- •Contents
- •Practice №1 The study of cloud services Google. Gmail.
- •1.1 About Gmail
- •1.2 Why choose Gmail
- •1.3 Creating an account
- •1.4 Gmail as a Google Account
- •2. Gmail’s Interface
- •2.1 Inbox
- •2.2 Compose Mail
- •2.3 Drafts
- •2.4 Sent Mail
- •2.5 More
- •2.6 Report Spam
- •2.7 Delete
- •2.8 Keyboard Shortcuts
- •3. Organizing your Gmail
- •3.1 Contacts
- •3.2 Stars
- •3.3 Labels
- •4. Advanced Settings
- •4.1 General Settings
- •4.2 Accounts and Import
- •4.3 Filters
- •4.4 Forwarding and Pop/imap
- •4.5 Offline
- •5. The Fun Stuff
- •5.1 Buzz
- •5.2 Chat
- •5.3 Web Clips
- •5.4 Labs
- •5.5 Themes
- •5.6 Gmail Mobile
- •5.7 Google Docs
- •5.8 Google Calendar
- •5.9 Tasks
- •6. Conclusion
- •Practice №2 The study of cloud services Google Talk.
- •2.1 Use the native Gmail Talk option
- •2.2 Installing the voice/video chat plugin
- •Practice №3 The study of cloud services Google Calendar
- •3.1 Interface
- •3.2 Create an event
- •3.3 Add location
- •3.4 Invite people
- •3.5 Share meeting materials
- •3.6 Meet online
- •Invite guests, add attachments, and meet online.
- •3.7 New committee? New (shared) calendar.
- •Practice №4 Editing of electronic documents Google Apps
- •4.1 Creating new files
- •4.2 Using templates
- •Practice №5 The study of functions Google App Engine
- •5.1 Google App Engine Docs
- •5.2 Download the App Engine sdk for php
- •5.3 Creating the Configuration File
- •Practice №6 Creating a data warehouse environment Google App Engine
- •6.1 Setting up Objectify
- •6.2 Creating the data model classes
- •6.3 Adding the greetings and the form to the jsp template
- •6.4 Creating the form handling servlet
- •6.5 Testing the app
- •6.6 Creating required indexes
- •Practice №7 The study of cloud services Google Apps
- •7.1 Gmail
- •Google Drive
- •Google Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Forms
- •7.4 Google Sites
- •7.5 Google Calendar
- •7.6 Google Hangouts
- •7.8 Google Apps Vault
- •7.9 Usage
- •Practice №8 Microsoft Office Live Workspace
- •8.1 Setting up Microsoft Live Workspace
- •8.2 Features Available with Office Live Workspace
- •Practice №9 The study of cloud services Microsoft SkyDrive
- •9.1 Creating a Microsoft account
- •9.2 Getting to know OneDrive
- •9.3 Installing the Microsoft OneDrive app
- •9.4 OneDrive for mobile devices
- •Practice №10 Network services for the mobile user. Wi-Fi technology
- •10.1 What is Wi-Fi ?
- •Practice №11 Search engines in Internet
- •Veronica & Jughead:
- •Improve Your Searching Skills:
- •Infoseek:
- •Inktomi:
- •Vertical Search
- •Verticals Galore!
- •Information Retrieval as a Game of Mind Control
- •Increasing The Rate of Algorithmic Change
- •Practice №12 Search graphic information in Internet. Comparative analysis of search engines. Internet image search
- •Study Guide
- •3 55029, Stavropol, Pushkina, 1
7.6 Google Hangouts
On May 15, 2013, Google announced that a new text, voice, and video chat tool would replace its Google Talk, Google Voice, and Google+ Hangouts services. Known as Google Hangouts, it allows up to 10 people for the consumer version and up to 15 people for the work version to join conversations from their computer or mobile device. Participants can share their screens, and view and work on things together. The Hangouts On Air service lets people stream live broadcasts to Google+, YouTube, and their websites.
The version of Hangouts included with Google Apps for Work supports up to 15 participants, and administrators can choose to restrict Hangouts to only people on the same domain, limiting the access of external participants.
The Hangouts app keeps messages stored online in Google’s cloud, and offers an option to toggle off history if people want to go off the record. And the Google+ integration saves every photo people share with each other in a private, shared album on Google+.
On July 30, 2014, Google announced that all Google Apps customers will have access to Hangouts, including those without a Google+ profile. Google also partnered to integrate with other video chat providers - like Blue Jeans Network and Intercall. Google also announced that Hangouts is covered under the same Terms of Service as other Google Apps for Work products like Gmail and Drive. Apps for Work customers also get 24/7 phone support for Hangouts, 99.9% guaranteed uptime, and ISO27001 and SOC 2 certification.
On December 19, 2014, Google announced via Google+ post that they brought back one of the most requested features for Hangouts in Gmail. The Apps admins have control to keep status messages to be only visible internally.
7.7 Google+
Google’s social networking service, Google+, launched on June 28, 2011, in an invitation-only field trial. Observers declared it Google’s latest attempt to challenge social giant Facebook. While Google+ has since overtaken Twitter to become the world’s second largest social network after Facebook, it has been criticized for disappointing users and failing to generate referral traffic.
On October 27, 2011, Google announced that Google+ was available for people who use Google Apps at college, work and home.
On August 29, 2012, Google announced that after receiving feedback from business customers that participated in a pilot program, they tailored Google+ features for organizations. These features include private sharing within organizations and administrative controls that restrict the visibility of profiles and posts.
On November 5, 2013, Google added an extra layer of security for restricted communities that could only be joined by people in an organization. Administrators have the option to set restricted communities by default and choose when people outside of the organization can join.
Google+ as a business network received mixed reviews from having features that help small businesses get noticed online to confusing people over its branding to being an important player in social marketing strategy for businesses. Many online articles emphasize that having a Google+ presence helps businesses with their Google search result rankings since Google+ posts and shares are immediately indexed by Google.
