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Seo Master present to you:
By Rania Hadi, MENA Outreach Manager

Get your laptops ready – Google is coming to town! We are announcing our back-to-back Google Days in Dubai and Amman in October. Packed with dynamic sessions on all things Google, Googlers will provide developers, webmasters, students, IT and business professionals the chance to see and learn about the latest technologies.

g|uae will take place from Oct 19-20, and g|Jordan from Oct 23-24. Building on previous Google Days in MENA, each day of the 2-day conferences will cater to a different audience. From developers to computer science students, digital advocates to entrepreneurs, women in technology to tech marketers, we will have a wide variety of sessions delivered by a cross section of international Googlers. They’ll be there to interact with you, answer questions, brainstorm ideas, and provide both beginner lectures and hands-on codelabs and workshops.

While we’d love to accommodate as many as possible, space is limited so please register for g|uae and g|jordan as soon as possible. You will then be fully registered as soon as we send you a confirmation. If you still aren’t convinced, check out the fun we’ve had at past events.



Hope to see you at g|uae and g|jordan 2011!


Rania Hadi has been with Google since 2004 and now works on Outreach in MENA. She focuses on building relationships and promoting Google technologies with the developer and tech communities.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor


2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you: Author Photo
By Chetan Sabnis, Google Politics & Elections Team

Cross-posted from the Google Politics & Elections Blog

Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. To make it easier for you to build apps with voting information on the web, we are releasing our new Google Civic Information API. The API enables you to look up comprehensive voting information for an individual U.S. address, including polling place, early vote sites, contests, and local election official contact information. By releasing this API, we hope to unleash the creativity of the Internet and help you build innovative products that push civic information to your communities in interesting ways.

As you know, this type of information can change frequently as we get closer to Election Day, and we will make every effort to ensure we're returning timely and accurate data. We have also included contact information for local election officials in the API so voters can find the most accurate information.

While this API only includes voting information for elections in the U.S., we plan to expand to other countries and include other types of civic information. Please join the Google Civic Information API Forum for updates on the data available and check out the Google Politics & Elections page to find more information about the work we are doing around the election and our international elections programs.


You can get started here through the Google APIs Explorer. The API is available now, but please note that full information isn't yet available for the November 6th General Election. We expect to be able to provide full live data around the middle of October, as it becomes available. For now, we recommend building your applications using the test data we provide. We'll be using the API to power our own election tools over the coming weeks, including an embeddable app anyone can use on their site, and we're looking forward to seeing the applications you come up with!

The Civic Information API replaces our previous Google Election Center API, which will be turned down after January 1, 2013.

For questions, comments, and to showcase your apps using the API, we encourage you to use the Google Civic Information API Forum.


Chetan Sabnis is a software engineer on the Google Politics & Elections team. In his spare time, Chetan enjoys solving logic puzzles and crosswords.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:
By Richard Dunn, Technical Lead, Google+ platform for Hangouts

Cross-posted from the Google+ Platform Blog

In the three months since we launched face-to-face-to-face communication in Google+ Hangouts, I’ve been impressed by the many ways people use them. We’ve seen Hangouts for game shows, fantasy football drafts, guitar lessons and even hangouts for writers to break their solitary confinement. That’s just the beginning. Real-time applications are more engaging, fun, and interactive, but were hard for developers to deliver. Until now.

Today we’re launching the Developer Preview of the Hangouts API, another small piece of the Google+ platform. It enables you to add your own experiences to Hangouts and instantly build real-time applications, just like our first application, the built-in YouTube player.

The integration model is simple -- you build a web app, register it with us, and specify who on your team can load it into their Hangout. Your app behaves like a normal web app, plus it can take part in the real-time conversation with new APIs like synchronization. Now you can create a "shared state" among all instances of your app so that all of your users can be instantly notified of changes made by anyone else. (This is how the YouTube player keeps videos in sync.) And we’ve added our first few multimedia APIs so you can, for example, mute the audio and video feeds of Hangout participants.

When you’re ready to start hacking, we’re ready for you -- read the documentation, sign up, and start coding. We’re anxious to get your feedback, since this is a very early version of the API. We’ll be making improvements and moving towards full production based on what we learn together. And we’ll be releasing new updates on a regular basis, so stay tuned!

Follow the conversation on Google+.

Richard Dunn is Technical Lead, Google+ platform for Hangouts


Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor

2013, By: Seo Master
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