Google App - Top 10
This is a personal top 10 of the best Google applications in 2006. I included
both software and web applications, applications launched or updated this year,
tools that make your life easier.
10. Blogger Beta
The new
Blogger, launched in August, brings dynamic serving, easier-to-manage
templates, labels, but - most of all - a reliable platform and integration with
Google by using Google Accounts. After being neglected a long period of time,
overwhelmed by outages, Blogger has been given a new life.
9. Picasa + New
Picasa Web Albums
Picasa added
many useful features this year (geotagging, nested folder view, better
thumbnails), but the biggest update was its online extension. Picasa Web Albums
is a place where you can upload your albums from Picasa and share them with your
friends. While the space is not very generous (only 250 MB, upgradeable for a
fee), Picasa Web Albums lets you add friends, has comments,
tags and search. But, most of all, it's only for you and your friends.
8. New
Google Calendar
After months of waiting, Google Calendar launched in April as a way "to keep track of all the events in your life, coordinate schedules with friends and family, and find new things to do". Google Calendar lets you share calendars or just events, get SMS notifications, search your calendar, other public calendars and public events. Unfortunately, there isn't an easy way to synchronize your calendar with Outlook or your mobile phone.
7. Google Video
Google Video
has shifted its mission from searching TV shows captions to searching all
the videos in the world, one by one (including user-generated videos).
The video store wasn't successful, but Google Video continued to add
features: popular videos, uploading videos online, ratings, comments, labels.
But most of them were added a long time after they were included in YouTube, its
major rival. Adding Google Video to Google's homepage didn't help it too much,
so Google bought YouTube.
Contextual
video ads, launched this year, will have a big exposure, while Google tries
to make deals with content providers.
6. Google Books + Google Scholar
A new interface for book search, PDF downloads for public domain books and a
big effort to digitize books. Google Scholar now ranks recent papers by importance and lets you find papers in libraries.
5. Google Reader
Google's feed reader changed its interface and became everybody's favorite. The new views expanded view and list view) continue to support the idea of "river of news". Now you have more control over what you read, a way to tag posts and feeds, infinite scrolling and an easier to propagate your favorite articles. Google Reader still lacks search, but its big flexibility has the advantage of suiting everyone's needs.
4. Google Maps + Google Earth + New SketchUp
Google Maps added more imagery, a better zoom, more mobility, live traffic, and continued to be used in a lot mashups. Google Earth added support for Linux, included more featured content and drawing tools (for the free version). Google also acquired @LastSoftware, the creators of SketchUp, a powerful tool for creating, viewing, and modifying 3D models. SketchUp now has a free version.
3. New Google Docs & Spreadsheets
After buying Writely, an online word processor, Google developed a spreadsheet application and created the foundation of an office suite. The applications, that weren't meant to replace desktop office suite, made it easy to collaborate with other people and stored your files online, so you can access them from anywhere. In October, the two applications merged and became
Google Docs & Spreadsheets. Google targets consumers, organizations and small businesses that don't use all the features of a full-fledged office suite, but need an efficient solution for their daily tasks.
2. Gmail
Gmail didn't get out of beta this year, but it added two mobile versions (a Java client and
a web page), integrated Google Talk, added a delete button, feeds, and
MP3 player and an option to fetch mail from POP3 accounts. Gmail is the link between all Google's collaborative applications.
1. Google Web Search
Google did many interface experiments , tweaked its algorithms, added more OneBox results,
more direct answers, malware warnings. Google Co-op, a collaborative effort to improve search results by using experts, is also a platform for developing custom search engines. A unified search engine, somehow anticipated by the SearchMash experiment, is something to watch in the year to come.
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