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Archive for the 'Google' Category

Greasemonkey, Gmail, And More On the Ad-driven Business Model

From the Gmail Greasemonkey 1.0 API page, emphasis added:

Greasemonkey is an integral part of the web experience for many experienced users. Google acknowledges that some people are going to change their own experience of our web applications regardless of what we do. Resistance, as they say, is futile. It would also be somewhat hypocritical. After all, a Google employee wrote Greasemonkey in the first place, another wrote these scripts to add functionality to Gmail, and a third wrote two books on the subject (and these docs).

The news about Gmail and Greasemonkey is cool and interesting, but what I found most interesting was the emphasized statement above.

When I wrote a week or two ago that I didn’t think an Ad-driven business model could last forever, I think a lot of people probably thought that was crazy. After all, don’t we read articles about blogs, sites, and businesses making hundreds of thousands of dollars, per month, with online advertising?

Absolutely; and I think those sites and business models will continue to work. Probably they’ll even do so for the next few years, even the next decade (maybe). But Google’s acknowledgment above is at the heart of what I was trying to say:

We, the web publisher, have NO CONTROL over how the browser views our site.

It’s conceivable that anyone, via their browser, plugins like Greasemonkey, other addons, or yet other technologies and methods unforeseen, can ignore or over-ride our CSS, our carefully tested layouts, any and all widgets on the page, anything.

Yes, right now it’s a very small percentage of rather geeky folks who are using Firefox extensions, Greasemonkey, etc, to do this, but we have no reason to suppose that it will remain this esoteric in the future. It could become easy as one-click, in many more browsers, to remove ads from web pages. What then?

Again, the sky is not falling, no one is going to stop making money, and this business model isn’t going to fall apart overnight. I’m just not sure it’s The One True Business Model that will continue to work in perpetuity…

Back to Gmail & Greasemonkey. Again, this is cool. Anyone found or created greasemonkey scripts for this yet?

Google Documents and Spreadsheets Gets a Facelift

If you use Google’s documents and spreadsheets, you’ll have noticed today (earlier?) that they have a facelift:

Google Documents and Spreadsheets screen grab

What stands out right off the bat is the standard, left-pane, folder-tree navigation. Since Google docs is a little different than just a file-system, we have not only a file tree, but various other categorizations; you can see documents by who they are shared with, by type, and so forth.

While the main differences seem to be cosmetic, there’s something to be said for a great user interface. That’s not to say that this interface is anything groundbreaking — but it’s familiar looking, which is nice, and it is extremely usable.

It’s nice just to see change, also. We’ve grown so used to seeing “BETA” slapped onto every web application that is introduced, I think we forget that beta means we should be expecting new features; i.e., that they are still working on it. Mind you, I realize that a lot of development will take place behind the GUI, but it’s cool to see some changes make it to the public face of the application once in awhile.

Honestly, the Google apps (web apps generally) have actually changed the software I use. I have NeoOffice (a mac port of OpenOffice) installed on my mac mini, but I have used it… once? For spreadsheets, written documents, I invariably use the Google apps. I used to use 37Signals Writeboard, but Google won me over by having both apps in one spot. On my linux machine(s), I expect I will always have OpenOffice installed… but again, I use it very rarely.

I’m getting as tired as the next person of the constant, ubiquitous, stream of Google-worship… but they make the best web software there is. They were “web 2.0″ before it was a buzzword. They created the app (maps.google.com, or gmail, depending who you ask… maybe both) that popularized “Ajax” before the term “Ajax” was even coined. They are the kings of software on the web, at this point in time. Way to go, googlers.