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Why would I be concerned about the privacy of letting Google manage my e-mail, web page, calendar etc. if the alternative is to host it on any other service provider? Let's see, do I trust Google with my stuff being about one billionth of their hosted content, or would I rather share hosting services with a few thousand other organizations at a sever farm in Podunk Texas?
For even the smallest company, whats the cost in getting a throw-away domain (maybe making it similar to or related to your primary company domain) and testing out the service there?
I smell "hidden agenda" in a lot of the concern I hear expressed over this company or that.
The fact that he is right doesn't mean Google will have a smashing success on their hands.
On the privacy issue ... it is like Mac Beach said ... as a small business, I am taking the same risk as if I would host my mail at some server farm.
And the Google Mail interface is sooooo sweet.
Gmail is fine for a free e-mail service - they're probably leading the way with free e-mail. However, why anyone would use Gmail for business is a mystery to me. Gmail is still pretty primitive e.g. doesn't even support IMAP. There are any number of companies that specialise in e-mail hosting, do a great job, and offer their services at low cost.
The same is true for shared calendaring. There are several low-cost shared calendaring systems (very low TCO, compared to MS Exchange) that are much more suited to corporate calendaring than Google Calendar. The truth is - any business that is large enough to need shared calendaring (perhaps more than four or five employees) can afford something way better than Google Calendar.
And as for the Office Suite... well, I'm sorry, but Google's word processor and spreadsheet simply aren't even close to being good enough to run a business on; and that's ignoring the fact that many businesses need a PowerPoint like app too, where Google has nothing. If a business can't afford MS Office, then OpenOffice, for example, is far more compelling than "Google Office".
Bottom line: forget about privacy. The reason to not use the Google "business suite" is that it's just not very good compared to the competition...
It will all come down to net citizenship, aka big brother, where all data has to ultimately be accessible regardless of privacy
Ramon Ray
Editor, http://www.smallbiztechnology.com
Most of us will never garner the attention of surveillance--lest we raise our heads and say "peep".
Watch out Robert. Watch out OM. Why don't you two come up with an app named "Below Radar"?
The latrine is still a private place right?
One thing about the podtech, while i was listening to the podcast of Om, I was putting in my comments, when the page refreshes, the podcast stop. logically yes it should stop as the page refreshes. I am sure you can use AJAX to avoid the page refresh.
www.irin.co.uk
http://mail.google.com/mail/help/intl/en/privac...
Obviously companies with IP to protect will have to think twice on going for such stuff.