Services
Web Hosting Dedicated Servers Forex Investment Web Design Voice over IP
Products
Clothing & Fashion Mobile Phones Electronics eBooks & Info Music & Movies
Shopping
Agenzy.Com Shopping Shopping - UK Couponzy.com Shopping - EU Shopping Info
Blogs
Real Estate Fashion Technology Business News

OpenGoo is no competition for Google Docs

There are times when I think open source is an unstoppable force. And then there’s OpenGoo.

OpenGoo declares its mission to be to “make the best Web Office. Period.” But then it proceeds to undermine every benefit that a true Web office productivity application, like Google Docs, provides to its users. Like the Web, for starters.

That’s right. The first thing that struck me when trying to use OpenGoo (aside from its rather unfortunate name, which is yet another reminder that marketing is an essential function, not an afterthought, for open-source projects) was the download page.

Download page?!? I thought this was a Web office productivity suite. Why would I want to download an application?

I never found out. Once I had downloaded and unzipped the file(!?), I was greeted with this:

(Credit: Matt Asay)

I tried finding the application launcher, but couldn’t. More pertinently, why should I? It’s a Web application, right?

I finally gave up and used the demo, instead. It works fine, though it’s nowhere near as polished as Google Docs, and still left me wondering, “Why do I care, as a lay consumer, that this is open source?”

Yes, there is value in having access to source code should OpenGoo go down (particularly as it appears one is meant to install and run OpenGoo inside the enterprise firewall, which sort of defeats the purpose of it being a “Web Office,” but…). But would open source make OpenGoo a more resilient service, in the way that some are (wrongly) claiming open source would make Twitter more impervious to denial-of-service attacks?

Of course not.

The OpenGoo site brags that by using OpenGoo, “you are free of vendor lock-in.” But I would gladly trade a little lock-in for some ease of use.

There is tremendous value in open source, but the OpenGoo developers have mistaken where it begins and ends. Open source should be invisible to the end users that care about a Web-based office productivity suite. By making it a feature, OpenGoo demonstrates misunderstanding of its audience.

Zoho also uses a lot of open source, but it doesn’t sell open source as a feature. This is probably why you’ve heard of Zoho but, until this article, you likely hadn’t heard of OpenGoo.

Follow me on Twitter @mjasay.

Originally posted at The Open Road

Here is the original post:
OpenGoo is no competition for Google Docs

Share/Save/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.