By Antone Gonsalves
Intelligent Enterprise
The Gadgets-in-Docs and Visualization API are meant to act as a platform on which anyone can build an application for displaying spreadsheet data on a chart, a table or any other area with a Web page. The idea is to let users expand the use of Google spreadsheets, which are part of the company Google Docs product that also includes online word processing and presentation applications.
Non-developers can find a gadget by opening up a Google spreadsheet, clicking on the chart icon and then clicking on "gadget," Google said. The tiny application can then be customized to fit the data on a spreadsheet and then published to an iGoogle personalized homepage or any other Web page.
Developers looking to reach a broader audience can use the Visualization API, which provides a platform that can be used to create, share and reuse visualizations written by the developer community. The technology provides a common application programming interface to access structured data sources, the first being Google spreadsheets, the company said.
Google Docs are considered a complement and rival to Microsoft Office, the industry's dominant productivity suite for homes and businesses. Docs are part of a collection of online software called Google Apps, which also include Web mail, calendar, instant messaging and a personalized homepage.
Consumers and small businesses primarily use Google Apps, but the company has been trying to push adoption to large companies. Google in September partnered with Capgemini, which agreed to offer a desktop outsourcing service for Google Apps. The IT consultant also offers an outsourcing service for Microsoft Office.
As part of the deal, Google agreed to host the apps from its data center, while Capgemini supported them, and charged businesses additional fees for services such as deployment, integration, help-desk support, software and hardware provisioning, and security monitoring and software.
See original article on InformationWeek
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