Investigating Online Office Suites
jcatcw writes "Computerworld reviewed four online office suites — Ajax13, Google Docs & Spreadsheets, ThinkFree Online and Zoho Office Suite. None has all the applications and features of Microsoft Office, but if you're looking for the core office applications in an access-anywhere format, at least two were surprisingly sophisticated. The article weighs the ability to save files to a centralized server quite heavily in its ranking. The winner is ThinkFree Office because it provides the most sophisticated features and has the best Microsoft Office compatibility. Zoho's suite is the second choice."
but enough about me. I really like Open Office. Do these 'compete' with OOo? Or do these solve some sort of other problem? Would I use OOo _and_ one of these things? Why?
thanks in advance
It's very unwise to use a hosted-server solution to store confidential or private data unless it's encrypted and you hold the only keys or you've got a contractual agreement that the hosts will never look at the data absent a court order and that they are liable if an adversary breaks in for any reason other than your negligence.
Keep this in mind when you use services to create or save documents. It doesn't matter if it's a spreadsheet, email, or what-not.
And for heaven's sake don't store my credit-card number on Google. CowboyNeal's maybe but not mine.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Who in their right mind is going to store their documents on a system controlled by some dotcom company. There are a number of downsides to this and not a whole lot of upsides.
You would at least want some sort of contract to say that can't do things with your documents. That still won't protect you against searches by LE. At least when the data is on your servers, you should get a heads up (barring black bag jobs) that LE has taken an interest in you.
If the company goes bankrupt you may lose your data.
Why not just have the data on a server you can access remotely and have the proper tools with you to edit that data (e.g. a laptop or livecd). You can keep the data encrypted on the server if you don't trust the host.
Arrow keys? You, sir, are obviously not a serious vi user. heheheheh
Say it with me class, "you pick the right technology for the job". Thin clients have their place. Office suites is not one of them.
-James