Archive for May, 2008

Google previews Android phone

Friday, May 30th, 2008

As reported on Telegraph.

Google has unveiled a number of new features of the Android mobile phone at a developer conference.

At the demonstration in California it was revealed that owners will be able to unlock the device by drawing a secret shape on the screen.

Along with the ’signature unlocking’ the phone boasts several more predictable feature including an internet browser, map software, compass, multimedia applications, text messaging, calendar functions and email - as well as a phone.

The phone, tipped to rival Apple’s iPhone, is based on Android, a mobile phone operating system launched by Google last November.

The operating system is backed by an alliance of more than 30 mobile phone operators, handset makers, software firms and component manufacturers. HTC, Samsung, Motorola have said they will produce handsets that will run on the Android OS.

Android is an open-source operating system, and while Google will be supplying many applications, developers will be encouraged to create their own.

Google has declined to give a definite release date, but Android project leader Andy Rubin says they’re committed to meeting a deadline in the second half of 2008.

Strategy Analytics, a research firm, has estimated that Android will be installed on two per cent of smartphones by December. This, however, is likely to only be the beginning of a period when all phones begin to resemble computers much more closely; Android is Google’s bid to establish a potentially lucrative dominance in the mobile OS market that could be comparable to Microsoft’s dominance in the PC market.

It is estimated the mobile advertising market could be worth more than £5.5 billion by 2011.

[via Telegraph]

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Google Vs. Facebook

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

As reported on Forbes.

Competition is heating up between Google and Facebook for control of the universe of Web application developers.

But those attending a developer conference put on by Google this week aren’t taking sides–at least for now–despite an imminent site redesign by Facebook that could impede the growth of independent Web applications.

To give its site a cleaner look, Facebook will restrict the number of Web apps displayed on users’ profile pages. This means that most apps, which range from music recommendations to virtual vampire bites, will be hidden from view and likely won’t get passed around the Web as easily.

(more…)

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Microsoft surrenders libraries to Google

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

As reported on The Inquirer.

MICROSOFT has finally surrendered something in the great battle for online services to its rival Google.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the Vole is calling it quits on plans to scan libraries and make contents available online.

It looks like the idea will not be able to turn a dollar, however it might help humanity preserve its knowledge and understanding.

Writing in his bog, Satya Nadella, senior vice president of Microsoft’s search and advertising group said that Vole would kill off two sites for searching the contents of books and academic journals.

Live Search will send Web surfers looking for books to non-Microsoft sites.

Apparently, Microsoft will be focusing on something called “verticals with high commercial intent” which we think means “stuff that will make us money.”

Nadella said that making huge wodges of cash will be a key feature of the next generation of search, not providing knowledge to the great unwashed.

The Vole has been scanning books since 2005 and has been giving information to the Open Content Alliance.

It will give publishers copies of the 750,000 books and 80 million journal articles it has scanned in.

[via The Inquirer]

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Viacom suit is Net killer, Google claims

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

As reported on The Register.

Viacom’s copyright infringement lawsuit against YouTube threatens the way that hundreds of millions of people use the internet, YouTube owner Google has said in its court defence.

YouTube is accused by media conglomerate Viacom of copyright infringement in a $1bn court case that could prove a vital testing ground for the legal basis of businesses grounded in user-submitted content.

Google said that it not only complies with US copyright law, but that it goes “far beyond” its legal obligations in the way that it protects content producers and owners.

(more…)

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Google’s Page Goes To Washington To Promote ‘White Spaces’

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

As reported on InformationWeek.

Google (NSDQ: GOOG) co-founder Larry Page intensified the campaign to make “white spaces” spectrum available for use by mobile phones and other wireless devices in a visit to Washington lawmakers this week.Page toured the Federal Communications Commission and Congress during the week, meeting with FCC officials and members of Congress, including John Dingell, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Underlying issues are whether the slivers of unused spectrum will cause interference with other spectrum and whether white spaces could be auctioned.

(more…)

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How long does it take you to type?

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

We all know that typing on mobile phones can sometimes be a headache — especially if the phone in question has a small 9-key keypad. On those kinds of devices, we estimate that it takes an average of 40 seconds and 41 key presses to enter a query. When it comes to key presses, that’s more than double what it takes on other phones!

In an effort to help our mobile users, we studied the effect of incorporating a feature like Google Suggest on mobile phones with 9-key keypads. We found that these users respond favorably to query suggestions: Users who were shown suggestions while typing their query rated their overall enjoyment higher and perceived workload lower than users who were not shown suggestions. Users who were shown suggestions also reduced their overall key presses by half. Surprisingly, the time to enter a query for these users was not significantly less than the average time needed to enter queries for users who were not shown any suggestions.

You can find a more complete discussion of our results and findings in the PDF version of “Query Suggestions for Mobile Search: Understanding Usage Patterns.” It was presented at the CHI-2008 conference last month. Also, we’ve incorporated Google Suggest on Google’s iPhone interface, so try it out if you haven’t already!

[via Official Google Mobile Blog]

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Pitiless Google Steals Search Share From Rivals

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

As reported on PC World.

Extending its dominance in the search market, Google grew its share of queries in April at the expense of rivals Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL and Ask.com.

Google’s U.S. search query share in April grew to 61.6 percent, up from 59.8 percent in March, comScore announced Thursday. Google accomplished this although the number of search queries dropped 2 percent overall in April to 10.58 billion, compared with March, comScore said.

So even with the overall monthly decline, Google managed to increase its search queries by 1 percent, from 6.44 billion to 6.51 billion.

(more…)

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Live Search Cashback: Microsoft gives you cash to ditch Google

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

As reported on Salon.

For years, Microsoft has been trying to beat Google in the search engine business. The software company has tried various strategies — redesigning its search engine, pouring boatloads into search engineering, offering to buy Yahoo, and now, according to reports, it’s discussing a deal to purchase only Yahoo’s search engine. Nothing’s worked; Google now conducts two out of every three Web searches, and its share is growing, while Microsoft’s is declining.

(more…)

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Android Global Time

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Google announced today the release of a new open source sample application called AndroidGlobalTime. It’s a 3D world clock developed by an engineer at Google and may serve as an illustrative example of how to use the OpenGL ES APIs in your Android applications.

You can find it at the apps-for-android project page.

Just a quick word on how to use AndroidGlobalTime. When you launch it, you’ll see a spinning globe showing day and night regions. Pressing the space bar will overlay an analog clock with the time corresponding to location you’re currently examining. The arrow keys allow you to spin the Earth and traverse through different time-zones while the clock is displayed. Pressing the center key in the emulator toggles between a 3D and 2D view of the earth. Pressing the L key will turn the city lights on or off. You can also zoom-out by pressing 2 and zoom-in by pressing 8.

[via Android Developers Blog]

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Google or Microsoft: Yahoo Should Pick Both

Monday, May 19th, 2008

As reported on The New York Times.

Yahoo might well be able to have its Google cake and eat Microsoft’s market share too.

Faced with the prospect that Yahoo might give some of its search advertising business to Google, Microsoft recovered from its “we’ve moved on” tantrum and proposed that it might combine its search ad business with that of Yahoo.

On the face of it, Yahoo now has a real choice between two options that might well help it increase search revenue and still keep its independence.

The most attractive option for Yahoo, however, might be to do both. That’s right: it should merge its search advertising unit with that of Microsoft. And for the year or two (at best) it will take to combine those two systems, it can let Google sell ads on some of its search terms, brining in many hundreds of millions of dollars in much-needed cash.

This is a wacky structure, but it is essentially the same deal Yahoo is discussing with Google now. Yahoo doesn’t want to give up on search ads, presumably on the theory that there is room in the market for a No. 2 player and because search ads are tied at least a bit to display ads, which are essentially its core business. So it wants to take money from Google, in effect, to build its own rival to Google.

Google had a few reasons for talking about a deal that would help its closet rival. Money, for one: each search it can put an ad on is more money in the bank. Moreover, I suspect that Google is so cocky, with at least some reason, that it figures Yahoo won’t be able to catch up, even with a cash boost.

Google also has legal reasons to keep any deal with Yahoo flexible. It has so much market share in search ads that antitrust regulators would look askance at a long-term restrictive contract with Yahoo. (The deal they are discussing would allow others, including Microsoft, to bid for Yahoo’s search ad business. But Google makes so much more money on each search that it presumably would wind up selling most of the ads.)

There are some soft motives for Google as well. Love: Yahoo gave Google its first big break, allowing it to power Yahoo’s search engine. And hate: Google sees Microsoft as its mortal enemy, so it wants to help keep Yahoo out of Microsoft’s hands.

So why would Google agree to a deal even if Yahoo merges its search business with Microsoft? I’m not saying it is likely. But most of Google’s reasons for doing it still apply. It will still make money and at least temporarily increase its share of the search market. It also doesn’t have that much to fear from even a combined Yahoo and Microsoft. And since it is partway down the road toward offering Yahoo this sort of arrangement, why back out now?

Microsoft may find this concept more than a little disturbing. It doesn’t seem to buy the open nature of the proposed arrangement between Yahoo and Google, and it suggested that the proposed deal was one reason it walked away from its acquisition negotiations.

But if Microsoft wants Yahoo to consider its alternative arrangement, it needs to give it all of what it wants: independence, cash now to assuage shareholders, and the ability to have at least a piece of a search advertising business that could rival Google in the future.

Microsoft could do that, without involving Google, with its checkbook. It could offer to pay Yahoo enough cash to cover the gap between what Yahoo would earn on its own search ads and what Google would pay for them.

That is probably the most likely scenario here. (That is on the assumption that Yahoo doesn’t just sell its search ad business to Microsoft.) But it would be very amusing if Yahoo and Microsoft found a way to get Google to put up some of the money they need to build the Google killer they both dream of.

[via BITS of the New York Times]

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