Automatic conversion
Word becomes Docs, Excel becomes Sheets, PowerPoint becomes Slides. No fiddling.
Free, no ads
Double-click an Office file. Popdoc imports it to Google Drive, converts it into Docs, Sheets or Slides, and opens it in your browser.
How it works
A .docx that landed in your inbox, an old .xls gathering dust. You open it the way you always do.
The file heads into your Google Drive and turns into a native Google document.
The document shows up in your browser, ready to edit. Popdoc bows out.
Features
Word becomes Docs, Excel becomes Sheets, PowerPoint becomes Slides. No fiddling.
Reopening a file you already imported? Popdoc offers "Open existing" or "Import a copy."
5.9 MB. A small floating progress window, then the app closes once the queue is done.
.docx, .xlsx, .pptx, .doc, .xls, .ppt, .odt, .rtf, .csv. The classics are covered.
The document opens right in Google Docs. You pick up where you already work.
Privacy
Free doesn't mean you pay with your data. Here's exactly what Popdoc sees, touches and keeps: almost nothing.
Download
The .dmg file, hosted on GitHub Releases. You download it, you drag it, it's installed.
Download the .dmgmacOS, ~6 MB
We're working on it. Not ready yet, and we won't promise you a date we might not keep.
Roadmap
Switch between several Google accounts and choose where each file lands.
Keep your documents in sync between the original file and its Google version.
The same simplicity, for Macs and PCs alike.
The why
My whole life, I've used free tools that helped me out and never asked for anything back. 7-Zip to unzip things, FileZilla to move files around, Notepad++ to hack on a bit of text.
Nobody ever billed me for those moments. They were just there, free, ready to lend a hand. To me, that's the original spirit of the internet: useful things, given freely, no strings and no hidden agenda.
I learned to code partly thanks to tools like those. Popdoc is my way of giving back a little of what I got.
It's small, it's simple, and it's free for good. My modest brick in the wall.
— Guillaume, creator of Popdoc
Open source
Popdoc is open source under the Apache 2.0 license. The code lives on GitHub: read it, audit it, tweak it, or send improvements.
And on privacy, you don't have to take our word for it — everything is verifiable, line by line.
See the code on GitHubThe Popdoc name, logo, mascot and visual identity remain the property of their author.