03rd Mar 2011

O’Reilly Reveals Preview for Its First Book on Node.js


Up and Running With Node, an as-yet-unpublished tome on Node.js, is available as an online preview for all interested parties — especially helpful and constructive commenters.

O’Reilly Media’s first “animal book” on the increasingly popular framework Node.js should be hitting store shelves sometime this summer. What you can see now is author Tom Hughes-Croucher’s text, images and code samples, all of which are currently open for comments.

As Hughes-Croucher writes in the Author’s Note for the preview, “What you’ll find within this first release is not necessarily the final work that we will publish. We hope by making this book available as it’s written we’ll get your feedback, ideas and thoughts on what I’ve already written and what else we should be covering.”

Node.js is rapidly evolving — almost too rapidly for the printed page to keep pace — so Hughes-Croucher, who is also a Node core contributor, is doing all he can to ensure the book is, at press time, current with the available versions of Node.

As O’Reilly describes it, “This book introduces you to Node, the new web development framework written in JavaScript. You’ll learn hands-on how Node makes life easier for experienced JavaScript developers: not only can you work on the front end and back end in the same language, you’ll also have more flexibility in choosing how to divide application logic between client and server.

“Node is already winning the hearts and minds of many companies, including Google and Yahoo. This book shows you why.”

Among other things, the book attempts to teach devs about Node’s approach to event-driven programming and its support for databases and data storage tools. Readers will also find best practices for the still-nascent framework and get examples of how to use the APIs.

Node has also captured the imaginations of many of the developers we talk to on a regular basis; we’re excited to see what Hughes-Croucher is bringing to the table.

The author told us via e-mail that he’ll be updating the preview every two weeks. Anyone can read and comment on the book until it’s published.

And if you already know you’re going to want a hard copy, it’s available for pre-order for $34.99.

More About: developers, development, node, node.js, o'reilly, tom hughes-croucher

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13th Feb 2011

37 New Digital Media Resources You May Have Missed

icon heads image

Notice something different in the air? No, it’s not hordes of people rushing out to buy Valentine’s Day presents — we’ve added a section to our weekly roundup.

We’re still bringing you all the tools and resources from the past week or so, but we’ve also combed through to pull out some of the best, most useful, or most interesting reads as collected by our editors. These include stories on the smart grid, a guide to Facebook privacy, and a break down of how 3D technology actually works.

Looking for even more social media resources? This guide appears every weekend, and you can check out all the lists-gone-by here any time.


Editors’ Picks



Social Media


For more social media news and resources, you can follow Mashable’s social media channel on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.


Tech & Mobile


For more tech news and resources, you can follow Mashable’s tech channel on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.


Business


For more business news and resources, you can follow Mashable’s business channel on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.

Image courtesy of Flickr, Rosaura Ochoa

More About: business, Features Week In Review, gadgets, List, Lists, Mobile 2.0, social media, tech, technology

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03rd Feb 2011

Binpress Is a Marketplace for Buying & Selling Source Code


If you’re a developer interested in earning some passive income for blocks of code, or if you’re a dev who’d like to save time by buying someone else’s code, we’ve got an interesting proposition for you.

Binpress is a new site that hopes to act as a marketplace for source code. Its goal is to bring web developers “high-quality and high-level source-code solutions for development projects and web ventures,” and it promises that all code sold is “mature and tested,” a promise that’s fulfilled in the company’s developer screening and selection process.

You can go buy — or sell — a JavaScript image manager or an auction system coded in PHP, the little code packages that might make your projects a little bit less of a headache and your work process a little bit faster.

For example, if you’re working on an e-commerce app, you can buy this Paypal API abstraction class for Express Checkout and Direct Payment features. It’s written in PHP, and you can buy a single-site license for $25; a multi-site license will run you $200.

And once you buy a code package, you will receive all future updates and fixes of that code. You’ll have the opportunity to contact the developer if you need to, and you also get a money-back guarantee.

On top of all that function, we have to admit that the form is pretty nice, too:

Binpress seems like a lot less effort for everyone involved than “rent-a-coder”-type outsourcing or contracting solutions, and it generally costs less, as well. Some code is even free, and with many packages, you can see a demo of the code in action before you buy.

In addition to single-language, stand-alone components, Binpress also offers code packages for web frameworks such as CakePHP and Django and platforms such as WordPress and Joomla.

Binpress is a fairly new initiative, and its marketplace offerings are slender so far. So to kick things off and incentivize devs to sell their code on the site, the company is running a programming contest with more than $40,000 in cash and prizes for winners. The contest’s sponsors include Google, Microsoft, PayPal, Amazon Web Services, Conduit, O’Reilly, Tropo, Media Temple, uTest and others.

Although the idea of a “code marketplace” is hardly new, it’s timed well for the current development market. We saw a lot of similar ideas floating around in the early 2000s; however, web development and the dev ecosystem and communities have changed significantly since then. It’s long been time for a new, better way to buy and sell code packages and snippets, and Binpress is a good-looking, functional site that meets the need. If enough devs flesh out its code package inventory, we can see the site being of great use to developers, both those who buy and those who sell.

Binpress comes from Lionite, an Israeli web dev shop with a focus on great design.

In the comments, please let us know if Binpress is the kind of resource you’d use, either as a buyer or seller, and why or why not.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, jgroup

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13th Jan 2011

Teens In Tech Launches Startup Incubator for Young Entrepreneurs


Beginning Thursday, young entrepreneurs and developers have a new advocate and a new aspiration: the Teens in Tech Incubator.

Teens in Tech launched three years ago as a support network for young people who were starting their own companies and getting involved in the tech world. Now, the organization is taking the next logical step by providing hands-on instruction and mentorship to young teams.

The incubator will begin this summer and run for about eight and a half weeks. Only teens ages 13 through 19 who are local to the San Francisco Bay area can apply for this session, and teams should have at least one developer who can code the project at hand.

Appcelerator in Mountain View will be providing the physical space for the startups to work from, and Teens in Tech will also be courting sponsor companies to fund the program.

Other benefits will include free web hosting, marketing and PR, and legal advice.

The application deadline is March 18, 2011, and the program will begin June 20. On August 10, Teens in Tech will hold a Demo Day for incubator teams to show their products to press and VCs.

Teens in Tech co-founder Daniel Brusilovsky says one of the biggest issues facing teen entrepreneurs is that “people don’t take them seriously. So we’re putting them in a room with 30 people who do take them seriously and who want to help them.

“Most people give these young entrepreneurs a thousand reasons why they shouldn’t jump off a cliff. I’m giving them 1,001 reaons to do it, and we’ll help them grow wings as they’re falling off.”

Brusilovsky speaking at the Teens in Tech Conference, one of the organization’s most successful endeavors.

Teens in Tech has built a substantial network over the past three years, both in terms of having broad connections in the sphere of young developers and entrepreneurs and in having solid ties to a large group of all-star mentors in their twenties and thirties. Many of these mentors are serving as advisers for the incubator.

In fact, this incubator’s roster of mentors is one of the most impressive things about it. Teen entrepreneurs and developers will be schooled in design by Jesse Thomas of JESS3 fame and über designer Joey Primiani. They’ll get coaching from investors like Paige Craig. And they’ll get coding and marketing tips and advice from the makers of Seesmic, Twilio, PBWorks, Disqus, Posterous, Eventbrite, Paypal, Salesforce and more.

“When we talk with young entrepreneurs and ask them about their struggles,” said Brusilovsky, “the top thing they always say is, ‘I wish there was someone I can go to and ask a question or get some advice.’ That was something we took to heart… so we have some fantastic mentors that are going to help shape these companies.”

Brusilovsky says his incubator is “not looking to compete” with organizations like Y Combinator and TechStars, which he said were his inspiration. “For them, this is their business model. For us, this is a learning expereince.

“Our number one goal is that every person in this program walks away learning at least five news things about startups that they didn’t know.”

The first season of this incubator will involve five startups. The Teens in Tech team hope to grow that number as well as the number of cities with Teens in Tech incubator programs in the years to come. Brusilovsky also hopes to hold some events for teen entrepreneurs and developers during the school year.

Along with giving solid legal advice for these business-owning minors (Brusilovsky says having parents involved is key), the Teens in Tech co-founder told us, “One of the most important things we can teach is balancing school, personal life and startups.”

Image courtesy of Flickr, nimbuzz.

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31st Dec 2010

The Top 8 Web Development Highlights of 2010


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This year brought quite a few headlines of note to the developer world. While we each have our favorites, from new releases of classic tools to astounding announcements from tech companies, here in no particular order are a few stories that stood out to us this year.

In the comments, we’d love to know what stories stood out most to you this year, partly to indulge our sense of gratuitous end-of-year nostalgia and partly to help us hone our coverage for 2011, when we hope to bring you more fascinating web dev news than ever before.

What were your favorite dev-related headlines of 2010?


1. The Release of Rails 3.0


Early in February, the Ruby on Rails core team took the wraps off Rails 3.0, a long-awaited release of the popular Ruby framework.

Rails creator David Heinemeier Hansson wrote on the Rails blog, “We’ve had more than 250 people help with the release and we’ve been through almost 4,000 commits since 2.3 to get here. Yet still the new version feels lighter, more agile, and easier to understand.

“It’s a great day to be a Rails developer.”


2. Salesforce’s Acquisition of Heroku


Earlier this month, Salesforce bought Heroku for a staggering $212 million, giving another token of legitimacy to the growing Ruby community as well as to cloud-based programming tools.

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said at the time, “The next era of cloud computing is social, mobile and real-time… Ruby is the language of Cloud 2, and Heroku is the leading Ruby application platform-as-a-service for Cloud 2 that is fueling this growing community. We think this acquisition will uniquely position Salesforce.com as the cornerstone for the next generation of app developers.”


3. Facebook’s Release of HipHop for PHP


In February, Facebook rolled out HipHop, an internal open-source project intended to speed up PHP for large-scale applications.

HipHop isn’t quite a compiler. “Rather,” wrote Facebook engineer Haiping Zhao, “it is a source code transformer. HipHop programmatically transforms your PHP source code into highly optimized C++ and then uses g++ to compile it.”

The project was the culmination of two years of work by a small team of engineers; in the end, it got a thumbs-up from PHP creator Rasmus Lerdorf, who said, “”I think it is a cool project and it will certainly be a good option for some sites.”


4. The Rise of Node.js


Node.js has been around for a couple years, but 2010 was the year awareness and use of the JavaScript framework really blew up.

Commits have grown, as has the number of committers. Traffic to the project website has steadily climbed through the year, and downloads for Node.js from GitHub have predictably grown, as well.

As the organizers of the annual Node Knockout wrote, “It’s at the bleeding edge of a technology stack that allows developers to blur the lines between software, the web and the new like never before.”


5. Microsoft’s Release of Visual Studio 2010


The latest version of Microsoft’s Visual Studio, a big release by any standards, launched this year to impressive reviews from all corners of the web. InfoWorld said the release “marks a major advance in functionality and ease,” and The Register wrote, “It is hard not to be impressed by Microsoft’s tool suite.”

The IDE was overhauled, completely rewritten from the ground up. Support for Silverlight was added, and Microsoft also took this opportunity to release F#, a new programming language developed by Microsoft Research.


6. Facebook’s Release of the Open Graph API


Facebook and social app developers have long wrestled with Facebook integration for third parties. In the spring at its f8 developer conference, Facebook rolled out a brand new model for tapping into the social web, and it did so to unprecedented fanfare.

Dubbed the Open Graph, Facebook’s changes brought instant gratification and familiarity for Facebook users as they surfed the web — and they brought a fast and easy way for devs to integrate with the social network, as easy as a single line of HTML in many cases.


7. The Android/Java/Oracle Saga


What a year it’s been for Java! Not only is the language a key part in the programming stack of the fastest-growing mobile OS out there; it’s also the star of a big, potentially spendy lawsuit between two of the giants of the tech industry.

Sun, which developed the language in-house back in the dark ages, was acquired by Oracle. That deal became official in January, and Oracle wasted no time in getting litigious with Google over that company’s use of Java in the Android platform and the Dalvik virtual machine that stands in for the JVM on mobile OSes.

The lawsuit began in August with Oracle claiming that Google “knowingly, directly and repeatedly infringed Oracle’s Java-related intellectual property.”

Google quickly countered that it was shocked — shocked! — that Oracle would make such claims over an open-source technology. It followed with the assertions that Oracle’s patents are unenforceable and that if there had been “any use in the Android platform of any protected elements” of Java, Google itself “is not liable” due to the face that such violations would have been committed by third parties and without Google’s knowledge.

We’ll continue to keep an eye on the lawsuit and on Java’s role in the Android platform throughout 2011.


8. Apple Declares War on Flash


Tensions between Apple and Adobe ran high this year, beginning in January when the iPad launched without support for Flash. Then in February, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs told employees why: “No one will be using Flash. The world is moving to HTML5.”

These were the words that launched a thousand blog posts. Throughout the spring, the two companies waged a war of words — and one sweet antitrust inquiry with the Department of Justice over Apple’s banning of Flash for iPhone app devs.

Steve Jobs dropped the bomb of the year in a passive-aggressive missive on Flash in which the Apple co-founder stated that Adobe’s programming technology “no longer necessary” and waxed hypocritical about open technologies.

But while he may have been passive-aggressive and hypocritical, he also may have been right. With HTML5 making a strong showing early in its lifetime, it was only a matter of time before a public figure of Jobs’s stature would make a statement or two about the death of Flash.

Of course, this tension has made for a convenient cozying-up between Google and Adobe along the way.


What Are Your Picks?


Again, let us know in the comments what your favorite stories of 2010 were — and Happy New Year from the geeks at Mashable!

With special thanks to our Twitter friends who made suggestions for this list: Jordan Runnin, Leon Gersing and Jeremy Bray.


Reviews: Android, Facebook, Google, Mashable, PHP, Twitter

More About: 2010, developers, News, programming, Web Development

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23rd Dec 2010

HOW TO: Make the Most of TextMate


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For web developers, a key part of the toolkit is a solid text editor. Vi and Emacs wars aside, there are lots of good choices for web developers, ranging from the ultra-sparse to the full-on IDE.

One of the most popular text editors for Mac OS X among coders is TextMate. Despite not receiving many major updates since 2007, TextMate is still a favorite amongst developers, front-end coders and even writers (a few of Mashable’s bloggers use TextMate to compose first drafts of blog posts).

On its own, TextMate is a good program. With the right add-ons and modifications, however, TextMate it can be a dream come true. Even if we never see a TextMate 2, here are some tips to making the most out of your TextMate installation.


Install Some Themes


Out of the box, TextMate comes with a handful of themes, but there are many more options for your text editing enjoyment.

In a previous post, I compiled some of my favorite TextMate themes from over the years and put them together in a handy package on GitHub.

To install a theme, just double click it. TextMate, like other text editors, is designed for monospaced fonts. Mac OS X comes with several choices, including Menlo, which made its appearance in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard.

If you want to further explore your programming font choices, check out this article, written by my friend Dan Benjamin, which provides a great overview of some of the most popular choices.


Add Some Plugins


Despite not receiving any major updates for well, years, TextMate remains a favorite amongst old and new developers. If I had to pick a single reason, it would be the extensible nature of the program.

Simply put, TextMate can be extended and improved via the use of plugins and bundles. Plugins can impact the program as a whole, whereas bundles are specific collections of commands, snippets and shortcuts.

Some of my favorite TextMate plugins include:

  • WebMate — This lets you preview and edit HTML content in TextMate.
  • MissingDrawer — This adds a better project window interface to TextMate.
  • SVNMate — A nice SVN integration for TextMate.

What’s even better than just downloading the plugins is downloading the plugins and a set of UI modifications. One of my favorite TextMate “packages” is Green Moleskine, which has recently been updated to version 1.2. The new version includes Snow Leopard support for some of the UI modifications.

Green Moleskine also includes SVNMate, WebMate and MissingDrawer, but the link to MissingDrawer on GitHub has an updated version of that plugin.

For new TextMate installations, I usually just start with Green Moleskine and then build out.


Get GetBundles


Without a doubt, bundles are my favorite part of TextMate. I never thought I would be the type of person who got religious about my text editor, but the bundles feature in TextMate has made me a disciple.

Over the years, TextMate bundles have been created for practically every web framework and task you can imagine. You can find these bundles online and double click the *.tmbundle file to install.

But what if there was a better way to discover and install bundles, within TextMate itself? There is, and it is called GetBundles. GetBundles has a graphical interface that allows you to search the official TextMate bundle repository, the review queue and GitHub. The GitHub support is really slick, because these days, that’s where most of the updates and new code ends up being released.

The easiest way to install GetBundles is to pop open Terminal in Mac OS X and paste in the lines that Trey Piepmier thoughtfully setup on his blog.

Once GetBundles is installed, you can search the various repositories and click on a bundle to install it — and also check for updates to the bundles you already use.


Bundle Bonanza


Once GetBundles is installed, the final step to an awesome TextMate experience is track down some bundles.

These are a few of my favorites:

  • Blogsmith Bundle — Back when I wrote for TUAW and DownloadSquad, my colleague Brett Terpstra created a bundle to help us with our blogging. He did this because the backend of the publishing tool we used was unable to connect to XML-RPC clients like MarsEdit. This bundle, which included things like the ability to select a group of words and quickly insert a link, search archives or add tags and other information to a post, became something that I was so reliant on, I commissioned Brett to write me a Mashable-specific add-on bundle when I started working here. If you do any type of web writing, this Bundle, which works with MultiMarkdown, is an absolute gem.
  • MultiMarkdown Bundle for TextMate — John Gruber’s Markdown syntax is a format for writers who want markup that is readable and fast. MultiMarkdown adds even more features in the form of a TextMate bundle.
  • CSS3 Bundle — David DeSandro (of jQuery Masonry fame) created this excellent CSS3 bundle for TextMate, complete with browser-specific prefixes.
  • HTML5 Boilerplate Bundle — Darren Wood made this bundle, which puts all the HTML5 Boilerplate goodies at your fingertips.

How have you tricked out your TextMate install? Let us know in the comments.


More Dev & Design Resources from Mashable:


- Hacker Web Design: Words of Wisdom for Building Great Apps
- 5 Better Ways to Read “Hacker News”
- A Beginner’s Guide to Integrated Development Environments
- 10 Chrome Web Apps to Check Out
- HOW TO: Make Your WordPress Blog More Like Tumblr

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01st Dec 2010

5 Better Ways to Read “Hacker News”


The Web Development Series is supported by Rackspace, the better way to do hosting. Learn more about Rackspace’s hosting solutions here.

Hacker NewsHacker News is one of our favorite places to find interesting stories, learn about apps and side projects from the dev community and stay connected to the early stage startup scene.

The only problem is the interface. It’s simple and easy to get used to, but it’s also a trifle — dare we say it? — ugly.

We’re not the only ones with the same complaint. Over the years, many a developer/designer has tried his or her hand at reimagining the Hacker News interface. Here are a few we like and think are interesting.


1. Hacker News UX


This is a clever extension for Google Chrome users. It basically delivers the same no-frills UI to which you’re accustomed, but splits it into two columns. On the left, you will see the top stories, and on the right, the newest, giving you an integrated, at-a-glance interface for exploring both the popular and the fresh on Hacker News.

Cooler still is the tooltips feature. When you hover over a username on Hacker News, you’ll immediately see the user’s stats and bio.

Another Chrome extension of interest is Hacker News OnePage, which, as the more astute among you might guess, creates a single-page interface in two columns, with top stories on the left and individual stories’ comment threads on the right.


2. hckr news


This site is, as the creator writes, a minimalist Hacker News alternative that displays a “chronologic list of items that have made it onto the Hacker News homepage.”

You can filter this list by number of posts — just see the top 10 if you’re pressed for time; if you’ve got a couple hours to burn, you can browse through the top 50%. You can view what’s new or easily catch up if you’ve spent a few days offline — like, say, if you were in a coma or otherwise unable to access the Internet.

The thoughtful chap who designed hckr news also made Chrome and Safari extensions that help manage and monitor comments on the site.


3. Flipboard


We’ve gone on before about how Flipboard is a great, gorgeous interface for Twitter and general, end-user social media tools, but we’re not alone in thinking it’s also an awesome way to digest Hacker News. It brings Flipboard’s typically glossy, magazine-like interface to the bare-bones feed, rendering it easier to skim and read.

Polaris Venture Partners’s Ryan Spoon writes that the way the Flipboard app renders Hacker News is “inspiration to (re)consider product design.”


4. Hacker Newspaper


Suppose you don’t use Chrome and don’t own an iPad. Here’s a UI you can try out in any browser.

As you might gather from the name, this “miniapp” gives Hacker News a traditional newspaper-like skin. Its creator considered that the “complex, structured heirarchy” of a print paper had a lot of sophistication that most for-geeks publications lack. Hacker Newspaper marries this heirarchy with an hourly update from the Hacker News feed via a Python script. It’s easy to read and easy on the eyes, as well.


5. “Hacker Monthly”


If there’s anything more old school than a print-like interface on the web, it’s an actual print publication.

Hacker Monthly is just that: a print curation of the top-rated articles and stories posted to Hacker News. You can subscribe to the print version for $88 per year, and you can get a year-long digital subscription for $29. Single editions run $10 plus shipping for a physical copy or $3 for the digital edition.

And just think of all the time you’ll save when you don’t have to make — or, heaven forbid, read — those troublesome comments.


What Did We Leave Out?


Aside from “the point of Hacker News,” is there anything you think we’ve missed? We’d love to hear about your favorite Hacker News redesigns or alternatives in the comments.


Series supported by Rackspace


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The Web Development Series is supported by Rackspace, the better way to do hosting. No more worrying about web hosting uptime. No more spending your time, energy and resources trying to stay on top of things like patching, updating, monitoring, backing up data and the like. Learn why.


More Dev & Design Resources from Mashable:


- 11 Trends in Web Logo Design: The Good, the Bad and the Overused
- Essential Web Design Advice From a Wireframing Master [INTERVIEW]
- 10 Beginner Tips from PHP Masters
- 10 Intermediate and Advanced Tips from PHP Masters
- 4 Game-Changing Trends in Web App Design

Image based on photo from Flickr, dsevilla.

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23rd Nov 2010

Aviary Debuts HTML5 Photo Editor


Creative web app powerhouse Aviary has just announced its latest product, an HTML5-powered photo editor.

Like Aviary’s other apps, the HTML5 photo editor — code named Feather — is easy to use and surprisingly powerful. Beyond its use of HTML5 (as opposed to Flash, Silverlight or other RIA frameworks), what sets this app apart is that it’s designed to be portable and embeddable.

Aviary already has a very solid Flash-based image editor, Phoenix. It’s been around for over two years and has a wealth of features. So what makes Feather different and special?

On its blog, Aviary discusses the the rationale for building Feather. First, Aviary says that it knew it wanted to be able to reach out to the world of creativity happening outside of Aviary.com. Because Feather is portable and embeddable, developers can directly integrate it into their sites and apps. That means that users don’t have to leave one page or experience in order to complete a task and then shift back.

Furthermore, as powerful as Phoenix and some of Aviary’s other image tools are, many third parties who use Aviary’s products were requesting a simpler tool. You don’t always need to have a full-fledged photo suite. If a website just wants to make it easy for a user to upload a product photo and maybe add a caption, they probably don’t need to the ability to create multiple layers, make magic wand selections and add different type of brush effects.

So with Feather, Aviary decided to take the most popular functions of Phoenix and put it in one portable package. Plus, third-party developers can customize what features they want to include or exclude. The great thing about being in HTML5 is that the tool is easier to integrate and embed into third-party solutions. Aviary also says it has plans to open source the editor and create a mobile version too.

Already Everloop, Fashism, Shopify and other companies have signed up to integrate Feather into their apps.


How it Works


If you want to get a feel for Feather and see how it might be useful in your project, head to http://www.aviary.com/html5 and click on the “See it in Action” tab. Then upload an image and get started!

While simple in nature, the app is really powerful. I uploaded a photo from my online collection and then applied one of the pre-formulated “effects” — in this case, “Instant.” The results were a photo with cooler tones and already framed in a Polaroid. I was then able to add text, save the image and download the file.

Super simple, super effective. The fact that developers can take advantage of this portable toolset on their own sites is super cool. Even better, the functionality of this product is totally top-notch.

Aviary deserves kudos for showing off what HTML5 can do. Do you use any web-based image editors? What do you use and why?

More About: Aviary, feather, HTML5, html5 image editor, web apps

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01st Nov 2010

Google Introduces API Console


If you use Google APIs much, you might be interesting in checking out Google’s latest product for developers.

Coming straight from the fine people at Google Code, the API console is the fruit of a yearlong effort to better organize Google’s APIs.

The new console will help developers manage their API usage for all their applications and websites.

For the console, you can log in with your Google credentials to see data for all your API projects. If you’re working with a team, you can create and manage project teams from the console.

The console will also help you track exactly how you use each API, and you can get stats on API usage for your app or site, such as specific rate limits, which pages are making the most API calls and graphs of API usage over time.

Right now, the API console supports a handful of Google APIs (including APIs for Buzz, Translate, Custom Search and five others) with support for more expected soon.


In other Google APIs news, the Google Developer Team is also happy to announce new, improved APIs for Translate and Custom Search. The new Custom Search API will return search results in Atom or JSON syndication formats in addition to XML and the Custom Search element.

These refreshed APIs and the new console are the first built on the company’s new API architecture, which is discussed in the hour-long Google I/O video below. What do you think of the console so far? Is it useful for you, either personally or professionally?


Reviews: Google, coming

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29th Oct 2010

Microsoft Shifts From Silverlight to HTML5


Adobe isn’t the only company being tempted by the sweet taste of HTML5, Microsoft has a hankering for the stuff too.

Despite its past efforts to shape Silverlight into the leading cross-platform runtime for the web and the desktop, Microsoft now says that its strategy and plans for Silverlight “has shifted.”

ZDNet’s Mary-Jo Foley spoke with Bob Muglia, the president of Microsoft’s server and tools business about the lack of focus on Siverlight at the company’s Professional Developers Conference this week.

Muglia’s response was pretty telling. Although he reaffirmed Microsoft’s commitment to making Silverlight the development platform for Windows Phone, he noted that the cross-platform solution Microsoft sees going forward is HTML.

Speaking with Foley, Muglia said, “HTML is the only true cross platform solution for everything, including (Apple’s) iOS platform.”

This is a big admission from the company that has spent years trying to push Silverlight as a cross-platform technology forward. As a video technology — indeed even as an application technology — Silverlight and WPF are actually pretty nice. I attended a two-day XAML workshop held at Microsoft’s Atlanta offices in 2009 and was very impressed with the capabilities and the toolsets that were possible within Silverlight.

However, despite the prevalence of the .NET platform on Windows and in the enterprise, Silverlight has had a problem gaining traction across the web. With the exception of the Olympics and a few other live broadcasts, you almost never see Silverlight used on the web.

Likewise, the number of desktop applications built using Silverlight are nascent in comparison to the growing number of Adobe Air applications. Aside from Seesmic Desktop, it’s hard to think of any cross-platform apps that are built using Silverlight.

All the while, Microsoft is increasingly embracing HTML5. The company’s recent launch of Internet Explorer 9 beta was promoted using a number of different HTML5-specific web pages and promotions. Silverlight may not have been mentioned much during PDC, but HTML5 certainly was.

It’s clear that Microsoft — like Adobe, Apple and Google — sees that HTML5 is the technology that will work across the broadest stretch of devices — and more importantly, will work on future devices.

Yes, the W3C has stated that the HTML5 spec isn’t yet ready for full use, and in a broad, global sense, this is true. However, when you look at the types of devices that individuals will be buying today and tomorrow, and not the device they already own, it’s clear that HTML5 is the technology that is going to have built-in support.

As a technology, Silverlight has a lot of promise and we think it is still interesting. Still, we can’t help but think Microsoft is making a better strategic move to focus on HTML5 as its cross-platform solution going forward.


Reviews: Google, Seesmic Desktop, Windows, adobe AIR

More About: HTML5, microsoft, pdc, Silverlight

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