Posts Tagged ‘google’

Google invites Microsoft Office users onto its cloud

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Google released Google Cloud Connect for MS Office users

Google has released its Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office users that have yet to discover Google Docs.

Google Cloud Connect allows Microsoft Office users to collaborate, share and synchronise Word, Excel and Powerpoint files. The plugin gives users the ability to upload files to Google’s servers and have a unique URL.

Due to Microsoft’s half-hearted support of Office for Mac, Google’s Cloud Connect plug-in is only available for Windows users. Google said, “Unfortunately due to the lack of support for open APIs on Microsoft Office for Mac, we are unable to make Google Cloud Connect available on Macs at this time. We look forward to when that time comes so we can provide this feature to our Mac customers as well.”

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Google Updates Social Search

Friday, February 18th, 2011

google-social-searchGoogle’s efforts to infuse its services with social elements have been relatively lackluster when not being outright stumbles, like the company’s privacy-challenged launch of Buzz last year. Google has a popular social network, Orkut, but that popularity remains confined to Brazil. And the service has been losing ground to Facebook in critical markets like India.

Google hopes to deploy more compelling social offerings this year and its latest effort along these lines demonstrates at least that the company is serious about social connectivity. Google is weaving social into search, its core service.

Google on Thursday said that it has begun mixing social content — friends’ posts to various services like YouTube, Flickr and the like — with its algorithmically determined search results.

So if your friends blog or tweet about their favorite coffee shops, your searches for coffee will return their musings, provided your friends aren’t posing somewhere that Google can’t reach, like past Facebook’s privacy settings.

Previously, social search results were more like the dregs of relevance, settling at the bottom of the search results page were they were less likely to be noticed.

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Google “Street-View” on Art

Friday, February 4th, 2011

If you can afford to take a trip around the world to some of the world’s famous museums, no need to worry, Google has you covered.

google-art-project

The search engine has announced a new art project where one can Google any piece of art in the world and experience it, as if they were actually in the museum.

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Google Claims Bing Copies Its Search Results

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

bing-logoAfter noticing curious search results at Bing, then running a sting operation to investigate further, Google has concluded that Microsoft is copying Google search results into its own search engine.

That’s the report from Search Engine Land’s Danny Sullivan today, who talked to both companies about it and presented Google’s evidence. According to the report, a mechanism could be the Suggested Sites feature of Internet Explorer and the Bing Toolbar for browsers, both of which can gather data about what links people click when running searches.

The story began with Google’s team for correcting typographical errors in search terms, which monitors its own and rivals’ performance closely. Typos that Google could correct would lead to search results based on the correction, but the team noticed Bing would also lead to those search results without saying it had corrected the typo.

Next came the sting, setting up a “honeypot” to catch the operation in action. Google created “one-time code that would allow it to manually rank a page for a certain term,” then wired those results for particular, highly obscure search terms such as “hiybbprqag” and “ndoswiftjobinproduction,” Sullivan said. With the hand coding, typing those search terms would produce recognizable Web pages in Google results that wouldn’t show in search results otherwise.

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Facebook Places Deals to Target Local Business Ads in UK and Europe

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

Facebook made a significant move into the potentially lucrative local business advertising space on Monday with the launch in the UK and other European countries of Places Deals, which gives users discounts and benefits with nearby shops, restaurants and venues through their mobile phones.

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Launched in the US last November, Facebook Deals lets users ‘check in’ to venues via the Places feature on its mobile app for iPhone, Android and through facebook.com on some smartphones.

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