VMware has acquired a new whiz-bang feature to add to its growing stock of cloud-based products: SlideRocket, an online business-presentation service that competes directly against Microsoft PowerPoint and Adobe PDF.
Terms of the transaction to purchase the 25-person, San Francisco-based company were not disclosed by VMware.
The service enables users to create presentations and easily add such features as video, Twitter feeds, various types of charts and graphs, and embedded financial data widgets with real-time information updates, SlideRocket founder and CTO Mitch Grasso told eWEEK.
“This is all about taking this 25-year-old technology that’s PowerPoint and reinventing it for the Web,” Grasso told eWEEK. “This really brings the ability to integrate collaboration as it needs to be with the tools and to provide different levels of security and analytics that weren’t possible with a desktop tool.
“It also allows the move into mobile – both for authoring and consuming a presentation, and just improving the authoring experience across the board.”
Presentation software is second only to email as the most widely used business software, VMware VP and general manager Brian Byun said. “The modern end-user environment is mobile, social, collaborative and delivered via the cloud – characteristics that legacy PC-era technologies could never have anticipated,” he said. “SlideRocket’s cloud-based architecture, design and integration with other cloud applications and services have transformed a decades-old business-productivity software.”
SlideRocket features online authoring, editing and access, combined with built-in collaboration and version control; a Web-based interface; the ability to add dynamic data feeds from sources, such as Google, Twitter and financial services; and shared access, both online and offline, across a range of end-user devices, from desktops to mobile devices and tablets.
The new VMware product also offers real-time viewer feedback and analytics to capture key usage metrics, to provide insight into presentation effectiveness.
SlideRocket has a marketplace that offers an online resource for browsing and purchasing content, including themes, stock photography, graphics, data feeds, audio, video, illustrations, animations and plug-ins. The publishing model enables slides to be accessed via a URL, embedded in a Web page or blog, or shared in an online meeting.
Additional security preferences allow authors to control publishing, printing, viewing and password rights, Grasso said. Users create new presentations using a full set of browser-based professional authoring tools built into SlideRocket or quickly import existing legacy presentation applications into the SlideRocket environment, protecting existing content investments.
SlideRocket comes in a range of price points starting at free, Grasso said.
“VMware and SlideRocket share an affinity for seizing big opportunities to reinvent how people work, and we are aligned in our vision for the future of cloud applications – it’s a future where work becomes collaborative, social, mobile, and even fun,” Chuck Dietrich, SlideRocket’s CEO wrote in his blog.
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