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Tampilkan postingan dengan label google. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label google. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 24 April 2011

Sony Ericsson’s First Android Phone- Sony Ericsson W8

Sony Ericsson has just made an announcement of its first handset from walkman series to run Android OS.  This is the first step to enter into Android Smartphone lists.A new Android powered smartphone namely, Sony Ericsson XPERIA W8 with Walkman logo and it runs on Android 2.1 operating system with Timescape UI.
Sony-Ericsson-W8-(1)
The newest smartphone has many more high-end features like 3-inch capacitive touchscreen display with resolution of 320 x 480 pixels, 3.2 megapixel camera, a full Qwerty keypad, 3.5mm headphone jack etc. The touchscreen enabled smartphone of Sony Ericsson supports up to 16GB expandable memory through micro SD card slot and comes included with 2GB memory. User can access more than 150, 000 apps from the Android market.

Sony Ericsson W8 Features and Specifications

  • Processor: 600MHz
  • O.S : Android 2.1(Éclair)
  • Display: 3.0 – Inches TFT capacitive touchscreen display
  • Resolution: 320 x 480
  • Camera: 3.2 MP with Geo Tagging
  • Internal Memory: 168 MB RAM
  • External Memory : 16GB
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
  • Battery: 4.76hrs TalkTime
  • Dimensions: 99 x 54 x 15mm
  • Weight: 104g
  • Micro USB 2.0
  • Integrated Social Networks Like Facebook, Twitter
  • Music Recognition
  • FM Radio
  • WebKit Browser
Smartphone price is not yet announced. It will be available in China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Hong Kong, Philippines, Taiwan and India in Q2 of 2011.The device will be available with Orange, Red and blue colors and will be available from quarter to 2011

Rabu, 06 April 2011

Google and partners offering free .ca domains and hosting for Canadians

8VTH7CT5BASR Google and partners offering free .ca domains and hosting for Canadians.Last Tuesday, Google and several partners in Canada including RBC Royal Bank, Rogers Communications, The Globe and Mail, and the Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) launched the "Get Your Business Online" initiative targeted at small businesses in Canada. This exciting new move offers small businesses in Canada a free .ca domain for one year, paid for by Google. There are also free hosting and free website creation tools provided by San Francisco-based Yola, and free resources tailored for small businesses provided by the other GYOP partners. And finally, as a small cherry topping, Google is including a $75 coupon for advertising on Google AdWords.
So what is Google's motivation behind this initiative? According to the Financial Post, in a survey conducted by Angus Reid on behalf of Google, only a million of Canada's estimated 2.2 million small businesses have an online home. 71% of small businesses did consider having their own website, but 66% of respondents felt they lacked the technical expertise to create and maintain web pages, and less than half thought the costs of maintaining these sites was out of their reach.
Although designed for small businesses, individuals can (technically) take advantage of this offer provided they have a credit card with a Canadian billing address. Don't be alarmed though - the credit card is only used to verify an individual's residency in Canada and will not be charged. In addition, users who prefer to use another hosting service other than Yola may choose to migrate their domain away at no charge after 60 days, as per the CIRA rules.
To get started, head over to www.gybo.ca.

Rabu, 30 Maret 2011

With +1, Google Search Goes Truly Social — As Do Google Ads

Back in early December of last year, we first reported that Google was toying around with the name “+1″ for an upcoming social product. At the time, we were told it was sort of like Google’s version of the “like” or “retweet” button. Today it officially launches as a way to share Google Search results that you like with your friends and the broader web in general. Oh, and also a way to inject social into Google Ads.
To be clear, the version of +1 which is beginning to roll out today is not the toolbar version that we first got a glimpse of in December, that’s apparently a different version that was being tested. This version of +1 actually launching is a small button that will reside next to each and every Google Search result. If you like the result, you click the +1 button and it gets shared with your social circle — and the public (more on that in a bit).
The button also works on the ads that appear in Google Search. If you like those and think they can be useful to friends, you can also hit the button there to highlight them. That may sound like something no one would ever do, but the implementation is actually pretty smart. You see, since the pages that are linked to in Google ads also appear in Google’s regular index, if a page has ever been +1′d as a regular result, it will also show up as +1′d in the ad.
But let’s take a step back for a second. Google +1 is an extension of what Google has been doing for a while with Social Search, Google’s Matt Cutts tells us. In their most recent update to that feature, results were surfaced and highlighted when someone in your social circle shared something on a social network like Twitter or Buzz. “People really like this aspect of social search,” Cutts says.
At the same time, the current social mechanisms require some work to be useful — you have to explicitly share a link somewhere. You might not want to do that with every link you like. And that’s where the +1 button comes in, it’s a simple way to indicate you like a page and think it might be useful to others. Again, basically a “like” button.
Cutts wants to be very clear that this +1 data is public. While a big aspect of +1 is sharing results with your social graph (which is still sort of confusing given that Google isn’t an actual social network, so it’s Gmail chat contacts, Reader and Buzz friends, etc) , it is also about using that data in aggregate to highlight better results for everyone. For example, on a result that has been +1′d, you’ll see if any of your friends have +1′d it (in a similar way to the current Social Search look with people’s tiny profile icons under the result itself). But you’ll also see that X number of other people that aren’t in your social circle +1′d it as well.

This also ties directly into Google’s push to make all Google Profiles public. If you’ve upgraded to the new Google Profile, you will have a new +1 tab that will keep track of all the results you’ve clicked the button for. From here you can easily remove any result as well if you no longer want to publicly indicate that you like it. And when you’re adding +1 to search and your profile (it will be opt-in at first), you’ll notice that there’s a check box to opt-out of using your +1 information to “personalize content and ads across the web.”
The last bit is key there. Ads.
Again, you’ll be able to +1 any Google ad you see in results just as if it were a regular result. This is similar to the concept Digg has been using with Digg Ads (ads that you can digg), and sort of like the way you can retweet any Twitter Promoted tweet. Of course, it’s most like the way that you can “like” any ad on Facebook as well.
At the end of the day, that’s what this really all comes down to. Whether they’ll admit it or not, Google is at war with Facebook for control of the web. Facebook is coming at it from a social perspective, Google from a data perspective. But the two sides have been inching closer to one another. Facebook isn’t fully doing search — yet. But their social ad play is also a huge threat to Google. Probably even a bigger threat, since that’s the way Google makes the vast majority of their money. And +1 is a big attempt to keep pace with Facebook in that regard.
The key that Google isn’t really touting yet is that +1 data can be used to make ads social not just on Google Search result pages, but also across the whole web. If you have a site that runs AdSense ads, it may now feature +1 data in addition to the ad. And these newly social ads require no changes from advertisers. The bidding model doesn’t change at all and as a bonus +1 data will now be included in reports, Google’s Christian Oestlien says.
Guess who else would like to do the same thing with ads across the web given the social data that they have? Yep — Facebook.
At the same time, Google has had many failures in the social space. And they realized that with +1, they couldn’t afford to have some big hyped-up launch once again. So they’re purposely taking it slow. There will be no +1 buttons for publishers at launch that will be blanketed across the web (but you better believe they’re coming). There will be no toolbar that spreads across other Google properties (that may be coming). There will be no mobile app or aspect (that is likely coming as well). The feature itself will roll out slowly and will at first be an opt-in one found in Google’s search experiments area.
But make no mistake, this is a massive Google project. And eventually it will hit all users — and not just those logged into their Google accounts. Down the line, Google can envision this +1 data influencing search results across the board, Cutts says. That’s what we call “downplaying” — assuming people use it, the social data is very likely to be the key ingredient to the future of Google Search.
For now, you can enable +1 here.

Google mimics Facebook with new +1 button

In Google's (GOOG, Fortune 500) latest attempt to become relevant in the social networking space, the search giant on Wednesday unveiled a new tool that allows people to share helpful search links with their friends.
The +1 button will soon appear next to links on Google's search results page. By clicking the button, users will be able to recommend links to their list of Gmail chat buddies and those in their Gmail "My Contacts" group. The button will work both with search links and advertisements on the results page.
In a blog post introducing the feature, Google declared that the +1 button is "digital shorthand for 'this is pretty cool.'" It's meant to help guide friends through search results, allowing them to see what people they know think is most useful. It adds a human element to Google's automated search algorithm.
As an example, Google said that if you're looking for a new pasta recipe, search results could be populated with +1's from your "culinary genius" friend. You could also, for instance, see how many people recommend your local coffee shop.
For now, Google is limiting +1 to its search results, but in the coming weeks, the company said it will start introducing the buttons on other Google products.
Google also plans to offer the buttons up to third-party websites, as Facebook did with its Like button. It currently has such a button for Google Buzz, and some analysts speculate that +1 will eventually replace the Buzz button.
Google has struggled to develop its social business. Its first attempt at a social network, Orkut, has not caught on in most places in the world (though it remains popular in Brazil). Its second attempt, Buzz, encountered a Buzz-killing privacy debacle at launch.
In an ironic twist, Google also on Wednesday announced a settlement deal with the Federal Trade Commission over charges stemming from its Buzz misfire. The FTC said that Google "used deceptive tactics and violated its own privacy promises" when it launched Buzz. The company has agreed to implement a privacy program and undergo independent privacy audits for the next 20 years.
The +1 launch appears to be part of what outgoing CEO Eric Schmidt described as "layers" of social across the Web rather than yet another attempt at a Facebook-like social network solution. Schmidt has repeatedly maintained that Google does not compete with Facebook, saying Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) is the company's biggest rival.
Still, Facebook is dashing past Google in many Internet milestones. Last year, the social network topped Google for the lead in the number of website referrals. Web users now spend more time on Facebook than Google. And most recently, according to Hitwise, Facebook passed Google as the most-visited website on the Internet.
For now, however, Google says it is focused on social as a way to power search. It's experimenting with the idea that those you know will be even better search guides than its famed algorithms. 
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Google settles with FTC, unveils new social tool

(GOOG 582.10, +0.26, +0.05%) apologized for glitches related to its Buzz service, which triggered litigation and scrutiny from regulators following complaints about user control of private information. The company said that it’s reached an agreement with the FTC whereby it will be required to have its privacy and data protection practices audited by an independent third party every two years, for the next 20 years.
“We don’t always get everything right,” Alma Whitten, Google’s director of privacy, product and engineering wrote in a company blog post. “The launch of Google Buzz fell short of our usual standards for transparency and user control — letting our users and Google down.”
The FTC said that following the launch of Google Buzz, the Internet giant received thousands of complaints from consumers “who were concerned about public disclosure of their email contacts which included, in some cases, ex-spouses, patients, students, employers, or competitors.”
“Although Google led Gmail users to believe that they could choose whether or not they wanted to join the network, the options for declining or leaving the social network were ineffective,” the federal agency said in a statement.
The proposed settlement would bar Google “from misrepresenting the privacy or confidentiality of individuals’ information,” the FTC said. The agreement is subject to final approval after a public comment period, the FTC said.
Even as it settled thorny issues related to Buzz, Google unveiled a new service aimed at tapping into the online social-networking trend that’s propelled younger firms such as Facebook Inc. to success. The new service is called “+1.”
The new feature allows users of Google’s market-dominating search engine to flag particular search results and advertisements for friends and contacts, by clicking on a +1 button.
Google identifies a user’s network by tapping into his or her chat and email contacts.
“We’ll be slowly rolling out +1’s, starting in English on Google.com,” Google product manager Rob Spiro wrote in a post on a company website, adding that, “in the weeks ahead they’ll appear in many more places (including other Google products and sites across the web).”
Google has sought to assert itself in the social-networking market in a number of ways over the years, in addition to Buzz. Its Orkut social-networking service has become popular in some foreign markets, but has failed to take hold in the U.S. Meanwhile another service for blending social-networking tools and messaging, called Wave, was scuttled last year.
Google’s new +1 feature is similar to the “Like” feature available to Facebook users, which enables them to recommend items to contacts with a single click.
Facebook, too, has been the subject of widespread privacy complaints, and has come under FTC scrutiny as a result. The closely-held firm has nonetheless grown rapidly to an estimated 600 million users, and is expected to undertake a high-profile initial public offering of shares next year.
In addition to Facebook, other relatively young firms making their mark on the social-networking business include Twitter Inc., the closely-held microblogging service, Zynga Inc., which develops social games including FarmVille, and LinkedIn Corp., the provider of a professional online networking service that has filed papers for an IPO.
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Google Settles With FTC Over Google Buzz

Google Inc. agreed to strict privacy rules and said it would ask users before sharing their data with outsiders, in a proposed settlement of government claims that it violated users' privacy at its social network, Google Buzz.The proposed settlement with the Federal Trade Commission, announced Wednesday, requires the Web-search giant to develop a "comprehensive privacy program" and to submit to independent privacy audits every two years for the next 20 years.
The FTC said it marked the first time a company had agreed to implement a wide-ranging privacy program that will cover future as well as current products. The agreement protects people's names and e-mail addresses, as well information about their contacts, location and unique identifiers transmitted by their computer or cellphone. The settlement could serve as a model for restrictions on other tech companies.
"We are sending a signal that we want companies to be accountable for their privacy policies," said Jessica Rich, deputy director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
In its complaint, the FTC alleged that Google used "deceptive tactics and violated its own privacy promises to consumers" when it launched Buzz last year. Google initially made some Buzz users' contacts, such as the address book, automatically visible to others, angering many users. Google later changed the settings so that contacts were kept private by default.
The requirement under the settlement to seek user permission before sharing data with outsiders, known as "opt in," is unusually strict. It could hamper, at least temporarily, Google's ability to compete with rivals such as Facebook Inc. and Apple Inc., which don't need to seek user permission.
"Facebook gets to continue to do opt-out and Google has to do opt-in," said Christopher Soghoian, a privacy researcher who worked briefly for the FTC last year.In a blog post, Alma Whitten, Google's director of privacy, said the privacy misstep with the launch of Google Buzz "fell short of our usual standards for transparency and user control." She said Google is now "100% focused on ensuring that our new privacy procedures effectively protect the interests of all our users going forward."
At the time, Google's privacy policy said it would ask users for permission to use personal information with outside companies "in a manner different than the purpose for which it was collected." Google later had removed that language from its privacy policy, according to the FTC complaint. The settlement would effectively restore that policy for data shared outside of Google. It doesn't apply to data Google shares within the company.
The FTC also charged Google with violating the terms of a privacy trade agreement with the European Union, which governs the transfer of personal data from the EU to the U.S. The FTC said it was the first time it had alleged substantive violations of the pact.
The FTC has become more aggressive in protecting online privacy. In December, the agency called for technology and advertising companies to develop a "do-not-track" mechanism that would allow Internet users to opt out of online tracking.
At a Senate hearing earlier this month, FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz said that The Wall Street Journal's "What They Know" series on online privacy prompted the agency to "step up our enforcement efforts."
Sen. John Kerry (D., Mass.) said that the Google settlement underscores the need for a federal privacy law that would make all companies adhere to similar standards. "Every company should adhere to this kind of standard, not just Google," Mr. Kerry said.

Google chooses Kansas City for ultra-fast Internet

The year-long wait is over: Google announced Wednesday that it has chosen to deploy its ultra-fast broadband network in Kansas City, Kansas.
Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) will provide broadband Internet access to the city with speeds of about 1 gigabit per second. That's around 100 times faster than what most Americans have available to them today. Google said that the network's speed would be fast enough to download a high-definition, full-length feature film in less than five minutes.
The decision follows Google's March 2010 announcement that it would build and test-drive a new, high-speed fiber-optic network in a U.S. community. Nearly 1,100 cities applied, with some going to great lengths to try to influence Google's choice. Topeka, Kansas, even renamed the city "Google" for a day, which Google later poked fun at in an April Fools gag.
In a blog post, the search giant thanked all the various communities for their interest, but said it chose Kansas City after "a careful review." Google said that it was looking for a city where it could "build efficiently, make an impact on the community and develop relationships with local government and community organizations."
Kansas City has a relatively small population of about 150,000, which may have influenced Google's decision.
The company said it has signed a development agreement with the city and will work with local organizations, companies and universities to build out the network. Google expects the service to go live early next year.
Google said the network would offer wire-line service directly to consumers' homes at "a competitive price." The network will be built by Google, but consumers will be able to choose their service provider.
The goal of the project, according to the company, is to "make the Web better for users." Google's view is that faster Internet speeds have always led to new platforms, innovations and businesses. For instance, YouTube, iTunes and Skype would not have taken off had most of America not upgraded from dial-up connections.
America's average download speed of 4 megabits per second ranks 15th in the world, according to the Information Technology Industry Council. President Obama and the Federal Communications Commission have long advocated for faster speeds to increase the country's global competitiveness.
And if you're bummed out that your community wasn't chosen, Google offered this little ray of hope: "We'll also be looking closely at ways to bring ultra high-speed Internet to other cities across the country." To top of page
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