Each release is accompanied by a nice logo "Beta" under your name and a number of humorous comments about the company's tradition of maintaining dozens of products in this state, usually reserved for software that is still under development and a number of bugs per board. The problem is so well-established services such as GMail still in beta despite having years with us without further complications.
Immersed in this doubt, NetworkWorld began to see one by one the 49 established services offered by the big G, finding that 45% of them wore the ominous word in any part of your presentation.
Following its investigation, NW were directly contacted Google consultation by this curious subject, and answer the following story:
We have a very high internal demand for the products we launched before they can get out of beta. Our teams continue to work to improve these products and provide users with an even better experience. We believe beta has a different meaning when applied to Web applications, where people expect continual improvements in a product. On the web, you need not wait for the next version is on the shelves to upgrade. The improvements are presented as they develop. Instead of packaging and software slowed in the past, we move to a world of regular Automatic Up function constant refinement where applications "live in the cloud
Admittedly, the explanation sounds very nice, but does not tell us much final accounts. Folk knowledge is more concrete and prayer is much shorter: "Half of Google is in beta as an excuse in case you commit a serious error by deleting your Gmail account or something like that."
Immersed in this doubt, NetworkWorld began to see one by one the 49 established services offered by the big G, finding that 45% of them wore the ominous word in any part of your presentation.
Following its investigation, NW were directly contacted Google consultation by this curious subject, and answer the following story:
We have a very high internal demand for the products we launched before they can get out of beta. Our teams continue to work to improve these products and provide users with an even better experience. We believe beta has a different meaning when applied to Web applications, where people expect continual improvements in a product. On the web, you need not wait for the next version is on the shelves to upgrade. The improvements are presented as they develop. Instead of packaging and software slowed in the past, we move to a world of regular Automatic Up function constant refinement where applications "live in the cloud
Admittedly, the explanation sounds very nice, but does not tell us much final accounts. Folk knowledge is more concrete and prayer is much shorter: "Half of Google is in beta as an excuse in case you commit a serious error by deleting your Gmail account or something like that."
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