Microsoft and Google give away office space

By Elsa Wenzel on 30 August 2006

Tags: apps | beta | domain | for | google | live | office | your | web | microsoft

Microsoft and Google provide myriad popular tools for Web surfers and consumers. Lately, both tech mammoths are also gunning to serve small businesses online. Microsoft Office Live beta and Google Apps for Your Domain let you design company Web pages and collaborate with chosen colleagues.

Unfortunately if you're a fan of Firefox or Macs, most Microsoft Office Live functions work only with Internet Explorer 5.5 and may require Windows 2000 or later versions. Google's services, on the other hand, are compatible with Mozilla-based browsers and Internet Explorer, as well as with Macs and Linux machines.

Microsoft is giving away domain names for free, which otherwise cost around AU$20 from a third party. Via Office Live, you can park and keep www.yoursite.com for free, which is superior to using some lengthy URL embedded within Microsoft's corporate domain. However, in return, Microsoft slaps the Office Live logo onto your Web pages.

Google, on the other hand, doesn't provide personalized Web site registration and hosting, although you can reserve a clunky URL through Google Page Creator beta. Google doesn't even suggest a registrar; it only links to Google search results for "domain registration." Instead, you tailor Google Apps for Your Domain to work with a Web site that you've already reserved. Basically, this lets you display your company's name and logo (rather than Google's) within Google Calendar and Gmail. Thus, customers can e-mail you at, say, owner@yourbiz.com, while you open the messages within your customised Gmail interface.

Microsoft Office Live Basics is free, but there are expanded, paid services too. There's no calendar or instant messaging within the free Office Live Basics, for example, while Google Apps for Your Domain connects to the beta Google Calendar and Google Talk. If you're serious about managing a small-business site with Office Live, you can pay for a calendar as well as 19 other business applications. The paid Office Live Essentials and Collaboration are free to try while in beta testing.

Neither Microsoft nor Google wrap together a built-in online Word processor with their small-business packs, which is odd given Microsoft's corner on the productivity tool market, as well as Google's Web-based Writely and Spreadsheets. We also find it strange that Google Apps for Your domain makes no mention of Google Checkout, which lets you set up a shop on your Web site.

Office Live is available at http://officelive.microsoft.com. You can access Google Apps for Your Domain at https://www.google.com/a/.

  Microsoft Office Live Basics beta Google Apps for Your Domain
Compatibility Internet Explorer 5.5; Windows 2000 Internet Explorer 5.5, Firefox, Safari, Netscape 7.1; Windows, Mac, Linux
Domain name registration Free No
Web site storage space 30MB, 10MB bandwidth free, unlimited number of pages 100MB through Google Page Creator
Web site traffic analysis Yes No
E-mail Office Live Mail, 5 e-mail accounts, with 2GB of storage each Multiple accounts through Gmail, with 2.8 GB of storage each
Chat No Google Talk
Calendar Not included with Basics; available with paid Office Live Essentials or Collaboration Google Calendar
Web page design Built-in Site Designer with thousands of customizable, industry-specific templates Google Page Creator
Privacy and Security Privacy policy; must enable cookies Privacy policies of each app; must enable cookies
Customer support E-mail Searchable knowledge base, forums
Paid versions 20 business applications and 24-hour phone support with Office Live Essentials or Collaboration; US$29.95 and up per month after beta No

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viky
28/04/2007 07:15 AM

Microsoft is growing big. Eventhough google is doing good in others , Microsoft rocks.

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