Figure 12-10Figure 12-11277Case
On first glance, this screen looks like nothing more than the Amazon.com page that corresponds to theiPod device. However, if you scroll down in the browser window, you also see information displayedfrom the Epinions.com Web site that contains reviews of the iPod. An example of this is illustrated inFigure 12-12. Figure 12-12If you think about what was done here, it is really pretty cool. You used Google to retrieve a link to anEpinions Web page containing a review of the product specified in the search. You then retrieved theactual page from the Epinions Web page and programmatically displayed it in the same browser win- dow with the rest of the results. Scrolling down even farther leads you to a section of the browser page where the eBay search results areshown. Figure 12-13 provides an example of what this screen might look like. In the eBay section, some basic information is provided about the item along with a hyperlink to the auc- tion listing. The calls to Amazon.com and Google are hitting the live sites, whereas the call to eBay is hitting theSandbox test environment. The same code would also work against the live eBay site. That s it. See, it really is simple to integrate data from multiple APIs into your programs. 278Chapter
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