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Seo Master present to you: Day 1 of Google I/O was an action-packed endeavor, shared with an excited community of developers on the ground learning about developing web applications with Google and open technologies, and showcasing some of their best apps.

Here are a few highlights from our keynote speech:
  • Google Web Elements is launched: Adding Google products to your website or blog has never been easier.
  • App Engine for Java is now out of preview and open for signups
  • Google Web Toolkit 2.0 previewed upcoming new features, including in-browser debugging and developer-guided code splitting (also known as runAsync())
  • Android Developer Challenge 2 launched: Win awards for building great apps on Android
  • Google Latitude on iPhone 3.0 was previewed
Check out a video playlist of this morning's keynote:


Since a picture is worth a thousand words, we thought we'd recap the 1st day of I/O with photos captured throughout the day:


In case attendees had trouble finding Moscone West, they were directed to look for the life-sized Google Maps pin placed right in front of the entrance.


I/O 2009 had higher attendance, but registration went much more smoothly this year.


An attendee checks out the I/O agenda board. Product stickers were distributed to attendees to stick on their conferences badges to identify fellow attendees with similar product interests.


Eric Schmidt greeted developers and kicked off the keynote


Vic Gundotra takes the stage to talk about "a more powerful web, made easier."


Vic welcomes Jay Sullivan, VP of Mozilla, while also thanking Mozilla and the larger developer community for tireless efforts towards new web standards. Jay gave a glimpse of Firefox 3.5 features.


Michael Abbott, SVP of Palm, talks about why the web is the platform and Palm webOS.


A view from the audience.


We gave all Google I/O attendees a limited edition Android-powered device in order to encourage and facilitate further application development on the Android platform, and provided a preview of Donut features.


Office Hours are a new addition to I/O, where attendees can drop in and bring questions for Google engineers. View Office Hours schedule.


Alon Levi speaks on his App Engine session, From Spark Plug to Drive Train: Life of an App Engine Request.


At the Google Web Toolkit Fireside Chat - members of the GWT team listen to audience question.


Anybot struck up conversation and hung out with developers.


View of the Developer Sandbox from the escalator.


Enjoying a complimentary chair massage.


Developers crashed on bean bags, taking a break to check email and get some work done.


The Street View trike roamed the halls.


A developer pondering what to grab from the drink coolers, available throughout Level 2 for attendees to quench their thirst.


Developers enjoyed bins of chocolate covered raisins, M&Ms, pretzels, trail mix, and other goodies throughout the day.

To follow the latest at Google I/O, check out twitter and twazzup. Stay tuned for Day 2!

2013, By: Seo Master



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Seo Master present to you: At Google, many teams use the Visualization API to create charts and visualizations of their data - both for external and internal products.

The Visualization API wire protocol has been made available publicly so that anyone can connect their data on the web to the list of powerful visualizations available (from Google and third parties) since late last year.

However, internal developers at Google had access to our complete code base for implementing data sources with full query capabilities and more. We felt that the whole web community should also enjoy the same benefit, so yesterday we released a full open source Java library that lets developers expose their data (publicly or to select users) for visualizations, charts and dashboards with a fraction of the effort required previously. This is the first complete free Java package for implementing a Visualization API data source - complete with a full implementation of the API's query language - and it joins our growing list of other tools and data source implementations by third parties and Google.

While we were at it, we also took the opportunity to bring our developer community many more goodies. Most notably:
  • We're launching new versions of the wire protocol and query language, including improved security features for sensitive data.
  • We're launching a generic image chart that provides access to all our popular Chart API's charts and their options through the simple but robust Visualization API JS interface (without the limitation on data quantity imposed on the Chart API URL length limitation).
Check out the full list of new stuff on our What's New page.

We will be reviewing the Java library and many of the new features in our sessions at Google I/O. If you can't make it be sure to check out our full documentation, where we will also post the videos from the sessions.

2013, By: Seo Master
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