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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Google China news searches now focus on images

Google China news searches now focus on images

By Sophie Taylor

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Google Inc. sought to close in on its China market rival Baidu.com by allowing users of its Chinese site to find news by first searching for images carried within articles.

The Web giants are vying for market share in the world's second-largest Internet market.

Google's move was mainly aimed at catching up with Baidu -- which already offers a similar search function -- as many Chinese Web surfers tend to be drawn more to images rather than immediately seeking out text articles, said Edward Yu, president at Beijing-based research firm Analysys International.

"The first priority for Google China is to try to build up as much traffic as they can in order to close the gap with Baidu, then they can monetize the traffic to get more advertising dollars," Yu said, adding that Google would also need to launch services which are more tailored to Chinese consumers' tastes.

The function was jointly developed by Google's recently established engineering centre in Shanghai, and its centre in California, spokeswoman Jin Cui said on Wednesday.

Google.cn's news page, alongside its traditional search method, now also allows users to first search for an image, which then automatically calls up the link to the corresponding story when the user rolls the mouse over the picture.

The rollout comes after Google said last week it had won preliminary approval from Beijing in its application for a license to provide Internet content in China.

"It's a grey area ... but after they get their ICP license, they can promote many services without worrying about regulatory barriers," said Liu Bin, principal analyst at research firm BDA.

Baidu dominated China's search engine market with a 57 percent share of the 493 million yuan ($64.7 million) in first quarter market sales, compared with Google's near-19 percent share, according to Analysys.

Google's engineering research centre in Shanghai, reporting rather than simply show news search results, while Google is promoting a Chinese-language map search service and online word processing programs. Both are trying to build online library services. ($1 = 7.6189 Yuan)

A Disappointing Redesign For Google Docs And Spreadsheets

A Disappointing Redesign For Google Docs And Spreadsheets


Google has given Docs and Spreadsheets a makeover and added some new features, including support for folders and live search, but while the new interface is looks different, in some ways the new “features” are a step backwards.

Folders were undoubtedly one of the most requested features for Google Docs and they have indeed arrived, however folder support comes at the expense of labels. Label (or tag if you prefer) support has been dropped in the new Google Docs.

Existing users will note that all their tags have been converted to folders which work more or less like labels, but include drag-and-drop support. Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be a way to re-order the folder list hierarchy other than with creative naming conventions.

But the real problem with the new folders is their inconsistent behavior. Files can be be placed in multiple folders, but rather confusingly this only works from the main list.

If you drag a document from the main list to a any number of folders it will be added to those folders.

However, if you are inside a folder and drag a document to a different folder it will be removed from the first folder, which makes for a rather confusing user experience.

People have been clamoring for folders in various Google Apps for some time, however, this implementation may leave many questioning their wishes.

Given that Google is aiming Docs and Spreadsheets at the business crowd, the move to folders makes sense, folders are a much more familiar organizational metaphor and have a somewhat more “professional” feel about them, but in terms of functionality the new folders differ from labels primarily in name.

I always thought of folders and labels as complimentary, so ditching labels in favor of folders seems, well, kind of pointless. Now everyone is going to clamor for the old labels — why not support both?

And the labels to folders move isn’t the only letdown in the redesign. Those using the collaborative features will likely miss the “last edited by” function, which appears to have gone the way of the Dodo (if you know where it went, let me know). Update: according to a commenter below, the “last edited by” function can still be found, it's just buried: “ Check a document, click more actions, click revisions. The second column is last edited by” (thanks Shruti).

Also, while it’s a minor point, I can’t help thinking that interface has a very un-Google feel to it, I don’t mind the re-design, but it looks more like something Yahoo or AOL would come up with.

But the redesign isn’t a total letdown. There are a couple of truly useful features in the new Docs and Spreadsheets. The live search suggestions tool with dynamic results pulled from your document list as you type (think Google Suggest or Apple Spotlight) is a great time saver and the ability to sort documents by collaborator is also quite handy.

Since there doesn’t appear to be a way to revert to the old version, the Google Docs redesign, for better or worse, appears to be here to stay.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Apple's iPhone Will Stream Google's YouTube Videos

Apple's iPhone Will Stream Google's YouTube Videos



Apple's iPhone will allow subscribers to wirelessly stream material from Google's popular video sharing site YouTube.



Apple's widely anticipated music and video playing iPhone will allow subscribers to wirelessly stream material from Google's popular video sharing site YouTube, Apple said on Wednesday.

YouTube has begun encoding its videos in a new format to improve quality and save battery life when viewed over wireless devices.

The iPhone will be the first mobile device to use the new format, Apple said. More than 10,000 videos will be available on the iPhone when it hit stores on June 29, with more material added each week.

AT&T Inc. has an exclusive deal to sell iPhones with its wireless subscriptions.

While the phone will not support AT&T's highest-speed cellular data links, Apple said YouTube would work well on the phone's short-range Wi-Fi network connection.

Prior to the development of the new mobile format, VerizonWireless, a venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group Plc, had an exclusive deal to offer a selection of YouTube videos on its phones.

Verizon Wireless spokesman Jeffrey Nelson said YouTube has been one of its most popular mobile video offerings, frequently taking the top two or three viewership slots.

Apple said YouTube also works on its Apple TV home media hub, which acts as a bridge between a television and desktop computer, playing movies and TV shows.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Adobe joins Google and Microsoft in making programs to go

Adobe joins Google and Microsoft in making programs to go
London, (GUARDIAN NEWS SERVICE)

By Jack Schofield

One of the biggest drawbacks of web-based applications is that you can only use them when you are online - and very often you aren't. But that could change. Google, Adobe and Microsoft are all working to make online applications available while you are offline, or vice versa.

Adobe was the latest to join the fray this week when it released a beta version of the AIR, or Adobe Integrated Runtime. This is the desktop player formerly known as Apollo. But it doesn't just play Flash movies. It also supports HTML, JavaScript, Adobe's PDF and SQLite, the small and highly portable relational database. With AIR, companies that have developed rich internet applications (or RIAs) with Adobe's Flash and Flex products should be able to convert them to run on the desktop, or develop applications from scratch. Adobe is offering a free SDK (software development kit) and a "Developer Derby" to encourage programmers.

Separately, Google is tackling the same problem with Google Gears, which also includes SQLite. Gears provides the local server and database facilities needed to run an online application offline. Google produced a version of its RSS Reader as an example, and you have to switch it to offline mode so it can download feeds before you log off.

Microsoft's offering, Silverlight, starts from the other end - you can take a desktop application and convert it to run in a web browser. It works with IE and Firefox on Windows and Mac OS X. A Linux version may emerge from an outside project. Rather than being a killer app, each system meets different needs, and they seem most likely to co-exist.

Silverlight is best for deploying desktop-style applications - but uses Windows Presentation Foundation, which only runs on Vista and Windows XP SP2, and looks like the worst choice if you want a cross-platform application. Gears is conceptually the simplest, while leaving the developer with the most work to do. And Adobe's AIR provides a runtime product that should be properly cross-platform (it's open source). Also, according to Ben Forsaith, Adobe business development manager, AIR enables applications to run on the desktop without using a browser.

"It gives you the best of the web and the best of the desktop," he says, "but it's about building a whole new experience. We're wrapping our arms around the much broader development community. That's the key advantage for Adobe."

If Adobe sounds unusually cuddly, rest assured: it plans to make lots of money from the server side of AIR applications. Still, the fact that Adobe, Google and Microsoft are now duking it out is a reflection on Sun's Java, which was supposed to provide "write once, run anywhere" capabilities a decade ago.

Java father James Gosling says Adobe has "a toolset that works well for people who aren't engineers. One of the things on our 'to do urgently' list is to pay more attention to that corner of the world."

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Who's Afraid of Google? The New Evil Empire

Who's Afraid of Google? The New Evil Empire



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joshua Greenbaum
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6/7/2007



One of the more significant non-events just happened -– Google’s lukewarm embrace of Salesforce.com – and there’s a lot of speculation about what Google in the enterprise software market would mean. So let’s talk about what Google is really up to first: A clearer understanding of Google’s role in the overall economy will shed some light on what an alliance with Salesforce.com, or any other enterprise software vendor, would mean.

Let’s start by calling Google for what it is: a publishing company that makes money from advertising, one that is so successful that it is slowly sucking the life out of the mainstream publishing business, and along with it the profession of journalism and the role of the fourth estate in modern society.

And let’s also start by calling Google for what it isn’t: a company that will make an impact in the enterprise software space any time soon, deals with the likes of Salesforce.com notwithstanding.


Based on what it’s been able to accomplish to date, I deem this company to be the new evil empire – this from a company whose informal motto is “Don’t be Evil.” Google’s evil is more threatening than anything the original evil empire, Microsoft, has ever succeeded in doing, and in that regard Google has already topped its rival, even if it still hasn’t really made a dent in Microsoft’s core business with its free, on-demand software.

The evil starts with Google’s primary business, search, a content aggregation function that is destroying the value of information on a daily basis. Stewart Brand’s famous claim that “information wants to be free” was really a claim about free access, not free value, but in Google’s hands information has ceased to have value to anyone but Google.

Brand’s free-access dictum was, I believe, what Craig Newmark had in mind when he created Craigslist, which has decimated local newspapers around the country by killing their valuable classified listings. I tend to think of Craig more like an Albert Einstein, an egghead just a little removed from the realities of the destruction he was creating. But if Craig is Einstein, then Google is the Manhattan Project – an assembly of the best and the brightest who, in the process of striking a blow for freedom, end up creating one of the most dangerous geniis ever to escape from the bottle.

The same company that is killing the value of information is also destroying privacy in the process -– something that good old Microsoft never succeeded in doing as well or as insidiously. I’m talking about Google Street View: the absolutely disgusting way in which Street View has become a voyeurs paradise (with contests for the most embarrassing and salacious “view” abounding) is further evidence of the unfortunate impact of the way this company chooses to conduct its business.

Before I close my rant, let me return to my opening paragraph, where I call the Google/Salesforce.com alliance a significant non-event. It’s significant because potential battle lines are being drawn, with Google and Salesforce arrayed against the “old paradigm” of Microsoft, SAP, Oracle, etc. That Google wants to extend its hubris to enterprise software is significant: they must think they can do for mainstream software what they’ve done for mainstream media, the value of information, copyright, etc.

But the deal is decidedly a non-event because it’s about a pretty minor issue -- Google AdWords integrated into Salesforce’s CRM. This certainly is not how Google will destroy mainstream software, nor will it further help Salesforce.com’s attempts at a ‘no software” world. Sorry, AdWords just ain’t enough to revolutionize enterprise software.

And, more importantly, Google really doesn’t have a lot to offer the enterprise customer beyond search. Google’s on-demand Office-wannabe is far behind where Microsoft is taking Office (as in, an interface to enterprise software), and Google’s understanding of the enterprise market in general is so limited that no amount of a Salesforce.com IP infusion will help.

I for one don’t look forward to the day when Google tries to make a serious play for the enterprise, if they ever do. What private information will a Google search yield about your company, when they’re done making the world’s information “universally accessible?” If you’re like me, you’d rather not find out.

Joshua Greenbaum is a principal with Enterprise Applications Consulting, a technology and marketing consultancy in Berkeley, Calif.

The article first appeared on Datamation.com.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Google Hits the Streets, Raises Concerns

Google Hits the Streets, Raises Concerns
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
The Associated Press



Google sign inside Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., May 30, 2007. Google Inc. bills the latest twist on its online maps as "Street View," but it looks a bit like "Candid Camera" as you cruise through the panorama of pictures that captured a fleeting moment in neighborhoods scattered across the country.(AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)



SAN FRANCISCO - Google Inc. bills the latest twist on its online maps as "Street View," but it looks a bit like "Candid Camera" as you cruise through the panorama of pictures that captured fleeting moments in neighborhoods scattered across the country.

In San Francisco, there's a man picking his nose on a street corner, another fellow taking out the trash and another guy scaling the outside of an apartment building, perhaps just for fun or maybe for some more sinister purpose.

Further down the highway at Stanford University, there's the titillation of a couple coeds sunbathing in their bikinis. In San Jose, there's the rather sad sight of a bearded man apparently sleeping , or did he just pass out? , in the shadow of a garbage can, with what appears to be an empty cup perched in front of him.

In Miami, there's a group of protesters carrying signs outside an abortion clinic. In other cities, you can see men entering adult book stores or leaving strip joints.

Potentially embarrassing or compromising scenes like these are raising questions about whether the Internet's leading search engine has gone too far in its latest attempt to make the world a more accessible , and transparent , place.

"Everyone expects a certain level of anonymity as they move about their daily lives," said Kevin Bankston, a staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group devoted to protecting people's rights on the Internet. "There is a certain 'ick' factor here."

Google is hoping to elicit "oohs and ahhs" with Street View, which was introduced on its maps for the San Francisco Bay area, New York, Las Vegas, Denver and Miami earlier this week. The Mountain View-based company already is planning to expand the service to other U.S. cities and other countries.

The feature provides high-resolution photos to enable street-level tours so users can get a more realistic, 360-degree look at places they might go or spots where they already have been. To guard against privacy intrusions, Google said all the photos were taken from vehicles driving along public streets during the past year. The photos will be periodically updated, but the company hasn't specified a timetable for doing so.

"This imagery is no different from what any person can readily capture or see walking down the street," Google spokeswoman Megan Quinn said in a statement. "Imagery of this kind is available in a wide variety of formats for cities all around the world."

Google certainly isn't the first company to venture down this photographic avenue. Amazon.com Inc. launched a similar mapping feature in January 2005 on a search engine called A9.com. That search engine's former chief executive, Udi Manber, now works for Google. And Microsoft Corp. began displaying street-level pictures on its online maps for San Francisco and Seattle late last year.

A9's photographic maps, which were abandoned late last year, raised privacy concerns about women being seen entering domestic violence shelters.

Hoping to avoid similar complaints, Google tried to identify potentially sensitive locations by contacting the Safety Net Project at the National Network to End Domestic Violence, much to the delight of Cindy Southworth, the group's director.

"We were thrilled that a major technology company like this reached out in this way to help protect these victims," she said.

Google also is offering a "help" button on all the street-level photos to provide a link for users to request the removal of an image that is objectionable or clearly identifies a person who doesn't want to be included in the visual tapestry. Company spokeswoman Victoria Grand said Google has fielded "very few" removal requests so far.

Eileen Diamond is hoping she can persuade Google to replace its current picture of a Miami street corner where protesters gather once a week to protest the abortions performed at A Choice For Women. The picture, still available on Google's maps Friday afternoon, includes a cluster of protesters standing outside the clinic, an image that clinic administrator Diamond worries will scare away potential patients or perhaps attract trouble makers to the facility.

"It's sort of disturbing because it's certainly not the kind of message we want to be sending out," said Diamond. "It's already very painful for our patients to come in. We want them to feel safe and protected."

As of Friday, Diamond said she was still having trouble finding the right way through Google's Web site to notify the company she would like the picture removed.

Privacy experts believe these kinds of ticklish situations are bound to arise as technology makes it increasingly easy to share pictures and video on the Internet, pitting the rights of free expression against the rights to personal privacy.

"What you have to do is balance out the perception against the reality and I think in this case, the perception is much scarier than the reality," said Lauren Weinstein, co-founder of People For Internet Responsibility, a policy group.

Because Google's street-level pictures were taken in public places, the company appears to be on solid legal ground, according to both Bankston and Weinstein.

But Bankston doesn't think the law necessarily absolves Google, particularly since the company has embraced "Don't Be Evil" as its creed. He worries that some people in need of psychological or medical help won't seek treatment for fear of being caught in the cross-hairs of Google's cameras.

"There's a distinction between what Google has a legal right to do and what is the responsible thing to do," said Bankston, who believes the company should have blurred the images of unwitting pedestrians before it posted the street-level pictures. "It's a problem we as a society have to grapple with, and I think we are just now seeing the fault lines emerge."

While he thinks some of the issues raised by Google's new service are prime fodder for a healthy debate, Weinstein worries that it might inspire overly repressive laws.

"It's a tough area, but it just seems there is no way around the fact that public spaces are public spaces," Weinstein said. "You don't want to create an environment where it becomes illegal to take photos in public. It can be riskier not to be able to see something than it is to be able to see something."