Monday, June 16, 2008

Google courts Web developers

Google has been courting software developers to entice them into a money-making relationship built on turning its array of online widgets into a global infrastructure.

At a conference in San Francisco, said to be the biggest yet for net developers, the search giant made clear that the Web is the future for application development.

It wants its own bit of web infrastructure – the Google Cloud – to be more accessible to developers and spent two days wooing them to build and run applications on it.

To encourage them aboard, Google invited the 3,000 developers to mash-up Google’s online services, like Gmail, Docs, Maps and Search, with their own applications.

To show client-cloud connectivity, it showed off Google Gears, a browser add-on in the Adobe Flash mould that allows for richer browser experiences, to improve search in MySpace email.

It then showcased the new Google Web Toolkit, so rich net applications can be Java-built, and the hosting of new Ajax libraries, which enhances applications via JavaScript tagging.

Top of its agenda, Google wants the web browser – the enabler of its cloud – to have more functionality, interaction and to evolve so it becomes as powerful as its desktop counterpart.

But Google is also forward-thinking: it revealed Web 2.0-style application widgets for single sign-on for the Web, universal authorisation and a social network development ‘standard.’

“These diverse tools and technologies might seem loosely unintegrated and targeted at different areas,” said Ovum analyst Madan Sheina.

“In fact they're all cogs and wheels of a more meaningfully connected web that hosts Google web services powered by the Google App Engine. Importantly some of these web services and applications aren't written just by Google, but by an entire market of independent developers.”

The analyst believes most of these third-party developers no longer build 'cool' web applications just for the sake of it; rather they want a slice of Google as a lucrative advertising business.

“Google likes to separate its web development technologies from its advertising. But the two are inextricably linked,” Ms Sheina said.

“Google's monetisation strategy is simple. Invest in advancement of the web by allowing users to do more on the internet. That makes the Web a much bigger market for Google to monetise services like search.”

For this reason, she said Google sees a “pile of money in its web application development efforts downstream”. However the company knows that, currently, the best way to get there is to get freelance developers to build browser-based applications to help thicken its Cloud.

Source : http://www.contractoruk.com/

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