on lots of desktops but is it good for the future of the web? All I see here is more ad views for Google and more Windows licenses for Microsoft. We get stuck running win32 apps for the next decade because it's easier & cheaper than developing a native HTML5 app.
That's a fairly standard linux feature (X+SSH), isn't it? Seems like Chrome OS going to be the long awaited commercialization of Linux for the desktop.
I think MacOS is close enough to a commercialization of Linux for the desktop to count as that. (I realize it's not based on Linux of course, but the result is very similar).
To be honest, I am actually looking forward to install this OS into my system. I saw their feature video on this stating that turning Google Chrome bypasses the BIOS startup. A few of my colleagues said this is impossible, but for what it's worth, this is Google we're talking about.
it sounds somewhat like a vnc plugin in addition to their native chrome applications (if these 'legacy' apps indeed run 'in the cloud'), but could also include wine for windows apps or perhaps a nested X server for native linux apps. but the majority of the article is speculation and a review of recent tech history, so who knows
[+] [-] stcredzero|16 years ago|reply
It has been noted here that the world's most widely used database is Microsoft Excel. This is because enterprise software is about top-down control of workflow and processes -- it's solidified corporate policy/politics! As a result, enterprise software sucks. In order to work around maladapted restrictions imposed by enterprise software, the most productive workers take their processes and automation into spreadsheets like Excel, where they can adapt quickly to changing conditions. Often, the most successful of these processes are then built into enterprise applications, to become the new status quo.
Google wants small and transitional medium sized businesses to outsource much of their IT to them and to run their spreadsheets on Google's apps. Google hopes that this will allow them to do with ad-hoc processes in spreadsheets what they did with web links: organize and unify a huge collection of disparate linkages to create value. When a company has all of its spreadsheets in Google apps, users will be able to link data in disparate spreadsheets. This network of links will be subject to analysis. New business processes will be absorbed from the ad-hoc spreadsheets into the enterprise more quickly and efficiently. This will have tremendous value to companies, especially small and medium sized ones, some of which will grow into giant conglomerates. If this works, Google stands to dwarf the achievements of Microsoft.
EDIT: This remote desktop stuff is just a selling point in support of larger goals.
[+] [-] ryanhuff|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hy3lxs|16 years ago|reply
Nobody in enterprise will take the Google office suite seriously unless there are some serious additions to performance and features.
Linking data from disparate spreadsheets sounds good in theory, until you find that trying to use any non-trivial dataset will break Google spreadsheets, your browser, or both.
[+] [-] papachito|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] arethuza|16 years ago|reply
How is this different?
[+] [-] losvedir|16 years ago|reply
The advantage with this is to connect you probably simply visit chromeos.google.com (or something) and log-in. You don't have to worry about the IP address of the machine you're using or firewalls or anything like that.
[+] [-] unknown|16 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] billpaetzke|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jsz0|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tybris|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pjscott|16 years ago|reply
http://code.google.com/p/neatx/
[+] [-] dRother|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] nudded|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] moolave|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] w1ntermute|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] peterwwillis|16 years ago|reply