Google Web Toolkit 2.2 (aka GWK) expands HTML5 support

Google has released the latest Google Web Toolkit (GWT) in it’s most exciting release yet.

GWT 2.2 now includes support for the HTML5 Canvas tag – which means you can now build dynamic images/animations/transitions all in HTML with GWT.

Going a step further for devs, Google is now also directly integrating GWT Designer into the Google Plugin for Eclipse. GWT Designer is a tool that lets devs rapidly build UIs.

The end result is a whole lot of ease of use improvement for anyone that is building apps with GWT for AppEngine.

Together with GWT Designer, this could well be one of the easiest ways to take advantage of HTML5 Canvas.

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Chrome beta hits v.10, Chrome dev hits v.11

Author: Stephen Shankland (cnet)


Chrome speeds up its V8 JavaScript engine with the Crankshaft version in Chrome 10.
(Credit: Google)

Google released two new versions of Chrome yesterday, version 10 for beta users and version 11 for developers willing to put up with more instability.

With Google’s six-week update schedule, the new releases are milestones that Chrome users pass–often not necessarily noticing given the software’s silent auto-update mechanism. But there are significant new features coming with the new beta.

Top on Google’s list is faster JavaScript with the “Crankshaft” version of the new V8 JavaScript engine. JavaScript runs increasingly sophisticated Web-based applications such as Google Docs, and this highly competitive aspect of browser performance has become even more so with the “Chakra” engine in the forthcoming IE9 from Microsoft.

Crankshaft leaps ahead 65 percent on Google’s own V8 benchmark suite. Note, though, that faster JavaScript is only one aspect of overall browser performance, and that other benchmarks such as Mozilla’s Kraken can yield different results.

Also in Chrome 10 (Windows | Mac | Linux) is hardware-accelerated video, which can increase computing efficiency and spare battery life; settings controls that move from a pop-up dialog box to a browser tab; and password synchronization among different installations of Chrome (though not, as with Firefox, with Chrome on Android).

Google isn’t talking much yet about its Chrome 11 (Windows | Mac | Linux) plans, but it looks like one interesting feature on the way is “chromoting,” which lets a Chrome browser remotely take over another machine over a network. It’s not unlike LogMeIn or other remote desktop applications, but those can’t be installed on a Chrome OS machine, so chromoting gives a browser-based mechanism. That, in turn, would let Chrome OS in effect remotely run some native software that wouldn’t run on a Chrome OS machine.

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Social links get higher billing in Google

Author: Tom Krazit

Google’s Matt Cutts climbed Mount Kilimanjaro last year, and if he’s part of your social landscape, content that he has authored or shared could now rank higher in your personalized Google results.
(Credit: Google)

Google’s putting a little more attention into social cues when it comes to returning search results.

Over the course of the day Google will start rolling out new social search features that more prominently display content that connections on social networks like Twitter have shared. Google’s been doing that for a while, but in the slums of the search results page: all the way at the bottom.

Now those results will appear interspersed with regular search results when you’re signed into Google and someone on a social network that you have connected to your Google profile shares a link, with a note under the result telling you who shared the link and where. Twitter seems to be the big winner here, but any account linked to one’s Google profile can be featured in results.

Those results won’t be displayed to all searchers: you’ll see individual results when signed into Google based off of friends and connections within the Google world (Gmail, Chat, Google Buzz) who publicly share sites through those services or externally linked services like Twitter or LinkedIn. Google’s also making it possible for users to privately link accounts to their Google Profiles.

It’s all part of Google’s ongoing and mostly fruitless attempts to make social-media connections a greater part of its search results. One of Google’s biggest priorities at the moment is finding a way to stay relevant as an information source as more and more people share information in social networks, and as more and more sites try to game Google’s results.

This is a long-term problem, but it’s a problem nonetheless that is getting a lot of attention internally. One huge issue is the closed nature of Facebook, the king of the social-media world: Google’s all-seeing Web crawlers can’t penetrate Facebook’s services and that has caused tension between the two companies.

Google is expected to roll out more social services over the coming year, having discussed plans to add social layers to existing products as opposed to trying to build a network of its own. Past attempts at that–such as Orkut and Google Buzz–haven’t made an impact.

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An early preview of Firefox 5

Author: Seth Rosenblat (Cnet)

Firefox 4 hasn’t even been fully baked and served up yet, but that’s not stopping Mozilla from pushing ahead with plans for Firefox 5.

In this slide-show, we get a sense of some of the ideas that Mozilla is toying with for the next version of the browser, including Mozilla’s version of Internet Explorer 9′s pinned sites feature, a redesigned add-on updater work-flow, and heavy promotion of Firefox Sync.

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Flash 10.2 Brings To the Table More Efficient Video

Author: Stephen Shankland (cnet)

Adobe Systems released Flash Player 10.2 today, bringing a technology called Stage Video designed to be easier on computing devices’ processors and therefore batteries.

Tom Nguyen, product manager for Flash platform runtimes, offered this glowing account for the Flash Player 10.2 announcement:

Stage Video lets websites take advantage of full hardware acceleration of the entire video pipeline…Stage Video hardware acceleration means that Flash Player can play even higher quality video while using dramatically less processing power, giving users a better experience, greater performance, and longer battery life. In our testing across supported systems, we’ve found it’s up to 34 times more efficient.

Put another way, Flash Player using Stage Video can effortlessly play beautiful 1080p HD video with just 1 to 15 percent CPU usage on a common Mac or Windows computer…Many millions of additional PCs, from Netbooks to desktops, can now become slick HD home theaters on the Web.

CPU usage during video has been a particular sore spot with Flash, in particular with Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs lambasting Flash video as battery-sucking software. Stage Video, among other things, uses hardware acceleration to combine (“composite,” in technical terms) video with other elements such as text or graphics–think subtitles, pop-up ads, and player controls. (Adobe already added hardware-assisted decoding of H.264 video in Flash Player 10.1.)

Web developers need to update their software to use the new Stage Video interface; Google already has for its Flash-based player at YouTube, Adobe said.

Speaking of hardware acceleration, Flash Player 10.2 also takes advantage of that ability in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 9 for higher performance and smoother compositing. It also comes with the ability to show full-screen video on one monitor in a dual-monitor setup.

Flash faces a host of challenges beyond power consumption. Also on the list are a variety of competing Web standards in varying degrees of maturity and the fact that Flash Player is a rarity on mobile phones.

The Flash Player 10.2 plug-in can be downloaded from Adobe’s download site, but things are somewhat different for users of Google’s Chrome browser. Google builds Flash Player directly into Chrome and it issued a new stable version 9.0.597.94 and developer version 10.0.648.45 with Flash Player 10.2; the new versions download automatically and are installed upon restarting the browser.

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New! All Yearly Subscribed Level 5 Hosting Accounts Come With a Free Domain Name For the Life of the Account!

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IE9′s ‘pinning’ brings traffic boost to sites

Author: Josh Lowensohn (Cnet)

Microsoft says a small new feature within Internet Explorer 9 is having a big impact on sites that have tweaked their code to make use of it.

“Site pinning,” which is new to this latest major version of Internet Explorer, lets users add a shortcut to a site from any page of their own to sit on their Windows 7 task bar. On the surface this would just seem like any other shortcut, except that Microsoft has provided ways for sites to boost the interactivity, like putting site-specific notifications, navigation, and information in contextual menus that sit behind the icon.

Microsoft now says that sites that have gone this extra step are seeing anywhere from a 15 percent to 50 percent increase in site visits, behavior that can be tracked back to a pinned site’s increased visibility compared to bookmarks, which are usually kept hidden within a menu inside of the browser.

“It shouldn’t surprise that much,” Brian Hall, general manager of Windows Live business group, told CNET in an interview last week. “If you think about it there’s a reason people have competed aggressively for default home paging for years and years and years. That default home page was the thing that you saw every time you started your browser,” Hall said.

“What we enable is the ability to get out of having only one home page. And not go wonky to the level that you have to have multiple paths, which an average customer isn’t going to do for their home page set,” he continued.

So far more than 900 sites have taken advantage of the feature, meaning that they’ve added some code to their site to offer up the special features to IE9 users. That includes high-resolution icon and support for Jump Lists, which break out site-specific actions into a menu that can be accessed without hunting around for those same options on the site itself. The feature has long been available to native applications built for Windows 7, with Microsoft positioning IE9 as the first pathway for Web developers to include the functionality into their sites and Web applications.

“We have more and more sites that just continue to keep pushing it,” Hall said. “For instance when you have Pandora pinned now you’ll notice that when you’re paused and the windows is not in the foreground, you’ll see a notification that lets you know that you’re in pause.”

Others have also moved to take advantage of the feature by promoting it when users first visit using IE9. “Huffington Post is interesting. If you go to Huffington Post from IE9, it will actually prompt you to do the pinning because they know that if it’s pinned you’re going to go there more often,” Hall said. Similar initiatives have been done by mobile Web application developers with the home screen shortcut feature that’s built into Apple’s Safari browser on its iOS devices.


Microsoft says sites that have been coded to enable things like Jump Lists after being pinned are seeing traffic gains.
(Credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft also sees site pinning as a way to change the way portal-style home pages typically drove traffic to internal properties. “Let’s take a site like Yahoo, which today has obviously good home page share in the United States,” Hall said. “We could encourage people to pin Yahoo, pin Yahoo Mail, pin Yahoo Finance, and all the sudden [Yahoo] doesn’t need to try and program everything through that single piece of real estate that is the home page.”

Hall said that system encourages users to group together similar sites, or clusters of links. “If you go to 20 different sites, if you just start pinning them you get logical groupings,” he said. “So let’s say I’m doing all my research on MSN, I can have 10 links that are logically grouped here, and they’re not getting in the way of my de novo browsing section.”

But does that principle scale as users begin to pin more and more sites? Based on user behavior during the beta, that hasn’t proven to be an issue. “I think the majority of people aren’t going to have more than 10 pins,” Hall said. For those that do, Hall pointed toward simply expanding the size of the Windows task bar to double or even triple height (or width) to accommodate more pins.

“I think what you’ll find is, the more sites that do pinning, the more people want to pin. You might see more people going into double height, but that’s a problem we look forward to having,” Hall said.

Microsoft put out the first, and likely only, release candidate for IE9 last week, though the company has not said when it plans to roll out a final version. The software continues to be offered only to users of the current, and previous iteration of Microsoft’s Windows operating systems: Windows 7, and Windows Vista.

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HTML5 spec set for 2014 completion

Author: Stephen Shankland (Cnet)

It’s been a work in progress for years, but there are a few more years to go yet before the next version of Hypertext Markup Language is finalized.

Specifically, the World Wide Web Consortium’s HTML Working Group is set to announce today that it expects to anoint HTML5 as an officially recommended standard in the second quarter of 2014. That drawn-out schedule contrasts with another effort to make HTML a more fluidly updated “living standard.”

“We started working [on HTML5] in 2007,” Philippe Le Hegaret, the HTML activity leader for the W3C, told CNET. “We’re targeting seven years for completing HTML5.”

HTML5 will become the first new revision since HTML 4.01 was released in 1999. Among the features in the next-generation Web page description language: built-in video and audio, a “canvas” element for two-dimensional graphics, new structural labels such as “article” to smooth programming, and a codified process to consistently interpret the hodgepodge styles of real-world Web pages, even when improperly coded.

That doesn’t mean interested parties won’t be able to employ the new technology until 2014, though. On the contrary, key phases of the coming years’ development involve getting feedback from real-world use that’s already well under way and ironing out wrinkles that may arise implementing the standard in Web browsers.

At the same time, work continues on a broad range of HTML standards–geolocation, offline data storage, background processing, a direct browser-server communication conduit, and more–that aren’t strictly speaking part of HTML5. And after the W3C releases the first “last call” draft of the standard in May–the point at which the W3C thinks the standard’s features are set–the W3C plans to begin tackling the early stages of what it’s calling HTML.next for now.

Clearly, then, the W3C isn’t idling while browser makers and Web developers aggressively push ahead. But the W3C’s schedule contrasts sharply with the speed at which the Web is developing today, growing beyond its role as a medium for static documents into a foundation for sophisticated applications. But the schedule also is not a great surprise given the complexity of HTML, the technological and political wrangling among the 55 organizations in the group, and an interest in HTML that’s broadening beyond browser makers and Web programmers.

“When you want interoperability at a global scale across a broader industry, it takes time [and] more investment than single-platform stability,” said Ian Jacobs, head of W3C marketing. For example, although the Web began as a phenomenon on personal computers, it’s becoming a reality on mobile devices and another domain, TV, is coming, as exemplified by a recent W3C workshop dedicated to the subject.

“The key thing here is that there are lots of stakeholders, some of whom may not move at the same speed. One of the pieces of feedback from the TV and Web workshop is that TV manufacturers expect a shelf life of 7 years,” Jacobs said. “Because the W3C has as its mission to make the Web available to everybody, we always have to take into account the multiple needs of multiple audiences.”

The WHATWG’s living document
Even as the W3C proceeds methodically, though, another group involved in developing HTML is changing its philosophy to an even more fluid arrangement. The WHATWG–Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group–began work on what became HTML5 in 2004 when the W3C declared that the 1999 update to HTML4 was the final version and that the future lay with an incompatible standard called XHTML 2.0. That proved to be largely a dead end, however, and the W3C resumed HTML work in 2007 and now has phased out work on XHTML 2.0.

The WHATWG got its start as an open mailing list, but its founders and decision-makers all came from browser makers–Opera and Mozilla to start, with Apple joining later. HTML governance now essentially involves both the W3C and the WHATWG. One key figure is Ian Hickson, a former Opera and now Google employee who serves as an editor of the somewhat divergent versions of HTML maintained at both the W3C and the WHATWG.

In January, Hickson declared that at the WHATWG, HTML has now become a “living document,” a specification that is constantly updated according to need. Abandoning version numbers that no longer are needed, Hickson ditched the term “HTML5″ in favor of just “HTML.” And he said he’d like to see the W3C follow suit.

Don’t expect the standards group to do so, though.

The W3C has always revised its standards, Jacobs said. “That doesn’t mean everybody wants the nightly build of a specification,” he said, referring to the software development practice of building a new test version of software every night to include programmers’ latest patches. “We also have stable versions of standards, because there are some communities who need those for the level of interoperability they require…We think both innovation and stability are valuable, and they are not mutually exclusive.”

Another factor is intellectual-property rights–specifically, patents. Those who participate in creating the W3C’s specifications agree not to sue those implementing the specification for infringement of any patents those participants own. It’s a bit of legal reassurance in a technology world that has plenty of patent risks, but technically that assurance only comes with the final version of a specification.

The final schedule
What exactly will happen between now and mid-2014 with HTML5? Several steps, according to Le Hegaret and Jacobs:
In May 2011 comes the first “last call” draft of HTML5. This version is feature-complete, meaning no new features will be added, but that existing features will be refined. The W3C expects to deal with thousands of comments through this phase, some of them likely to lead to “substantial” changes.

Likely by the end of 2011, the W3C will issue a second last-call version and begin a second round of refinements.

In the second quarter of 2012, a new phase begins, in which “implementors” of the specification–browser makers, essentially–provide feedback. During this phase, the W3C concentrates on a suite of thousands of tests to see if implementations of HTML5 really do get the same results when interpreting a Web page’s code.

The culmination of this phase is a “candidate recommendation” of the HTML5 spec and at least two “interoperable implementations”–in other words, two different browsers that produce the same results on the test cases. The implementors’ feedback is scheduled for completion by the first quarter of 2014.

Last comes a final review period of about six weeks, then some time to get the promotional gears engaged.

Then, in the second quarter of 2014, HTML5 should be done.

“We’re excited to be able to say we now have a time frame,” Jacobs said.

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Client Focus: Dusebreed

Author: Ryan Sanders
As always we love to shine the spotlight on a random client of ours to showcase their talents. In today’s spotlight we have Dusebreed.com.

From Dusebreed: When Raw Lyrical word play meets swagger, passion and brilliance, here you have the rawest form of a Hip-Hop musical artist. Growing up on the West side of Detroit artist “DuseBreed” born DeJuan Cotton Jr was heavily influenced by artist Jay –Z, Nas, Tupac Shakur and the late great Notorious Biggie Smalls.DuseBreed would take on an early to Hip Hop always loving English writing and Literature, he would began to write very creative rhymes in class. Discovering this talent by his Father at the age of 11 when he would show him pages of rhymes schemes and poems he created, His father would work with him on his freestyling ablilities and enter him into talent shows and local rap battles.

Spending a summer on the east coast with Older cousins, he was always ask to Freestyle raps he created and always impressing Older heads. DuseBreed was taking to an KRS One hip-hop concert in Hampton, Virginia where he was able to get back stage in meet the Hip Hop Legend, His older cousin got him to perform a freestyle and gather a small crowd back stage at the Hip Hop venue. People was trully amaze by the talent he had at that age and Krs One Told DuseBreed that one day he would definitely be an Hip-Hop legend. Since that Day DuseBreed has not put down the pin or mic, Being held back by the bumping roads of life Duse always thought he should just quit rapping and do other things but was always convinced by family , peers and others that this was his true calling . Later on moving to the suburbs with his mother because of their next door neighboor was violently murdered, DuseBreed had adapted to other cultures and began to enjoy other ventures of music. Still finding himself back in the Hood getting into trouble DuseBreed would have understood two different worlds and cultures. Later in Highschool DuseBreed would hook up with local artist Morioty and create over 80 songs together by the year of 2007.  (continued)

Visit their site at www.dusebreed.com to read/learn more.

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Couch merges with Membase in Couchbase NoSQL team-up

Author: Sean Michael Kerner (Internet News)

In a move that is all about scalability- memcached vendor Membase is merging with NoSQL vendor CouchOne. The new company will be called Couchbase.

CouchOne is the commercial entity led by CouchDB founder Damien Katz. I’ve written about CouchDB a few times over the years and I use the database myself (as do millions of Ubuntu users) everyday. CouchOne started off as a company called Couchio, before it changed its name in 201.

Membase on the other hand started out as memcached vendor NorthScale that grew their own NoSQL/memcached database, called ..Membase.

Personally, I had always thought that CouchDB already had pretty decent scalability, but the new merger aims to expand that.

The new merged entity is set to rename the Membase Server as Elastic Couchbase. Elastic Couchbase will include Membase, memcached and CouchDB.

Couchbase will continue to market a non-clustered version of CouchDB as well as a mobile version.

What I don’t understand is how this new effort will impact the underlying Apache CouchDB effort. Will items that might otherwise have gone into CouchDB for scalability now go into the Elastic CouchBase?

It will be interesting to see how non-Couchbase backers of CouchDB respond to this merger. If there are those that are unhappy, will we see a fork? Since Katz really is one of the leading voice in the ongoing development of CouchDB, I don’t think that’s likely, but only time will tell.

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