The document discusses building applications for Yahoo! OpenMail. It provides an overview of application capabilities, the development process, and code examples. Specifically:
- Applications can access users' email content and calendars, and trigger new email messages. Storage space of up to 5MB is available.
- Developers set up accounts, enable OpenMail access, and use web or command line tools to code, test, and deploy applications.
- A basic "Hello World" example demonstrates configuring an app, launching a view on click, and composing a test email via the OpenMail API.
This document provides an overview of the K+ Open API including what K+ is, who is using the API, how to use the API, available methods, and references/resources. K+ is Yahoo's knowledge Q&A service available in Taiwan and Hong Kong containing millions of questions and answers. The API allows developers to integrate K+ question and answer data into their applications. Authentication is required to access private user data and methods. The document provides links to the API documentation and registration process.
The document discusses building applications for Yahoo! OpenMail. It provides an overview of application capabilities, the development process, and code examples. Specifically:
- Applications can access users' email content and calendars, and trigger new email messages. Storage space of up to 5MB is available.
- Developers set up accounts, enable OpenMail access, and use web or command line tools to code, test, and deploy applications.
- A basic "Hello World" example demonstrates configuring an app, launching a view on click, and composing a test email via the OpenMail API.
This document provides an overview of the K+ Open API including what K+ is, who is using the API, how to use the API, available methods, and references/resources. K+ is Yahoo's knowledge Q&A service available in Taiwan and Hong Kong containing millions of questions and answers. The API allows developers to integrate K+ question and answer data into their applications. Authentication is required to access private user data and methods. The document provides links to the API documentation and registration process.
SearchMonkey is an open platform that uses structured data to enhance search results. It allows developers to build applications that display richer information and customized presentations in search results. Site owners can submit structured data to Yahoo! Search through custom data services and data feeds to have their content included in search results in new ways through SearchMonkey applications.
K+ Open Api For 2009 Yahoo! Open Hack Day By Sc@20091017JH Lee
This document summarizes Yahoo!'s K+ Open API for accessing its question-answering knowledge base. It outlines the API, describes who is using it, how to get started with it, the available methods, and reference resources. Key points include that the API provides access to Yahoo!'s TW and HK question/answer databases, requires an Application ID for authentication, and supports common methods like searching, accessing question/answer/comment content, and user profile data.
This document discusses how to build your own search service using the BOSS API from Yahoo. It provides an overview of the BOSS API, including what it allows developers to do, key features, and how to get started. Specifically, it outlines how developers can (1) access Yahoo's search infrastructure through the BOSS API, (2) build various client and browser integrations, and (3) customize search results through features like result re-ranking and presentation customization. It also provides examples of how to make requests to the BOSS API for web, image, and news searches.
The document discusses the evolution of the YUI JavaScript framework architecture. Some key changes include a modular design that allows discrete modules to be loaded independently, a common component foundation using attributes and events, and a Node API that provides a normalized way to interact with DOM elements.
This document contains PHP code for a web application that demonstrates the Yahoo! Content Analysis API (CAS). The index.php file defines the overall page structure using frames. The left.php file contains a text input and form to select the CAS method. The form submits to test.php which calls the CAS API, parses the XML response, and displays the results.
This document introduces Yahoo! Query Language (YQL) which allows users to query data from various sources using SQL-like syntax. It provides an overview of YQL, demonstrates how to use the YQL Console to run queries and view community-created tables, and gives examples of querying data from sources like Flickr, HTML pages, and weather services. The document encourages developers to create their own YQL tables to access other APIs and data sources.
This document introduces Yahoo! Open Strategy (Y!OS) which includes social APIs, the Yahoo! Query Language (YQL), OAuth, and OpenID. The social APIs allow accessing a user's profile data, status updates, contacts, and more. YQL provides an SQL-like syntax to query data from many sources. OAuth and OpenID are standardized protocols for authorizing access to data and authenticating users across multiple services. The presentation provides an overview of these Y!OS platforms and components.
SearchMonkey is an open platform that uses structured data to enhance search results. It allows site owners to share structured data with Yahoo to provide richer search experiences for users. Developers can build SearchMonkey applications that display additional information in search results by connecting to custom data services or APIs. The platform provides tools for developers to create these applications and data services and publish them for users.
Blueprint is Yahoo's platform for developing and distributing mobile internet services allowing developers to maximize reach across devices with minimal effort. It works by coding services once which are then optimized to run on thousands of devices. Developers create an XML configuration file and Blueprint code which is deployed to Yahoo's Blueprint Server and delivered to devices via the Yahoo Mobile frontend. The Blueprint language uses tags like module, placard, block, and image to structure mobile content and interfaces.
SearchMonkey is an open platform that uses structured data to enhance search results. It allows developers to build applications that display richer information and customized presentations in search results. Site owners can submit structured data to Yahoo! Search through custom data services and data feeds to have their content included in search results in new ways through SearchMonkey applications.
K+ Open Api For 2009 Yahoo! Open Hack Day By Sc@20091017JH Lee
This document summarizes Yahoo!'s K+ Open API for accessing its question-answering knowledge base. It outlines the API, describes who is using it, how to get started with it, the available methods, and reference resources. Key points include that the API provides access to Yahoo!'s TW and HK question/answer databases, requires an Application ID for authentication, and supports common methods like searching, accessing question/answer/comment content, and user profile data.
This document discusses how to build your own search service using the BOSS API from Yahoo. It provides an overview of the BOSS API, including what it allows developers to do, key features, and how to get started. Specifically, it outlines how developers can (1) access Yahoo's search infrastructure through the BOSS API, (2) build various client and browser integrations, and (3) customize search results through features like result re-ranking and presentation customization. It also provides examples of how to make requests to the BOSS API for web, image, and news searches.
The document discusses the evolution of the YUI JavaScript framework architecture. Some key changes include a modular design that allows discrete modules to be loaded independently, a common component foundation using attributes and events, and a Node API that provides a normalized way to interact with DOM elements.
This document contains PHP code for a web application that demonstrates the Yahoo! Content Analysis API (CAS). The index.php file defines the overall page structure using frames. The left.php file contains a text input and form to select the CAS method. The form submits to test.php which calls the CAS API, parses the XML response, and displays the results.
This document introduces Yahoo! Query Language (YQL) which allows users to query data from various sources using SQL-like syntax. It provides an overview of YQL, demonstrates how to use the YQL Console to run queries and view community-created tables, and gives examples of querying data from sources like Flickr, HTML pages, and weather services. The document encourages developers to create their own YQL tables to access other APIs and data sources.
This document introduces Yahoo! Open Strategy (Y!OS) which includes social APIs, the Yahoo! Query Language (YQL), OAuth, and OpenID. The social APIs allow accessing a user's profile data, status updates, contacts, and more. YQL provides an SQL-like syntax to query data from many sources. OAuth and OpenID are standardized protocols for authorizing access to data and authenticating users across multiple services. The presentation provides an overview of these Y!OS platforms and components.
SearchMonkey is an open platform that uses structured data to enhance search results. It allows site owners to share structured data with Yahoo to provide richer search experiences for users. Developers can build SearchMonkey applications that display additional information in search results by connecting to custom data services or APIs. The platform provides tools for developers to create these applications and data services and publish them for users.
Blueprint is Yahoo's platform for developing and distributing mobile internet services allowing developers to maximize reach across devices with minimal effort. It works by coding services once which are then optimized to run on thousands of devices. Developers create an XML configuration file and Blueprint code which is deployed to Yahoo's Blueprint Server and delivered to devices via the Yahoo Mobile frontend. The Blueprint language uses tags like module, placard, block, and image to structure mobile content and interfaces.