Google Gears
represents the prototype of one of tech industry’s most important current
trends; it is an application that can keep browser-based applications running
while also offline, thus, allowing people to use their computers even if they
have no connection to the Internet. Google Gears was launched less than a year
ago, but now Google seems to have thought about mobile phone users too, as it
announced on Monday that the open source technology became available also on
Windows Mobile.
“Today we're
announcing the launch of Google Gears for mobile, a mobile browser extension
for creating rich web applications for mobile devices. The first version is now
available for Internet Explorer Mobile on Windows Mobile 5 and 6. It's a fully
functional port
of Google Gears v0.2 that
can be used to develop offline capability into your mobile web applications,”
said Charles Wiles, Google Mobile Team’s Product Manager.
Google Gears is
expected to reach also Android, as well as other mobile platforms in the
following period of time.
For less than
one year, desktop and notebook users have had the possibility to test Google Gears
and the advantages it brings. Although still in beta testing, the software
program offers people the opportunity to continue to work with the web-based
applications they need also after they have gone offline. At the moment Google
Gears is available for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer on Windows XP and Windows
Vista, as well as for Mozilla’s Firefox on Windows XP, Vista,
Mac OS X and Linux. Google Gears for Mobile
is a port of this software.
Google’s smart
application for mobile phones was highly necessary, as phone owners are likely
to be at the mercy of their carrier network when coverage comes in and out.
Thanks to Google Gears’ ability to cache data on phones, developers can now
create web-based applications that will be usable also offline and when networks
suffer delays.
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