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Archive for February, 2007

Quintura Visual Search Engine Relaunches

26th February 2007

Moscow-based search engine Quintura will relaunch its visual search engine with a new user interface.

The company, which is backed by Mangrove Capital Partners (Skype, AllPeers, Piczo, Nimbuzz) and OpenView Venture Partners, has developed technology that clusters related search terms to the initial query and presents those terms as a tag cloud. Users can refine their searches by clicking on any word in the cloud - words that are closer and bigger than other words are more correlated to the initial query than other terms. Mousing over any word in the cloud shows related terms to that as well.

The company wisely moved away from a downloadable search application last year to a pure online service. The new interface moves the tag cloud to the left and search results to the right - previously the search results were below the cloud and seemed somewhat crowded.The site also has decent image and video search, and child-safe search.

Posted in Misc Search | No Comments »

Google Apps Grows Up

23rd February 2007

Back in 2005, Google Apps was conceived in a few lines of code, and then it was born in February 2006. Our team has had such a close relationship with it, you might understand how we have nurtured it as we would a child.

So first there was Gmail for your domain — a limited service that helped organizations like San Jose City College offer personalized Gmail inboxes to all their users. As our little guy picked up new skills (Calendar, Talk, and Page Creator) it grew out of its old name and into Google Apps for Your Domain.

A quick learner, by October Google Apps had perfected 17 more languages, so we could help bring our communication tools all around the globe. Later in the fall, we improved our organizational skills with the Start Page, which brought all the Apps together into a centralized place. Then it was time to start school. Google Apps entered Arizona State University and stood out as one of those high achievers. Today, students and administrators at large universities like ASU and Lakehead are raving about Apps — how it saves money and IT resources, plus make students lives easier with bigger spam-free mailboxes and a set of tools for working together.

Now, I’m excited to tell you that our baby has finally graduated and is entering the business world. Google Apps Premier Edition is a new version designed to take on all the challenges presented by businesses with complex IT needs. For $50 per account per year, you get the whole Google Apps package plus many new business-oriented features, including access to our APIs and partner solutions (so it’s easy to integrate with existing systems), conference room scheduling for Calendar, 10GB of inbox storage, extended business hours phone support, and mobile access to your email on BlackBerry devices (just in case you can’t get enough at the office).

Already, companies big and small, like Procter & Gamble, General Electric Corporation, Prudential, and SF Bay Pediatrics, are talking about how this new version of Google Apps makes it easy to offer low-cost communication and collaboration tools to all their employees so they can get on with what they do best.

Google Apps also won’t forget its roots anytime soon. The Standard and Education Editions will continue to be offered for free, and we’ll keep working on all three flavors of Google Apps with the help of feedback from all of you. As a start, we’ve just integrated Google Docs & Spreadsheets in all three editions so that everyone can share and edit documents online. Since August, we’ve also added five more major features you’ve requested, including customized service URLs (mail.yourcompany.com) and domain registration for organizations that don’t yet have a custom domain. Our appearance has matured too, with updates to the administrator control panel that make it easier to setup and manage your services.

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Google’s Child Safety Initiatives

19th February 2007

Last week, Google participated in a conference in New York, sponsored by CommonSense Media and The Aspen Institute together with several organizations that have a stake in child safety.

The conference organizers convened a panel of experts and executives to address the question “Does the Internet Change Everything?”. Find out what Google’s VP of Global Communications and Public Affairs Elliot Schrage had to say on the topic here.

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It Is About Bloody Time!

16th February 2007

Google announced yesterday that gmail is no longer on their “invite only” service, and is open to everyone now. So if you’ve been patiently waiting to get a coveted @gmail.com behind your name, now is the time!

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In-Game Advertising?

12th February 2007

This is an interesting article that discusses Google’s desire to acquire AdScape Media. The result could be advertising within video games to a demographic with plenty of disposable income.

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Another Company Sets Its Eyes On Surpassing Google

9th February 2007

Powerset a San Francisco based search engine company is close to announcing a new search technology that may propel it past Google. The technology attempts to understand the meanings between words, similar to the way humans understand language, this technology has been coined “natural language”. The technology was developed at Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and has been 30 years in the making.

“The deal is significant because practical use of linguistic technology has eluded Google. The giant search engine has said it wants to implement language-understanding technology one day. However, tests of linguistic approaches haven’t made any difference in Google’s results so far, it says (see our Q&A with Google Director of Research Peter Norvig below; also see his speech last year about this at Berkeley). Google has shunned reliance on word meanings, instead focusing on finding the most popular pages that contain the keywords. As for relationships between words, Google relies on statistical relationships, such as frequency they appear together, but not on linguistic relationships.”

“The deal with PARC, which is owned by Xerox, is Powerset’s answer to its critics, such as search expert Danny Sullivan, who all but heaped scorn on Powerset’s ambitions when we first wrote about them. At the time, Sullivan didn’t know the degree to which Powerset has focused on this.”

“The move is significant because Google’s own technology, based on “page rank,” has been virtually replicated by other search engines like Yahoo and MSN, and so isn’t as difficult to emulate as it was a few years ago. Powerset could possibly steal a lead if it improves search results by a significant measure with natural language and simultaneously incorporates a near-equivalent to Google’s existing capabilities. Powerset has been hiring lots of Yahoo search experts and others, to help it do that.”

“We’d be surprised if Google doesn’t scrutinize Powerset closely, perhaps even consider an acquisition (although in our Q&A today with Norvig, below, he says Google is now working on natural language after all). Until now, though, Google’s disciplined focus on a statistical approach may have blinded it to the possibilities of a linguistic approach, Powerset’s executives say. Powerset plans to launch the search engine publicly this year.”

Read The Full Article Here

Posted in Misc Search | No Comments »

Google Maps Australia!

6th February 2007

Google has released Google Maps Australia. Here is their official blurb:

Many Australians have used our maps and satellite images, so today we’re especially excited to launch Google Maps Australia. We’ve expanded service to include Australian business listings, driving directions, and support for Google Mobile Maps in Australia.

The next time you’re looking for an address, tiger meat pie in Sydney, cafes in Melbourne, or how to get to the beach, Google Maps can help you find the answer. If you’re at your computer, go to http://maps.google.com.au and start searching — you can type addresses or business searches like [cricket near melbourne] all into the same search box. If you want to access Google Maps on your mobile device, go to http://www.google.com/gmm from your Java- enabled phone or Palm device to get started.

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Another Charity-Raising Search Engine

5th February 2007

Another search engine has set itself up as charity donating website. This time around it is Three45.

charitysearch

Just click on the charity you want to help out, and click away.

Posted in Misc Search | No Comments »

Google Gets On The Orkut Wagon

2nd February 2007

We’ve all been obsessed lately with watching videos on the web. And when we come across something that strikes our fancy, we can’t wait to share it with our friends. That got us thinking: rather than sending multiple emails and IMs to share the video URL, wouldn’t it be nice to have a feature for sharing videos on orkut?

From now on, when you see that crazy video you feel is a must see for all your friends, now you can create your own video playlist on orkut to share with anyone who visits your profile. Just copy the video URL from your favorite YouTube or Google Video hosted videos, and your friends can enjoy watching your top videos through orkut. And because we know your friends will love your videos as much as you do, we’ve added an “Add to my favorites” button that lets you easily make your friend’s favorite videos appear on your list.

So next time you log into orkut, sit back, relax, and break out the popcorn.

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