Google plans to roll out enhancements to its online spreadsheet program, including
the ability to display data in new ways using lightweight "gadgets"
and to notify users via e-mail when data is changed.
The enhancements, expected to go live either late Tuesday or early Wednesday,
will be extended later to the other Google
Docs components -- the word processor and presentation applications.
The gadget feature will let third-party developers and Google create new features
for the spreadsheet application in a componentized way, said Jonathan Rochelle,
senior product manager for Google Docs.
"If we have a new idea for visualizing data, we can create that as a separate
feature that can be pushed out to users of Google Docs' spreadsheet," he
said.
For example, a gadget could be created that takes data from a spreadsheet and
presents it visually on a map or in charts that can be displayed in Web sites
that support inline frames, such as the iGoogle personalized home page, he said.
"We're finding today, spreadsheets being used more and more as a foundation
to publishing information on Web sites," Rochelle said.
The gadgets will access spreadsheets via a visualization API, designed to let
developers quickly identify a range of cells whose data they want the gadget
to use or render graphically, he said.
Meanwhile, the new notification feature will generate e-mail messages to users
who collaborate on a spreadsheet, alerting them of changes to the document,
including who made modifications and what changed.
The notifications, which users can configure to receive once per day or every
time a change is made, also include a link to the spreadsheet, where the modified
cells will appear highlighted, Rochelle said. "It supports the collaboration
and makes it stronger," he said.
Google didn't say on Tuesday when the enhancements would be made to the other
Google Docs programs.
Google Docs is a free suite of Web-hosted applications that is considered a
rival and a complement to Microsoft Office, the dominant office productivity
suite. Unlike Microsoft Office, which is designed to be installed on PCs, Google
Docs lives on Google servers and is accessed via a Web browser. While Microsoft
Office has more features, Google Docs has gained attention because it allows
people to collaborate on documents and jointly edit them.
Microsoft has recently been making moves to make its software available via
the Web, including enhancements to Office
Live Workspace, which is still in beta, or test, mode.
People can sign up for Google Docs only, or they can use it as part of a broader
collaboration and communication suite called Google
Apps, which includes other components like Gmail, Google Sites and Talk.