Developer Highlights: Tower of Babel Roundup
April 15th, 2008 | Published in Youtube API
We wanted to take a minute and highlight some developers like yourselves who have been writing helpful tutorials or wrappers for the YouTube Data APIs.
In case you missed the announcement, we recently added YouTube support into the Google Data Objective-C Library. Not long after, Dan Sinclair, wrote a few helpful tutorials about getting started building a YouTube app in Cocoa. Check 'em out here:
Part 1: MyTube from the ground up
Part 2: MyTube - Installing the image wall
Part 3: MyTube - now with moving images
For the ActionScript 3 developers who want help querying and parsing Google Data feeds from Flash, Martin Legris wrote a small wrapper and also contributed an article to code.google.com on how to use it.
Shane Vitarana's Ruby wrapper has been updated to handle the Google Data feeds. Read the short introduction in his blog.
The Google Data .NET Client Library doesn't have YouTube-specific support yet, but Karsten Januszewski has written a sample and wrapper to help ease the parsing pain in the meantime.
If you've written a cool application, tutorial, or extension using the YouTube APIs, we'd love to see it! Share it with everyone over in the forum.
In case you missed the announcement, we recently added YouTube support into the Google Data Objective-C Library. Not long after, Dan Sinclair, wrote a few helpful tutorials about getting started building a YouTube app in Cocoa. Check 'em out here:
Part 1: MyTube from the ground up
Part 2: MyTube - Installing the image wall
Part 3: MyTube - now with moving images
For the ActionScript 3 developers who want help querying and parsing Google Data feeds from Flash, Martin Legris wrote a small wrapper and also contributed an article to code.google.com on how to use it.
Shane Vitarana's Ruby wrapper has been updated to handle the Google Data feeds. Read the short introduction in his blog.
The Google Data .NET Client Library doesn't have YouTube-specific support yet, but Karsten Januszewski has written a sample and wrapper to help ease the parsing pain in the meantime.
If you've written a cool application, tutorial, or extension using the YouTube APIs, we'd love to see it! Share it with everyone over in the forum.