Today google announced that in last 1 week they have upgraded google apps with the following two services:
- Upload any file to Google Docs
- Default https access for Gmail
As I extensively use google apps both of these features were something that I was really waiting for. I used to always wonder why it is not https by default and finally they made it. Following are the key features of the new additions as mentioned on google blog:
Upload any file to Google Docs
Last Tuesday, we began rolling out the ability for you to upload any type of file to Google Docs, not just documents, spreadsheets, presentations and PDFs. This lets you access and share anything up to 250MB from the cloud. You get 1GB of storage for uploaded files for free, and you can purchase additional storage for file uploads. (Additional storage plans are coming soon for schools and businesses, too.)
Google Apps Premier Edition customers can also use the Google Documents List Data API to programatically add files to Google Docs, and purchase third-party applications so employees can sync files between their computers and Google Docs.Default https access for Gmail
In the past, you had the option to always use https encryption in Gmail to help protect your data as it travels between your browser and our servers. After evaluating the trade-offs between security and latency, as of last week https encryption is now the default in Gmail.If you trust your network’s security and want to disable always-on https for performance reasons, you can change your preferences in Gmail settings. Employees and students whose admins have not already defaulted their entire organizations to https will also see this option. The Gmail sign-in page will still always use https to help keep your password safe.
ENJOY the new updates to google apps!
Google Apps may get all the media attention, but it really lags in terms of providing functionality to users. Check out the following blog entry about how an established online collaboration company called HyperOffice beat Google Apps by years in terms of functionality – http://blog.hyperoffice.com/2010/01/19/google-apps-learns-business-collaboration-lessons-we-learnt-years-ago/
Google Apps may get all the media attention, but it really lags in terms of providing functionality to users. Check out the following blog entry about how an established online collaboration company called HyperOffice beat Google Apps by years in terms of functionality – http://blog.hyperoffice.com/2010/01/19/google-apps-learns-business-collaboration-lessons-we-learnt-years-ago/