Google Docs update adds menus, toolbars

It's Office 2003 all over again, and in case you think I'm reaching here, that is apparently exactly the effect the Google guys were going for. The Google Docs Blog explains: Every so often, we hear from users that they have trouble finding a particular feature, like "Check Spelling" or "Word Count" or "Find and Replace". So a while ago, our Docs User Research team worked on a "card-sort" study in which we disconnected all features in the application from the places we had put them in the UI, and asked some people what the labels and icons meant to them, and how they would group the concepts they represented. One of the things we found was that names such as File, Edit, Format, and Tools resonated as "where you might look" for certain editing features. Check spelling? Seems to fit in a "Tools" group to many people. Find and replace? People generally look for that in an "Edit" group. So now, when you're looking for one of our features, you'll find it in the redesigned menus, hopefully right where you expect it. For the frequent actions you need quick access to during editing, you'll find most of those at the top level in the toolbar. About a month ago, we removed the "Save" and "Save & close" buttons from the upper right hand corner of Docs when you're editing documents. For those of you who told us that those buttons were useful and that you missed them, you'll be happy to see that we've brought them back! Interesting. Obviously, something like Google Docs is only interesting in the short term for those with both very reliable high-speed connections and limited word processing needs (a market that is, admittedly, much bigger than that for, say, the MacBook Air). But it's always thrilling to watch new technology evolve. One day we'll look back on this stuff and regard it with the same quaintness we now reserve for the first versions of Microsoft Word. UPDATE: The Google Blogoscoped blog has a wonderful graphic showing how this tool has evolved ov

Paul Thurrott

March 27, 2008

2 Min Read
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It's Office 2003 all over again, and in case you think I'm reaching here, that is apparently exactly the effect the Google guys were going for. The Google Docs Blog explains:

Every so often, we hear from users that they have trouble finding a particular feature, like "Check Spelling" or "Word Count" or "Find and Replace".

So a while ago, our Docs User Research team worked on a "card-sort" study in which we disconnected all features in the application from the places we had put them in the UI, and asked some people what the labels and icons meant to them, and how they would group the concepts they represented. One of the things we found was that names such as File, Edit, Format, and Tools resonated as "where you might look" for certain editing features. Check spelling? Seems to fit in a "Tools" group to many people. Find and replace? People generally look for that in an "Edit" group.

So now, when you're looking for one of our features, you'll find it in the redesigned menus, hopefully right where you expect it. For the frequent actions you need quick access to during editing, you'll find most of those at the top level in the toolbar.

About a month ago, we removed the "Save" and "Save & close" buttons from the upper right hand corner of Docs when you're editing documents. For those of you who told us that those buttons were useful and that you missed them, you'll be happy to see that we've brought them back!

Interesting. Obviously, something like Google Docs is only interesting in the short term for those with both very reliable high-speed connections and limited word processing needs (a market that is, admittedly, much bigger than that for, say, the MacBook Air). But it's always thrilling to watch new technology evolve. One day we'll look back on this stuff and regard it with the same quaintness we now reserve for the first versions of Microsoft Word.

UPDATE: The Google Blogoscoped blog has a wonderful graphic showing how this tool has evolved over time:

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About the Author

Paul Thurrott

Paul Thurrott is senior technical analyst for Windows IT Pro. He writes the SuperSite for Windows, a weekly editorial for Windows IT Pro UPDATE, and a daily Windows news and information newsletter called WinInfo Daily UPDATE.

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