You and your colleagues can all work within the same document when using Google Docs, so any comments or edits will be seen by all collaborators. You can click on your comment to assign a color so that your comments are easily distinguishable from those of other collaborators, and the commenter's name and a timestamp will automatically appear next to each comment. Using comments to share feedback and knowing that you are all looking at the most recent version of your document makes it easier to progress from a rough draft to polished text.
In Google Drive, select the doc, right click, select to share, enter collaborator details, select done. Job done.
So long as all the people involved have proper access to the document, you can edit while collaborators are also 'live' with access to the document. Depending on the Internet speeds involved, some viewers may experience slight delays in observing edits.
In Google Docs, just next to the CREATE button is an icon that is an Upload button (also red), click that and set "Convert documents, presentations, spreadsheets, and drawings to the corresponding Google Docs format" then choose your Word .doc file and upload it. The document will be converted into a GoogleDoc.After finishing your document, copy and paste the whole of it into your google document. If this doesn't work then you will have to create it on google docs.
GTalk and Google Docs are separate Google products. You can collaborate with others using Google Docs by granting permissions. You collaborate using text. The collaboration panel is visible on the right side of the document (for left-right reading languages). Adding GTalk would duplicate the collaboration panel. GTalk does not involve developing documents, although you can send files.
Yes, you can open a Google Docs file in Microsoft Word, but you'll need to first download the document from Google Docs in a compatible format, such as Microsoft Word (.docx). To do this, open your document in Google Docs, go to "File," select "Download," and then choose "Microsoft Word (.docx)." Once downloaded, you can open the file in Microsoft Word without any issues.
If, by 'elaborating' you mean adding comments, you can choose to Insert Comments using those options if they are available on the Google Docs toolbar for your document.
When you look in your gmail account, look at the top left corner. You will see something that says documents. Click on that and you will find the documents and power-points you saved. Just click on the file you want and edit.
There is no save button. The document gets automatically saved.
Your best bet is to create a google docs document. When you are finished, export into pdf.
In order to send a document from Google Docs, you must first make it available to the e-mail product you use.Since Microsoft Outlook and documents you create using Google Docs are made possible by two different vendors, you are required to take a few extra steps to get the results you want.Here are your options:From within Google Docs, you can Share your document with a person with an e-maill address, giving them specific permissions, orFrom within Google Docs, Download your document as a .PDF file, to your desktop.From Outlook, choose the file you want and attach it to your e-mail message.
If you're referencing a document created using Google Docs, you cite the title of the document and its date and author, as you would any publication. If you want to insert a citation into a Google Docs document, you can simply insert it at the bottom of the page, with an appropriate footnote citation mark.
In order to access any document created within the Google Docs environment, you must have a valid e-mail account that has been given appropriate permissions to access the document. Your teacher can help you with your specific question.