Google has  announced that it has acquired mobile office software company Quickoffice. “Quickoffice has an established track record of enabling seamless interoperability with popular file formats, and we’ll be working on bringing their powerful technology to our Apps product suite,” said Google in its official blog.
Details of the acquisition were not disclosed, Xinhua reported.
We’re happy to announce that we have acquired Quickoffice, a leader in office productivity solutions.
Today, consumers, businesses and schools use Google Apps to get stuff done from anywhere, with anyone and on any device. Quickoffice has an established track record of enabling seamless interoperability with popular file formats, and we’ll be working on bringing their powerful technology to our Apps product suite.
Quickoffice has a strong base of users, and we look forward to supporting them while we work on an even more seamless, intuitive and integrated experience.
“We’re excited to welcome the Quickoffice team and their users to Google” said, Alan Warren, Engineering Director, Google
Launched in 1997, Quickoffice provides mobile office document software for devices running Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android operating systems, allowing users to open, view and edit Microsoft Office files with complete document data integrity.
The company said its product has been downloaded on 300 million devices so far in 180 countries.
Analysts said Google may release its own mobile office software suite as Microsoft appears to hold back Office from other mobile platforms, rather than its Windows 8.
Quickoffice is Google’s second major acquisition this week. On Monday, the search giant announced that it had purchased the instant messaging firm Meebo.
According to an earlier report by technology news site AllThingsD, the price Google paid for Meebo is about $100 million.
