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Google Docs in Plain English

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    Home is where we keep the things we need.
    Whether it's a lawn mower or a coffee pot,
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    it has a home in our lives. Of course, our
    documents are no different. For years, they've
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    lived on our computers. Each person has their
    own computer-based home for documents.
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    When we need to share a document, we usually
    attach it to an email and send it to a friend's
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    or co-worker's computer home. Here's the problem:
    When you attach a document to an email, copies
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    are created. Consider this. If you send an
    email attachment to three people, the same
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    document will exist in four different places.
    That's a problem.
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    There's a better way, and it means saying
    good-bye to messy email attachments. This
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    new kind of home isn't on your computer. It's
    on the Internet.
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    And that makes sharing and collaborating on
    documents much easier and gives you full control
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    over who can see and access your documents.
    Here's the basic idea. Instead of attaching
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    a document to an email, let's switch it around
    and look at how we can attach an email address
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    to a document.
    Meet Sam. Sam is the editor of a neighborhood
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    newsletter called the Oak Tree View. She works
    with local writers who would like to publish
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    articles in the newsletter. Sam loves her
    job but often feels frustrated when time is
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    wasted managing all the articles. It's a familiar
    problem. Each month, writers send her draft
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    articles as email attachments. She reviews
    them and sends them back with comments. One
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    article might create six different versions
    of the same file, not to mention countless
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    emails. Sam often feels buried by all the
    email attachments. She finds it hard to keep
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    track of all the versions being sent to her
    from the writers. As the deadline looms, frustration
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    rises. Something has to give.
    Sam decides to try something new: Google Docs.
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    Here's what happens.
    First, she visits the Google Docs page and
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    creates a free Google account. She logs in,
    and because some articles were already written,
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    she uploads the current drafts right from
    her computer. With a snap [clicking fingers]
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    Google Docs turns the offline articles into
    online versions. Now, all she needs to do
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    is invite the writers to collaborate on the
    documents. Here's how.
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    She clicks 'Share', inserts email addresses,
    and click 'Invite Collaborators'. Google Docs
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    sends the writers an email with a secure link
    directly to her document. One click, and they
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    can edit and save the document online.
    This means that when Julie edits the document,
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    Sam see the changes immediately. Since there's
    only one document, there's never confusion
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    about updates or versions; it's all saved,
    along with the past versions on the website.
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    For the first time, the articles all have
    a home; a single place for organizing and
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    editing that is accessible from any computer
    with Internet access.
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    Problem solved.
    What's really cool is that this problem isn't
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    just solved for documents but also spreadsheets
    and presentations. All three can now have
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    a secure home on the web that works exactly
    like Sam's documents.
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    Sam is relieved. Without having to deal with
    attachments, multiple versions and all that
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    clutter, she can be an editor instead of a
    document master. And for the next newsletter,
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    not a single email attachment is sent and
    Sam beats the deadline by a week.
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    Sharing documents made simple, and all for
    free. Google Docs rocks!
Title:
Google Docs in Plain English
Description:

Create and share online documents, spreadsheets and presentations. It's free. You can:

1) Access your documents online from any computer with an internet connection.

2) Add collaborators to your document and Docs will send them a link to access the doc online (no need to send email attachments back and forth)

3) Decide who can view and edit each document (only you, some people, or everyone)

For a quick product tour, check out: http://www.google.com/google-d-s/tour1.html

Or to get started, visit: http://docs.google.com

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
02:50

English subtitles

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