Google adds Passbook support to iOS Chrome, spreadsheets to Drive

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
Google on Wednesday rolled out updates for the iOS versions of its Chrome web browser and Google Drive cloud storage solution, each bringing notable enhancements like Passbook support and spreadsheet editing.

Chrome

Google's Chrome browser, first introduced in June, hits version 23 with the latest update and brings Passbook integration for devices running iOS 6. Much like Apple's own mobile Safari, Chrome is now able to recognize Passbook-ready boarding passes, gift certificates and other digital assets, for storage in the Passbook app.

In addition to Passbook support, the newest Chrome version is capable of sending PDF files to other apps like GoodReader.

Chrome v23


From the release notes:
What's New in Version 23.0.1271.91
  • Open PDFs in other apps
  • Save your boarding passes and tickets with Passbook

  • Seeing garbled characters? Turn on text encoding detection in settings.
  • Stability and security improvements
  • Many bug fixes

Google Drive

Also debuted in June alongside Chrome for iOS, Google Drive received a few requested changes with version 1.2.0, including the ability to create and edit spreadsheets in-app, a feature some Google Docs users may be familiar with. According to Google, iOS users will now be able to see collaborators' edits in real time, a function previously restricted to the app's desktop client.

Formatting when copy-and-pasting text in Google documents has also been enhanced

Google Drive v1.2.0


From the release notes:
What's New in Version 1.2.0
  • Create, edit and collaborate on spreadsheets
  • Upload to Drive from other apps using ?Open in...?
  • Manage upload progress and see recent uploads in new Uploads section

  • Rich text copy-paste within a document
  • Improved speed and stability
  • Improved contact search for sharing
  • Bug fixes
Both apps are free to download from the iOS App Store, with Chrome weighing in at 15.7MB, while Drive is 22.7MB.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 6


    Huh. Well, that's good! The more Passbook support the better.

  • Reply 2 of 6
    MS Office killer
  • Reply 3 of 6
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,212member


    The NYT has an article up on the success Google is having in competition against Microsoft Office.


    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/26/technology/google-apps-moving-onto-microsofts-business-turf.html?_r=2&adxnnl=1&ref=technology&pagewanted=1&adxnnlx=1356534248-ohr9VHs082DB/ffzEfSwUw


     


     


    Google has been promoting the idea for more than six years, and it seemed that it was going to appeal mostly to small businesses and tech start-ups.


    But the notion is catching on with larger enterprises. In the last year Google has scored an impressive string of wins, including at the Swiss drug maker Hoffmann-La Roche, where over 80,000 employees use the package, and at the Interior Department, where 90,000 use it.


    One big reason is price. Google charges $50 a year for each person using its product, a price that has not changed since it made its commercial debut, even though Google has added features. In 2012, for example, Google added the ability to work on a computer not connected to the Internet, as well as security and data management that comply with more stringent European standards. That made it much easier to sell the product to multinationals and companies in Europe.


    Google is tight-lipped about how many people use Google Apps, saying only that in June more than five million businesses were using it, up from four million in late 2011. Almost all these companies are tiny, but in early December Google announced that even companies with fewer than 10 employees, which used to get Google Apps free, would have to pay.


    Google’s revenue from Apps, according to a former executive who asked not to be named in order to maintain good relations with Google, amounted to perhaps $1 billion of the $37.9 billion Google earned in 2011.


    Shaw Industries, a carpet maker in Dalton, Ga., with about 30,000 employees, switched to Google Apps this year for communication tools like e-mail and videoconferencing. Jim Nielsen, the company’s manager of enterprise technology, calculated that using Google instead of similar Microsoft products would cost, over seven years, about one-thirteenth Microsoft’s price.


    Shaw is a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, run by Warren E. Buffett, but the close friendship of Mr. Buffett and Microsoft’s founder, Bill Gates, did not sway Mr. Nielsen. “When you add it up, the numbers are pretty compelling,” he said.


    In addition to the lower price, Google has simplicity in pricing. Mr. Nielsen said he had to sort through 11 pricing models to figure out what he would pay Microsoft.

  • Reply 4 of 6
    Google's <a href="http://appleinsider.com/l/?link=https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/chrome/id535886823?mt=8">Chrome browser</a>, first introduced in June</a>, hits version 23.....

    23.....:wow:
  • Reply 5 of 6
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,212member


    It's not the 23rd version of Chrome for iOS. AI inadvertantly (I'm sure) left readers such as yourself with that impression. 

  • Reply 6 of 6
    gatorguy wrote: »
    It's not the 23rd version of Chrome for iOS. AI inadvertantly (I'm sure) left readers such as yourself with that impression. 
    I just looked in the iTunes store and it looks like the latest version is 23.0.1271.100. That's quite a versioning system they got going there if it really has been out for 6 months. But I don't really know as I don't use Chrome anywhere.
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