Google Gears heads for Windows Mobile phones
Google is bringing Google Gears to mobile phones so that people on the go can access Web-based applications even when they're not connected to the mobile Net.

Smartphones and 3G data services are changing the way some people work, allowing them to access documents and applications from anywhere. But when their wireless connection is interrupted or not available at all, they're cut off.
Google Gears for mobile helps solve this problem so mobile workaholics can even get stuff done on airplanes or when they're supposed to be on vacation in some far-off destination with no wireless access. (On second thought, maybe having access to work documents and other Web-based applications from anywhere isn't such a good idea.)
Google Gears is an open-source browser extension that lets developers create Web applications that can run offline. Google has been developing the software for PC users, but now it is extending it for mobile users too. Google Gears is still in its early days. The mobile version right now supports Internet Explorer on Windows Mobile 5 and 6 phones. This means that other smartphone users, such as those using Apple's iPhone, or people using other popular mobile browsers, such as Opera, won't be able to use Google Gears.
But Google has said that it plans to expand support to other browsers and cell phone platforms, including its own Android software.
Another issue is that mobile Gears only works with applications that are Gear-enabled. So far, Google Gear applications aren't widely available, but Google is trying to make it easier for developers to create Gears-enabled mobile Web applications.
Charles Wiles, product manager for Google's mobile team, posted a blog explaining how Google Gears for mobile would work. He used the example of Zoho, a Web-based productivity application, and Buxfer, a Web-based personal finance application.
Google Gears is integrated into these applications. When users go to the Web site where these applications are located they will be asked to install Google Gears for mobile. Once installed, Gears sits on the phone and people can access their data even when there is no network connection.
Google is providing more information for developers on its developer Web site.
Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies. E-mail Maggie.
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Google Gears is about much more than offline. For example, you can use Gears on mobile devices to create applications that work reliably, even when the network has high latency and is intermittent. For example, you can download and cache your data in the embedded SQLite database, do full-text searching of it, and more even if the network is going in and out. Developers can also use Gears worker pool functionality, which allows you to do activity that would normally freeze the browser without affecting end-users.
Developers can also use Gear's local server to cache the HTML, JavaScript, and CSS of an application so that it appears instantly without having to reload it from the server.
All of this can be used to create applications that have greater reliability without having to necessarily work offline.
Expect to see more from Gears in the future that is not offline-related. Gears is about teaching current browsers new tricks and iterating the base DNA of the web faster, in an open way. Offline (and the performance and reliability features of things like Worker Pools and the local database) are just the beginning of this.
Best,
Brad Neuberg
Google Gears
http://codinginparadise.org
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