Over the past few months, Google has been implementing no end of changes to its Docs system in an effort to bring a competitive edge to what was originally a bog standard on-line document editing tool. This year alone, Google has introduced offline access for Android, customisable styles, sparklines, donut charts and error bars for spreadsheets, Google+ sharing, stock photos, PDF and Scanned document OCR, collaborator comments, support for keyboard shortcuts in cells and cloud-powered spell checking. Let's not also forget some GUI redesigns and the more recent introduction of Google Drive.
This time around, Google has focused on moving away from a handful of web-fonts and has introduced over 450 new fonts to Google Docs, with users able to select those they're most interested in and import them into their collection for access from the usual font menu.
In addition to a huge array of new fonts, Google has extended Doc's image import functionality, allowing users to import images straight from Google Drive, the LIFE photo archive or even directly from a webcam. The firm has also introduced over 60 new template documents so that users can get straight down to business.
To follow updates made to the Google Docs and Drive collection, head on over to Google's developer blog.