
"Opal works by getting users to enter a description of the app they want to make, after which the tool uses different Google models to do so. Once the app is ready, users can open the editor panel to view and customize the visual workflow of inputs, outputs, and generation steps. They can click any step to review or edit the prompt, or add new steps manually using Opal's toolbar."
"In addition to the expansion, Google also announced improvements coming to Opal. The tech giant says it has improved the debugging program but intentionally kept it no-code. Users can now run their workflow step by step in the visual editor or tweak specific steps in the console. Errors show up right where they happen to provide immediate context and eliminate guesswork."
"Google also says that it's made significant improvements to Opal's core performance. The company notes that previously it would take up to five seconds or more to create a new Opal. Now, it's worked to speed that up to make it easier to get started. Plus, users can now run steps in parallel, allowing complex workflows with multiple steps to execute simultaneously."
Google expanded Opal availability to 15 additional countries including Canada, India, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil, Singapore, Colombia, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras, Argentina, and Pakistan. Opal converts user text descriptions into mini web apps by invoking various Google models, then exposes a visual editor to customize inputs, outputs, and generation steps. Users can review or edit prompts, add steps, publish apps to the web, and share links for others to test. Google improved Opal's no-code debugging with step-by-step execution and contextual error display, sped up app creation, and enabled parallel step execution for complex workflows.
Read at TechCrunch
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