Now, what Google
announced is really
exciting! I'm not
kidding. It's even better
than I hoped. Yes, it's
only Python, but IBM's
PC-DOS was only BASIC and
Pascal when it first came
out, and it didn't
matter. Yeah, I preferred
C, but I coded in Pascal
because that's what you
had to do to get an app
running. What you're
going to see here that
you've never seen before
is shrinkwrap net apps
that scale that can be
deployed by civillians.
That's a mouthful, but
that's what's coming.
Why? Because here is a
standardized platform
that can be stamped out
in the billions of units.
Maybe Google can't do it,
but the perception is
that they can. Who is
willing to stand up and
say Google hasn't nailed
scaling? What PCs did in
the 80s, Google is doing
now. PCs took the black
magic out of owning a
computer.
In keeping with the
longstanding SYS-CON
tradition of being at the
very forefront of
software development with
all its online and
offline resources,
SYS-CON Media & Events
jointly today announced a
double whammy, launching
both 'Open Web
Developer's Journal' (htt
p://openweb.sys-con.com)
and 'Open Web Developer
Summit' (http://openweb.s
ys-con.com) - to be held
for the first time in New
York City April 21-22,
2008.
To take advantage of the
OpenSocial implementation
in Orkut sandbox, you
have to create a Google
Gadget with the
OpenSocial feature, post
the gadget on the
Internet, and then add
the URL of the gadget as
an application. As I
looked into the Google
gadget API to build this,
I found something
interesting, the Google
Gadget framework exposes
the function
_IG_FetchContent() that
can be used to
asynchronously fetch the
text at any URL.
One of the Google folks
working on OpenSocial
sent me a message via
Facebook asking what I
thought about the
technical details of the
recent announcements.
Since my day job is
working on social
networking platforms for
Web properties at
Microsoft and I'm deeply
interested in RESTful
protocols, this is
something I definitely
have some thoughts about.
Below is what started off
as a private message but
ended up being long
enough to be its own
article.
There are 50 million
Facebook users who don't
know what OpenSocial APIs
are...and don't care.
There are about 5,000
tech bloggers and
developers who think it
is a revolution that will
'Checkmate' Facebook and
leave them with no moves.
TechMeme has over 100
stories saying that
OpenSocial is awesome and
Facebook is dead. MySpace
joins Google on
OpenSocial initiative.
OK, surely that settles
it, Facebook is toast.
Nope, not in my opinion.
Imho, Google has a long
way to go to build the
base of users and
developers connected
using the new protocol
that is the subject of
all this chest-thumping.
Do they exist in any
tangible form? How much
of a moving target are
they? It's like
proclaiming the new
owners of A-Rod's
contract as the winners
of the 2008 World Series.
Only in tech, a
persistently immature
industry, could such an
idea be aired seriously
(assuming Mike is
actually serious). I hope
that the Facebook people,
many of whom have never
been in the middle of a
tech PR war, don't
overreact. Me, I've been
around this block so many
times and it's boring.
Let's see some software
then I'll let you know if
this means anything. But
Google is keeping people
like me far away, which
suggests that there may
actually be no 'there'
there.
As I write this, the
stock price of Google,
Inc. just exceeded $500
for the first time in the
company's still-brief
(two-year) history as a
public company. That
gives the search colossus
a market cap of $150
billion, many times in
excess of its physical
assets - currently valued
at $10.2 billion.
Does the arrival of
'Google Apps for your
Domain' sound the
death-knell for Redmond's
world domination? That is
the question sweeping the
industry this week as the
owner of the world's
most-used search engine
released a set of hosted
applications 'for
organizations that want
to provide high-quality
communications tools to
their users without the
hassle of installing and
maintaining software or
hardware.'
What comes after Google?
Where will the Web, the
Internet, the whole nexus
of telecommunications,
i-Technology, and the
quest for a better world,
take us?
Like so many of the ideas
that tumble out of the
Googleplex into the
public domain, Google
Trends is irresistible.
Jeremy Geelan puts the
application, newly taken
out of beta and now
available to all
cyberspace from the
Google main page, through
its paces by taking it
out for a giddy spin
around the i-Technology
world. The results are
surprising...
May. 12, 2006 09:15 AM Reads: 25,072 Replies: 7
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