Member Sign In
Not a member?

A Wired.com user account lets you create, edit and comment on Webmonkey articles. You will also be able to contribute to the Wired How-To Wiki and comment on news stories at Wired.com.


It's fast and free.

Sign in with OpenID
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...
Join Webmonkey

Please send me occasional e-mail updates about new features and special offers from Wired/Webmonkey.
Yes No

Please send occasional e-mail offers from Wired/Webmonkey affiliated web sites and publications, and carefully selected companies.
Yes No

I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to Webmonkey's User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Retrieve Sign In

Please enter your e-mail address or username below. Your username and password will be sent to the e-mail address you provided us.

or
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Welcome to Webmonkey

A private profile page has been created for you.
As a member of Webmonkey, you can now:
  • edit articles
  • add to the code library
  • design and write a tutorial
  • comment on any Webmonkey article
Close
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Sign In Information Sent

An e-mail has been sent to the e-mail address registered in this account.
If you cannot find it in your in-box, please check your bulk or junk folders.
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

New Google Sites: Build Your Own One-Click Wiki

googlesites.jpgGoogle has finally found a way to incorporate the collaborative website editing tools the company acquired over a year ago when it purchased JotSpot. The result, dubbed Google Sites, is part of the Google Apps suite and offers most, though not all, of the features found in the popular JotSpot.

The new Google Sites tool is designed to make it easy for anyone to create, edit and invite collaborators to help build a website — Google Sites seems aimed at anything from corporate intranets to school classroom pages to small project collaborations.

As with all things Google, Sites is clearly positioned to compete with a Microsoft product, in this case Sharepoint (or something like IBM’s Lotus Notes). Although Google Sites is doesn’t compete with Sharepoint directly in terms of features, it definitely trumps it in ease-of-use.

Setting up a new website in Google Sites is just a matter of clicking a button and choosing a default page look. From there you can set up the site however you like — control who can view it, who can edit it and more.

Google Sites provides a set of page templates (five different pages at the moment), a rich-text editor, 10GB of storage per account and of course integration with other Google services which makes it easy to embed things like Google gadgets, calendars, spreadsheets, presentations, slideshows and videos directly into your pages.

Thankfully Google Sites eschews the markup languages common to most wikis and just offers a rich text editor, which you can use just like the word processor in Google Docs (there’s also an option to edit the HTML source directly).

Still, other hints of JotSpot’s wiki past are in evidence (and that’s a good thing). A Google Sites page records all the editing changes anyone makes and you can see who made changes, un-do those changes or just get alerted when changes are made — all standard wiki features.

Google Sites also allows you to control who can see your pages, whether it’s just you, a select group you invite or the world at large.

As with most Google Apps offerings, the initial launch is light on the features and focuses instead on the simplicity and sharing aspects of Google Sites. In many respects this is a step backwards from the old JotSpot, which featured an API and many more options, but as with Writely and other Google acquisitions, the power user features will likely come in future releases.

[via Google Operating System]

See Also:

Post Comment Comments Permalink Print
Reddit Digg