Earlier this month Google launched
OpenSocial, a set of
developer tools to make it easier for users of web sites and applications to
take social networking-type functionality with them wherever they go.
The launch reflects Google’s ambitions to be all things to all customers.
Matt Glotzbach, the US enterprise director at Google, said his business unit is
able to follow the innovative leads the firm makes in the consumer market, and
then tailor them for its enterprise customers. “We are really just trying to
bring good solutions to the business market. One of the benefits we have of
being in Google is the constant innovation,” he added.
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Glotzbach said that the firm continually assesses its applications, to gauge
their potential to attract users in both the consumer and enterprise markets.
“It used to be that enterprise technology was at the cutting edge. Now the
consumer market leads and we follow,” Glotzbach said. “All of our current
applications are candidates [for corporate use], and we get asked all the time
about enterprise versions of tools, such as
Blogger and
YouTube.”
One significant consumer-oriented technology that is currently attracting a
lot of interest from enterprises is social networking. Google made further steps
into this area with the launch of OpenSocial, a set of developer tools for
creating applications that work across a range of sites and online tools.
At the launch, Jeff Huber, senior vice president of engineering at Google,
said, “The web is fundamentally better when it is social, and we’re only just
starting to see what’s possible when you bring social information into different
contexts on the web.”
Huber added that OpenSocial would act as a catalyst for the further
development of social networking technologies. “There’s a lot of innovation that
will be spurred simply by creating a standard way for developers to run social
applications in more places. With the input and iteration of the community, we
hope OpenSocial will become a standard set of technologies for making the web
more social,” he said.
The new set of APIs includes tools for managing newsfeeds, profile
information, social information and activities.
Ovum analyst David Bradshaw predicted OpenSocial would have many benefits for
Google, as well as its users. “It is providing the APIs which could make it the
natural provider for advertising across these sites. However, more importantly,
it is establishing itself as a developer of infrastructures that people can
build on for the web,” he said. “Now users can carry their social networking
tools from site to site, it is becoming even more pervasive it is part of the
infrastructure of everyone’s web.”
Bradshaw added that the functionality could also appeal to enterprises. “A
set of tools that provides such things as real-time collaboration, presence
information, would be useful to businesses, especially if you can use them as
you jump between applications,” he explained.
Some applications have already been developed using OpenSocial, including a
Flixster film-rating program, and a NY Times tool for sharing articles.
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