May
2
2009
theodp writes “The WSJ reports that the controversial practice of framing seems to be making a comeback on the Web. Big sites like Digg, Facebook, Ask.com and StumbleUpon have all begun framing links recently, joining the likes of Google, which employs the technique for Image Search. Long ago, Jakob Nielsen argued that ‘frames break the fundamental user model of the web page,’ but, today’s practitioners contend, ‘it’s a feature, not a bug,’ and say it provides publishers with massive distribution they wouldn’t otherwise have.”

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Comments Off on Controversial Web "Framing" Makes a Comeback | tags: facebook, google, web | posted in technical news
May
2
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “Dow Jones reports that Hulu scored a big victory when Disney agreed to take a nearly 30% stake in Hulu and put full episodes of its ABC TV shows on the site, enabling users to see shows like Lost, Scrubs, Ugly Betty and Desperate Housewives for free. Disney views the move as a way to reach a new audience that isn’t coming to the network’s own website. Although the ABC.com website has attracted regular viewers of its shows, Hulu offers the opportunity to tap into a new group of viewers. Now Google is under mounting pressure to add more professional content to YouTube in order to attract more advertisers. According to Dow Jones’ Scott Morrisson, the equity structure of the Disney-Hulu deal suggests that content creators want greater involvement in online distribution than Google has offered with YouTube. ‘Content providers don’t want to give (YouTube) content because the advertisers aren’t there yet,’ said Edward Jones analyst Andy Miedler.”

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Comments Off on Disney-Hulu Deal Is Ominous For YouTube | tags: google, network, news, tv, web, youtube | posted in technical news
May
2
2009
suraj.sun tips news that Google and 47 other companies are being sued over use of the “Android” name. Eric Specht of Android Data alleges that Google “stole first and asked questions later.” According to The Register, “Google applied for a trademark for Android in October of 2007, but had that application denied in February of 2008. The USPTO’s reasoning for the denial was simple: Since both Google and Specht were involved in the development of software and related services, ‘consumers are likely to conclude that the goods are related and originate from a single source.'” Reader ruphus13 points out related news that Motorola is planning several Android-based phones for later this year.

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Comments Off on Google & Others Sued Over Android Trademark | tags: consumers, google, mobile, news, Phone | posted in technical news
May
2
2009
Many of us have been saying it for a long time: location based services are the future. But up until now they’ve been a distant, hazy future, because they’ve been so difficult to use. That’s going to change soon, and it looks like Google is going to be leading the way.
Comments Off on Google Becomes Default Location Provider For Firefox | tags: google | posted in technical news
May
2
2009
Google has added the ability to search Google directly within Gmail, a move that increases the centrality of the e-mail service and gives Google a new opportunity to show advertisements.
Comments Off on Google Bulks Up Gmail With Built-In Search | tags: gmail, google | posted in technical news
May
1
2009
Paul Buchheit built the first version of Gmail in one day. Then he built the first prototype of Google’s contextual advertising service Adsense, in one day as well. …
Comments Off on The Man Who Made Gmail Says Real-Time Conversation is What’s | tags: gmail, google | posted in technical news
May
1
2009
Death Metal notes an EFF report on information wrested from the FBI over the last three years via Freedom of Information requests. The report characterizes what Ars Technica calls the FBI’s “Everything Bucket” — its Investigative Data Warehouse. (Here’s the EFF’s introduction and the report itself.) The warehouse, at least 7 years in the making, “…appears to be something like a combination of Google and a university’s slightly out-of-date custom card catalog with a front-end written for Windows 2000 that uses cartoon icons that some work-study student made in Microsoft Paint. I guess I’m supposed to fear the IDW as an invasion of privacy, and indeed I do, but given the report’s description of it and my experiences with the internal-facing software products of large, sprawling, unaccountable bureaucracies, I mostly just fear for our collective safety.”

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Comments Off on A Look Into the FBI’s "Everything Bucket" | tags: google, microsoft, privacy | posted in technical news
May
1
2009
Google has launched a video campaign to promote its Chrome browser, which is every bit as innovative as the comic-book it commissioned for the browser’s launch. The 11 short videos guide you through just what Chrome is capable of, and even have their own YouTube channel. The films (mostly animations) are all under two minutes long and attempt to
Comments Off on Google Chrome moves from comics to videos | tags: cap, google, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
30
2009
The immensely popular BitTorrent client uTorrent recently added a Google powered torrent search engine to its website. This added search capability used Google’s custom search program and allowed visitors to search for .torrent files on Google. For reasons unknown, Google appears to be blocking the use of its search technology on the site.
Comments Off on Google Custom Search Cuts uTorrent Off | tags: cap, google, program, technology, web | posted in technical news
Apr
30
2009
Google’s search data may have been able to provide an early warning of the swine flu outbreak — if the company had been looking in the right place.
Comments Off on Google Could Have Caught Swine Flu Early | tags: google | posted in technical news