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Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Google is reportedly planning virtual kiosk


Android-Tablet (von Acer): Die auf den Markt drängende Plattform braucht InhalteWho Apps in the offer, you need a shop who sells media content via App, needs a review: In fact, a clear cause. Google allegedly planned digital press kiosk is still always a rumor - albeit an increasingly better informed of sources.

San Francisco - Google reviewed a report by the Wall Street Journal, according to the structure of a digital newspaper kiosks. The U.S. company already had discussed his plans with major American publishers such as Time Warner, Condé Nast and Hearst, the newspaper reported Sunday, citing unspecified sources.The report was picked up by U.S. media as if he were already the official press release from Google - like most major U.S. companies Google does not comment on rumors generally. The fact that the industry still Smalltalk as quasi-fact traded is hardly surprising. It would be an absolute surprise when Google would not maintain such a kiosk plans.

Because that what all vendors of platforms for e-books and magazines is that Apple has its iTunes store already extended to newspapers and magazines, including such offerings within its bundles Amazon Kindle offers. Google has been trying for some time, newspapers and magazines on his draw Android platform. That is attractive for publishers but only if they are then found: the example of the Apple App Store shows that reading content lost in the jumble of mini-games, fun gadgets and small practical applications. Statistics show that the use of reading content makes this exuberant range of almost four percent. Without the presentation via iTunes it would be even less.

The first reading boom is over 

quarrel with the basic conditions of the presentation of their products from Apple, the U.S. publishers but also from other, non-media-inherent reasons. Even Apple has not really understand it, the press and bundled products sufficiently prominent to present - and especially not as attractive for publishers and customers.

The initial high sales figures were apparently too much to do with curiosity. Now that is saturated, the continuous single purchase, fact, figures from the digital single sales collapse literally - a subscription model but fails so far to the fundamental disagreement between Apple and the publishers about the conditions.

Sun correlate the Apple sales figures of newspapers and now largely with those of the normal street sales - rather than with those of the more impressive iPad growing sales numbers. Their readership is falling, although the number of owner-iPad increases. The publishers had thought with a view and hope for the development of new markets differently.

But not that Apple hinbekommt tempting offers is also due to the wall of the U.S. publishers themselves: they complain on the one Apple's claims commission (the company collects 30 percent of sales from the App-sale) and other data Apples greed. Because Apple refuses to date, percolating detailed information about the buyers and users - Google is, according to the Wall Street Journal "willingly and also willing to raise the press products to a much smaller commission on the Android platform.

The rumor heats up the atmosphere before the Consumer Electronic Show CES in Las Vegas in addition, beginning on Tuesday. America's leading trade fair for consumer electronics, and here the industry observers agree, will be available this year in the sign of the Tablet PC. Expect a flood of devices that are designed to provide Apple's previously unchallenged dominant iPad stand up, and many of them are running with Google's Android platform. In short: a better place and better time to give a Google Kiosk known, there would be few.

Especially since the store surface should be no great challenge even for Google. Just last month, Google began in the U.S. with the sale of digital books through an online store - shop and shop.
READ MORE - Google is reportedly planning virtual kiosk

New Google Logo Celebrates the New Decade


As ever Google are bang up to date with a brand new Google logo to celebrate the arrival of the new decade of 2011.

This time Google have gone Latin with the use of Roman numerals to spell out the date. The numerals are cunningly mixed in with the first and last letters of the Google name. Hence we have “G” for Google, followed by “MM” the Roman numerals for two thousand. Then “X” the numeral for ten, plus “1″ which makes eleven. Finally we have the final “e” from the Google name.

Cunning stuff, but easy-peasy to fathom out for crossword and sudoku buffs.

The colour scheme on this latest Google logo can only be described as “jolly”. The starbursts in the background appear to celebrate the birth of the new decade.

When it comes to innovative marketing Google is always teaching lessons to traditionalists. By “messing” with their logo to bring new life to their brand Google show that the brand name is actually more important than the design style which does not have to be static.
READ MORE - New Google Logo Celebrates the New Decade

Roman Numeral Style The Google Doodle Rings in the New Year


Happy (Almost) New Year, Googlers! To celebrate the dawn of 2011, Googlei s out with a brand-new Doodle, a festive little number (pun intended) featuring fireworks and the roman numerals signifying “2011.”

This is hardly the first holiday the Doodle has honored — Google has celebrated Halloween with sweet treats, Thanksgiving with gluttony, and the collective holidays with an array of cultural scenes.

What was your favorite Doodle this year?
READ MORE - Roman Numeral Style The Google Doodle Rings in the New Year

Google takes heat over Android tablet OS

Android device makers around the world are anticipating great things from the next version of Google's mobile software, and they need the boost. Apple has a strong head start with sales of its popular iPad, while the App Store and iTunes give it apps and content, to boot.

But after a year of prodding Google, device makers think they've finally won with the upcoming "Honeycomb" upgrade to Android, which is expected by the end of the first quarter and is supposed to be the first version of the software designed for tablets instead of smartphones.

Earlier this year, for example, Samsung Electronics, had to fight to have the Android Market app, which connects users to the software's online treasure trove of over 150,000 apps, on its Galaxy Tab, according to one executive who asked not to be named due to his company's close relationship with Google.

At the time that Samsung was developing the Galaxy Tab to use Android, Google was struggling to decide if it wanted to put its upcoming Chrome OS in tablets and make Android exclusive to smartphones. The Chrome OS better fits Google's Cloud strategy, the executive said.

A Google spokesperson declined to comment on the issue.

Google's decision to make a tablet-friendly version of Android became a must after Apple launched its groundbreaking iPad, analysts say.

"Earlier in the year, Google probably thought that Chrome OS might be the right platform for tablets. However, the importance of the compatibility of apps across smartphones and tablets, evident from the iPad experience, has created the need for Google to ensure that the commercial success of apps can be preserved in the tablet proposition," said Martin Bradley, an analyst at Strategy Analytics.

Apple sold nearly 8 million iPads through the end of September, making it one of the hottest products of the year. (That tally is from official Apple figures from its quarterly earnings conference call and doesn't include holiday sales.)

By being first, Apple has set the tone for the entire market. Tablet makers need to put out the same OS for their smartphones and tablets so apps can be shared on either device. Even more important, apps specifically designed for tablets need to be made available, to take advantage of the larger screens, more powerful processors and expanded memory on board.

Of the 300,000 or so apps available to Apple iPhone and iPod Touch users, 40,000 are specifically designed for the iPad, and they are marketed that way on Apple's App Store.

By contrast, Google's Android Market does not offer any tablet-only apps to users, only smartphone apps. However, upstart Appslib is filling the void with its own tablet-only app store for Android lovers. Appslib is not affiliated with Google.
READ MORE - Google takes heat over Android tablet OS

First impressions: Google TV delights


Logitech RevueI simply don't understand all the fuss about Google TV delays. I set up the Logitech Revue on Christmas Eve and the family is absolutely loving it. Revue/Google TV delivers one of the best non-cable-provider set-top box experiences I've ever had testing these devices. In fact, setup and benefits make up for all the pain encountered with similar class products running other operating systems.

First the news that gets stranger: Following rumors that Google TV asked partners to pull their products from next month's Consumer Electronics Show, there's now buzz that Logitech has either suspended Revue production or shipments until Google releases a software update.
Oh yeah? I don't see a problem, whether or not the rumors are true. I'm dumbfounded by how good Google TV is right now. I can compare to Apple TV, but not Xbox 360's integration with AT&T U-verse (I don't have one of Microsoft's game consoles).

12 Steps to TV Bliss

Initially, I found Revue setup to be daunting. I received the Google TV device late afternoon on December 22d but waited another day before installation. Based on my past bad experience with this kind of product -- and, yes, including Windows Media Center -- I was flummoxed by instruction to connect my IPTV settop box to the Revue. I figured that could only lead to trouble. How wrong I was.

Logitech provides an HDMI cable in the box, which I used to connect my AT&T U-verse tuner to the Revue, which in turn got the other cable already connected to the TV -- a three year-old 42-inch Vizio model VU42L. So HDMI goes out from the tuner into the Revue and out to the Vizio. I then turned on the Revue and TV, which launched a 12-step setup process and notification 20 minutes time would be required.

I balked at the 12-step process, which was more than Apple TV ever demanded. But Revue/Google TV would be doing more -- gulp, controlling the AT&T settop box and television. For this first impressions review, I won't go through step by step. At some point I entered my Google account ID, zip code, service provider, settop box brand and model and TV brand and model. The process seemed straightforward except for setting screen size, which required using buttons on the Revue keyboard to widen the black display area to cover over blue background.

Say Your Hail Marys

After the setup process concluded, Revue rebooted and I said my Hail Marys (Heck, I'm not even Catholic, but it was Christmas Eve!). What happened next shocked me. Revue provided unified and flawlessly functional access to AT&T U-verse features, the TV and Google TV. Based on past bad experience using this kind of device, I expected either U-verse features to be unavailable or somehow compromised. Not the least. If anything, U-verse is now better, because of Google search.

Revue's mini-keyboard replaces the U-verse and TV controllers and, quite surprisingly, offers all the functionality I normally use. I was skeptical of the keyboard, which proved to be too cumbersome with other products I've tested. But, because all the functionality I expect is there and because of the ease of searching, the keyboard is handy and confortable to use -- even for my tech-adverse wife.

Google TV starts from Revue's Home button, which serves up appropriate services/applications, such as Amazon Video-on-Demand, Netflix, television and other services. Chrome browser is also available, and it's surprisingly useful and integrated into other experiences. For example, Chrome launches access to Amazon VoD, for renting or buying movies. The experience looks like the Amazon service would in a browser. I've never been a fan of Internet on the television, with screen resolution problems being one of several reasons. But I found the browser experience to be surprisingly pleasant considering the TV is more than three years old. One browser gripe: No bookmarks sync with Chrome on PC that I can see.

Google Search opens Doors

Pretty much any content available in a browser is accessible on Google TV, although the exceptions are perplexing. Hulu isn't available as a service or application (because Google TV uses Android, applications are available, too). This morning, I went to Hulu in Google TV's Chrome browser and immediately received one of several notices the service wasn't available -- yet. But I persevered, getting as far as the video window for a TV show, at which point the final prompt stopped me. Surely, it's a licensing thing, or so I guess after observing that Starz Play is available from Netflix on my laptop but not Google TV.

From a user interface perspective, Apple TV is much more visually appealing. But I found searching for and renting movies from Amazon VoD on Google TV to be much more functional. On Christmas Eve, I rented "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" for $3.99. A notice indicated that Amazon VoD HD was coming soon for Google TV, but the quality looked plenty good enough to me. On Christmas Day, my wife and father-in-law rented "That's Entertainment" for $2.99 (for 48-hours), and my daughter and I later watched "Die Hard" streamed from Netflix. I often search Apple TV and can find nothing to watch, because of the presentation and cumbersome search capabilities. So less than two days using Google TV, that works out to two more movies rented using Google TV (and one streamed for free) than Apple TV (for the month). The Apple TV is boxed; I'm done with it.

Google search is what makes the experience so far superior to using either U-verse alone or another settop box. For example, this morning I wanted to go from a Web page to Google's main page -- something really unnecessary for searching, which can be done from the address bar. But I was fooling around. Typing "Google" brought up some unexpected choices, including "Google Baby." WTH? There's a new Google service oriented to kids? No. "Google Baby" turns out to be a program airing on HBO in nine days. Google search didn't just cover the Web but future U-verse programming. Clicking "Google TV" took me to information about the show and option to record using the U-verse DVR. Hell, that's slick, and remember AT&T's service runs Microsoft's MediaRoom software. Google search is simply amazing and, as I'll explain in a later post, may fundamentally change how I use the television -- perhaps as much as the DVR did.

That's a wrap. I may do a full review in a couple weeks, particularly if Google really does issue a major software update.

READ MORE - First impressions: Google TV delights

Google's Chrome OS-based Cr-48 Notebook Unboxed


READ MORE - Google's Chrome OS-based Cr-48 Notebook Unboxed

Google Launches New Book Database

With little fanfare, Google has made a mammoth database culled from nearly 5.2 million digitized books available to the public for free downloads and online searches, opening a new landscape of possibilities for research and education in the humanities.

The digital storehouse, which comprises words and short phrases as well as a year-by-year count of how often they appear, represents the first time a data set of this magnitude and searching tools are at the disposal of Ph.D.’s, middle school students and anyone else who likes to spend time in front of a small screen. It consists of the 500 billion words contained in books published between 1500 and 2008 in English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese and Russian.

The intended audience is scholarly, but a simple online tool allows anyone with a computer to plug in a string of up to five words and see a graph that charts the phrase’s use over time — a diversion that can quickly become as addictive as the habit-forming game Angry Birds.

With a click you can see that “women,” in comparison with “men,” is rarely mentioned until the early 1970s, when feminism gained a foothold. The lines eventually cross paths about 1986.

You can also learn that Mickey Mouse and Marilyn Monroe don’t get nearly as much attention in print as Jimmy Carter; compare the many more references in English than in Chinese to “Tiananmen Square” after 1989; or follow the ascent of “grilling” from the late 1990s until it outpaced “roasting” and “frying” in 2004.

“The goal is to give an 8-year-old the ability to browse cultural trends throughout history, as recorded in books,” said Erez Lieberman Aiden, a junior fellow at the Society of Fellows at Harvard. Mr. Lieberman Aiden and Jean-Baptiste Michel, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard, assembled the data set with Google and spearheaded a research project to demonstrate how vast digital databases can transform our understanding of language, culture and the flow of ideas.

Their study, to be published in the journal Science on Friday, offers a tantalizing taste of the rich buffet of research opportunities now open to literature, history and other liberal arts professors who may have previously avoided quantitative analysis. Science is taking the unusual step of making the paper available online to nonsubscribers.

“We wanted to show what becomes possible when you apply very high-turbo data analysis to questions in the humanities,” said Mr. Lieberman Aiden, whose expertise is in applied mathematics and genomics. He called the method “culturomics.”

The data set can be downloaded, and users can build their own search tools.

Working with a version of the data set that included Hebrew and started in 1800, the researchers measured the endurance of fame, finding that written references to celebrities faded twice as quickly in the mid-20th century as they did in the early 19th. “In the future everyone will be famous for 7.5 minutes,” they write.

Looking at inventions, they found technological advances took, on average, 66 years to be adopted by the larger culture in the early 1800s and only 27 years between 1880 and 1920.

They tracked the way eccentric English verbs that did not add “ed” at the end for past tense (i.e., “learnt”) evolved to conform to the common pattern (“learned”). They figured that the English lexicon has grown by 70 percent to more than a million words in the last 50 years and they demonstrated how dictionaries could be updated more rapidly by pinpointing newly popular words and obsolete ones.

Steven Pinker, a linguist at Harvard who collaborated on the Science paper’s section about language evolution, has been studying changes in grammar and past tense forms for 20 years.

“When I saw they had this database, I was quite energized,” he said. “There is so much ignorance. We’ve had to speculate what might have happened to the language.”
READ MORE - Google Launches New Book Database

How the World Googled in 2010



Shortly after Yahoo released its list of the year’s top searches, Google (Google) has announced the results of its annual zeitgeist report, revealing the most popular search terms of 2010 by region and worldwide.

The search giant analyzed billions of searches performed in 2010 and compared them with searches from 2009 to surface emerging trends. Chatroulette, the iPad and Justin Bieber were the three fastest-rising search terms in 2010; Twitter (Twitter) and Facebook (Facebook) also made the list, at numbers eight and 10, respectively.

Among the items of interest that lost the world’s attention in 2010 were swine flu, Stephanie Meyer’s novel (and the accompanying movie) Twilight (twilight): New Moon, Susan Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire, “MySpace (MySpace) layouts” and Michael Jackson.

The iPad was the emergent search winner in the consumer electronics category, followed by the iPhone 4, Nokia 5530, HTC EVO 4G and Nokia N900.

In terms of news searches, Haiti proved the most popular, followed by Turkish sports club Besiktas, Chile, “earthquake,” Lady Gaga and the iPhone 4. The Gulf of Mexico oil spill ranked 10th.

If you’re interested in learning more about what consumers searched for on Google in 2010, check out the company’s microsite, which includes tools to help you dig deeper into the data. For a more general overview of the year, I’d suggest watching the video above.
READ MORE - How the World Googled in 2010

Google Bring the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Web


Dead Sea Scrolls or the Dead Sea Scrolls, the script is touted as one of the most important archaeological discoveries in human history, will soon be able to enjoy it online via the internet.

Recently, the Israeli antiquities authority (Israel Antiquities Authority / IAA) has appointed Google to digitize a collection of dead sea manuscript.

"This is the most important discoveries in the 20th century, and we can pass it with the most advanced technology in the coming century," said Project Director of the IAA, Pnina Shor as quoted from Discovery.com.
READ MORE - Google Bring the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Web

Google Maps 3D 5.0 for Android Support


Google Maps for Android version 5.0 now adds 3D graphics features, which makes it looks more accurate, also supports the viewing offline.

According to the Gizmodo site, which demonstrated the application at the D conference: Dive Into Mobile in San Francisco, California, much faster than previous versions and offers in real time. Similarly, as quoted by Mashable,.
READ MORE - Google Maps 3D 5.0 for Android Support

Browser Chrome getting Fast with 'crankshaft'

Google Chrome browser is now used by 120 million people worldwide, up from the previous still 70 million people in May last. This information was revealed on Google Chrome is a new event was held.

Google Chrome browser is now in third position in the world browser market with the number 9.26 percent marketshare, according to Net Applications analysis. Similarly, as quoted by TechCrunch,

Sundar Pichai, Google's product manager also memngumumkan that Google Chrome will make the browser more quickly with an increase in units called 'crankshaft'.
READ MORE - Browser Chrome getting Fast with 'crankshaft'

4 Google's New Surprises



Within a day, Google announced four shocks simultaneously. Surprises are joining SAP in Google App Marketplace, Google's online bookstore eBookStore, Google's smartphone Nexus S, and a new advertising service. Fourth announcement disclosed in Google's official blog.

SAP is a major player providing business application provider SAP Streamwork, a shared decision-making applications. This application provides the following virtual discussion tables where voting and polling. As more than 200 applications in the current Google App Marketplace, SAP Streamwork can be accessed by users logged in using the same account.
READ MORE - 4 Google's New Surprises

Smartphone Google Nexus S



Nexus S is the second brand smartphones made by Google to boost the popularity of Android. This is the first smartphone on the market that use the latest version of the Android operating system 2.3 or called Gingerbread. If Google's first smartphone Nexus HTC manufactured phones manufacturers, Nexus S produced by South Korean company, Samsung.

Computational performance supported Samsung Cortex A8 processor (Hummingbird) 1 GHz and 16GB of internal memory memory, and graphical processing units (GPU) of its own. Not only perfectly supports multitasking, Nexus S can also be a Wi-Fi hotspots, supporting the Internet callling, and the first Android smartphone is equipped with a chip called Near Field Communication (NFC) to read digital bar code expected to be used in a variety of future products.
READ MORE - Smartphone Google Nexus S

Chinese official departure of Being Behind Google


Hacker attack on Google that makes this the largest search site leaving the other not diotaki mainland China by a Communist lawmaker in the country. This report is one more successful diplomatic wire memo leaked by the site pembocor documents, WikiLeaks.

As quoted from the pages of The Guardian, Saturday, December 4, 2010, memo confidential diplomatic wires were made by diplomats from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
READ MORE - Chinese official departure of Being Behind Google

Google Cloud Connect, Threat to Microsoft Office


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Google has launched Google Cloud Connect to Microsoft Office, this service could allow users to store office documents that they have in Google Docs.
READ MORE - Google Cloud Connect, Threat to Microsoft Office

Google Services Ebook will present challenging Amazon and Apple

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Google will soon launch an online bookstore and has indirectly challenged the Amazon Kindle, Apple's iBook for the iPhone and iPad.
It is reported by the Wall Street Journal that Google will launch the online bookstores in December this.
READ MORE - Google Services Ebook will present challenging Amazon and Apple

Google released Google Earth 6.0 Beta with 3D view

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This version of Google Earth is a stepping stone for Google, which in this version there are no additional features that are so significant, but the convenience of use and to building on the 3D view is quite obvious that retrieved through Google Street View, other than that displayed all the trees in the form 3D.
READ MORE - Google released Google Earth 6.0 Beta with 3D view

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