Self-determining developers have helped Google progressively incline up its Apps Marketplace, an online storefront for programs that works with the company’s Google Apps suite. But on Thursday Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) declared a noteworthy expansion of accessible applications by bringing its own web services in to the Apps fold.
Exclusively, Google said that such services like Google Voice, Reader, Blogger and AdWords can now be accessed unswervingly from Google Apps accounts through the standard single sign on used to access Google Apps.
Although the Google services are free, giving Google Apps administrators the ability to make those services readily accessible to users as an extension to Apps, without them requiring to log in and out to access those services in a split browser, is seen as a potential efficiency booster.
The added services are not enclosed by Google’s standard Google Apps Service Level Agreement (SLA) or telephone support, but Google will be watching for feedback that how to make these new applications even more useful.
Google also said that it’s plummet the ‘Standard’ and ‘Premier’ names for its different apps suites to a very easy naming structure.
Google has also revealed a novel documents editor for Google Docs that lets users edit documents using a mobile browser. As mentioned before, Google has already started supporting editing of spreadsheets from mobile browser.
