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Posts Tagged ‘spreadsheets’

And Now for Something Completely Different - Business Intelligence Widgets

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Your boss (or client) wants to see what kind of results you’ve been getting from that latest search marketing program. Want a cooler, easier way to show them the data? This may be your answer.
var myLogiWidgeta8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223 = new rdLogiWidget;myLogiWidgeta8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223.definition=”a8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223″;myLogiWidgeta8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223.containerID=”myWidgeta8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223″;myLogiWidgeta8e97804_93d7_402d_b1ab_8f1e292d5223.load();

There you have it. Other than the date field problem, I have now have a cool widget that shows this client (this is actual client SEO data BTW) how organic search visits to their site have increased since the end of last year.

Once the kinks are worked out, Widgenie will give non-technical users a much more interesting way to display and share business intelligence data.

*****

Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

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And Now for Something Completely Different - Business Intelligence Widgets

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Google Offers Data APIs on Force.com

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Salesforce.com and Google Partner Again

Salesforce.com and Google have made a pretty big announcement this week. They now have a global strategic alliance. This alliance comes after the news of an integration service called Salesforce for Google Apps — a service that integrates Google Apps with Salesforce.com and their newest venture, Force.com Toolkit for Google Data APIs. According to CNET, this is just another step in Saleforce’s plan to take down the mighty Microsoft giant.

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Google Offers Data APIs on Force.com

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EditGrid spreadsheet mashes up your numbers with online stats

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

The underappreciated Web spreadsheet EditGrid is getting a useful and cool new feature: built-in lookups to online resources. For example, if you want your online spreadsheet to display the current stock price of a company, or maybe its site’s Alexa rank, you can now easily code that into your formulas.

Other functions give you data from the CIA World Factbook (natural gas reserves in Thailand, anyone?), baseball stats via Strikeiron, TechCrunch’s Crunchbase company database, and other interesting info. If you want to get fancy, there are also functions to pull data straight from Web pages.

EditGrid has a new collection of functions that pull live data from various online sources.

All the data you pull in from these functions can serve as input to other formulas, which opens up interesting analysis possibilities. Say you’re trying to get a read on a start-up you’re thinking of investing in, and efficiency in getting eyeballs to the site matters to you. A simple formula of monthly page views (from Compete) and number of employees (from Crunchbase) might do that for you. Assuming you trust those data sources, of course.

I did find the menu of data sources a bit limiting outside the realms of financial information and Web analytics, but the concept of adding online data sources directly into a spreadsheet’s function library is spot on, and EditGrid spokespeople confirm that more sources will added to the lineup shortly. I hope EditGrid also opens up the application programming interface so people at other sites can mash their online data into the EditGrid libraries.

Google Docs has a subset of these functions, but not the breadth of data that EditGrid now offers.

Previous review: EditGrid: A nice competitor to Google Spreadsheets.

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EditGrid spreadsheet mashes up your numbers with online stats

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SocialText wiki platform gets collaborative spreadsheets

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

SocialCalc is coming to the enterprise wiki, SocialText.

(Credit: SocialText)

Corporate Wiki software company SocialText is adding a spreadsheet to its wiki product. The new feature, SocialCalc, allows users to collaborate on spreadsheets the same way they do in the company’s text-based Wikis. The product is based on Dan Bricklin’s open-source Wikicalc.

For spreadsheet jockeys this is both good and bad news. On the positive side, SocialCalc spreadsheets inherit wiki-style revision tracking, which is an automatic audit trail that will arguably be even more important on spreadsheets with financial and other hard data on them than it is on text-based wiki pages. “There’s no inherent audit trail in Excel,” SocialText chairman Ross Mayfield reminded me.

Users can also easily embed data from other SocialCalc sheets in their spreadsheets, or for that matter data from any SocialText wiki page or Web URL. This could make building workgroup-wide, or even company-wide spreadsheets possible. Assuming, that is, everyone in said workgroup or company is comfortable using SocialCalc instead of Excel.

Which brings us to the negatives of this new product. The biggest is that it is not Excel, and it will require the most re-learning from exactly those people who would find its collaboration functions the most helpful: heavy spreadsheet users. And it’s not just the interface that’s different, it’s the features. Like many Web-based productivity tools, SocialCalc doesn’t have all the analytic or presentation features of its mature standalone counterparts. I predict this will frustrate people who want to use SocialCalc to build complex company-wide models on it.

Mayfield told me that coordinating work is “at least eight times as important” as providing a complete Excel-caliber feature set on SocialCalc, and I agree in principle, but I can still see a few heavy Excel users in a company raising a very loud stink if they are forced to use a tool that doesn’t do everything they are accustomed to.

The other downside to SocialCalc is that it doesn’t allow real-time collaboration like the spreadsheet in Google Docs does. While some people see live multi-person spreadsheet editing as a gimmick, in fact the more people who need to contribute to a worksheet the more important that feature becomes. It removes the awkward need for users to wait in line to edit a document if someone else has it open.

SocialText will provide professional services to make the adoption easier by its customers, and the tool will no doubt be welcomed by infrequent spreadsheet users. It’s a good addition to the SocialText lineup; I just don’t expect it to be an easy transition for everyone.

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SocialText wiki platform gets collaborative spreadsheets

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More Google Docs available offline: Spreadsheets, presentations

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Google has broadened the number of online applications that people can use offline, adding spreadsheets and presentations to the mix.

However, unlike with word-processing documents, spreadsheets and presentations can only be viewed, not edited, according to a post by marketing manager Andrew Chang on the Google Docs blog Friday. That’s still useful, though. Chang gives the example of giving a slide presentation without having to worry about network access.

The offline access uses the Google Gears technology the search engine giant introduced in 2007 as an open-source project.

Google is trying to take on Microsoft with its online software, but Gartner believes Microsoft poses a greater competitive threat to Google with online ads than Google does to Microsoft with online office suites.

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More Google Docs available offline: Spreadsheets, presentations

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