The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

How iWork.com can beat Google docs at its own game

By | May 18, 2010, 8:41pm PDT

Summary: One of the biggest drawbacks of Google docs is that you can’t edit them on the iPhone or iPad. If Apple allowed users to edit online docs and spreadsheets from its mobile devices it would leapfrog Google’s functionality overnight.

http://www.apple.com/iwork/iwork-dot-com/news/assets_c/2010/02/iphone_new_signin_022610-thumb-120x209.pngThere’s no love lost between Apple and Adobe these days, this much we know.

But Apple’s also soured on Google ever since it dove into the mobile phone market with its Android OS and began stealing market share and posing a serious threat to Apple’s golden goose — the iPhone.

Here’s one way that Apple can beat Google at its own game: by improving iWork.com and making it more functional that Google docs. Notice that I didn’t say better, I said more functional.

There’s no denying that Google docs is an incredibly useful tool, it is. But its got one major flaw: it’s read only on mobile devices, including the iPhone, iPod and iPad. In other words you can read your Google docs on the iPhone but you can’t edit them. In fact I don’t know of any mobile platform that allows editing of Google docs. To do so you need a desktop OS and browser, which is insane.

So here’s the recipe: make iWork.com the ultimate Web 2.0 word processor and spreadsheet with document editing on Apple’s iDevices. If Apple wanted to be really clever it could require an iPhone/iPod/iPad to edit iWork.com docs and banish Android/Blackberry/Symbian/Palm/Kin users to read-only land.

Now let me be clear, I don’t want mobile doc editing to require a $99/year MobileMe subscription or anything crazy like that. Nor do I want it to require a $10 copy of the Pages or Numbers app to edit (it kinda does that on the iPad now). I just want sweet, sweet online document editing in Mobile Safari. Capice?

I’m also a realist and know that building an online word processor and spreadsheet isn’t trivial (Google had to acquire them, after all), but it can be done.

Apple should use some of its massive $38 billion warchest (or just some of the money in between Steve Jobs’ couch cushions) to build a better Google docs, before Google does.

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Topics

Jason O'Grady is a journalist and author specializing in mobile technology. He has published six books on Apple and mobile gadgets and his PowerPage blog has been publishing for over 15 years.

Disclosure

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady is the creator and editor of O'Grady's PowerPage, which has been publishing mobile technology news since 1995. He maintains an advertising relationship with the following legacy advertisers on the PowerPage:

  • Amazon Associates
  • Google Adsense
  • Tekserve
  • Advertising on the PowerPage is brokered by a third-party agency (BackBeat Media) and he recuses himself from these negotiations.

Biography

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady developed an affinity for Apple computers after using the original Lisa, and this affinity turned into a bona-fide obsession when he got the original 128 KB Macintosh in 1984.

He started writing one of the first Web sites about Apple (O'Grady's PowerPage) in 1995 and is considered to be one of the fathers of blogging. He has been a frequent speaker at the Macworld Expo conference and a member of the conference faculty. He also co-founded the first dedicated PowerBook User Group (PPUG) in the United States.

After winning a major legal battle with Apple in 2006, he set the precedent that independent journalists are entitled to the same protections under the First Amendment as members of the mainstream media.

O'Grady is the author of The Nexus One Pocket Guide, The Droid Pocket Guide, The Google Phone Pocket Guide, and The Garmin nuvi Pocket Guide (Peachpit Press), the author of Corporations That Changed the World: Apple Inc. (Greenwood Press), and a contributor to The Mac Bible (Peachpit Press). In addition, he has contributed to numerous Mac publications over the years, including MacWEEK, Macworld, and MacPower (Japan).

When he's not writing about Apple for ZDNet at The Apple Core, he enjoys spending time with his family in New Jersey.

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Apple beat Google on Internet?
Isaaac 21st May 2010
Apple not so powerful to beat it.
0 Votes
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Android and Google Docs
ArtInvent 18th May 2010
Or seen another way: seems like one way Google can crush with a pad running Android: make it work perfectly with gDocs. Seems like a much easier task than for a company to drum up an online office suite from scratch.
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Plus, Google Docs is a moving target. It's not exactly standing still.
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I'm also unclear: I have an iPad and clearly Apple is not positioning it as an editor of anything. You are frustrated at every turn trying to interact with your media or documents in more than a 'consumption' mode. Apple can compete in the space, but first they will actually have to want to. The stock iPad can't move files around, can't print, can't even open a PDF much less a .doc. Apple is very very clearly telling people: get a Macbook if you want to do that stuff.
0 Votes
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We are anDroids. Apple's intent are irrelevant!
Uralbas Updated - 18th May 2010
Resistance is futile. Prepare to be assimilated!

LOL.... Lets see more Apple hackers make Android run on Apple 4GS ... wink wink ROFL
@ArtInvent
I open excel, word, and ppt on my iPad. I edit, make presentations, docs etc all using iWork, then email them to my office. Works great for short trips when I dont want to carry my laptop.
Tried posting 3 times, and got "an error existed"

and even if I had...the logistics/navigation of this website equates to a drunk taxi cab driver

I hope the college kid that is responsible for this heap of **** got an A
and the "most recent" replies will continue to be pushed further and further down, you will have to scroll and click 5 times to post, and God help you if you want to see if anyone replied to your post
0 Votes
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correction
banned from zdnet 19th May 2010
interesting idea.

some small corrections though. android is not taking away market share from the iphone. apple's smartphone market share is still expanding, hence no one has taken away any market share (and we can only speculate whether apple's expansion has been slowed down by android).

and apple's war chest (cash and short term investments) is 41.7 bn.
Jason,

you have it wrong. It's not Google's fault that it's read-only on the iPad. It's Apple's, for designing a device that just wasn't made to do such things. Its a consume-only architecture that doesn't lend itself to creation and editing, can you even email or transfer files created within apps?

The iPad is a device that has a lot more potential, but has become nothing greater than a vehicle for more revenue through app sales from Apple. With a crappy file structure and no clear method for transferring files and data two-ways (wtf?) it's a device that was stunted by SJs insane lust for money.

... or.. basically what @artinvent said.

Why does anyone tolerate their disgusting margins on hardware, anyhow?
0 Votes
+ -
Apple beat Google on Internet?
Isaaac 21st May 2010
Apple not so powerful to beat it.

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