A module to detect the presence of Gears that can create a
local
cache of "anonymous" content wouldn't hurt
Drupal's performance.
Gears has both SQLite and a "LocalServer" which
could serve files.
Think preloading - but run in the back ground after
DocumentReady.
This cache could be greedy or intelligent - but that's easy
enough
to make a configurable.
More thoughts:
It's under a "new BSD" license - but may become as
ubiquitous as
flash. I don't know how Drupal community feels about Gears
licensing.
SQLite is really quite useful BTW:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-51604354879
53918649
OffTopic:
some may also be interested in scrapbook for firefox, for
offline
viewing...
http://amb.vi
s.ne.jp/mozilla/scrapbook/
Stephen Wills wrote:
> Funny, I seem to recall this same sentiment being
proffered many times
> about a company run by an aggressive dropout from
harvard who managed to
> take out an awful lot of the OS space.... a lot... but
not all
>
> imho, no one need fear interoperability. The only
question is if
> Googles rich client api is the right thing. I have a
use case in the
> non-profit sector. The VISTA program likes to promote
Drupal for it's
> projects and many of them have existing data sources,
under developed
> client side solutions and a lot of new web-enabled
out-reach initives.
> Google Gears may be the right ticket to integrate their
systems and
> bridge the "digital divide" that much of
their clientele is oppressed by.
>
> Climbing off soapbox,
> Steve "CTC-VISTA wannabe" Wills
>
>
> On May 31, 2007, at 12:36 PM, Dan Robinson wrote:
>
>> With the advent of Google Maps I was very hesitant
to use them or
>> recommend that others use them. Essentially
because I was really afraid
>> about where Google was going with this. Of course
my fears have been
>> meaningless and ignored by Google and practically
everyone else in the
>> computing world and Google maps are becoming
ubiquitous. My point is at
>> that I'm starting to think "if you can't beat
them, join them". In my
>> view we are headed into a brave new world. Led,
for better or worse, by
>> Google. The rate of change they are pushing is
mind boggling. I have
>> wondered for a long time whether they could keep it
up - but it seems
>> clear that they are accelerating and deepening.
>>
>> In my view core Drupal needs to "play
nice" with google stuff (as well
>> as others). The world is changing. 2-3 years from
now the way people
>> use the Web will look different from what it does
now. Very different.
>> People will use Drupal if it is relevant to them.
>>
>> Dan
>>>
>>> http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/05/google_r
eleases.html
>>> http://gears.google.com/
>>>
>>> --Dries Buytaert :: http://www.buytaert.net/
>>>
>>
>
>
--
Jonathan Hendler
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
cell: 617-216-1475
AIM/MSN: snooplegoop
pgp key : pgp.mit.edu
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