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Chrome 2.0 Offers Thumbnail Control, Tabs Options.

Gives users the option to remove thumbnails from the New Tab Page.

google_chromeGoogle has released an update for Google Chrome via its Preview Channel which gives users the option to remove thumbnails from the New Tab Page .

The latest Chrome version for those signed up for the Preview was released on Thursday.

Along with more control over the thumbnails this version also gives users the option to undo an accidental tab close. This very useful undo close tab feature has been incorporated owing to increased demand for the same. Chrome’s Beta and normal versions already come with the feature; but you would require to open a new tab and then click on the recently closed options.

The aforementioned features are available only for those who have signed up for the Dev Channel releases.

For normal beta seekers, Google has announced an update to the existing Beta version on Wednesday . This one fixes some bugs and crashes.

April 20th, 2009 | 1 Comment

Updates to Browser-based Gmail Points to Mobile Trend.

Browser-based Gmail Points to Mobile Trend

Browser-based Gmail Points to Mobile Trend

Google has improved access to Gmail from Android devices and iPhones, pointing to a potential trend toward more Web- and browser-based mobile applications.

Key to the updated Gmail, accessible through the browsers on iPhones and the Android G1 phone, are changes that let people use the service even while their mobile connections are flaky or unavailable, Joanne McKinley, a Google mobile engineer wrote on a company blog. Users will be able to open recently read messages and compose new mails even when out of range of wireless service, she said.

“All this is achieved with aggressive caching and by leveraging new browser technologies, like HTML5 and Gears. The full impact of this new architecture isn’t visible yet, but it will enable us to significantly improve performance and quickly roll out new features in the near future,” she wrote.

Such developments could make browser-based mobile applications more common, a trend that could help solve the fragmentation issues that are slowing down application development in the mobile environment.

“The Web could be a universal access platform” for mobile applications, said Christy Wyatt, vice president of software platforms and ecosystems for Motorola, speaking during a panel discussion last week at the CTIA conference in Las Vegas. Wyatt and others discussed the difficulties that developers have because of the many, incompatible mobile phone platforms. Developers currently must rebuild their applications to work on the various platforms if they want a wide potential audience. The Web could serve as an open development platform for applications accessible from any Web-enabled phone so that developers don’t have to rewrite their apps.

While there are shortcomings to building Web-based applications for mobile phones — namely that mobile networks aren’t always reliable and developers can’t leverage all mobile phone capabilities in Web applications — the executives said those are not insurmountable problems.

Adobe’s runtime environment provides offline capabilities so even when applications are Web-based they can run offline, said Danny Winokur, senior director at Adobe.

Eventually, essentially any application that now requires software on the device will be able to be run from the Web, said Sumit Agarwal, head of mobile product management for Google in North America. “What apps can you say can’t use the browser? Before, you didn’t have access to location [from the browser], now you do,” he said. “Maybe soon we’ll have access to the camera and the speaker. It’s not clear to me what aspect of the device you won’t have access to in the browser.”

Winokur agreed. While there currently may be performance issues, extension capabilities within runtime environments let developers plumb many of the capabilities of the device up to the runtime layer, he said.

“They’ll get more sophisticated,” said Jason Kenagy, vice president of product management at Qualcomm, of mobile Web-based applications. Kenagy works on Qualcomm’s Brew application development platform.

The Gmail update should also make the application work faster when users do things like open a message, navigate and search, McKinley said. It also includes a couple of other changes such as a “floaty bar” that stays on the screen as users scroll through messages and that contains options to archive and delete messages.

April 8th, 2009 | Leave a Comment

Google Voice App Coming to iPhone.

Google Voice App Coming to iPhone

9:11 pm, April 6th, 2009, Pete Mortensen

Sean Kovacs brings word of GV Mobile, his new iPhone and iPod Touch client for the Google Mobile service, which should be available early next week. Google Voice is a remarkable service built on an old start-up called GrandCentral that Le Goog acquired a few years back. Basically, it allows you to consolidate all of your phone numbers to a single number, control who can call you, screen calls, listen in to voice mail as it records, send free text messages, and transcribe your voicemail. It can even allow people to dial your phone by clicking on a link on a web page. And since it initiates calls, not just placing them, iPod touch users can create a phone call to a different device!

And GV Mobile packs most of that into a handy-dandy iPhone OS app. The video’s pretty slick, and it seems to carry over most of what makes Google Voice so much fun. For now, it’s available only to those who had GrandCentral accounts and those who know folks at Google, but this should be a great companionreplacement to the main iPhone dialer once the service goes more mainstream. Now, if only the free SMS was two-way… no one would ever pay for AT&T’s overpriced SMS plans again…

April 7th, 2009 | Leave a Comment

Tesla Motors Model S Backed by Google Founders Brin, Page

Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are two of the investors pumping money into Tesla Motors, which has revealed the prototype for its all-electric, zero-emission sedan, the Model S. Drivers will theoretically be able to monitor the car’s electric charge via an iPhone or laptop. Tesla represents an attempt by Silicon Valley to build a car company, and will rely on government money to put the Model S into production.

The vehicle, which can accelerate from 0-60 mph in under 6 seconds and hit a top speed of 130 miles per hour, will feature a 17-inch touch-screen with 3G connectivity, allowing drivers to check Google Maps or other data. The car’s electrical charge could also theoretically be monitored via an iPhone or a laptop, according to the company.

Tesla hopes that the Model S will eventually lead to a mass-produced electric vehicle, but production hinges on whether the Department of Energy will provide a $350 million loan to help kick-start production.

“This is just the first of many mainstream cars we’re developing,” Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, said in a statement. Musk was a co-founder of PayPal and founder of SpaceX.

Musk went on to cite the ownership cost of the Model S, should it enter production, as “similar to a gasoline car with a sticker price of about $35,000″ once the lower cost of electricity versus the likely future price of gasoline was taken into account.

The company anticipates that the base price of the Model S will stand at $49,900, once federal tax credits totaling roughly $7,500 are factored in; it will come with a choice of batteries with either a 160-, 230- or 300-miles-per-charge range.

Deliveries of the vehicle will begin in 2012; those interested can visit this site to put their name on what will presumably be a long waiting list, if sales of the Roadster, Tesla’s first electric car, are any indication.

The Roadster, currently in production with a price of just over $109,000, can go from 0-60 mph in 3.9 seconds and travel 244 miles per charge. There is a substantial waitlist for the vehicle, which was unveiled in 2006, three years after the founding of Tesla Motors.

Starting this spring and continuing through 2009, Tesla will open stores in Chicago, London, New York, Miami, Seattle, Washington and Munich.

Both Page and Brin, who’ve made no secret of their green IT leanings, were early investors in the company.

Should the Model S enter production, it may very well have a variety of technologies already in place to help meet drivers’ commuting IT needs. Intel rolled out four new Atom processors on March 2 designed to fit into a wider variety of devices, including those embedded in car dashboards; those processors will be paired with the Microsoft Auto software platform, designed to provide features such as mobile device integration and speech recognition.

The Model S’s promised 3G connectivity will allow drivers to connect with Google Maps, Internet radio and other tools.

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The electric Tesla Roadster in Silicon Valley-Test driving

March 29th, 2009 | Leave a Comment

Google rolls out semantic search capabilities.

Google takes a first step toward the future of search engine technology
Google search result - Picture
Google has given its Web search engine an injection of semantic technology, as the search leader pushes into what many consider the future of search on the Internet.

The new technology will allow Google’s search engine to identify associations and concepts related to a query, improving the list of related search terms Google displays along with its results, the company announced in an official blog on Tuesday.

For example, Google’s search engine, upon encountering a query like “principles of physics,” now understands that “angular momentum,” “special relativity,” “big bang” and “quantum mechanics” are related terms, the company said.

Ori Allon, technical lead of Google’s Search Quality team, said in an interview Tuesday that the search improvement involves a dollop of semantic search technology mixed in with a big helping of lightning-fast, on-the-fly data mining.

“This is a new approach to query refinement because we’re finding concepts and entities related to queries while you do a search, so everything is happening in real time and not [pre-assembled],” he said. “Because we’re doing it in real time, we’re able to target many more queries.”

The use of semantic search isn’t more broad at this point because full conceptual analysis of documents would slow down the process of generating query refinements on the fly, Allon said. “If we want to get it all done in a matter of milliseconds, there’s a lot of innovations we still have to do. A full semantic search would be very hard to do in this limited amount of time,” Allon said.

This is a big stumbling block that semantic search engines often run into: scaling their technology to the speed and volume of a massively used service like Google’s.

“We’re working really hard at search quality to have a better understanding of the context of the query, of what is the query. The query isn’t the sum of all the terms. The query has a meaning behind it. For simple queries like ‘Britney Spears’ and ‘Barack Obama’ it’s pretty easy for us to rank the pages. But when the query is ‘What medication should I take after my eye surgery?’, that’s much harder. We need to understand the meaning,” said Allon, who came to Google in 2006 when the company hired him after his ‘Orion’ Ph.D. project on search engine technology caught Google’s attention.

Offering query-refinement suggestions is but the first application of the technology behind these enhancements, so users can expect other concrete improvements applied to things like search ranking, he said.

“The main Google infrastructure now is able to have a better sense of what is the context of the query and what are its related concepts, and how they relate to each other,” he said. “So this is the first of what we hope will be many other applications that we’re working hard to incorporate into search quality.”

Google has often been criticized for using what is considered an aging approach to solving search queries based primarily on analyzing keywords and not on understanding their meaning.

Google executives over the years have acknowledged that semantic search technology will be an important component of search engines in the future.

“Right now, Google is really good with keywords and that’s a limitation we think the search engine should be able to overcome with time,” Google Vice President of Search Products – User Experience Marissa Mayer said in an interview with IDG News Service in October 2007. “People should be able to ask questions and we should understand their meaning.”

She cautioned, however, that Google sees semantic search technology as part of the algorithmic mix, not as a replacement to its traditional keyword-analysis approach.

“I think the best algorithm for search is a mix of both brute-force computation and sheer comprehensiveness and also the qualitative human component,” she said.

In January of this year, during Google’s fourth-quarter earnings conference call, CEO Eric Schmidt touched briefly on this topic, hinting that the company is getting more serious about semantic search technology. “Wouldn’t it be nice if Google understood the meaning of your phrase, rather than just the words that are in the phrase? We have [done] a lot of discoveries in that area that are going to roll out [soon],” Schmidt said.

There is an entire field of Google competitors that are busy developing and perfecting semantic search engines, betting that they will be able to deliver on the promise of this technology: to let users type in queries in natural language and have the search engine understand their meaning and intent.

Microsoft last year acquired Powerset, one of these companies, in order to improve its Web search engine with semantic search technology.

Google also rolled out on Tuesday another enhancement to its search engine: longer “snippets,” which are the text excerpts Google extracts from Web sites to show in search results where the query keywords appear.

Critics have often pointed out that these excerpts aren’t very useful in previewing enough context so that users can decide whether to click over to the Web site.

Now, when people enter queries that are three words or longer, Google will deliver longer snippets in order to provide users with a better view as to how their query keywords appear on the Web site.

It remains to be seen if Web site publishers will cry foul over longer snippets. In the past, publishers have sometimes complained that search engine abstracts that are too long give away too much of their sites’ content. This in turn, they say, could cause potential visitors to not click over to the page, particularly if the abstract, or snippet, gives them the information they’re looking for.

This is an area where search engines have to strike a delicate balance between fulfilling their mission — giving their users the most precise information possible related to their query — and not violating the copyrights of Web site publishers.

March 28th, 2009 | Leave a Comment

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