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Google catering to the "Generation X"

posted Tuesday, 6 June 2006
Have you ever thought of what's the most popular business application ever? Is there any statistics by Gartner-Shmartner?
May be there is, may be there is not, but I have my own opinion (as usual). Ready? The most popular business application is Microsoft Excel.   Lots of business users request, understand and feel comfortable with this spreadsheet tool.
Try to offer them a nicely created report...Nay...Just give it to me in Excel format. Ad-hoc report? Most likely they want it in Excel. You can even write database queries against any database that has an ODBC driver right from Excel.
Some more advanced users write complex formula for the what-if scenarios. Some of the users have become para-programmers and maintain secret databases in a form of a spreadsheet. They will resist fiercely if their IT department will try to take away this database and merge the data with a real DBMS. The Generation X.

Excel is probably the most popular Microsoft's product after Windows.  So Microsoft was peacefully resting on its laurels, but
Google came from behind with Google Spreadsheets: shareable spreadsheets on the Web. Today they made available just a limited test version of the product. Can   this product  be considered a serious punch into Microsoft's face? Microsoft does not seem to be scared.

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1. mike left...
Tuesday, 6 June 2006 11:48 pm

I have my reservations...First of all the most important business application is e-mail. I bet average white color US employee spend more time reading and answering e-mails than working on spreadsheets. Outlook is still the most used e-mail software for people who pay for their software. I think my boss will freak-out if I send him a business document from my gmail account instead of secure corporate e-mail system and if I mail him invitation to look at excel spreadsheet over Internet he will fire me on the spot.

For profitable business the price of Excel software is insignificant in comparison to the risk of data loss to competition.


2. Yakov left...
Wednesday, 7 June 2006 5:35 am

Mike, you're right.

Microsoft Outlook is more popular than Excel.

As to using other emails...it's just a matter of time. These days corporations let offshore companies their data, in several years they may as well let you using yahoo, hotmail, or gmail accounts. They just need to figure out how to protect/audit these emails.


3. Len left...
Friday, 9 June 2006 12:22 pm

To Mike:

<Q> For profitable business the price of Excel software is insignificant in comparison to the risk of data loss to competition. </Q>

There is HUGE cost in using excel: http://www.eusprig.org/stories .htm http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/22/managing_spreadsheet_fr aud/