Several web applications from a variety of companies used Gears at some point, including Google (
Gmail,
YouTube,
Docs,
Reader,
Picasa for mobile,
Calendar,
Wave),
MySpace (Mail Search),
Zoho Office Suite,
Remember The Milk, and
Buxfer.
WordPress 2.6 added support for Gears, to speed up the administrative interface and reduce server hits. However, after Google announced in February 2010 that there would be no further development of Gears (see
End of life section), several of these applications discontinued their support for Gears, including Google Reader and WordPress. Gears could be enabled on sites where it was otherwise unsupported, by using a
Greasemonkey user script that one of the Gears engineers created. Gears was supported on
Internet Explorer 6 and
8 on
Windows XP,
Vista and
7;
Internet Explorer Mobile 4.01 and later on
Windows Mobile;
Safari 3.1.1 and later on
Mac OS X 10.4 and later);
Firefox 1.5 and later on multiple platforms; and the native browser on
BlackBerry OS 5. There was only limited 64-bit support from third parties. Gears did not support attachment files with sizes greater than 2 GB under
Mac OS X Leopard or
Snow Leopard due to a bug in the Blob handling code. On May 29, 2008,
Opera Software ASA announced that
Opera Mobile 9.5 would support Gears. The technology preview release of the browser was published on February 20, 2009. It was available for touchscreen devices running
Windows Mobile 5 and
6 only. Gears was not built into browsers other than
Google Chrome and had to be downloaded separately. The
Ruby on Rails framework supported interfaces to Gears without needing to understand the Google Gears API. ==End of life==