Planet Google

Planet Google

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Firebase launch checklist
Firebase launch checklist
Review this checklist before launch to make sure that your app and the Firebase products that it uses are ready for production.
·firebase.google.com·
Firebase launch checklist
Firebase Studio
Firebase Studio
Firebase Studio is an entirely web-based workspace for full-stack application development, complete with the latest generative AI from Gemini, and full-fidelity app previews, powered by cloud emulators.
·studio.firebase.google.com·
Firebase Studio
Find and add unmanaged users - Google Workspace Admin Help
Find and add unmanaged users - Google Workspace Admin Help
It's possible that some of your employees are using unmanaged accounts that access Google services. Unmanaged accounts are users who independently created a Google account using one of your organizati
Find and add unmanaged users It's possible that some of your employees are using unmanaged accounts that access Google services. Unmanaged accounts are users who independently created a Google account using one of your organization's domains. It's common for this to happen, but not ideal for managing your users and keeping their work data secure. Additionally, some unmanaged accounts result in conflicting account names. Attempting to create a managed account with the same name as an unmanaged account triggers such a conflict. As a Google Workspace super administrator, you can specify how to handle conflict accounts during user provisioning. You can invite unmanaged users to convert their accounts to managed accounts within your domain, unilaterally replace conflicting accounts with managed ones, or manually manage conflicting accounts. You choose a default option for handling unmanaged accounts using the Conflicting accounts management setting. The selected option applies when user accounts are created using the Admin SDK Directory API. The Transfer tool for unmanaged users enables you to see what unmanaged user accounts exist, and then invite those unmanaged users to convert their accounts to managed accounts within your domain. Once the user accepts this request, their account and data can be managed within the Admin console. You can use the transfer tool to resolve the conflict by migrating the unmanaged account. Note: The Transfer tool for unmanaged users and the Conflicting accounts management setting only support handling conflicts on an account's primary email address. User invitations aren't supported for conflicts on an alternate or alias email address. Set the option for handling unmanaged user accounts Note: The selected option applies to user accounts created using the Admin SDK Directory API that specify the resolveConflictAccount=true parameter. If you’re using Google Cloud Directory Sync (GCDS) or GAM this parameter is set to true by default. However, for third-party connectors, this won’t be set unless they‘ve integrated this feature. You must be signed in as a super administrator for this task. Sign in with a super administrator account to the Google Admin console. If you aren’t using a super administrator account, you can’t complete these steps. Go to Menu  Account > Account settings > Conflicting accounts management. In the conflicting accounts management section, choose an option: Automatically invite users to transfer conflicting unmanaged accounts to managed ones—Default setting Set a daily follow-up email duration. If users decline or don’t accept invitations within the follow-up period, choose an option: Replace their conflicting account with managed one Don’t replace their conflicting account   Replace conflicting unmanaged accounts with managed ones Don’t replace conflicting unmanaged accounts with managed ones You can view invitations and manage them manually from the transfer tool. Click Save. Migrate unmanaged user accounts For instructions about how to check the status of unmanaged users or manually migrate them, see the following articles: Before using the transfer tool Use the transfer tool to migrate unmanaged users Use CSV to migrate unmanaged users Note: You can't transfer consumer (unmanaged) users to a managed Google Workspace account if those users are members of a family group. Managed & unmanaged accounts & conflicting account names Managed user account A managed user account is an account belonging to a domain-verified customer. A managed user account is under the full control of a Google Workspace or Cloud Identity administrator, and it can be managed in the Google Admin console. Unmanaged user account An unmanaged user account is fully owned and managed by the individual who created it. Unmanaged user accounts don’t belong to domain-verified customers, and they’re not controlled by Google Workspace or Cloud Identity administrators. Your organization has no control over the configuration, security, and life cycle of these accounts.  Unmanaged accounts are sometimes referred to as personal accounts, or consumer accounts, because the individual signed up for Google consumer services using their company domain in their email address. Conflicting account If an admin creates a managed Google Account using the same account name as an existing unmanaged user account, this results in a conflicting account. If there’s a conflict like this, super administrators can resolve such conflicting accounts by using the Transfer tool for unmanaged users. Why you need to transfer unmanaged accounts If your employees use unmanaged accounts, then the premise of having a single place to manage user identities is compromised. Unmanaged accounts aren't managed by Google Workspace or Cloud Identity. Therefore, you can use the transfer tool to identify unmanaged user accounts that you want to convert to managed accounts, and migrate the unmanaged user accounts to managed
·support.google.com·
Find and add unmanaged users - Google Workspace Admin Help
Access Denied
Access Denied
Access Google Drive with a Google account (for personal use) or Google Workspace account (for business use).
·docs.google.com·
Access Denied
Access Denied
Access Denied
Access Google Docs with a personal Google account or Google Workspace account (for business use).
·docs.google.com·
Access Denied
Google Docs: Sign-in
Google Docs: Sign-in
Access Google Docs with a personal Google account or Google Workspace account (for business use).
·docs.google.com·
Google Docs: Sign-in
Gmail
Gmail
Gmail is email that’s intuitive, efficient, and useful. 15 GB of storage, less spam, and mobile access.
·mail.google.com·
Gmail
Google Drive: Sign-in
Google Drive: Sign-in
Access Google Drive with a Google account (for personal use) or Google Workspace account (for business use).
·accounts.google.com·
Google Drive: Sign-in
Firebase News feed | daily.dev
Firebase News feed | daily.dev
daily.dev is the easiest way to stay updated on the latest programming news. Get the best content from the top tech publications on any topic you want.
·app.daily.dev·
Firebase News feed | daily.dev
Firebase Studio
Firebase Studio
Firebase Studio is an entirely web-based workspace for full-stack application development, complete with the latest generative AI from Gemini, and full-fidelity app previews, powered by cloud emulators.
·firebase.studio·
Firebase Studio
Llms
Llms
·smithery.ai·
Llms
Google UNLEASHED Firebase Studio for AI app development (FREE) | daily.dev
Google UNLEASHED Firebase Studio for AI app development (FREE) | daily.dev
Google has released Firebase Studio, a free tool for AI-assisted app development. Built on VS Code, it allows users to code, prototype, and publish apps directly from a web browser. It integrates with GitHub for version control and includes a chatbot for coding assistance. Firebase Studio supports deploying web apps using various Google services like Cloud Run and Google Maps. Though powerful, it currently has some first-release issues, and better results might be obtained by using more advanced models with an API key.
·app.daily.dev·
Google UNLEASHED Firebase Studio for AI app development (FREE) | daily.dev
Google Drive: Sign-in
Google Drive: Sign-in
Access Google Drive with a Google account (for personal use) or Google Workspace account (for business use).
·drive.google.com·
Google Drive: Sign-in
Getting Started on Kaggle | Kaggle
Getting Started on Kaggle | Kaggle
Explore and run machine learning code with Kaggle Notebooks, a cloud computational environment that enables reproducible and collaborative analysis
Notebooks Explore and run machine learning code with Kaggle Notebooks, a cloud computational environment that enables reproducible and collaborative analysis Types of Notebooks There are multiple different types of Notebooks on Kaggle. Notebooks The most common type is Jupyter notebooks (usually just “notebooks”). Jupyter notebooks consist of a sequence of cells, where each cell is formatted in either Markdown (for writing text) or in a programming language of your choice (for writing code). To start a notebook, click on Create > New Notebook. This will open the Notebooks editing interface. Notebooks may be written in either R or Python. The language can be changed under the File > Language menu. Scripts It's also possible to create a script. Scripts are files that execute everything as code sequentially. To start a script, create a new notebook, and then change the type to Script under File > Editor Type. Also under the File menu, you can select what type of script you would like to execute. You may write scripts in R or in Python. You can also execute selected lines of code by highlighting the code in the editor interface and clicking the “Run” button or hitting shift-enter. Any results will be printed to the console. RMarkdown Scripts RMarkdown scripts are a special type of script that executes not just R code, but RMarkdown code. This is a combination of R code and Markdown editing syntax that is prefered by many R authors in our community. The RMarkdown editor is the same one used for basic R or Python scripts, except that it uses the special RMarkdown syntax. To start editing an RMarkdown script, create a new notebook, change the file type to "Script" under File > Editor Type and then change the language under File > Language Searching for Notebooks In addition to being an interactive editing platform, you can find and use code that others in the community have shared public. Kagglers working with data across both the Datasets and Competitions platforms are constantly building cool things. Exploring and reading other Kagglers’ code is a great way to both learn new techniques and stay involved in the community. There’s no better place than Kaggle Notebooks to discover such a huge repository of public, open-sourced, and reproducible code for data science and machine learning. The latest and greatest from Notebooks is surfaced on Kaggle in several different places. Site Search You can use the site search in the top bar of the website while on any page to look for not only Notebooks but Datasets, Competitions, Users, and more across Kaggle. Start typing a search query to get quick results and hit "Enter" to see a full page of results that you can drill down into. From the full page search results, you can filter just to "Notebooks" and add even more filter criteria using the filter options on the left hand side of the page. Homepage When you’re logged into your Kaggle account, the Kaggle homepage provides a live newsfeed of what people are doing on the platform. While Discussion forum posts and new Datasets make up some of the contents of the home page, most of it is dedicated to hot new Notebooks activity. By browsing down the page you can check out all the latest updates from your fellow Kagglers. You can tweak your newsfeed to your liking by following other Kagglers. To follow someone, go to their profile page and click on “Follow User”. Content posted and upvotes made by users you have followed will show up more prominently. The same is true of other users who choose to follow you. Post high-quality notebooks and datasets and you will soon find other users following along with what you are doing! Notebook Listing A more structured way of accessing Notebooks is the Notebook listing, accessible from the “Notebooks” tab in the main menu bar. The Notebook listing is sorted by “Hotness” by default. “Hotness” is what it sounds like: a way of measuring the interestingness of Notebooks on the platform. Notebooks which score highly in Hotness, and thus appear highly in this list, are usually either recently written Notebooks that are scoring highly in things like upvotes and views, or “all-time” greats that have been consistently popular on the platform for a long time. Other methods of sorting are by Most Votes: Surfaces the most popular notebooks of all time Most Comments: Returns the most discussed notebooks of all time Recently Created: A real-time stream of new Notebooks Recently Run: A real-time stream of activity Relevance: Sorts the results based on their relevance to the query Other filtering options, available from the navigation bar, are Categories (Datasets or Competitions?), Outputs, Languages (R or Python?), and Types (Script or Notebook?). You can also use the Notebook listing to sort through your own Notebooks (“Your Work”), find Notebooks that others have shared with you ("Shared With You"), or to look at Notebooks you have previously upvoted (“Favorites”). Finally
·kaggle.com·
Getting Started on Kaggle | Kaggle
Gmail
Gmail
Gmail is email that’s intuitive, efficient, and useful. 15 GB of storage, less spam, and mobile access.
·mail.google.com·
Gmail