The Chromium projects include Chromium and Chromium OS, the open-source projects behind the Google Chrome browser and Google Chrome OS, respectively. This site houses the documentation and code related to the Chromium projects and is intended for developers interested in learning about and contributing to the open-source projects.
The Chromium projects include Chromium and Chromium OS, the open-source projects behind the Google Chrome browser and Google Chrome OS, respectively. This site houses the documentation and code related to the Chromium projects and is intended for developers interested in learning about and contributing to the open-source projects.
"Android-x86 Project - Run Android on Your PC
This is a project to port Android open source project to x86 platform, formerly known as "patch hosting for android x86 support". The original plan is to host different patches for android x86 support from open source community. A few months after we created the project, we found out that we could do much more than just hosting patches. So we decide to create our code base to provide support on different x86 platforms, and set up a git server to host it."
"We recommend that you start your development by building on the Google Mirror API starter project, which is available in many popular languages such as Java and Python. The starter project demonstrates the major functionality of the Google Mirror API and gives you a good foundation in understanding how a simple piece of Glassware works. The following sections describe how to setup and deploy the starter project for your preferred language."
"The Google Lit Trips project is the flagship project of GLT Global ED, a 501c)(3) educational nonprofit not affiliated or sponsored by Google.
The essence of the Google Lit Trips project is the use of Google Earth to create immersive 3D literary field trips where students virtually become traveling companions with characters in stories commonly taught in grades kindergarten through high school."
Apache Wave, where Wave development happens at Apache. Wave is a rich, distributed, near-real-time collaboration platform, which allows users to work together in new and exciting ways. The main sub project of Apache Wave is "Wave in a Box", a stand alone wave server and rich web client that can serve as a Wave reference implementation. As the project grows we hope to expand to offer other Wave related goodies as well.
Chromium is the open-source project behind Google Chrome. We invite you to join us in our effort to help build a safer, faster, and more stable way for all Internet users to experience the web, and to create a powerful platform for developing a new generation of web applications.
The LDSpider project aims to build a web crawling framework for the linked data web. Requirements and challenges for crawling the linked data web are different from regular web crawling, thus this projects offer a web crawler adapted to traverse and harvest sources and instances from the linked data web. We offer a single jar which can be easily integrated into own applications.
"Chromium is the open-source project behind Google Chrome. We invite you to join us in our effort to help build a safer, faster, and more stable way for all Internet users to experience the web, and to create a powerful platform for developing a new generation of web applications."
The most ambitious project ever conceived on the Internet: Google's master plan to scan every book in the world and the people trying to stop them. Google says they are building a library for mankind, but some say they also have other intentions.
This project consists of a few Chrome themes and customizations to make the browser look better on the Ubuntu desktop. There are currently themes for the Ubuntu Ambiance and Radiance themes, as well as customized scrollbars.
This project is a place to report and track developer issues with the Google TV. For more information on how to develop apps for Google TV, please see the Google TV Developer Guide.
The open Home Automation Bus (openHAB) project aims at providing a universal integration platform for all things around home automation. It is a pure Java solution, fully based on OSGi. The Equinox OSGi runtime and Jetty as a web server build the core foundation of the runtime.
The Endless Atlas Project is a diary, a continuous and unconventional narrative made of images, categories, tags. In the augmented mapping developed by Google, our research starts from everyday life, from bar conversations, from the minimum stories of everyday life. It's inspired by television shows, latest news, personal memories, pop culture in general. The results of this daily digital drift is a singular topographyc process.
Project Naptha automatically applies state-of-the-art computer vision algorithms on every image you see while browsing the web. The result is a seamless and intuitive experience, where you can highlight as well as copy and paste and even edit and translate the text formerly trapped within an image.