Online office suites: Google Docs vs. ThinkFree vs. Zoho
Posted by Jacque on July 23rd, 2008
If you’ve been watching the development of free online office suites but haven’t left your desk-top based product (e.g., Microsoft Office) yet, you’ll find Computerworld’s reviews of three popular online office suites instructive. Office suites typically include at least word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation apps.
Three major competitors in the field — Google Docs, ThinkFree, and Zoho — have all made major moves in recent months, significantly improving the products by adding more applications, features, and functionality.
But how do they shape up against desktop suites like Microsoft Office, known primarily for Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications?
“While Google Docs, ThinkFree and Zoho vary in the breadth of the applications they offer, their features and their usability, they are all capable of doing real, useful work. They do what you expect of productivity apps — create documents, spreadsheets and presentations — in sophisticated fashion,” says reviewer David DeJean. Developments in open source, AJAX, and browsers have helped online suites to compete.
A really big advantage is that all three are free and offer free storage space, as well. Since they work in a Web browser, they also work across different platforms. It doesn’t matter whether you create, view, or use them with PCs, Mac’s, or a Linux box. Since they are designed with collaboration and sharing in mind, that is especially important.
Computerworld reviews the three online suites’ capabilities as word processors, spreadsheets, presentations, and how they “leverage the web.” Each product has its strengths, although they have developed from different points of view.
There is no clear winner here, but the reviewer concludes, “Web-based productivity suites have made a transition. While at first they simply imitated desktop applications in a Web browser, the current versions add features that begin to integrate the social computing features of the Web. At the same time, they’ve begun to grow away from simply imitating Microsoft Office to developing personalities of their own.” Check out the article for details. [via Slashdot]




September 29th, 2008 at 1:22 pm
This is Sean at Box.net. New features for Zoho make it even easier to work with Office files right inside the browser. You can now use .docx files and even edit PowerPoint presentations. This makes the experience of creating and editing these files and (with services like Box.net), storing and sharing these files all without leaving the browser.