9/02/2010

Phone Systems

As mainly important moralities of the web is portability: a web page renders and behaves the same way, in any case of the browser’s operating system or the type of hardware it’s running on Phone Systems. These signify to browser successively on almost any contemporary computer or cell phone might be dart a rapid, perform sensitively resident user appliance. conversely, we know that just successively on today’s mainly trendy architecture isn’t enough proviso a latest workstation design emerge be supposed to be clever to scuttle indigenous Client modules previously released devoid of require maintainer cipher. Today we wanted to give developers a little more insight into our loom for printing from Chrome OS and other web-connected platforms. While the appearance of cloud and mobile computing has provided users with access to in sequence and personal documents from practically any device, today’s printers still need installing drivers which makes printing not possible from most of these new devices. Mounting and maintaining print subsystems for every combination of hardware and operating system-- from desktops to net books to mobile devices -- simply isn't possible. Since in Google Chrome OS all applications are web apps, we wanted to design a printing experience that would enable web apps to give users the full printing capability that native apps have today. Using the one part all major devices and operating systems have in common-- access to the cloud-- today we're introducing some preface designs for a project called Google Cloud Print, a service that enables any application (web, desktop, or mobile) on any device to print to any printer. Rather than rely on the local operating system (or drivers) to print, apps can use Google Cloud Print to submit and manage print job. Google Cloud Print will then be responsible for sending the print job to the correct printer with the particular options the user selected, and returning the job status to the app.