Sunday 5 October 2008
By dgirard on Sunday 5 October 2008, 21:50
MiniG is a webmail implementation with a GMail like user interface. It
is completely free software and is designed to work
with Cyrus IMAP servers.
MiniG uses a distributed architecture. Its GWT user interface comunicates with
a REST webservice responsible of full text indexing, grouping of email as
conversations and communication with addressbook data sources. The backend
webservice is written using Eclipse OSGi technologies to provide great
modularity.
http://minig.org

Saturday 4 October 2008
By dgirard on Saturday 4 October 2008, 19:22
Ben Galbraith
The UI combines a Vista-like “Start” menu along with an OS X-like dock
(using everyone’s favorite fish-eye widget). It also has a built-in widget
system that leverages Google Widgets. Overall, it’s a pretty nice
implementation of a desktop and windowing in Ajax.
If you want to switch from Classical to Multi-Window, go to the "Panel
settings". In Multi-Window, I was able to add my GWT-Keyboard-Warrior
application gadget.
http://samples.gwtphp.com/pax4/merchants/
GWT-Keyboard-Warrior Gadget
Source : ajaxian.com

Thursday 25 September 2008
By dgirard on Thursday 25 September 2008, 22:47
Google has released Google Moderator. This application is supported by
Google Web Toolkit.
Introducing Google Moderator on App Engine
http://moderator.appspot.com/

Wednesday 24 September 2008
By dgirard on Wednesday 24 September 2008, 23:56
Dobes
Last Thursday at Launch Party 5 one of the things surprised people was my
use of the Google Web Toolkit (usually abbreviated as GWT) to develop the
application. Since GWT is so new, there are relatively few publically
viewable application that use it, and of those, few are as attractive as
Clarity Accounting.
GWT is the Tech that Makes Clarity Accounting Tick
Demonstration

Tuesday 23 September 2008
By dgirard on Tuesday 23 September 2008, 11:32
Talend has published some screenshots about their Administrator tool.
Talend, the provider of open source data integration software (ETL).
Talend Administrator with
GWT: first results

Thursday 14 August 2008
By dgirard on Thursday 14 August 2008, 21:13
Tarry Singh
GoGrid is being showcased on the GWT Featured Project Page. GoGrid's rich,
interactive graphical user interface (GUI) is built using the Google Web
Toolkit (GWT), an open-source Java development framework which enables GoGrid
to provide a quick, responsive and interactive user experience. GoGrid is
nominated for Best Virtualization Solution for the LinuxWorld 2008's Product
Excellence Awards.
Google selects GoGrid for its Cloud Computing Framework
Wednesday 13 August 2008
By dgirard on Wednesday 13 August 2008, 23:40
Maxim
I'd love to introduce new big application which uses GWT as a client.
It is till in alpha stage but already gives some figures concerning
what can be done using such powerfull tool as GWT.
Project Kaiser™ provides (when ready) the following functionality
-Project Management (unlimited projects hierarchy)
-Issue tracking
-Forums
-Documentation management
-Content management
http://www.triniforce.com/pk.html
Source : GWT Forum
Tuesday 12 August 2008
By dgirard on Tuesday 12 August 2008, 13:58
Dion Almaer
Asciiroth is a a complete, functional, open source game, written using GWT,
and distributed either as an Adobe AIR application, or as a game you can play
over the web. In the latter case, it uses Gears to provide saved game support.
(So bottom line is you can play it using AIR or Firefox… IE is too slow,
Opera/Safari aren’t supported by Gears.)
Tombs of Asciiroth: GWT, Gears, and AIR enabled RPG Game
Source : Tombs of Asciiroth: Un RPG made with Air & Gears

Friday 8 August 2008
By dgirard on Friday 8 August 2008, 10:42
Cloud Computing News Desk
The Google Web Toolkit (GWT) allowed GoGrid developers to code, debug and
test strong software development best practices and produce a fast, rich,
friendly User Interface. GoGrid launched the Cloud Infrastructure product first
with a Graphical User Interface and later added an API (Application Programming
Interface). "We felt that it was important to reduce the barrier to entry
first, and extend the programmatic functionality to developers and system
administrators with the introduction of the API later," explained GoGrid's
Technology Evangelist, Michael Sheehan, continuing, "the use of GWT allowed our
developers to be able to do much more with fewer errors, delivering a more
robust and graphically pleasing experience to the end-user."
GoGrid uses
Google Web Toolkit to Extend Cloud Computing User Interface
Wednesday 6 August 2008
By dgirard on Wednesday 6 August 2008, 10:38
Dion Almaer
Chosr is another Quicksilver inspired piece of software, that lives in
the Web, created by Julius Eckert using GWT.
chosr:
Quicksilver interface in the Web
Friday 1 August 2008
By dgirard on Friday 1 August 2008, 10:51
GWT blog :
Google has recently launched Google Health, a place where you can organize
health information, keep it up to date and stay current with the latest health
issues. We're happy to say that Google Health was built with the Google Web
Toolkit, and pleased to have Samantha Lemonnier from the Health team share her
experience using GWT.
Building
healthy applications with GWT - Google Health
Saturday 3 May 2008
By dgirard on Saturday 3 May 2008, 09:42
Dion Almaer
XSketch is “a multiplayer word sketch game. It is programmed in Adobe Flash,
Java, Ajax, and GWT. Gameplay is similar to Pictionary where you sketch a
picture with the goal of having other players guess your word and vice
versa.”
XSketch: Pictionary
with GWT
Sunday 30 March 2008
By dgirard on Sunday 30 March 2008, 15:39
OwlSight is an OWL ontology browser that runs in any modern web browser;
it's developed with Google Web Toolkit. OwlSight is the client component and
uses Pellet as its OWL reasoner.
OwlSight web
site
Launch OwlSight

Saturday 29 March 2008
By dgirard on Saturday 29 March 2008, 19:20
CapnCleaver
Like a delicious pie long-a-baking, Whirled emerged from the alpha oven this
week into flavorful open beta. You can play!
We’ve been in closed invite-only alpha for just over a year, since we
announced Whirled at GDC 2007, with a pretty small community of very dedicated
and creative players. It’s exciting to see her with 200 simultaneous
players.
You need Flash 9.0.115 and FF 2/3, IE 7/8 or Safari. Whirled is very
Javascript (GWT) and Flash intensive, as Cory discovered. It helps to have
Firefox 3 beta 4, which has faster javascript and has fixed problems we were
having with Flash ’starving out’ GWT.
The Flogging Will
Continue… » Whirled goes Open Beta

Monday 24 March 2008
By dgirard on Monday 24 March 2008, 09:54
Jose Collas Goatstone :
I am ready to present a beta version of my live search engine using
GWT. The content of the search is the Project Gutenberg Library.
[...]
I think that the GWT way of developing web applications is great. I
have done this project in JavaScript and PHP as well
[...]
I wanted to compare the two methodologies. I think by far the better
solution is GWT.
Project Gutenberg Live Search Beta Announce
Wednesday 19 March 2008
By dgirard on Wednesday 19 March 2008, 10:56
Brice Le Blévennec
ContactOffice is a collaborative and messaging platform offered in Software
as a Service. It is used daily by more than 350.000 paying subscribers and
millions of users of the free version.
It’s new beta version is an AJAX enhanced interface developed using Google
Web Toolkit. ContactOffice developers have added numerous features to GWT (drag
and drop, marquee selection, contextual menus, sortable columns, resizable
panels, …) and are showcasing what is - according to Google engineers - the
most advanced web application built using their java based revolutionary AJAX
web application development framework.
Contact Office Beta version
By dgirard on Wednesday 19 March 2008, 10:55
Fei Yang :
Wibokr is delivering new experience to wiki/blog users.
In wibokr, articles are organized in spaces.
You can network with other people through your wiki/blog space.
You can create as many spaces as you want.
You can control access at both space and article level.
You can share stuff with your friends and no one else can see them.
You can control anyone to comment your article.
You don't need worries about lost your writing as wibokr will automatically
save a draft copy, and you also can save draft manually.
You can easily move or copy your page from space to space.
You can upload your customized portrait
You can drag-and-drop your dashboard as your want.
You can trace any article by history.
There are lots of keyboard shortcuts if you're really geeky
Powerful search function make it easy to find any public stuff you're
interested.
http://www.wibokr.com/

Sunday 16 March 2008
By dgirard on Sunday 16 March 2008, 20:29
Malek Obaid
BugzillaMetrics 0.9.1 released today with a nice gwt frontend. It
is an XML based change requests evaluation tool that provides wide
range of metrics define (e.g. incoming rate, case life time, reopened
rate, state residence time, backlog management index, etc.).
The home page for the project: www.bugzillametrics.org
Screenshots : http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=197170

Sunday 9 March 2008
By dgirard on Sunday 9 March 2008, 08:41
freeanalysis :
One of our developer just sent me some news of our new FreeDashBoard Web
Wizard (see print screen bellow). In fact, GWT keeps its promises : we have a
nice & easy Web 2.0 interface, something “user friendly”... GWT seems to be
one of the most important decision we have made in terms of technology.
FreeDashBoard
& GWT
Thursday 14 February 2008
By dgirard on Thursday 14 February 2008, 08:08
Sumit Chandel
We've been lucky enough to receive yet another guest blog post, this time
from Evan Tice who developed MapEcos.org
using GWT. Evan is an undergraduate at Dartmouth College and developed the
MapEcos project along with a team of students and staff there, in collaboration
with faculty from Dartmouth, Duke, and Harvard. In an effort to increase
awareness both about pollution statistics around the United States and GWT
goodness, we've invited Evan to write a guest blog post to share his
experience. Read on further below for his explanation of the MapEcos project
goal and how GWT fit into the picture during its development.
