Google's shopping trip through the Web 2.0 start-up market continued with the purchase of Wiki maker Jot.com. In the scheme of things, it's chump change for Google but it does put the spotlight back on Google's online application suite, which will come as little surprise to anyone when it's eventually launched one day. Jot.com is a nice addition because it brings a collaboration tool into the mix. The purchase got me thinking about what people are currently doing to cobble together an online office suite. Since I started working from home (and I can't be too effusive about not having to commute anymore!), I've really got into Web-based tools. This includes Skype, Google Talk, Writely, Yahoo Mail, PBWiki, along with Flock and Firefox. I'd be curious to see what other tools are people are using. Tags: Google, M&A
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Comments
Re: Google Jumps On Jot
by
Pema Hegan
on Tue 31 Oct 2006 09:53 PM EST | Permanent Link
A couple I use all of the time…
Google calendars – Creating a shared calendar with co-workers makes it easy to book meetings with people you’re working with. Omnidrive – It’s basically a one-gig web drive that you can map to your PC like a network. You can share the drive with other Omnidrive members, which makes it easy to collaborate on big files. Omni are in beta testing at the moment. Their beta product is good but apparently the next release will be a big improvement (scheduled for November 11). Re: Re: Google Jumps On Jot
by
Anonymous
on Wed 01 Nov 2006 10:28 AM EST | Permanent Link
Here's a few I use to work across multiple PCs:
Google calendar: synchronised (1 way) with Thunderbird Lightning and the ReminderFox FF extension. Google Browser Synch extension for FF: to synchronise bookmarks & cookies across multiple PCs. Google Bookmarks: for (active) temporary bookmarks, fully accessible in FF sidebar with GMarks extension Yahoo mail (beta): to access multiple mail accounts Avvenu: to remotely access files on my office PC through a web-browser. |
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