Open Web Developer News Desk
Google Plays the Platform Game
Making Netscape Look Like Kid's Stuff, Google is Making the Web the Platform
Apr. 17, 2008 02:15 PM
So Google has gone into the developer collection business.
It’s a move akin to grinding up glass and stirring it into Microsoft’s supper.
At least Google hopes it is.
Making Netscape look like kid’s stuff, it’s making the web
the platform.
Monday evening, at a gathering called Campfire One, Google
unveiled App Engine, a hosted web application platform that offers web
developers free use of Google’s mighty infrastructure and all the building
blocks that Google uses for its own applications.
Amusingly, it’s as vendor lock-in and importable as anything
Microsoft in its heyday ever dreamed up. That, however, didn’t stop Google from
immediately filling the 10,000 spaces it made available for App Engine’s
initial beta.
The offer goes like this: Google will provide web developers
with 500MB of storage, 200 million megacycles of CPU power a day and 10GB of
bandwidth a day, enough, it thinks, to serve around five million page views a
month.
It is also kicking in dynamic web serving, persistent
storage, automatic scaling and load balancing, Google APIs for authenticating
users and sending e-mail, and a reportedly full-featured local development
environment.
In a siren song it’s promising to do everything for the
developer short of writing his code including the spur that if his program
proves popular he won’t have to redesign it every six to nine months because of
increased traffic.
The idea, it says, is to relieve developers of system admin
and maintenance chores and make it easy to create and run web applications,
knowing full well that every web application deployed is a nasty paper cut for
Microsoft.
Death by a thousand cuts.
Eventually Google expects to charge those who use more than
the basic resources. Presumably that means for more than it takes to serve five
million page view a month; it’s kind of cloudy, so to speak, on that point and
completely cloudy on what exactly it will charge, but it did say it intends to
keep the basic level free after it opens App Engine to wider use. And when that
might be is, of course, also unclear.
App Engine is something like Amazon Web Services (AWS)
except that Amazon’s offering is a la carte – letting people choose to use,
say, the unbundled Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) computing engine, S3 storage or
SimpleDB database – while Google’s is a 12-course meal and ya gotta eat every
one.
Users even have to have a Google account to access a service
and the experience is expected to inch them toward using Google Docs and
YouTube – and only another step to Google-placed AdSense advertising.
Google will control the development environment end-to-end.
And the presumption is that App Engine will give Google a
superb observation post to spot trends and pick off winners for acquisition
early on. There is also the risk of them hijacking ideas – even the code kind –
and it’s got all the clickstream and user data.
Oh, boy, and you thought Microsoft was a dominant pain in
the neck.
IBM is supposedly moving in a similar direction with a
project code named Kittyhawk and Microsoft is supposed to be readying an entry.
Anyway, App Engine gives developers access to the Google
File System (GFS), the scalable widgetry for large distributed data-intensive
apps, and Bigtable, the company’s distributed storage system shared by such as
Google Earth that’s meant to handle petabytes of data across thousands of
servers.
There are some hazards however. Google may prove to be a
strict taskmaster. Mess with them and you’re off the air. And that includes
eating too many resources or exceeding the quotas, which currently means only
65,000 http requests and 2,000 e-mails a day and queries that return at most a
thousand results. It also means only three applications per developer.
Code can only be written in Python 2.5 and some Python
modules written in C are disabled; AJAX
techniques and JavaScript are apparently okay. Google is promising to add other
languages. You can also forget MySQL and Postgres and other third-party
packages. Oh, and for what it’s worth the App Engine datastore is not a
traditional RDBMS.
The App Engine SDK runs on Linux, Windows and Mac and can be
download so code can be written offline then uploaded.
Google says App Engine isn’t feature-complete. One of the
things it might think of adding is service level agreements. Ditto backup. It’s
already thinking of support for offline applications.
About Maureen O'GaraMaureen O'Gara is the Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.