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iGoogle Launches Developer Sandbox

gurubaba writes "Google has announced the launch of iGoogle Developer Sandbox, which will allow developers to build and test applications. The Sandbox provides support for building social applications using the OpenSocial API. 'The iGoogle OpenSocial container will allow developers to build full page applications, just like the ones on Facebook, using the Canvas View. The applications built using the developer Sandbox can display profile information, post activity updates, send messages and gadget invites and add friends. The developers will also be able to monetize the applications through ads.'"

2 of 62 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Sorry.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    With all the cool CSS/JavaScript navigation whatnot on Slashdot, i'd like to know why Slashdot is displaying [yahoo.com] on this trolls link:

    http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0oGklwoIg1InYYBns5XNyoA/SIG=127o7c63n/EXP=1208906664/**http%3A//slashblog.notlong.com/story%3Fid=32432423432

    A simple phishing check should be in order.

    And also on the goatse.ch link below:
    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=529844&cid=23152310
    I'd be happy if Slashdots's default behavior would be to block these links by default,( you know Slashdot has a file of suspect links it checks against ) and i would have to choose to enable them. like:

    Slashdot preferences: enable goatse links yes/no?

  2. Finally somebody makes sense of it all by Shux · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Opensocial is not just some gimmick. It is good and useful technology. No more logging into some annoying website so I can communicate with my friends. No more damn silos scattered everywhere under control of some fly-by-night company that might get scooped up by you-know-who anyday. Thanks Google.

    Google makes stuff that geeks appreciate, apps that are simple and easy to use that make us remember that computers are not supposed to get in our way. They don't keep our data locked up if we don't want them to. Let me explain...

    Let's start with their first product: search. Do you even remember how much that kicked ass back in the day? I started using Google almost immediately after hearing about in on slashdot because I really got the best search results and it was so beautifully simple. Some us may have thought, "Wait, no annoying ads or styling or anything? Just this simple page? Yeah, try selling that to somebody". But look now, all these years later they are the darling of the tech industry, all because of that drop-dead results page powered by a massive network of Linux boxes.

    Then came along gmail. I had an early invite and started using it about 3 or 4 years ago (if my memory serves me). I admit it took a long time to ween myself off the traditional email app (Thunderbird) but I will never look back. I can still remember the days of manually filing emails in folders and I laugh at the time I wasted. I chuckle when my coworkers (who do not use gmail) struggle to find an email containing some piece of information from long ago. It is a new way to do email that is hands down better than the previous way. And it seems young people love it too. All my friends use it, not just the geeks.

    As if that wasn't good enough, they gave us iGoogle. At first I thought, "Yeah this is lame like every other "portal" site. But now I have three tabs full of RSS feeds from news sites, deal sites, and programming blogs. I cut my daily browsing time in half (probably more than half) and have saved hundreds of dollars. I actually don't use my computer when I get home because I don't feel like I have to search around for something I may have missed.

    All this stuff is based on open standards and open technology. But really, I just love to use their apps. They are the closest thing to a command line for the web. Could all their financial success AND geek love actually have something to do with their philosophy of openness and the famous "don't be evil(tm)" slogan?