Spring cleaning for some of our APIs
By Adam
Feldman, APIs Product ManagerUPDATE June 3: In the days
since we announced the deprecation of the Translate API, we’ve seen the passion and interest
expressed by so many of you, through comments here (believe me, we read every one of them) and
elsewhere. I’m happy to share that we’re working hard to address your concerns, and will be
releasing an updated plan to offer a paid version of the Translate API. Please stay tuned;
we’ll post a full update as soon as possible.
Google I/O is
always an exciting time for developers. This year we made 34 separate announcements, including
7
new APIs:
With all of the recent API
announcements, our
API directory is
getting quite long! However, some of our older APIs have been superseded by bigger and better
things and others may not be receiving the necessary love.
As the web
evolves and priorities change, we sometimes deprecate APIs – that is, remove them from active
development – to free up resources and concentrate on moving forward. Today we're announcing a
spring cleaning for some of our APIs.
Note that the vast majority of
Google APIs are
not affected by this announcement.
Following the standard deprecation period – often, as long as three years – some of the
deprecated APIs will be shut down. The rest have no scheduled date for shutdown, but won’t get
any new features. The policy for each deprecated API is specified in its documentation.
- These APIs are now deprecated but have no scheduled shutdown date:
Code Search API, Diacritize
API, Feedburner
APIs, Finance API,
Power Meter API, Sidewiki API, Wave API
- These APIs
will be shut down as per their deprecation policies: Blog Search API, Books
Data API and Books JavaScript
API (not the new API),
Image Search API, News Search API, Patent Search API, Safe Browsing
API (v1 only), Translate
API, Transliterate
API, Video Search
API, Virtual Keyboard
API
Wherever possible, the documentation includes suggested
alternatives designed to help you achieve similar functionality — whether it’s a new version
or related offering. We hope these alternatives, along with lengthy deprecation periods, will
help minimize the impact and allow us to focus on building great products together.
Adam Feldman is a Product Manager, focusing on all of Google's APIs
and making sure Google provides the best possible platform to developers.Posted by Scott Knaster,
Editor