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Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Google Docs offline: Coming this summer
SAN FRANCISCO--Somewhat later than had been planned last year, Google is  addressing a significant weaknesses of Google Docs and Google Apps: the  inability to use the services while not connected to the Net. 
"We will make them [Google Docs offline apps] available this summer,"  said Sundar Pichai, senior vice president of Chrome, in an interview here last week at at the Google I/O conference. "We've all been using it internally. It's imminent. We want to make sure they're good." 
It's not clear just how high the demand for the feature is. Although I find offline Google Docs' absence a critical weakness, Google cited low interest in the idea as one justification for why it had removed an earlier attempt at the technology in 2008. 
One thing is very different from three years ago, though: Chrome OS, which in June will move from prototype to product with Chromebook models from Acer and Samsung. 
With Chrome OS, Google is betting that the world is ready for a  browser-based operating system. For office workers using a Chrome OS  machine to enter customer data into a Web form, offline access is no big  deal, but for Chromebooks to reach their full potential, they have to  be able to handle a bit more of what even the lowest-end PC can do. That  includes being useful when you're on a subway, on an airplane, or  heaven forbid, in some primitive backwater that's not saturated with  reliable 3G. 
Google reassures people that offline Web apps are now possible to  program thanks to a number of interfaces such as AppCache and IndexedDB  arriving in browsers. But actually taking advantage of those interfaces  isn't necessarily easy. 
Google Docs was supposed to get offline abilities in early 2011, for example. 
Offline Docs hasn't been easy, in part because of years of shifts in the  plumbing used to let browsers look for data on a local computer rather  than a remote server on the other side of the Internet. 
Initially, Google Docs had some incomplete offline support through a  Google technology called Gears. Google removed that support when it  discontinued Gears in favor of open Web standards that accomplished  similar goals. The technology in Gears for offline storage was a SQL  database interface that was closely related to the Web SQL Database standard for browsers. However, Mozilla and Microsoft didn't like its approach, and Web SQL's standardization was derailed. 
A final challenge for Google might be its own vision. The company is  betting heavily on a future in which the Internet is built into the  fabric of our lives. Indeed, with lobbying and investments in networking  technology, it's trying to hasten the arrival of that future. 
Google has perhaps a better idea of what that future looks like. Its  campuses are bathed in Wi-Fi and peppered with Ethernet ports. Employees  have home broadband, Net-connected shuttle buses, and for those moments  in between, wireless data modems. 
Thus, it should come as no surprise that Pichai said he must consciously  remember to unplug from the Net if he wants to try offline features of  Google Docs. 
But for those of us not in the Google bubble, with spotty 3G and capped  data for our smartphone and home broadband, offline support is  essential. Sumber : http://news.cnet.com/ 


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