A New year starts and this one will be the year of Google Wave. In this new post we talk about what we expect about Google Wave and everything related.
It’s been a while since the first Wave Gadget emulator came to light. But in case that wasn’t enough for you, we still have some others to show you.
The first, built by Avital Oliver, created in Java ( source ) , takes a different approach to it, .
Here you have for example the demo of the Sudoku gadget.
This one is a perfect example of how the gadgets work. There are several other gadgets you can try in the emulator’s page like…
Moreover you can upload any xml in order to try your own gadgets if you still don’t have a sandbox account and want to try your own code.
Still want some more?
Scott Wilson’s approach is implemented making use of W3C Widgets and a Wookie Server that gives the capability to share the state of the gadget between users like Wave.
What the author did was basically map the GW Gadgets API calls to the W3C Widgets specification.
You can find the web page with all the instructions necessary to run it on your own machine in Scott’s Workblog
Here you have an example that we took from his page. If you open this from several locations you will see that it’s updated the way it should. Cool, no?
This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.
News on Wave Gadget Emulators!
It’s been a while since the first Wave Gadget emulator came to light. But in case that wasn’t enough for you, we still have some others to show you.
The first, built by Avital Oliver, created in Java ( source ) , takes a different approach to it, .
Here you have for example the demo of the Sudoku gadget.
This one is a perfect example of how the gadgets work. There are several other gadgets you can try in the emulator’s page like…
A simple reorderable todo list
Magnetic Poetry
Sudoku
A slightly modified version of Vidar’s svg-edit
Click Me
Bidder
Moreover you can upload any xml in order to try your own gadgets if you still don’t have a sandbox account and want to try your own code.
Still want some more?
Scott Wilson’s approach is implemented making use of W3C Widgets and a Wookie Server that gives the capability to share the state of the gadget between users like Wave.
What the author did was basically map the GW Gadgets API calls to the W3C Widgets specification.
You can find the web page with all the instructions necessary to run it on your own machine in Scott’s Workblog
Here you have an example that we took from his page. If you open this from several locations you will see that it’s updated the way it should. Cool, no?
Tags: Emulator, Google Wave, Wave Extensions
If you like what you see, please, support us:
Posts that may be of your interest: