Friends, Technology, Web2.0 - What I am reading

    [Home] [Recent] [Site Map]

   

Google Mashup Editor

I just got in to the shiny new beta for the Google Mashup Editor and I wanted to share my thoughts on it with you. Like Yahoo! Pipes before it (our review here), the Google Mashup Editor provides a simple interface that enables developers to make basic web applications and mashups quickly. And again, like Yahoo! Pipes, it is very definitely aimed at developers.

The idea behind it is to provide a rapid development framework for mashing feeds into Google services, using common technologies such as XML, JavaScript, CSS and HTML. It also offers a JavaScript API for more advanced behavioral interactions. Google describes the Mashup Editor as "a great tool for grabbing information from feeds and letting users see and manipulate it."

Google Mashups Editor
Google Mashups Editor, showing code for a "Hello, World" application.

Documentation

For keen developers who haven"t yet received access to the beta, there is a strong set of resources you can use to start learning the GME application functionality, structure, code and controls that don"t require a login. Ample documentation is available, including a diagram of the application structure and a comprehensive tag reference. Typical of Google, the documentation is the bare necessities, without even a index of the listed tags at the top of the reference page. Also, there is currently a short list of articles & tutorials, a FAQ, the official project blog, and, of course, a Google Group.

Components

The application itself is divided into 3 main parts: the Editor, Feed Browser and Sandbox. A screenshot of each is included in this article.

The Editor is for building projects. Each project can have multiple GML files (I"d guess that stands for Google Markup Language, but it"s not documented), and you can also upload resource files such as JavaScript or images. Each GML file can contain a mix of XML, HTML, JS, CSS and the GME tags. The examples don"t encourage good coding practices, but at least you have a lot of flexibility with how you code the applications.

The GME Feed Browser
The GME Feed Browser, browsing the Read/WriteWeb feed.

The GME Feed Browser is a convenient tool for checking your source feeds. You can use Google Base, or external feeds that you source yourself. The documentation frequently suggests using Yahoo! Pipes to clean up feeds before bringing them into GME. It offers some simple options for choosing the maximum number of results and pages you want returned.

The Sandbox is the simplest of the GME components. It"s a running version of your applications. Just hit "Test" in the Editor and, after a sluggish pause, you"re automatically delivered to the Sandbox where your application begins running. You can test all functionality and see how your app will look. It also offers a simple option for viewing it as a Google Gadget.

The GME Sandbox
The GME Sandbox, displaying a quick basic app I wrote for reading Read/WriteWeb feeds.

Publication

Publishing is as simple as pressing a button and choosing a name for your application. That name becomes the subdomain at googlemashups.com, such as this sample application at http://mapwiki.googlemashups.com/. Google curates a full gallery of other mashups. Getting your mashup live and into that gallery as quickly as possible will result in massive exposure - the balance will be making sure it"s good enough to stand out.

Conclusion

The Google Mashup Editor is an incredibly powerful tool for rapid testing and deployment of mashup concepts, particularly those that utilize Google services or products. This opens the space to all those developers who don"t have their own servers to play on and gives them a framework to kickstart development. It"s simple easy and fun to produce something very quickly, but it will be much harder to produce fantastic products. Nonetheless, the cost-savings in development time are going to make this a popular testbed for all sorts of concepts. Google Mashup Editor is a name you will hear a lot in future.


>>Source Link
>>Blog: Read/WriteWeb
>>Publish Date: 8/4/2007 7:00:51 AM
>>Keywords: google editor

Related Posts
>>Google Mashup Editor #
    As announced during the Developer Day, Google released a Mashup Editor as invitation-only experiment. (You can try signing up to get an alert if you"re allowed in.) I"m still waiting for my invitation
>>Subtitle Editor for Google Video #
    Subtitle Horse is the name of a very cool subtitle editor for Google Video, among other supported formats. You start out by entering the URL of a Google Video file, e.g. the URL for Guys and Dolls (a
>>Fauxto Online Photo Editor #
    Fauxto*, released in late 2006, is a Photoshop-like online image editor that"s constantly growing its list of features. Once you edited a photo with brushes, layers, fill tools, eraser and so on, you
>>Google Acquires Zenter #
    Google has bought Zenter, a company that provides software for creating online slide presentations, as Google says. Already, Google"s Gmail includes a web-based PowerPoint preview feature, and Google
>>Google Courts Book Publishers, Librarians #
    Google held an all-day love-fest for book publishers yesterday at the New York Public Library. The grandiosely named Google Unbound came complete with an all-star cast of Web luminaries: Wired magazin
>>Google Maps Mashups Now Easier to Find and Create #
    Google has introduced the term Mapplets to describe what it"s calling the next generation of user-created data overlays commonly known as "mashups." In the LatLong Blog, product manager describes the
>>Get Blogger"s Experimental Features #
    Google"s Blogger has a new homepage for early adopters, as they say: draft.blogger.com*. From here you will be able to get new features still in test mode, like a current video upload option which you
>>Google"s IME Caught Plagiarizing #
    Google has been caught copying some of its competitor"s data for the recent release of their Chinese Input Method Editor (a desktop tool to convert Pinyin characters into Chinese characters). It turne
>>Jennifer Laycock, Lactivist and Search Engine Guide Editor, Starts Google Moratorium #
    So Tuesday June 12th is supposed to be "Don"t Use Google Day" - guess someone forgot to send me the memo because the day is more than half way done and I only just came across this. Jennifer Laycock

Other Posts:
>>Sign O" The Times: Billboard Adds Online Streaming Data to Charts
>>WebbAlert: Read/WriteWeb on TV
>>Yahoo! Plans a Run at YouTube
>>Platform Wars: Netvibes Launches Facebook Widget
>>rollSense: Your Blogroll on Steroids
>>Microsoft Works to be Offered as Free, Ad-Supported Desktop Suite - No Browser Version?
>>Newser: Human Edited News Aggregation
>>Yahoo! Buzzlist versus Google Trends
>>Amazon in Your Living Room
>>New Yahoo! Search Features: Search Assist, Shortcuts
>>VCs: Startups Are Too Reliant on the M&A Market
>>Top 100 Alt Search Engines, August 2007


Month Archives:

Top Tags:
Company & Product Profiles Google Technology Internet Search feature Business and Technology column analysis Web2.0 letter 服务介绍 业界信息 news Startups Search Headlines deal application comment 產業策進 未來趨勢 創投 WebApp咨询 創業案例 Web 2.0 News & Ideas 业界动态 Google/SEO 互联网络 SEW Experts Yahoo


@2007 All rights Reserved