Almost everyone is touting online office productivity suites as the next logical step which is why all big players starting from Google, Yahoo, to IBM and now even Microsoft are digging deeper into the trenches.
Well, Microsoft sounds like they are feeling the threats from all corners. But will web office productivity suites really replace our existing tools offline? Will people drop OpenOffice, MS Word, Powerpoint and Excel and ride with the bandwagon? IMHO, don’t think so.
The reasons is just common sense — the reliability on fast and efficient connectivity will always pause a huge hindrance. Just look at any of these scenarios:

- Students using an online word processing tool submits their theses to the teacher just before cut-off date but suddenly, they lost internet connection. Ma’am, the Intarwebs ate my homework!
- Our how about a speaker using an online presentation tool delivering his talk. Suddenly, the connection becomes laggy and he has to wait 5 minutes for each slide to transition to the next. Now that could take the whole day.
- A work sheet being updated by several people simultaneously from different locations, the final computations being dependent on the timely input of data from each party. But then, one person gets cut off.
Anyways, you know what I mean. There are thousands upon thousands of other possible scenarios we can think of. All these time, a good old USB drive is all I can think of.
Yes, I do see the use of web office productivity tools like Yahoo’s Zimbra or Google Docs but they are far from mainstream use. This isn’t just about practical storage issues or uptime. It’s also about access and redundancy. I think these online tools are here to compliment or supplement the existing line-up and not really replace them.


It’s more than reliability and redundancy, privacy and security of data once it gets online would be a primary concern in the near future if not today.
Plus, there’s still that threat called spam!