My first experience with Google Gears

The other day, I used Gears, Google’s offline data synchronization tool, for the first time… and it was really handy!
Being in Sydney for the Web Directions conference for the whole week, I had got somewhat behind in my RSS feeds in Google Reader (we’re talking 1200 unread items – and that was after I had gone through a few hundred already).
At the airport waiting for the flight home to board, browsing the internet, an epiphany struck – Chrome, the new browser from Google, has Google Gears built in and I had it on my laptop. I remembered seeing a little “online – click to go offline” icon at the top of the Google Reader screen… so I loaded up Chrome, went to Google Reader, found the icon and clicked it. Reader then proceeded to download 1200 items (which took around 3 minutes) and go into “offline” mode.
I disconnected from wireless – and it didn’t work: click on a category, page cannot be opened. Damn.
I reconnected the juice, clicked a few different categories, then disconnected again – and this time it was all sweet.
The plane trip took an extra hour due to strong headwinds (well over 5 hours to Perth!), but I used that time to read the 1200 items and flag some for checking out later. Back in Perth, I clicked on reconnect and “whump” – off it went, synching post status. That was a tense minute or so – I would never have found those 100-odd posts I had flagged for followup again, had it not worked - but it did work.
Many people get nervous about the amount of influence that Google has, myself included – but when their software works together so well it’s hard to justify using other systems! Google Gears is actually available as an extension for Firefox and a few other browsers too, so you could theoretically eliminate Chrome from the equation – but had I not been trying out Chrome, I would not have tried out Gears. If you’re a travelling blog addict, it might be just what you need.









