PowerPoint is used for creating presentations, not converting existing documents.
Please, please, don't tell me that someday I'll be responsible for some application like this one day in the boardroom when the wifi connection flakes and *poof!*, there goes the presentation. Ok, so presumably they'd create an offline client. But at that point, isn't anyone asking the obvious question: Isn't that the same dang thing as a rich client? I'm supposed to be excited about an offline AJAX-ed client built on the browser as its application foundation framework? Oh, and better yet, it's ad-supported. And if an update is introduced and it causes problems with some graphic or transition, well, too bad... no one is thinking of change management when it comes to web apps. Am I the only one missing the big buzz here?
Google has been releasing more and more productivity applications and other services as free, online versions, starting with Gmail.
Documents and Spreadsheets, Gmail, and what else? Really, how many is "more and more," exactly?
Google is great and all, but honestly, this type of hype is ridiculous. Maybe they own some stock in the company or something?
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