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Seo Master present to you:
By Mike Pegg, Google I/O Team

As we set out to plan Google I/O this year we looked for new ways of letting people experience the event online. I/O Live will give you the chance to watch two full days of sessions live online from the Android and Chrome keynotes, product tracks and even performances from our After Hours party.

As you’re watching online, we will also be giving you the chance to ask our product teams questions in real-time. For all of our livestreamed and Fireside Chat sessions we’re inviting you to post questions on Google Moderator. Our teams will answer them during the live Q&A portion of the sessions. Please follow the links below to start posting and voting up questions you want to be asked.

Android Sessions:

Chrome Sessions:

Fireside Chat Sessions:
(not live streamed, recording posted by 5/13)


Mike has spoken at and helped to organize every Google I/O and Developer Day event since 2006. His username is mpegg, while his brother John holds down jpegg.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:
Andrew
Richard
By Andrew Oates and Richard Rabbat, Page Speed Team

A few weeks ago, we introduced Page Speed Online, a web-based performance analysis tool that gives developers optimization suggestions. Almost immediately, developers asked us to make an API available to integrate into other tools and their regression testing suites. We were happy to oblige.

Today, as part of Google I/O, we are excited to introduce the Page Speed Online API as part of the Google APIs. With this API, developers now have the ability to integrate performance analysis very simply in their command-line tools and web performance dashboards.

We have provided a getting started guide that helps you to get up and running quickly, understand the API, and start monitoring the performance improvements that you make to your web pages. Not only that, in the request, you’ll be able to specify whether you’d like to see mobile or desktop analysis, and also get Page Speed suggestions in one of the 40 languages that we support, giving API access to the vast majority of developers in their native or preferred language.

We’re also pleased to share that the WordPress plugin W3 Total Cache now uses the Page Speed Online API to provide Page Speed suggestions to WordPress users, right in the WordPress dashboard. “The Page Speed tool itself provides extremely pointed and valuable insight into performance pitfalls. Providing that tool via an API has allowed me to directly correlate that feedback with actionable solutions that W3 Total Cache provides.” said Frederick Townes, CTO Mashable and W3 Total Cache author.

Take the Page Speed Online API for a spin and send us feedback on our mailing list. We’d love to hear your experience integrating the new Page Speed Online API.


Andrew Oates is a Software Engineer on the Page Speed Team in Google's Cambridge, Massachusetts office. You can find him in the credits for the Pixar film Up.

Richard Rabbat is the Product Management Lead on the "Make the Web Faster" initiative. He has launched Page Speed, mod_pagespeed and WebP. At Google since 2006, Richard works with engineering teams across the world.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:
Anton
Monsur
Joe
By Anton Lopyrev, Monsur Hossain, and Joe Gregorio, Google Developer Team

As announced at last Google I/O, the new family of Google APIs client libraries runs on top of a brand new API infrastructure, which allows Google to reduce the amount of work needed to release and maintain the client libraries. This is done through a simple API that provides machine readable descriptions of Google APIs that the client libraries take advantage of.

Today, we are announcing the Google APIs Discovery Service, which is the secret sauce behind the new client libraries. This service exposes machine readable metadata about Google APIs including:
  • A directory of supported APIs.
  • A "Discovery document" for each of the supported APIs that includes:
    • A list of API resource schemas based on JSON Schema.
    • A list of API methods and available parameters for each method.
    • A list of available OAuth 2.0 scopes.
  • Inline documentation of methods, parameters, and available parameter values.
The service is accessible through a lightweight JSON-based API. Navigate your browser to https://www.googleapis.com/discovery/v1/apis to get a quick look at the available data.

You can use the APIs Discovery Service to build tools for interacting with Google APIs, such as IDE Plugins and client libraries. We use the service at Google to build a number of such tools:
With the launch of this service, we are also open-sourcing the code for the APIs Explorer, which can serve as a great example of how to use the service.

Read more about Google APIs Discovery Service in the documentation, or explore its API in the APIs Explorer. If you are attending this year’s Google I/O and you want to know more about the service, make sure to attend our session “Building Custom Client Libraries for Google APIs” where you can chat with the developers of the service face-to-face.

We look forward to seeing what sorts of things you can build. Let us know of any issues and feature requests in our developer forum. Happy hacking!


Anton Lopyrev is an Associate Product Manager for Google APIs Infrastructure, previously a software engineer on Street View. He is a computer graphics enthusiast who is also passionate about product design.

Joe Gregorio is a Software Engineer. In the past four years at Google he’s worked on APIs, Google App Engine, Google Wave, and now has come full circle and is back working on APIs.

Monsur Hossain is a Software Engineer for Google APIs Infrastructure and enjoys making it easier to use APIs.


Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
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