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Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse, Part 1: Creating the application
Tapping into social software can be a great way to add value to your application. Social networks are making it easier to take data and mash it up to create innovative new Web applications. However, you must still deal with all the usual issues of creating a scalable Web application. Now the Google App Engine (GAE) makes that easier, as well. With the GAE, you can forget all about managing pools of application servers. You do not have to worry about storing huge amounts of static content and dynamic data. Instead, you can concentrate on creating a great mashup. In this article, the first of a three-part "Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse" series, we see how to get started developing GAE applications, and we will take a look at how to use Eclipse to make GAE development even easier.
Articles 05 Aug 2008  
 
Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse, Part 3: Using RESTful Web services
Social networks are making it easier to take data and mash it up to create innovative Web applications. You still, however, must deal with all the usual issues with creating a scalable Web application. Now the Google App Engine (GAE) makes that easier for you. With it, you can forget all about managing pools of application servers, and, instead, you can concentrate on creating a great mashup. In this article, the last of a three-part "Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse" series, we will take the application built in the first two parts and further enhance it. We will add the ability to view other users of the app and subscribe to their aggregate feeds. We will then complete the mashup circle by exposing the app as a Web service that can be used by other mashups.
Articles 19 Aug 2008  
 
Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse, Part 2: Building the Ajax mashup
Social networks are making it easier to take data and mash it up to create innovative Web applications. You still, however, must deal with all the usual issues with creating a scalable Web application. Now the Google App Engine (GAE) makes that easier for you. With it, you can forget all about managing pools of application servers, and, instead, you can concentrate on creating a great mashup. In this article, the second of a three-part "Creating mashups on the Google App Engine using Eclipse" series, we will take the application we built in Part 1 and enhance it. We will improve its performance by using more data-modeling features of GAE. We will then take that performance even further by using GAE's Memcache services.
Articles 12 Aug 2008  
 
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