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Review: The 10 Best (Non-Google) Web Apps

Step outside the Google universe and try these useful online apps for e-mail, calendars and lists, file storage, document creation and editing, and more. Scott Spanbauer

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Document Creation and Editing

5 Zoho Office: Zoho applications look and feel quite a lot like Microsoft Office apps. They include a word processor, a spreadsheet, presentation software, a database, and a note-taking program. But Zoho doesn't stop there, offering business-oriented CRM, project-management, and Web-conferencing tools, plus poll-taking and wiki apps. Zoho Mail, which is still in closed beta testing, provides a calendar and 1GB of free file hosting.

6 ThinkFree Office: Billed as the free online alternative to Microsoft Office, ThinkFree has Word, Excel, and PowerPoint clones that replicate the classic Office interface, plus real-time collaboration. Users get 1GB of online storage space, too.

File Storage

7 Scribd: Recognized as the YouTube of documents, Scribd lets you upload Word, PDF, text (.txt), PowerPoint, Excel, PostScript, and LIT (.lit) files for private use or public sharing. As on YouTube, files may not appear instantaneously.

Click here to view full-size image.

8 Windows Live SkyDrive: This site offers 500MB of free file storage. Share uploaded files with the world or with selected friends (Windows Live ID required), or keep them private.

Graphics

9 Pixenate: Adobe plans to provide an online version of Photoshop Express soon. Until then, use Pixenate to zoom, crop, resize, banish red-eye, and otherwise enhance images. When you're done, either upload the image to Flickr or download it to your hard disk. Pixenate even spiffs up Facebook photos.

Audio

10 MediaMaster: Tired of ripping CDs only to realize that the files are then trapped on a single computer? After creating a free MediaMaster account, you can upload MP3, AAC, or WMA music files to the site's server, and later play them back on any PC, Treo, or Windows Mobile phone. Though you can't subsequently download and burn your music (a limitation that probably represents a concession to the record industry), you can turn it into a public Internet radio stream.

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