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Google's Quickoffice Purchase Takes Aim At Windows 8 63

alphadogg writes "Google announced Tuesday it has acquired Quickoffice, whose software could bolster Google Apps on tablets and smartphones. Terms of the deal weren't disclosed. Google's second buyout in two days (yesterday it announced the acquisition of social/advertising company Meebo) gives the company more ammunition in its fight for the mobile office versus Microsoft, which is steaming ahead with Windows 8 and its Office apps. Quickoffice offers apps for Android and Apple iOS tablets and smartphones, but it's unclear what will become of the iOS ones under Google's domain."
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Google's Quickoffice Purchase Takes Aim At Windows 8

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  • Since this is an app and not a backend, this seems like "logical" speculation. With a few notable exceptions, most of the downloadable Google software appears to be open source to some extent.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by Dog-Cow ( 21281 )

      A few notable exceptions... like every single Android app?

      You really didn't think this one through, did you?

      • by h4rr4r ( 612664 )

        Like Google sky? Oh wait that one is open source.
        Or maybe basically all the system apps, nope those are open source too.

        Basically just market, goggles and maps are closed up.

        Not every single Android app. I doubt they will open this up, but surely not every single Android app Google has made is closed.

  • If I can get at all my content down and work off line and be able to sync up with it later then I'm really looking forward to this. My HTC doesn't really want to play along with docs right now. the page is blocked here. Does it say anything about collaborative editing?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 06, 2012 @07:04AM (#40230517)

    I'm guessing here, but we have to consider that Office Apps are required for a platform to be seriously considered by the enterprise. Microsoft have Office, Apple have iWork, and this gives Google QuickOffice. All three also have an online viewing/editing/storage option too.

    What can we expect in the future then? Google will presumably make the software free at some point, bundled with their platforms. Tablet Androids would be first, and then at some point a port to Google's ChromeOS must surely happen to make these devices more attractive. However I wonder how easy it will be to take software optimised for mobile devices with small screens and translate it to a laptop or desktop environment.

    • by lpp ( 115405 ) on Wednesday June 06, 2012 @07:35AM (#40230649) Homepage Journal

      What I find interesting is how Microsoft still uses the Office suite to fend off threats to the real reason it is still entrenched in many back offices... Exchange.

      I've personally seen many businesses try alternative office suites only to say that while they are more or less happy with the replacements for word processing, spreadsheets, presentations and the like, they didn't feel they could drop Outlook because they rely so heavily on the collaborative features of Exchange.

      These companies don't want to migrate to Google's cloud based offering because they want things kept on premises. And there isn't a compelling all-in-one alternative to Exchange that is as easily tied in with their existing systems (e.g. auto-login via Windows authentication). So because they keep Exchange, they keep Outlook. Because they keep Outlook, they keep Office. And so the wheel turns.

      • by JasterBobaMereel ( 1102861 ) on Wednesday June 06, 2012 @09:48AM (#40231609)

        My experience is that both Exchange and Outlook are both terrible, badly written and hard to maintain..... but work just that bit better than the alternatives, and users are familiar with it and it does everything they need (which seems to be different for each user...)

        • You must not have tried Lotus Notes. I am a heavy Linux user at work and home and generally try to use non-microsoft stuff when I can but after being forced to switch to Lotus Notes from Exchange I now realize how good we had it with Exchange.
      • --What I find interesting is how Microsoft still uses the Office suite to fend off threats to the real reason it is still entrenched in many back offices... Exchange.--

        Nothing else quite like it especially for a small business. So yes, Office, is what Microsoft really has. It's been a cash cow for years, but it's kinda worth it.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by GeLeTo ( 527660 ) on Wednesday June 06, 2012 @07:20AM (#40230581)
    Quickoffice will be one of the carrots to lure manifacturers to use the Google branded version of Android instead of rolling their own ( Amazon, Baidu Yi ). This is their primary incentive, not Windows 8.
    • by iserlohn ( 49556 )

      +1 Insightful (If I had mod points)

    • Quickoffice will be one of the carrots to lure manifacturers to use the Google branded version of Android instead of rolling their own

      The manufacturers will still probably roll their own so they can have branding and the opportunity to inject some additional revenue streams and crapware. The carriers will add theirs as well.

      Why sell you a device that doesn't also steer a little more revenues their way or reinforce their branding?

      If the manufacturer isn't going to act like a greedy ass, the carrier will.

    • That would make sense if QuickOffice was the only Office suite for Android, or at least the best one - but that's not the case. As it is, Polaris Office is superior in most respects (and rather popular among Android OEMs - I don't think you can even buy it in the app store). And long-term, SoftMaker will soon release their office suite for Android (currently in public beta), which rips all competitors apart in terms of MS Office format fidelity.

  • Horrible (Score:4, Informative)

    by imamac ( 1083405 ) on Wednesday June 06, 2012 @07:31AM (#40230633)
    Quickoffice has some of the worst reviews for an office app on iOS. 1-2 stars. I would think Google could afford something a but better.
    • emacs? It's an office suite, email program, IDE, and even has a text editor.
    • I agree. They should have bought OfficeSuite instead. I have both on the Android, and QuickOffice is incredibly buggy, slow, very likely not to be able to open files made in other programs (including Microsoft Word), and rarely if ever updated. The only benefit of it is that it shows documents in page view, instead of just reflowed text. Sure it's got a nice interface and some good options, but it just isn't as productive a product.
      • I prefer Documents to Go, but I have no idea if that's supported on iOS. It even integrates with Google Docs.
        • Docs to Go would have been better than QuickOffice, too. All three programs integrate with Google Docs though.
    • by Nehmo ( 757404 )

      Quickoffice has some of the worst reviews for an office app on iOS. 1-2 stars. I would think Google could afford something a but better.

      I support that - as long as it's a female "but better". :-) You probably composed that in your browser, but if you had done it in MS Word, you would have gotten a squeakily blue underline. I wouldn't know what Quickoffice would do because I don't have it. I do my word processing stuff in regular o' Office in Windows. I'm looking for reviews for Quickoffice. On their site [quickoffice.com], everything is positive. On Amazon, Quickoffice got 3.4 out of 5 stars. Which reviews are you referring to? And which version and type ar

    • I think the Android version might be better or at least the reviews are better on Google Play or whatever they are calling it these days.

  • Interesting with respect to Meebo. I used them extensively for a year or two starting in 2007 and their system was quite good - it handled AIM, MSN, Yahoo & Facebook better then almost anyone else - including Pidgin & Trillian. I stopped using it regularly when I switched jobs but I'm interested to see that they had kept building their repitoire. Now with Google in the game, that's a lot of capital to really push forward. Maybe it's time to revisit Google Plus?
  • The more competition there is for MS Office, the better. MS Office has become a bloated POS over the years and I hate the new Ribbon interface. LibreOffice is currently my choice for office suite.

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