Slide 1: Google et le travail collaboratif
Par V. Vandoorne - Akimedia
Slide 2: Calendar
- http://calendar.google.com/
• Start : April 2006 (out of beta since july 2009) • Similar to desktop calendar applications such as Microsoft Outlook or iCal • synchronized with mobile devices (e.g., BlackBerry, Palm, iPhone, Pocket PC, Android phones) • or with PC applications (e.g., Microsoft Outlook) via third party software, and natively with Apple's iCal • Sharing calendars (congés scolaires belges, évènements sportifs, web, agenda famillial,...) • Rappels gratuits par SMS, popup, mails. • No ads • Offline mode
Slide 3: Docs
- http://docs.google.com
Google Docs is a free, Web-based word processor, spreadsheet, presentation, and form application. • Google Docs is Google's "software as a service" version of an office suite. • Create and edit documents online • Collaborating in real-time with other users • Docs are automatically saved to prevent data loss • Revision history is automatically kept • Save in OpenOffice, HTML, PDF, RTF, Text, Word • equation editor • In the case of spreadsheets, users can be notified of changes to any specified regions via e-mail. • Offline mode, Mobile access
Slide 4: Gmail
- https://mail.google.com
• Gmail is a free, advertising-supported webmail, POP3, and IMAP service • Start : 1st April 2004 (out of beta since February 2007) • 146 million users monthly (July 2009) • 7350 MB of free storage with additional storage ranging from 10 GB to • a search-oriented interface and a "conversation view" similar to an Internet forum • Offline access (with Gears) • Chat • Import other e-mails account • No easy HTML signature :-( • Use your own @domainname.com
400 GB available for $20 to $500 (US) per year.
Slide 5: Group
- http://groups.google.com
Google Groups is a service that supports discussion groups, including many Usenet newsgroups, based on common interests. • Accessed using a web browser • or by subscribing to receive email • Groups search, Profiles, Rating posts, Starring threads, Email masking, Group web pages •
Slide 6: Translate
- http://translate.google.com
Google Translate is a beta service provided by Google to translate a section of text, or a webpage, into another language. • Google uses its own translation software. • statistical analysis rather than traditional rule-based analysis
Slide 7: Knol
- http://knol.google.com
Knol is a Google project that aims to include user-written articles on a range of topics. • Beta : July 2008 • knols will contain the personal opinions of the author (Wikipedia try to be neutral) • No Google logo (!?) • 100000 articles (January 2009) • The authors have an option to allow their knols to be edited by the public, to make them editable only to co-authors or to make them closed entirely. They may also choose to include ads from Google's AdSense to their knols.
Slide 8: Blogger
- http://www.blogger.com
Blogger is a blog publishing system. • • • • • • publish on http://subdomains.blogspot.com or use your own domain name Template collection Template customisation "Blogger for Word" (a free add-in for Microsoft Word) Google Docs has direct publishing integration to Blogger
Slide 9: Talk
- http://www.google.com/talk/
Google Talk (GTalk) is a free Windows and web-based application for instant messaging and voice over internet protocol (VOIP). • XMPP/Jabber compliant (open protocol) • Integrated with Gmail • Voicemail (10' MP3 send by mail)
Slide 10: Vidéo
- http://video.google.com
Google Video is a free video sharing website and also a video search engine.
Slide 12: Wave
Google Wave is "a personal communication and collaboration tool" announced by Google at the Google I/O conference on May 27, 2009.[1][2] It is a web-based service, computing platform, and communications protocol designed to merge email, instant messaging, wikis, and social networking.