Google I/O 2010 Round-Up

Google I/O 2010 Round-Up

The biggest announcements of this year's developer conference

Google Chrome Now Has 70 Million Users

Google Chrome Now Has 70 Million Users

Firefox grew by 100 million in the same time Chrome got 40 million new users

Google I/O 2010: Presenting the New Fonts API

Google I/O 2010: Presenting the New Fonts API

New API and JavaScript library for embedding non-standard web fonts

Google I/O 2010: YouTube Leanback for Google TV

Google I/O 2010: YouTube Leanback for Google TV

An online video experience for your TV

Google I/O 2010: Music May be Coming to the Android Marketplace

Google I/O 2010: Music May be Coming to the Android Marketplace

Google gets serious about music

Google I/O 2010: Google TV Set to Conquer the Living Room

Google I/O 2010: Google TV Set to Conquer the Living Room

Android and Google Chrome bring the web to the TV

Google I/O 2010: Android 2.2 Froyo Is Lightning Fast

Google I/O 2010: Android 2.2 Froyo Is Lightning Fast

And comes packed with cool new stuff

Google I/O 2010: Google App Engine for Business and VMware Partnership

Google I/O 2010: Google App Engine for Business and VMware Partnership

Google is getting serious about the enterprise

Google I/O 2010: Google Buzz API

Google I/O 2010: Google Buzz API

The service is already integrated into apps like TweetDeck and Seesmic

Google I/O 2010: Google Storage for Developers

Google I/O 2010: Google Storage for Developers

A new cloud storage service for web apps

Google I/O 2010: Google Wave for Apps and New APIs

Google I/O 2010: Google Wave for Apps and New APIs

Wave is ready to take on the business world

Google I/O 2010: Google Wave Is Now Open to Everyone

Google I/O 2010: Google Wave Is Now Open to Everyone

Precisely one year after it was announced

Google I/O 2010: WebM - A Technical Overview and Possible Legal Issues

Google I/O 2010: WebM - A Technical Overview and Possible Legal Issues

All's not what it seems with the newly launched video format

Google I/O 2010: WebM, Google’s Open Video Format for HTML5

Google I/O 2010: WebM, Google’s Open Video Format for HTML5

Promises to put an end to the HTML5 video codec debate

Google I/O 2010: Chrome Web Store

Google I/O 2010: Chrome Web Store

A dedicated marketplace for web applications