From the Doc Side
The Products Documentation Team Blog

Where's the download button?

Google posted on their blog today that Google Sites is now open to everyone. Curious as I am, I checked out what this new Google Sites feature was. After all, I knew they had acquired Jotspot a while back and now we get to see how they reconfigured it.

It appears to be a combination website/wiki creator. You can control who can edit the pages, view content, etc without having to know html. I love WYSIWYG more than I probably should but even that love will probably not make me an earlier adopter of this option for professional reasons.

The one major flaw in all these websites that make creating websites and wikis customizable and personal is the inherent flaw that instead of you controlling access to the information by having it on your own network, they are all hosted online. And if by some chance there is an option to host it yourself on your own network, well that’s where the fees kick in.

Even though this is a particularly sensitive issue for someone like me who works for a public company, I think it’s an important issue for every organization – private or nonprofit – to consider. I love the value of having software hosted but only if it’s done within the scope of a contract and ensuring your data is protected like we do here.

However, as massive as Google is and as smart as they have been with their apps in the past, I still don’t trust keeping our information on a hosted website. Too vulnerable.

This is something I’ll continue to follow because I have this ongoing dream to have an internal documentation wiki for the Documentation team. We have a lot of information that needs to be managed in order to successfully share with each other and pass on to future technical writers. I’ve been downloading and testing as many free apps as I can find with no luck yet. You need to have more programming knowledge than I have to install. I really think if they can make hosted versions online easy for consumers, why can’t they make installable versions easy too?

In the meantime, I guess it’s back to figuring out the good and the bad about Microsoft’s SharePoint wiki features. Yikes!
 


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