Google Terminates Six Services

Hit News   January 15th, 2009 23:17  

In addition to Google’s (NSDQ: GOOG) announcements about the elimination of 100 recruiting positions and the shutdown of offices in Austin, Texas; Trondheim, Norway; and Lulea, Sweden, the company said it would close , , Mashup Editor, Notebook, and Jaiku. It also said it’s discontinuing the ability to upload videos to Video.

Vic Gundotra, VP of engineering at , said in a blog post that , a mobile social networking service that lets users share their locations with friends, would be closing in the next few months and that further details would be forthcoming.

Jaiku, however, will live on as an open source project. Gundotra said that engineers have been porting the microblogging service to App Engine and that when the migration is completed, the company plans to make the code available under the Apache license.

“With the open source Jaiku Engine project, organizations, groups, and individuals will be able to roll-their-own microblogging services and deploy them on App Engine,” he said. “The new Jaiku Engine will include support for OAuth, and we’re excited about developers using this proven code as a starting point in creating a freely available and federated, open source microblogging platform.”

He also said that would be shutting Mashup editor, a tool for making Web service mashups that has been in closed beta testing. Much, if not all, of the functionality of Mashup Editor is available through App Engine, and Gundotra is encouraging users to transition their applications to App Engine.

In a separate blog post, Punit Soni, a product manager, said that is scheduled to close Thursday. The service, launched in 2001, provided the ability to search the full text of thousands of product catalogs for the few who used it. The technology developed for Google Catalog Search went on to provide the foundation of Book Search.

The cessation of the ability to upload videos to Google Video in a few months is unlikely to affect many video makers, apart from those seeking to upload videos longer than 10 minutes. YouTube limits videos to 10 minutes, with some exceptions, in part as a way to keep storage costs down and to prevent the unauthorized uploading of complete half-hour and longer-format, professionally produced content.

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