"The Web is great, but it doesn't work very well when you don't have a Web connection," Jeff Huber, Google's vice president of engineering, said. "Gears addresses a
functional gap on the Web." Gears would enable users of computers, cell phones or other Web-enabled devices to work on email, online calendars or news readers while completely offline. Bridging the
gulf that separates desktop software from the Web is uncharted and potentially valuable territory, which is more bad news for Microsoft.
Google already has several partners for Gears, including Adobe Systems, maker of the Flash and Acrobat, Norway's Opera, maker of the Web browser popular with mobile phone users, and Mozilla, the group behind No. 2 Web browser Firefox. Gears is available as open source software, which means developers are free to use and enhance the software in their own products.