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via Wayback Internet Archive". Archived from the original on December 6, 2016. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
{{cite web}}
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External links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media rela
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ernal links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wikis.
- A List of Wiki Sites by Category on Lifewire
- List of largest wikis on Wikimedia Meta
- List of multilingual MediaWiki sites on MediaWiki
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Google Cloud Platform
Google Cloud Platform (GCP) is a suite of cloud computing services offered by Google that provides a series of modular cloud services including computing, data storage, data analytics, and machine learning, alongside a set of management tools.[5] It runs on the same infrastructure that Google uses internally for its end-user products, such as Google Search, Gmail, and Google Docs, according to Verma et al.[6] Registration requires a credit card or bank account details.[7]
G
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quires a credit card or bank account details.[7]
Google Cloud Platform provides infrastructure as a service, platform as a service, and serverless computing environments.
In April 2008, Google announced App Engine, a platform for developing and hosting web applications in Google-managed data centers, which was the first cloud computing service from the company. The service became generally available in November 2011. Since the announcement of App Engine, Google added multiple cloud services to t
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Engine, Google added multiple cloud services to the platform.
Google Cloud Platform is a part[8] of Google Cloud, which includes the Google Cloud Platform public cloud infrastructure, as well as Google Workspace (G Suite), enterprise versions of Android and ChromeOS, and application programming interfaces (APIs) for machine learning and enterprise mapping services. Since at least 2022,[9] Google's official materials have stated that "Google Cloud" is the new name for "Google Cloud Platform," wh
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d" is the new name for "Google Cloud Platform," which may cause naming confusion.
Challenges
[edit]Like other cloud computing solutions, applications hosted on Google Cloud Platform are subject to the fallacies of distributed computing, a series of misconceptions that can lead to significant issues in software development and deployment. [10]
Products
[edit]Google lists over 100 products under the Google Cloud brand. Some of the key services are listed below.
Compute
[edit]- App Engine β Platfor
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listed below.
Compute
[edit]- App Engine β Platform as a Service to deploy applications developed with Java, PHP, Node.js, Python, C#, .Net, Ruby and Go programming languages.
- Compute Engine β Infrastructure as a Service to run Microsoft Windows and Linux virtual machines.
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) or GKE on-prem offered as part of Anthos platform[11][12] β Containers as a Service based on Kubernetes.
- Cloud Functions β Functions as a Service to run event-driven code written in Node.js
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ervice to run event-driven code written in Node.js, Java, Python, or Go.
- Cloud Run β Compute execution environment based on Knative.[13] Offered as Cloud Run (fully managed)[14] or as Cloud Run for Anthos.[14] Currently supports GCP, AWS and VMware management.[15]
Storage and databases
[edit]- Cloud Storage β Object storage with integrated edge caching to store unstructured data.
- Cloud SQL β Database as a Service based on MySQL, PostgreSQL and Microsoft SQL Server.
- Cloud Bigtable β Managed
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d Microsoft SQL Server.
- Cloud Bigtable β Managed NoSQL database service.[16]
- Cloud Spanner β Horizontally scalable, strongly consistent, relational database service.[17]
- Cloud Datastore β NoSQL database for web and mobile applications.[18]
- Persistent Disk β Block storage for Compute Engine virtual machines.[19]
- Cloud Memorystore β Managed in-memory data store based on Redis and Memcached.[20]
- Local SSD: High-performance, transient, local block storage.
- Filestore: High-performance f
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cal block storage.
- Filestore: High-performance file storage for Google Cloud users.[21]
- AlloyDB: Fully managed PostgreSQL database service.[22]
Networking
[edit]- VPC β Virtual Private Cloud for managing the software defined network of cloud resources.
- Cloud Load Balancing β Software-defined, managed service for load balancing the traffic.
- Cloud Armor β Web application firewall to protect workloads from DDoS attacks.
- Cloud CDN β Content Delivery Network based on Google's globally distr
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Delivery Network based on Google's globally distributed edge points of presence.
- Cloud Interconnect β Service to connect a data center with Google Cloud Platform
- Cloud DNS β Managed, authoritative DNS hosting service running on the same infrastructure as Google.
- Network Service Tiers β Option to choose Premium vs Standard network tier for higher-performing network.
Big data
[edit]- BigQuery β Scalable, managed enterprise data warehouse for analytics.[23]
- Cloud Dataflow β Managed service
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analytics.[23]
- Cloud Dataflow β Managed service based on Apache Beam for stream and batch data processing.[24]
- Cloud Data Fusion β A managed ETL service based on the Open Source Cask Data Application Platform.[25]
- Dataproc β Big data platform for running Apache Hadoop and Apache Spark jobs.[26]
- Cloud Composer β Managed workflow orchestration service built on Apache Airflow.[27]
- Cloud Datalab β Tool for data exploration, analysis, visualization and machine learning. This is a fully man
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lization and machine learning. This is a fully managed Jupyter Notebook service.[28]
- Cloud Dataprep β Data service based on Trifacta to visually explore, clean, and prepare data for analysis.[29]
- Cloud Pub/Sub β Scalable event ingestion service based on message queues.[30]
- Looker Studio β Business intelligence tool to visualize data through dashboards and reports.[31]
- Looker β Business intelligence platform.[32][33]
Cloud AI
[edit]- Cloud AutoML β Service to train and deploy custom machi
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AutoML β Service to train and deploy custom machine learning models. As of September 2018, the service is in Beta.[34]
- Cloud TPU β Accelerators used by Google to train machine learning models.[35]
- Cloud Machine Learning Engine β Managed service for training and building machine learning models based on mainstream frameworks.[36]
- Cloud Talent Solution (formerly Cloud Job Discovery) β Service based on Google's search and machine learning capabilities for the recruiting ecosystem.[37]
- Dial
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abilities for the recruiting ecosystem.[37]
- Dialogflow Enterprise β Development environment based on Google's machine learning for building conversational interfaces.[38]
- Cloud Natural Language β Text analysis service based on Google Deep Learning models.[39]
- Cloud Speech-to-Text β Speech to text conversion service based on machine learning.[40]
- Cloud Text-to-Speech β Text to speech conversion service based on machine learning.[41]
- Cloud Translation API β Service to dynamically transla
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d Translation API β Service to dynamically translate between thousands of available language pairs.
- Cloud Vision API β Image analysis service based on machine learning.[42]
- Cloud Video Intelligence β Video analysis service based on machine learning.[43]
Management tools
[edit]- Operations suite (formerly Stackdriver ) β Monitoring, logging, tracing, and diagnostics for applications on Google Cloud Platform.[44]
- Cloud Deployment Manager - Tool to deploy Google Cloud Platform resources defin
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ol to deploy Google Cloud Platform resources defined in templates created in YAML, Python or Jinja2.[45]
- Cloud Console β Web interface to manage Google Cloud Platform resources.
- Cloud Shell β Browser-based shell command-line access to manage Google Cloud Platform resources.
- Cloud Console Mobile App β Android and iOS application to manage Google Cloud Platform resources.
- Cloud APIs β APIs to programmatically access Google Cloud Platform resources
Identity and security
[edit]- Cloud Identi
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sources
Identity and security
[edit]- Cloud Identity β Single sign-on (SSO) service based on SAML 2.0 and OpenID.
- Cloud IAM β Identity & Access Management (IAM) service for defining policies based on role-based access control.
- Cloud Identity-Aware Proxy β Service to control access to cloud applications running on Google Cloud Platform without using a VPN.
- Cloud Data Loss Prevention API β Service to automatically discover, classify, and redact sensitive data.
- Security Key Enforcement β Tw
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ct sensitive data.
- Security Key Enforcement β Two-step verification service based on a security key.
- Cloud Key Management Service β Cloud-hosted key management service integrated with IAM and audit logging.
- Cloud Resource Manager β Service to manage resources by project, folder, and organization based on the hierarchy.
- Cloud Security Command Center β Security and data risk platform for data and services running in Google Cloud Platform.
- Cloud Security Scanner β Automated vulnerability
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Cloud Security Scanner β Automated vulnerability scanning service for applications deployed in App Engine.
- Access Transparency β Near real-time audit logs providing visibility to Google Cloud Platform administrators.
- VPC Service Controls β Service to manage security perimeters for sensitive data in Google Cloud Platform services.
Internet of things (IoT)
[edit]- Cloud IoT Core β Secure device connection and management service for Internet of Things.
- Edge TPU β Purpose-built ASIC designed
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Things.
- Edge TPU β Purpose-built ASIC designed to run inference at the edge. As of September 2018, this product is in private beta.
- Cloud IoT Edge β Brings AI to the edge computing layer.
API platform
[edit]- Maps Platform β APIs for maps, routes, and places based on Google Maps.
- Apigee API Platform β Lifecycle management platform to design, secure, deploy, monitor, and scale APIs.
- API Monetization β Tool for API providers to create revenue models, reports, payment gateways, and develop
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nue models, reports, payment gateways, and developer portal integrations.
- Developer Portal β Self-service platform for developers to publish and manage APIs.
- API Analytics β Service to analyze API-driven programs through monitoring, measuring, and managing APIs.
- Apigee Sense β Enables API security by identifying and alerting administrators to suspicious API behaviors.
- Cloud Endpoints β An NGINX-based proxy to deploy and manage APIs.
- Service Infrastructure β A set of foundational servic
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vice Infrastructure β A set of foundational services for building Google Cloud products.
Regions and zones
[edit]A region is a specific geographical location where users can deploy cloud resources. Each region is an independent geographic area that consists of zones.
A zone is a deployment area for Google Cloud Platform resources within a region. Zones should be considered a single failure domain within a region. Most regions have three zones.
As of Q1 2024[update], Google Cloud Platform is avai
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of Q1 2024[update], Google Cloud Platform is available in 40 regions and 121 zones. This is a list of those regions and zones:[46][47]
Similarity to services by other cloud service providers
[edit]For those familiar with other notable cloud service providers, a comparison of similar services may be helpful in understanding Google Cloud Platform's offerings.
Timeline
[edit]- April 2008 β Google App Engine announced in preview[55]
- May 2010 β Google Cloud Storage launched[56]
- May 2010 β Google
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gle Cloud Storage launched[56]
- May 2010 β Google BigQuery and Prediction API announced in preview[57]
- October 2011 β Google Cloud SQL is announced in preview[57]
- June 2012 β Google Compute Engine is launched in preview[58]
- May 2013 β Google Compute Engine is released to GA[59]
- August 2013 - Cloud Storage begins automatically encrypting each Storage object's data and metadata under the 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES-128), and each encryption key is itself encrypted with a reg
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each encryption key is itself encrypted with a regularly rotated set of master keys[60]
- February 2014 β Google Cloud SQL becomes GA[61]
- May 2014 β Stackdriver is acquired by Google[62]
- June 2014 β Kubernetes is announced as an open source container manager[63]
- June 2014 β Cloud Dataflow is announced in preview[64]
- October 2014 β Google acquires Firebase[65]
- November 2014 β Alpha release Google Kubernetes Engine (formerly Container Engine) is announced[66]
- January 2015 β Google Clou
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ine) is announced[66]
- January 2015 β Google Cloud Monitoring based on Stackdriver goes into Beta[67]
- March 2015 β Google Cloud Pub/Sub becomes available in Beta[68]
- April 2015 β Google Cloud DNS becomes generally available[69]
- April 2015 β Google Dataflow launched in beta[70]
- July 2015 β Google releases v1 of Kubernetes; Hands it over to The Cloud Native Computing Foundation
- August 2015 β Google Cloud Dataflow, Google Cloud Pub/Sub, Google Kubernetes Engine, and Deployment Manager gr
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oogle Kubernetes Engine, and Deployment Manager graduate to GA[71]
- November 2015 β Bebop is acquired, and Diane Greene joins Google[72]
- February 2016 β Google Cloud Functions becomes available in Alpha[73]
- September 2016 β Apigee, a provider of application programming interface (API) management company, is acquired by Google[74]
- September 2016 β Stackdriver becomes generally available[75]
- November 2016 β Qwiklabs, an EdTech company is acquired by Google[76]
- February 2017 β Cloud Span
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cquired by Google[76]
- February 2017 β Cloud Spanner, highly available, globally-distributed database is released into Beta[77]
- March 2017 β Google acquires Kaggle, world's largest community of data scientists and machine learning enthusiasts[78]
- April 2017 β MIT professor Andrew Sutherland breaks the record for the largest ever Compute Engine cluster with 220,000 cores on Preemptible VMs.[79]
- May 2017 β Google Cloud IoT Core is launched in Beta[80]
- November 2017 β Google Kubernetes Eng
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n Beta[80]
- November 2017 β Google Kubernetes Engine gets certified by the CNCF[81]
- February 2018 β Google Cloud IoT Core becomes generally available[82]
- February 2018 β Google announces its intent to acquire Xively[83]
- February 2018 β Cloud TPUs, ML accelerators for Tensorflow, become available in Beta[84]
- May 2018 β Google Cloud Memorystore becomes available in Beta[85]
- April 2019 β Google Cloud Run (fully managed) Beta release[86]
- April 2019 β Google Anthos announced[11][87]
- No
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April 2019 β Google Anthos announced[11][87]
- November 2019 β Google Cloud Run (fully managed) General availability release[88]
- March 2020 β Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Google Cloud postponed the online streaming version of its Google Cloud Next mega-conference, two weeks after it canceled the in-person version.[89]
- October 2020 β Google Cloud announced that it will become a block producer candidate for the EOS network and EOS.IO protocol. Currently the top block producers are cryptocurr
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. Currently the top block producers are cryptocurrency exchanges like OKEx and Binance.[90][91]
- February 2021 β Google Kubernetes Engine Autopilot introduced. [92][93]
- May 2021 β Vertex AI announced at Google.io [94]
- June 2021 β In 2021, Apple was Google Cloud's biggest customer.[95]
- April 2022 β MobiledgeX acquired and joins Google Cloud.[96]
- March 2023 β Google brings generative AI capabilities to Google Cloud.[97]
- May 2024 Google Cloud partnered with Airtel.[98][99]
Public Custome
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loud partnered with Airtel.[98][99]
Public Customers
[edit]Customers announced in 2023 include: Kingfisher plc,[100] the Government of Kuwait,[101] Deutsche BΓΆrse Group,[102] Unity Technologies,[103] Uber,[104] FanCode,[105] and Daimler.[106]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Alphabet Inc. 2023 Annual Form 10-K Report". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. January 31, 2024. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
- ^ "Google Cloud". Google Play. Retrieved May 13, 2025.
- ^ "Google Cloud 1.24.prod
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etrieved May 13, 2025.
- ^ "Google Cloud 1.24.prod.757803319". APKMirror. May 13, 2025. Retrieved May 13, 2025.
- ^ "Google Cloud". App Store. Retrieved May 13, 2025.
- ^ "Google Cloud Products". Retrieved June 2, 2017.
- ^ Verma, Abhishek; Pedrosa, Luis; Korupolu, Madhukar; Oppenheimer, David; Tune, Eric; Wilkes, John (April 17, 2015). "Large-scale cluster management at Google with Borg". Proceedings of the Tenth European Conference on Computer Systems. Article 18, sec. 2.1 (p. 1), sec. 6.1 (p.
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Systems. Article 18, sec. 2.1 (p. 1), sec. 6.1 (p. 11). doi:10.1145/2741948.2741964. ISBN 9781450332385.
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- ^ Fundamentals of Software Architecture: An Engineering Approach. O'Reilly Media. 2020. ISBN 978-1492043454.
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berger, Matt. "Google is turning a key technology into a weapon in its cloud war with Amazon and Microsoft". Business Insider. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
- ^ Gallagher, Sean (May 16, 2013). "Google wants your WordPress blogβand everything elseβin its cloud". Ars Technica. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
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- ^ Bednarz, Ann (June 29, 2018). "Google cloud storage gets a boost with managed NAS service". Network World. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
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Hanley (May 26, 2016). "Google goes after Microsoft, Tableau and others with a free analytics tool". Computerworld. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
- ^ Ghoshal, Anirban (October 19, 2021). "Google Cloud tools aim to ease machine-learning, cross-cloud analytics". InfoWorld.
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- ^ Novet, Jordan (January 17, 2018). "Google hopes to draw more cloud customers by making A.I. easier to use". CNBC. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
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on to power job searches". VentureBeat. August 16, 2018. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
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- ^ "Google Launches Cloud Natural Language API". InfoQ. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
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, 2022.
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Stackdriver)". TechTarget. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
- ^ Gonzalez, Jose Ugia; Krishnan, S. P. T. (June 15, 2015). Building Your Next Big Thing with Google Cloud Platform: A Guide for Developers and Enterprise Architects. Apress. ISBN 978-1-4842-1004-8.
- ^ "Cloud locations". Google Cloud. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "Regions and Zones". Google Cloud. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "Wildlife at the data center". Google Data Centers. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
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5, 2024.
- ^ "Google launches new cloud region in Saudi Arabia". Arab News. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "In the shadow of windmills". Google. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "Heita South Africa! The new Google Cloud region is now open in Johannesburg". Google Cloud Blog. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "Map AWS services to Google Cloud Platform products". Retrieved April 14, 2017.
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Retrieved April 14, 2017.
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- ^ a b "Google Cloud SQL: your database in the cloud β The official Google Code blog". Google Cloud SQL. October 6, 2011. R
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- ^ "Google Compute Engine is now Generally Available with expanded OS support, transparent maintenance, and lower prices". Google Cloud Platform Blog. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
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- ^ "Google Container Engine is Generally Available". Goog
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gle Container Engine is Generally Available". Google Cloud Platform Blog. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
- ^ "Google paid $380M to buy Bebop, executive Diane Greene donating her $148M share". VentureBeat. January 4, 2016. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
- ^ MSV, Janakiram. "Google Brings Serverless Computing To Its Cloud Platform". Forbes. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
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- ^ "Introducing Cloud Spanner: a global database service for mission-critical applications". Google Cloud Platform Blog. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
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atform Blog. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Developers#0
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Google Developers
Google Developers (previously Google Code) is Google's site for software development tools and platforms[update], application programming interfaces (APIs), and technical resources. The site contains documentation on using Google developer tools and APIsβincluding discussion groups and blogs for developers using Google's developer products.
There are APIs offered for almost all of Google's popular consumer products, like Google Maps, YouTube, Google Apps, and others.
The site a
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Maps, YouTube, Google Apps, and others.
The site also features a variety of developer products and tools built specifically for developers. Google App Engine is a hosting service for web apps. Project Hosting gives users version control for open source code. Google Web Toolkit (GWT) allows developers to create Ajax applications in the Java programming language.(All languages)
The site contains reference information for community based developer products that Google is involved with like Android
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roducts that Google is involved with like Android from the Open Handset Alliance and OpenSocial from the OpenSocial Foundation.
Google APIs
[edit]Google offers a variety of APIs, mostly web APIs for web developers. The APIs are based on popular Google consumer products, including Google Maps, Google Earth, AdSense, Adwords, Google Apps and YouTube.[1]
Google Data APIs
[edit]The Google Data APIs[2] allow programmers to create applications that read and write data from Google services. Currently,
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d and write data from Google services. Currently, these include APIs for Google Apps, Google Analytics, Blogger, Google Base, Google Book Search, Google Calendar, Google Code Search, Google Earth, Google Spreadsheets and Google Notebook.
Ajax APIs
[edit]Google's Ajax APIs[3] let a developer implement rich, dynamic websites entirely in JavaScript and HTML. A developer can create a map to a site, a dynamic search box, or download feeds with just a few lines of javascript.
Ads APIs
[edit]The AdSens
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few lines of javascript.
Ads APIs
[edit]The AdSense and AdWords APIs, based on the SOAP data exchange standard, allow developers to integrate their own applications with these Google services. The AdSense API allows owners of websites and blogs to manage AdSense sign-up, content and reporting, while the AdWords API gives AdWords customers programmatic access to their AdWords accounts and campaigns.
Developer tools and open-source projects
[edit]App Engine
[edit]Google App Engine lets developers
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pp Engine
[edit]Google App Engine lets developers run web applications on Google Cloud. Google App Engine supports apps written in several programming languages. With App Engine's Java [citation needed] runtime environment, one can build their app using standard Java technologies, including the JVM, Java servlets, and the Java programming languageβor any other language using a JVM-based interpreter or compiler, such as JavaScript or Ruby. App Engine also features a dedicated Python runtime envir
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ine also features a dedicated Python runtime environment, which includes a fast Python interpreter and the Python standard library.
Google Plugin for Eclipse
[edit]Google Plugin for Eclipse (GPE) is a set of software development tools that enables Java developers to design, build, optimize, and deploy cloud computing applications. GPE assists developers in creating complex user interfaces, generating Ajax code using the Google Web Toolkit, optimizing performance with Speed Tracer,[4] and deployi
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zing performance with Speed Tracer,[4] and deploying applications to Google App Engine. GPE installs into the Eclipse integrated development environment (IDE) using the extensible plugin system.[5] GPE is available under the Google terms of service license.[6]
Google Web Toolkit
[edit]The Google Web Toolkit (GWT) is an open source toolkit allowing developers to create Ajax applications in the Java programming language.[7] GWT supports rapid clientβserver development and debugging in any Java IDE
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tβserver development and debugging in any Java IDE. In a subsequent deployment step, the GWT compiler translates a working Java application into equivalent JavaScript that programmatically manipulates a web browser's HTML DOM using DHTML techniques. GWT emphasizes reusable, efficient solutions to recurring Ajax challenges, namely asynchronous remote procedure calls, history management, bookmarking, and cross-browser portability. It is released under the Apache License version 2.0.
OR-Tools
[edit
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der the Apache License version 2.0.
OR-Tools
[edit]Google OR-Tools[8] provides programming language wrappers for operations research tools such as optimisation and constraint solving.
Google Code
[edit]Google previously ran a project hosting service called Google Code[9] that provided revision control offering Subversion, Mercurial[10] and Git[11] (transparently implemented using Bigtable as storage), an issue tracker, and a wiki for documentation. The service was available and free for all OSI-
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n. The service was available and free for all OSI-approved Open Source projects (as of 2010, it was strongly recommended but no longer required to use one of the nine well-known open source licenses: Apache, Artistic, BSD, GPLv2, GPLv3, LGPL, MIT, MPL and EPL). The site limited the number of projects one person could have to 25.[12] Additionally, there was a limit on the number of projects that could be created in one day, a 200 MB default upload file size limit, which could be raised, and a 5 G
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file size limit, which could be raised, and a 5 GB per-project total size limit.[13] The service provided a file download feature, but in May 2013 the creation of new downloads was disabled, with plans to disable it altogether on January 14, 2014.[14] In March 2015, Google announced that it would be closing down Google Code on January 15, 2016.[15] All projects on the site entered read-only mode on August 24, 2015,[16] with the exception of certain Google-owned projects including Android and Ch
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ain Google-owned projects including Android and Chrome.[15]
Residents of countries on the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control sanction list, including Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria, were prohibited from posting to or accessing Google Code.[17]
Gears
[edit]Gears was beta software offered by Google to enable offline access to services that normally only work online. It installed a database engine, based on SQLite, on the client system to cache data locally. Gears-enabled page
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t system to cache data locally. Gears-enabled pages used data from this local cache rather than from the online service. Using Gears, a web application may periodically synchronize the data in the local cache with the online service. If a network connection is not available, the synchronization is deferred until a network connection is established. Thus Gears enabled web applications to work even though access to the network service is not present. Google announced the end of Gears development o
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t. Google announced the end of Gears development on March 11, 2011, citing a shift of focus from Gears to HTML5.[18]
Google developer events
[edit]- Google I/O is Google's largest developer event, which is usually held in May at the Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View.
- Google Summer of Code is a mentoring program to find students for open source projects. In 2016, the program received nearly 18,980 applications.
- Google Code Jam is an international programming competition.
Google Developer
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ational programming competition.
Google Developer Groups
[edit]Google Developer Groups[19] (GDGs) are communities of developers who are interested in Google's developer technology products and platforms. A GDG can take many formsβfrom just a few people getting together, to large gatherings with demos and tech talks, to events like code sprints and hackathons. As of June 2020, there are currently 1000+ GDGs worldwide. DevFest is one of these events.
References
[edit]- ^ "Site Directory β Google C
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s.
References
[edit]- ^ "Site Directory β Google Code". Retrieved 2009-08-06.
- ^ "Google Data APIs β Google Code". Retrieved 2009-08-06.
- ^ "AJAX APIs β Google Code". Archived from the original on 2010-10-19. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
- ^ "Speed Tracer"
- ^ GPE listing on Eclipse Marketplace Archived 2011-06-09 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Google Plugin for Eclipse License Information". April 7, 2009. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
- ^ Johnson, Bruce (2006-12-12). "GWT 1.3 Release Candidate is 100% Open Sou
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Developers#17
|
2-12). "GWT 1.3 Release Candidate is 100% Open Source". Retrieved 2007-02-08.
- ^ google (21 October 2022). "GitHub - google/or-tools: Google's Operations Research tools". GitHub.
- ^ "Google Code β Project Hosting". Retrieved 2009-08-06.
- ^ "Google Code Blog: Mercurial support for Project Hosting on Google Code". 2009-04-27. Archived from the original on 2009-04-26. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "Issue 2454 - support - native git support - User support for Google Project Hosting - Google Project H
|
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|
port for Google Project Hosting - Google Project Hosting". 2011-07-15.
- ^ "WhatsNew β support β Announcements of the latest project hosting features β Project Hosting on Google Code". Retrieved 2009-08-06.
- ^ "FAQ - support - Project Hosting on Google Code FAQ - User support for Google Project Hosting - Google Project Hosting".
- ^ Google Project Hosting (2013-05-20). "A Change to Google Code Download Service". Google Open Source Blog. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
- ^ a b Google Project Hosting
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Developers#19
|
d 19 November 2013.
- ^ a b Google Project Hosting (2015-03-12). "Bidding farewell to Google Code". Google Open Source Blog. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
- ^ "Information about Google Code's read-only transition". Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- ^ "Google Project Hosting - Google Code". Retrieved 2012-08-13.
- ^ Aaron Boodman (11 March 2011). "Stopping the Gears". Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- ^ "Google Developer Groups β Google Developers".
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Google Sheets
Google Sheets is a spreadsheet application and part of the free, web-based Google Docs Editors suite offered by Google. Google Sheets is available as a web application; a mobile app for: Android, iOS, and as a desktop application on Google's ChromeOS. The app is compatible with Microsoft Excel file formats.[5] The app allows users to create and edit files online while collaborating with other users in real-time. Edits are tracked by which user made them, along with a revision histo
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which user made them, along with a revision history. Where an editor is making changes is highlighted with an editor-specific color and cursor. A permissions system regulates what users can do. Updates have introduced features that use machine learning, including "Explore", which offers answers based on natural language questions in the spreadsheet. Sheets is one of the services provided by Google that also includes Google Docs, Google Slides, Google Drawings, Google Forms, Google Sites and Goo
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oogle Drawings, Google Forms, Google Sites and Google Keep.
History
[edit]Google Sheets originated from XL2Web, a web-based spreadsheet application developed by 2Web Technologies, founded by Jonathan Rochelle and Farzad "Fuzzy" Khosrowshahi.[6] XL2Web was acquired by Google in 2006[7] and turned into Google Labs Spreadsheets. It was launched as a test for a limited number of users, on a first-come, first-served basis on June 6, 2006.[8][9] The limited test was later replaced with a beta version
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mited test was later replaced with a beta version available to all Google Account holders, around the same time as an official announcement press release was issued.[10] In March 2010, Google acquired the online document collaboration company DocVerse. DocVerse allowed multiple-user online collaboration on Excel-compatible documents as well as other Microsoft Office formats such as Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint.[11] Improvements based on DocVerse were announced and deployed in April 20
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n DocVerse were announced and deployed in April 2010.[12] In June 2012, Google acquired Quickoffice, a freeware proprietary productivity suite for mobile devices.[13] In October 2012, Google Spreadsheets was renamed Google Sheets and a Google Chrome app was released that provided shortcuts to Sheets on Chrome's new tab page.[14]
Platforms
[edit]Google Sheets is available as a web application supported on: Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Firefox, and Safari web browsers.[15] Users can access all s
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