Les nouveautés et Tutoriels de Votre Codeur | SEO | Création de site web | Création de logiciel

Seo Master present to you:

We have found that there is a lot of news around the web dispersed on various
Google blogs, forums, and press releases. As fantastic as this all is, we want
to try to give you a weekly round-up containing news that was of interest to us.
The goal is that if you had time to read one Google related post a week, this
would keep you up to date on the big items.

Our roundups will cover news and events surrounding our APIs, products, and
items from the community at large.

Let's get started for this week, May 14-18th, 2007.

Google Developer Podcasts

We are excited to launch the new Google Developer Podcast. In the first episode we interviewed Bob Lee of the Google Guice project. In the future you will see interviews with Googlers on many different topics, and we hope that it keeps you in touch. Please contact us if you have any requests for the show, and check out episode one.

We also have a new podcast series around the ever-popular Google Summer of Code series.

Google Developer Day

The buzz is growing around the worldwide event that is Google Developer Day, May 31st, 2007.

We have launched a new developer day site that will allow you to keep up to date on the event. You may want to check out the sessions that are planned for your location. Simply choose your location from the front page and click on sessions.

Make sure to check your location, as demand has required that some sites are having to move to new, larger space. Here in California we have announced that the sessions are going to be held in the San Jose Convention Center.

We are only a couple of weeks away, and then we will witness the community gathering around the world. We have some fantastic content to showcase, but more importantly, we get a chance to listen and learn from you all.

JavaOne Roundup

JavaOne was as busy as usual this year, especially for Googlers, who gave at least 14 presentations on a variety of topics. At the booth we found a lot of interest in discussing our technologies, especially GWT, Guice, and various APIs.

We also produced an article on A Java Developer's Guide to Google Technologies that gives you a taste for what was on offer.

The Java community is an important one for us, and we would love to hear from you on what you would like to see from us in the future.

Fun in AJAX API Land

The AJAX API team has followed up on the AJAX Feed API launch by building useful components that use the feed API under the scenes.

The AJAX Feed API FeedControl allows you to build a flexible blog roll component in seconds, and the AJAX Feed API Slide Show Control will create a slide show on top of any feed that uses Media RSS (e.g. Photobucket, Flickr, Picasa Web Albums). At the same time, the Picassa team created a Flash component that works with their service.

Universal Search Launches

There was big news in search this week. At Searchology, we announced our first
phase of Universal Search which ties various search products together to give you an answer that makes sense across books, music, video, news, and good old web pages.

We published a little behind the scenes coverage for those who want to dig a little.

Google Code Projects of the Week

GWT Maven Support

If you are a maven user, it is hard to go back to any other way for building your Java applications. The GWT Maven project allows you to weave your nice dependency magic with your GWT projects.

Hey, What's That?

This Google Maps mashup allows you to get a profile on what you could see from a given point. This is normally most interesting from a point that is high up, so the interface gives you a list of mountains to choose from.

For extra bonus points, you can read up on the technical side for how
they work it all out
.

In other news...

YouTube API Blog: YouTube has just created a new API blog, so we should expect some interesting content around the APIs that Youtube has available to developers.

Real-time quotes for free: If you work in the financial sector, you will know that access to real-time quotes is very important indeed. It is great to see that we are going to be offering them for free, across our properties.

Viewing your collections with Google Maps: Check out the new maps view feature in 3D Warehouse.2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you: This post is part of the Who's @ Google I/O, a series of blog posts that give a closer look at developers who'll be speaking or demoing at Google I/O. This guest post is written by Ryan Massie, Product Manager at Clicker.com who will be demoing as part of the Developer Sandbox.

Over the years, the technical gap between engineering for the Web and engineering for an operating system has continued to narrow. Third party plug-ins led the way in this progression, until their services eventually became standardized and built into the browser itself. Now, using HTML5, we're outgrowing many of the limitations that came with developing for a specific OS or device, enabling us to create next generation user-experiences that bring more utility to more platforms than ever before.

In general, building for the Web enables us to be more agile. By establishing implementation guidelines for video, animation, audio and storage, HTML5 further reduces the level of fragmentation across the Web, empowering developers to efficiently build rich, browser-based experiences of superior quality.

For us here at Clicker, that means opportunities to create more unique and immersive experiences that guide users to the premium-quality TV shows, movies, music videos and Web originals available to watch online. Using HTML5, we’re able to offer more innovative in-browser experiences with movement and reflections while providing a faster performance.

One reason the Web is an amazing platform is because changes made to a given website are instantaneous and can be viewed by anyone in the world with an Internet connection. By creating browser-based utilities, optimized for various screens and devices, we can continue to create consistent, reliable and scalable experiences that push the boundaries of what people can do online, making the Web an increasingly more interesting place. And as developers, it's important to make the Open Web a success. HTML5 and other advancements give us more opportunities to stretch the boundaries of what we can enable people to do. And, without the hindrance of downloads and the added benefit of increased browser speed, consumers will increasingly expect rich, browser-based experiences. This end-user demand will continue to spur the overall pace of innovation and development on the Open Web.

We look forward to meeting fellow developers and continuing the conversation in person at I/O this week!

2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you: As mentioned before, I will be hosting an Ignite at Google I/O on Wednesday, May 27 from 4:15-5:15pm at Moscone West in San Francisco. I'm happy to announce the following nine speakers who will be joining me onstage. In no particular order, here they are - as well as a preview of what they'll be presenting during their five minutes in the hot seat:
  • Leo Dirac - Transhumanism Morality
    Why only geeks and hippies can save the world.

  • Michael Driscoll - Hacking Big Data with the Force of Open Source
    The world is streaming billions of data points per minute. This is Big Data ? capital B, capital D. But capturing data isn't enough. We need tools to make sense of it, to help us better understand -- and predict -- what we click and consume. We want to make hypotheses about the world. And to test hypotheses, we need statistics. We need R.

  • Pamela Fox - My Dad, the Computer Scientist: Growing up Geek

  • Tim Ferriss - The Case for Just Enough: Minimalism Metrics
    Looking at how removing options and elements gets better conversions, etc., looking at screenshots of start-ups I'm working with and real numbers. Some humor (I hope) and fun, both philosophical and tactical.

  • Nitin Borwankar - Law of Gravity for Scaling
    Why did Twitter have scaling problems? I spent 6 months thinking deeply about this and derived a simple formula that a high school student would understand. It demonstrates where the center of gravity is moving in the "Next Web" and why this aggregation of CPU's is even bigger than Google's. And oh yes, it explains how to build a service that scales to 100 million CPU's.

  • Kevin Marks - Why are we bigoted about Social networks?

  • Andrew Hatton - Coding against Cholera
    I'll examine what IT life is like on the front line with Oxfam, a humanitarian agency, and how good code can make a real difference to people's lives in all sorts of ways..some of them surprising..

  • Robin Sloan - How to Predict the Future
    OK, back in 2004 I made a video called "EPIC 2014," predicting the future of media (and Google). It turned out to be 100% CORRECT. No, just kidding. But it made a lot of people think, which is really the point of talking about the future. Turns out there's a whole professional discipline of future forecasting. And there are certain ways you can think about the future that will give you better odds of being right than others.

  • Kathy Sierra - Become Awesome

2013, By: Seo Master
Powered by Blogger.