For those of you who have been trying to build client-side GData mashups but have been thwarted by the same-origin policy, we have some good news for you: you can now get public Base, Blogger, and Calendar feeds as JSON! This means that you can start displaying GData in your web page with a little JavaScript.
<sep/>Standard protocol for reading and writing data on the web. These APIs use either of two standard XML-based syndication formats: Atom or RSS. The following data APIs allow your client applications to<sep/>
Wow, it's been nearly 4 months since we started the Google Developers channel on YouTube! We wanted a place to post talks, announcements, interviews, and anything else that might interest outside developers (and other fans). Now, we're building out more tutorial / lecture content -- something that hobbyists and seasoned programmers can watch to get their feet wet with our products.
We know that one of your New Year's resolutions must be to learn a new API, so check out our first videos on Gadgets and Google Data:
Three videos about Getting Started with Gadgets by "the Dans" (Daniel Lee and Daniel Holevoet):
An Introduction to Google Data by Jeff Fisher:
We're just getting started, so subscribe to the Google Developer Courses playlist for updates. There are many ways for you to keep up to date:
The Google Data team is holding a local event for developers Thursday, December 13th, 5:00pm-10:30pm at the Googleplex (Mountain View, CA). It'll be part hackathon, part unconference, part user group, part food, and part fabulous prizes.
Besides a short kick-off session, everything else will be up to you. We'll provide the wi-fi, power and food, and you can utilize the time however you want -- whether it's to pick the brain of someone on the GData team, meet other local developers, hack away on your current project, sit in on impromptu sessions about things like GData + Gears and GME, or hold your own lightning talk about the project you're working on.