Skip to main content

Facebook Messages will have Office integration; should Gmail start getting worried?

Example showing one-click PowerPoint integration with FacebookOnly a handful of users have been granted access to Facebook’s new messaging system, but details continue to pile up. Microsoft announced in its blog today that users will be able to send and receive Microsoft Office files – specifically Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. This is a fairly crucial tool for the site’s step toward full e-mail services. While maintaining this idea of “modern messaging” and keeping the service focused as a conversation between two people, it’s important Facebook address some of the more professional capabilities of e-mail, and complete access to Office documents helps it retain a more practical function.

“If you have Office installed on your computer, you will be able to download, edit and save attachments to your computer, ” Microsoft claims. And of course, anyone not privileged enough to have the full installed version of Office will be able to utilize its Web Apps for free.

When you receive an attachment, the Facebook message will come complete with simple “View on Office.com” or “Download” icons – similar to how Gmail allows users to access documents.

Microsoft also announced that this tool will be extended to Facebook’s Group application, so users will be able to share Office files with specific, customized groups of their Friends.

Aside from fortifying Facebook’s capabilities, Office integration is also significant because it may signal that Facebook and Microsoft are teaming up to edge Gmail out. It’s unlikely Microsoft sees Facebook’s messaging system as a strong competitor to Outlook. Outlook has a clearly carved niche with the corporate and institutional world, and it’s doubtful Facebook’s emotionally-charged campaign for its e-mail provider could put a dent in it. The social networking site is competing for Web-based e-mail consumers, and is no threat to Microsoft (seeing as Hotmail accounts for a small margin of its profits).

So once again, it looks like the pressure is on Google. And with Microsoft Web Apps as an answer to Gmail’s Google Apps, Facebook is looking more and more like a product that could give Gmail a run for its money. Mark Zuckerberg can say all he wants that this “is not e-mail” and that it won’t rival Gmail. As he said yesterday, Facebook’s messaging system is the introduction to a new way of thinking about e-mail, more or less implying it’s a game changer. If Facebook is successful and, as Zuckerberg claimed, users like what the site’s messaging function is doing, they’ll start preferring this type of conversational Internet communication. And if they do, Gmail is going to find itself either clinging to traditionalist users or jumping on Facebook’s bandwagon to mimic its system.

Then again, maybe Google has this all under control with its long-rumored social networking endeavor.

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
How to do hanging indent on Google Docs
Google Docs in Firefox on a MacBook.

The hanging indent is a classic staple of word processing software. One such platform is Google Docs, which is completely free to start using. Google Docs is packed with all kinds of features and settings, to the point where some of its more basic capabilities are overlooked. Sure, there are plenty of interface elements you may never use, but something as useful as the hanging indent option should receive some kind of limelight.

Read more
How to disable VBS in Windows 11 to improve gaming
Highlighting VBS is disabled in Windows 11.

Windows 11's Virtualization Based Security features have been shown to have some impact on gaming performance — even if it isn't drastic. While you will be putting your system more at risk, if you're looking to min-max your gaming PC's performance, you can always disable it. Just follow the steps below to disable VBS in a few quick clicks.

Plus, later in this guide, we discuss if disabling VBS is really worth it, what you'd be losing if you choose to disable it, and other options for boosting your PCs gaming performance that don't necessarily involve messing with VBS.

Read more
How to do a hanging indent in Microsoft Word
A person typing on a keyboard, connected to a Pixel Tablet.

Microsoft Word is one of the most feature-rich word processing tools gifted to us human beings. In fact, the very word “Word” has invaded nomenclature to the point where any discussion of this type of software, regardless of what the product is actually called, typically results in at least one person calling the software “Word.”

Read more