Google March 17 released a tool to help
Microsoft Exchange customers shuttle their corporate communications data to Google Apps in four
steps, the company's latest salvo versus Microsoft in a simmering collaboration
software war.
Intended for IT administrators, Google Apps Migration for Microsoft
Exchange moves e-mail, calendar and contact data from Microsoft's Exchange
e-mail server to Google Apps, the suite of Web-based collaboration applications
Google hosts on its servers.
The tool, free to existing customers of the paid Google
Apps Premier and Google Apps Education Edition suites, works with Exchange 2003
and 2007, both on-premise and hosted versions of that platform.
Admins can set up the migration tool in four steps and move
blocks of mail, calendar and contact data for hundreds of users at once, Google
Apps Senior Product Manager Chris Vander Mey told eWEEK.
The program is multi-threaded, meaning users will be
migrated in parallel to Google's cloud. Users can continue to access their
e-mail, calendar and contacts from Exchange during the migration without disruption.
Vander Mey, who shepherded the launch of Google's Apps Marketplace one week ago, said Google tested the tool with customers
such as the New Zealand Post and Google Apps partners Revevol Consulting and Sheepdog,
Inc.
Google Apps Migration for Microsoft Exchange is Google's
most blatant attack yet on the Exchange installed base of over 500 million
users, marking another line in the sand for Microsoft. Microsoft has come on
strong in the cloud on its own in the last year, with over one million paying customers for its
Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite.
Offering a migration tool can help Google lure more
Exchange users to the Google Apps cloud, keeping Exchange admins from
choosing BPOS.
This isn't the first migration tool Google has created.
Google last year released Google Apps Sync for Microsoft
Outlook to let users slap the Outlook e-mail front end on top of their Google
Apps suite. This tool has gotten a
mixed response from admins who have
implemented it.
Google later released Google Apps Connector for
BlackBerry Enterprise Server to let admins for corporate-issued RIM smartphones
synchronize business users' Google Apps e-mail, calendar and contacts with
applications on BlackBerry devices.
But the closest migration tool to Google Apps Migration
for Microsoft Exchange came in July in the form of Google Apps Migration for Lotus Notes, a
tool to help users of the popular IBM Lotus Notes e-mail application move their
mail, calendar and contacts to Google's Gmail application.
In related Google Apps news, Google also said it landed
National Geographic (2,000 seats) and Konica Minolta (7,000 seats) as new
customers.
While not Google's largest Apps installations by any means, the new
customers add more notches to Google's stated totals of having 2 million
businesses and more than 25 million individual users of the cloud collaboration
platform.