Publish your website on Google Drive (video)



Google Drive SDK: Publishing your website on Google Drive - YouTube: a new feature of the Google Drive SDK: the ability to publish a website from a Google Drive folder.

Announcing Google Drive Site Publishing - Google Apps Developer Blog: "Would you like to programmatically publish some web content? Or let your users do so in the context of your Drive app? This is possible now with Google Drive. Your app can now insert static web assets in a publicly shared folder, and then serve those files directly to users via file names in a relative path. Google Drive site publishing supports JavaScript, so it's even possible to run a JavaScript Drive app directly from Drive. Publishing from Drive is a simple, two-step dance: create a public folder and use a link to the root folder — the webViewLink — to publish its contents. You can refer to the Drive SDK documentation for full detail on how to work with public folders and content links, but basically the requirements are: The folder containing site assets must be public. Assets added to public folders must also be public on the web. Link to the files contained in the folder using the webViewLink (included in the folder’s JSON representation)."

https://developers.google.com/

https://developers.google.com/live/

http://googledevelopers.blogspot.com/








Practical aspects of developing Google Maps applications


Streamed live on Nov 20, 2012 - Google Maps Developer Relations Team members Mano Marks and Brendan Kenny discuss practical aspects of developing Google Maps applications. In this episode, Mano and Brendan will delve into common mistakes people make in developing Maps applications.





Google Pulls Together Public Alerts in Wake of Hurricane Sandy

Google Pulls Together Public Alerts in Wake of Hurricane Sandy: "Google has bundled its Public Alerts services, which provide information and warnings during emergencies, into Google Search, Google Maps and into its Android Maps and Google Now apps on devices running Jelly Bean. The announcement came just after the height of Hurricane Sandy, which pummeled much of the East Coast with hurricane-force winds, heavy rains, flooding, downed tree limbs and massive power outages stretching from Boston to Maryland."





Building footprints in Google Maps

Google Lat Long: Expanded coverage of building footprints in Google Maps: "As we go about our daily travels, we often rely on buildings to orient ourselves, locate landmarks and navigate from place to place. So today, we’re expanding the coverage of building footprints that are already available in Google Maps. Now, you can see 25 million new building footprints that have been added to Google Maps on desktop and mobile across major metropolitan regions in the United States, including Houston, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, and the San Francisco Bay Area. This expansion is part of our ongoing effort to provide you with maps that are as comprehensive as possible."






Transparency Report: Government requests on the rise

Worth reading, and troubling--

Transparency Report: Government requests on the rise | Official Google Blog: "When we first launched the Transparency Report in early 2010, there wasn’t much data out there about how governments sometimes hamper the free flow of information on the web. So we took our first step toward greater transparency by disclosing the number of government requests we received. At the time, we weren’t sure how things would look beyond that first snapshot, so we pledged to release numbers twice a year. Today we’re updating the Transparency Report with data about government requests from January to June 2012. This is the sixth time we’ve released this data, and one trend has become clear: Government surveillance is on the rise. As you can see from the graph below, government demands for user data have increased steadily since we first launched the Transparency Report. In the first half of 2012, there were 20,938 inquiries from government entities around the world. Those requests were for information about 34,614 accounts."






Hangout: Bringing telework into your business

From "Down Under"--

ZDNet Hangout: Bringing telework into your business | ZDNet: "Do you work remotely? Join our Google Hangout tomorrow, Tuesday, November 13, at 1 p.m. AEDST." (Australia) . . . The discussion will look at what the government is doing to encourage businesses to take up teleworking, what technology is required, how small businesses can get onboard, and what sort of organisations and people are best suited to teleworking. National Telework Week is being held this week by the Australian government in partnership with 138 organisations from a variety of industries. Its purpose is to encourage as many employers and employees as possible to trial teleworking. The federal government is promoting the rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN) as a key driver for the uptake of teleworking across the country. To watch this hangout, return to this page at 1 p.m. tomorrow, when we will be broadcasting live.

Sounds interesting!






Google renames productivity apps for Chrome users

Google renames productivity apps for Chrome users | ZDNet: "Google's productivity tools have gained new names, and users can now deploy them as apps in the Chrome Web Store. The Document, Spreadsheet and Presentation tools — rivals to Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint respectively — originally went under the Google Docs banner, before that got folded into Google Drive in April. Now, according to a Google Drive post on Tuesday, they are called Docs, Sheets and Slides. The renaming came alongside the release of Docs, Sheets and Slides as individual Chrome Web Store apps. For those running Chrome on a standard PC, there is no difference between installing those apps and simply bookmarking them within the browser."






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