The company announced that it's previewing a new offering called Google Voice, which is a hosted suite of applications designed to offer a variety of phone-related services. For example, Google voice is designed to provide a single number for your home and office land line phones and various cell phones. It also offers a single message repository for all of the voice mail systems associated with those phones, and it creates transcripts of messages and has the ability to record calls and store them online.
"The new application improves the way you use your phone," said a Google blog post written yesterday by some Google Voice product managers. "You can get transcripts of your voice mail and archive and search all of the SMS text messages you send and receive. You can also use the service to make low-priced international calls and easily access Goog-411 directory assistance."
The applications are an offshoot of GrandCentral, a service that Google bought about a year and a half ago. With a motto of "one number for life," GrandCentral had gained attention with tools that would let all of a person's phones ring no matter which of his or her multiple numbers was dialed. Analysts and users had been waiting since then to see how Google planned to use the technology.