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Could deploying Google Apps be a career-limiting move?

Before using Google, understand its strengths and weaknesses, says Burton Group
By Jon Brodkin , Network World , 08/22/2007

Deploying Google Apps could be a “career-limiting move for enterprise architects” if they expect too much from the software-as-a-service collaboration suite and its “rudimentary” feature set, the Burton Group research and consulting firm says in a new report.

Google Apps is useful in a limited set of circumstances, the report says. Start-ups and other small businesses might want to use it as a basic office and collaboration suite. Google Apps can also be considered a point solution for businesses that need a “lite” collaboration or enterprise content-management application, or a rudimentary replacement of Microsoft Office for “non-power users” who need only basic e-mail, word processing and spreadsheet capabilities.

Even at Google’s offices, Apps is used internally only as a collaboration add-on to Microsoft Office, the report says.

“Google has caught the attention of enterprises with its inexpensive Google Apps Premier Edition (GAPE) product: available at $50 per user, per year,” the Burton Group’s Guy Creese writes. “However, the seductive price can spell trouble for enterprise architects and their companies if they don’t do their homework: the solution’s rudimentary feature set means that enterprises need to pick carefully and implement slowly.”

The 55-page report was released last week and is titled “Google Apps in the Enterprise: A Promotion-Enhancing or Career-Limiting Move for Enterprise Architects?”

Microsoft Office has a huge lead in features over Google Apps, the Burton Group says, giving these examples:

* Documents: “Google Docs does not support a table of contents, headers, footers, automatic creation of footnotes or end notes.”

* Spreadsheets: “Google Spreadsheets does not support some of the more esoteric functions within formulas (e.g., database functions), and cannot hide rows or columns.”

* Presentations: “Google does not yet offer a presentation application, although it is in the process of developing one.”

* Customized applications: “Using Visual Studio Tools for Office, developers can create customized business applications that leverage capabilities in Microsoft Word and Excel, for example. While the Google APIs offer some programmatic control, they do not offer the broad level of capabilities that Microsoft does.”

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RE: Could deploying Google Apps be a career-limiting move?By Microsoft Subnet on August 23, 2007, 5:12 pmGoogle Apps is useful in a limited set of circumstances, says a report from Burton Group. But deploying Google Apps to the enterprise could be a “career-limiting...

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