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Finally! Google to Offer RSS Feeds for Web Search Results

October 10th, 2008 No comments

googlelogo150.jpgA rumor that’s been floating around the web lately is that Google will offer RSS feeds for new results in basic web search. Today Search Engine Land confirmed that Google will “soon” offer this functionality. Why is this big news? Because there’s no better way to keep track of new mentions of a company, person or concept online than through RSS.

digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/tech_news/Finally_Google_to_Offer_RSS_Feeds_for_Web_Search_Results’;digg_bgcolor = ‘#ffffff’;digg_skin = ‘normal’;As Search Engine Land’s Matt McGee points out in his post, Google is the only major web search engine to not offer feeds for basic web search, as they do in blog search and news. We’d previously recommended Live.com for web search feeds, but who really cares about Live.com search results? They’re terrible. Google feeds are good news.

Google says that the new feeds will be part of the Google Alerts product, which currently delivers e-mail alerts for new search results in web, blog and other result types. Google Alerts are widely used but are, we’d argue, like training wheels for people not yet comfortable with RSS feeds. There’s nothing wrong with that, but many of us want our feeds.

Though blogs and news sites are of growing importance, there’s still nothing quite like good old Web Search for getting a broad picture of who is linking where and what kind of online mentions are occurring. Google says it cannot confirm when the web search feeds will be available.

We hope that Google web search feeds will include “site:” searches for new mentions of keywords inside particular domains (Live and Yahoo do), and that they will deliver nice clean direct URLs – which Live.com feeds do but Yahoo search feeds do not.

There’s still no alerts or feeds available for Google Image Search, probably because the index is so woefully behind the web at large.

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Google Puts Tunes From YouTube a Click Away

October 10th, 2008 No comments

Google Puts Tunes From YouTube a Click Away

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Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

October 10th, 2008 No comments

Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

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Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

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CBS : Social Viewing Room

October 3rd, 2008 No comments



CBS Labs
has rolled out a labs version of a new product called Social Viewing Room, you pick a live show and chat about it with others.

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CBS : Social Viewing Room

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Obama releases iPhone recruiting, campaign tool

October 3rd, 2008 No comments
(Credit: CNET News)

Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign launched an iPhone application on Thursday that turns the vaunted device into a political recruiting tool.

The most notable feature “organizes and prioritizes your contacts by key battleground states, making it easy to reach out and make an impact quickly,” according to the software.

On my phone, the application ranked contacts in Colorado, Michigan, and New Mexico at the top; at the bottom was a friend whose cell phone has a Texas number, though she actually lives in California.

The application anonymously reports back the number of calls made this way: “Your privacy is important: no personal data or contacts will be uploaded or stored. Only the total number of calls you make is uploaded anonymously.”

The software is the latest effort by politicians to capitalize on technology, joining other examples such as ads distributed through YouTube, Web-based fund-raising, Facebook pages and fan groups, and e-mail recruitment drives.

The Obama for America iPhone application is available for download through Apple’s iTunes store, said Raven Zachary, an iPhone consultant who’s directing the launch effort.

A “get involved” feature uses the phone’s GPS-based location sensing to find the nearest Obama campaign headquarters, and “local events” likewise pulls up a list of activities sorted by proximity.

A “media” section provides links to video and photos, but beware: YouTube showed errors following some of the links. Perhaps the newer videos hadn’t been prepared for iPhone display yet.

The application also shows Obama statements to the news media and a guide to Obama’s positions on various issues.

Update 8:50 a.m. PDT: The application shows how many calls have been made nationwide and how many you made. Those statistics are the kind that can motivate people–they can feel like they’re part of something bigger. That may sound a bit silly as a motivational tool, but consider that Smule’s Sonic Lighter application for the iPhone is popular, despite the fact that it costs 99 cents more than its free competition, likely because people can see where else on the globe people are using it and because the longer you run the application, the bigger your own spot on the map becomes. It’s a kind of competition.

Update 9:28 a.m. PDT: The campaign added an Obama iPhone app Web site, too.

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LeWeb?08 Program

October 3rd, 2008 No comments

LeWeb’08 Program

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LeWeb?08 Program

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Customers Get Quick and Easy Access to Over 6 Million DRM-Free Songs from Amazon MP3 On New T-Mobile G1 Powered by Android Software

October 3rd, 2008 No comments
Customers Get Quick and Easy Access to Over 6 Million DRM-Free Songs from Amazon MP3 On New T-Mobile G1 Powered by Android Software

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Customers Get Quick and Easy Access to Over 6 Million DRM-Free Songs from Amazon MP3 On New T-Mobile G1 Powered by Android Software

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Intel Atom rival ships; larger Netbooks coming?

October 3rd, 2008 No comments

Are Netbooks ripe to be resized? Via Technologies thinks so. The Intel-compatible chipmaker says larger Netbooks are on the way.

Via Nano processor

Via Nano processor

(Credit: Via Technologies)

In an interview, Glenn Henry, the head of Via Technologies subsidiary Centaur Technology, said that Via has just begun commercial shipments of its Intel-compatible, power-sipping Nano processor. Centaur headed up development of the Nano processor.

“We just started shipping to customers last week and this week–literally right now,” Henry said.

Henry said there is a lot of demand for larger form factors. “Everyone wants to build a (Netbook) of some variety these days. Most of the interest we see from customers is for a larger screen than the HP (2133). There’s a lot of demand to move those things up to higher screen sizes. I’ve heard customers say they want to build 12- or 13-inch notebooks,” Henry said.

Via’s most illustrious customer is Hewlett-Packard, which currently uses the older Via C7 processor in its 2133 Mini-Note PC.

Though Henry refused to talk about design wins, he did say that there is interest from major companies. “We’ve given them (HP) samples,” he said. Though Henry qualified this by saying that Via has given samples to a lot of potential customers. “There’s a great deal of interest in the part from people whose name you would recognize,” he said.

The Nano processor is seen as the only real competition for Intel’s popular Atom chip, which is used in Netbooks from a long list of companies including Acer, Asus, Lenovo, and Dell.

2.6-pound HP 2133 Mini-Note uses the Via C7 processor

The 2.6-pound HP 2133 Mini-Note uses the Via C7 processor.

(Credit: Hewlett-Packard)

There is one crucial difference with the Atom. Nano has a thermal envelope of 5 watts at 1GHz. Though this is low compared with a standard Intel Core 2 mobile processor (typically drawing 25 watts to 35 watts), this is higher than Intel’s single-core Atom chip for netbooks which tops out at just 2 watts. At 1.3GHz, Nano has a thermal envelope of 8 watts, approaching that of Intel’s dual-core Atom.

Why the difference? Nano uses a more sophisticated superscalar, out-of-order design, while Atom has a more simple “in-order execution” architecture. Because of Nano’s more complex design, it may deliver better performance than Atom in some cases.

The thermal envelope, however, is important because it can influence the design of a Netbook-type device. Typically, parts with lower thermal envelopes can go into smaller devices.

On the upside, Nano can be plugged directly into a design that uses the older C7 processor. “One of the very interesting things about the Nano is that it’s plug compatible with our current C7s. You can plug the part into the same socket.” Though some adjustments must be made: A BIOS upgrade is necessary and “more importantly the part has a different power-versus-megahertz (paradigm) compared to the current part because it’s running benchmarks two times faster,” Henry said.

He said products using the Nano processor will not appear immediately. “No product that actually uses this is for sale to the end customer (yet). So the parts we’re shipping are going into the (customer’s) manufacturing process or development process.”

And what about a Via dual-core processor? “We’re working on it. When you see it, who knows. We’re implementing it but it’s not near at hand,” Henry said.

(Note: There are several ways to categorize a design as a netbook. One is screen size. Typically netbooks have 7-, 8-, or 9-inch screens. But this definition is in flux with, for example, the newest Atom-processor-based Eee PC 1000 that sports a 10-inch screen. So, as netbooks get redefined upward, the silicon inside–and other hardware–becomes the defining factor, i.e., low-power, low-performance processors and graphics that dictate how the computer should be used: primarily as a Net-centric device for Web browsing and email. Prices will also typically be lower than standard notebooks.)

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The next Internet

October 3rd, 2008 No comments

The next Internet

9/25/2008 04:34:00 PM

The Internet has had an enormous impact on people’s lives around the world in the ten years since Google’s founding. It has changed politics, entertainment, culture, business, health care, the environment and just about every other topic you can think of. Which got us to thinking, what’s going to happen in the next ten years? How will this phenomenal technology evolve, how will we adapt, and (more importantly) how will it adapt to us? We asked ten of our top experts this very question, and during September (our 10th anniversary month) we are presenting their responses. As computer scientist Alan Kay has famously observed, the best way to predict the future is to invent it, so we will be doing our best to make good on our experts’ words every day. – Karen Wickre and Alan Eagle, series editors

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The next Internet

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Google Blogsearch Relaunches as Techmeme Killer, Across 11 Categories

October 3rd, 2008 No comments

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Google Blogsearch Relaunches as Techmeme Killer, Across 11 Categories

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