FTR, see also a (just started) list of references on the official GWT
blog :
http://googlewebtoolkit.blogspot.com/2011/07/gwt-spotlight-berger-levrault.html
following.
Best regards,
Yannis
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
Google Web
Just did a cursory inspection of the new Google Offers application and it
looks like an application built using GWT.
https://www.google.com/offers/home
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
Google Web Toolkit group.
To view this discussion on the web
Fundamentally, it's because engineering teams at Google are free to choose
their own tools. The Architecture Police don't work here. There are many
instances where Google tools or products compete with each other like GWT
and Closure. In Google culture, that's generally viewed as healthy as it
*Market for GWT Apps.*
Android and iPhone apps have market. Developers build applications and sell
their apps.
Chrome and other tablets will extensively rely on GWT apps.
How do GWT developers get rewards?
Regards,
Bala
On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 8:26 AM, David Chandler drfibona...@google.comwrote:
Hi David !
Would you (or Thomas ? ;-) ) have any shareable insights as to why Google+
seems to be coded in pure Java / closure instead of GWT ?
Best regards,
Yannis
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
Google Web Toolkit group.
To view this
I am interested to know what Google+ is written in too. What leads you
to believe it is Java / closure?
On Jul 2, 4:45 am, Yannis BRES yaya.at.w...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi David !
Would you (or Thomas ? ;-) ) have any shareable insights as to why Google+
seems to be coded in pure Java / closure
On Saturday, July 2, 2011 1:24:42 PM UTC+2, Dan wrote:
I am interested to know what Google+ is written in too. What leads you
to believe it is Java / closure?
See http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2717174
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
What leads you to believe it is Java / closure?
Grmpf ! I meant pure JavaScript not Java ! I hope that the rest of the
sentence helped you to auto-correct... ;-)
Having a look at the web page sources and inspecting the DOM contents
quickly rules out GWT, at least as a core framework
Thanks makes sense. The Java bit throw me :)
On Jul 2, 4:42 pm, Yannis Bres yaya.at.w...@gmail.com wrote:
What leads you to believe it is Java / closure?
Grmpf ! I meant pure JavaScript not Java ! I hope that the rest of the
sentence helped you to auto-correct... ;-)
Having a look at
I realize that this question was asked in this thread, but seeing as the
response was a few years old I thought I would pose the question again.
At work there has been a ton of discussion (putting it nicely) about the use
of GWT inside the organization. It doesn't seem to be enough to those
Hi Kevin,
There are several hundred projects within Google using GWT and more are
being written or rewritten all the time. Some of the major ones:
AdWords UI
AdSense UI
Blogger (
http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/14/half-a-billion-blog-posts-later-google-to-give-blogger-a-revamp/
)
Groups (new UI)
Well, the new Google Groups uses GWT, to begin with
;-) https://groups.google.com/forum
Buzz makes use of GWT (the popup for finding people/seeing who you
follow/who follows some is built with GWT). I believe Orkut switched to GWT
a while ago, and Orkut team members (if I'm not mistaken) have
GWT is the best for developing enterprise applications for any mobile
platform.
It works on iPhone, Android, Blackberry and Windows Mobile too.
Emerging SOA Architecture is, thin client with GWT + Request Builder
connects to server side residing in Cloud.
Regards,
Bala.
Author: Book. Web
13 matches
Mail list logo