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  • Databases In Caves? A Unique Google Fiber Bid
    By on April 17, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    An anonymous reader writes “Plenty of cities have submitted bids for the Google Fiber project, with most of their bids being centered around the attributes that could describe many communities. Yet one small midwestern town, with much less fanfare than the metropolitan bids, provided an unusual proposition for Google in their likely quixotic nomination. Quincy, IL, has an extensive series of underground caverns that could provide year-round temperature (more…)

  • Google to Open Source the VP8 Codec
    By on April 13, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Several reader noted Google’s reported intention to open source the VP8 codec it acquired with On2 last February — as the FSF had urged. “HTML5 has the potential to capture the online video market from Flash by providing an open standard for web video — but only if everyone can agree on a codec. So far Adobe and Microsoft support H.264 because of the video quality, while Mozilla has been backing Ogg Theora because it’s open source. Now (more…)

  • Adobe Flash Now Officially a Part of Google Chrome
    By on March 31, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    MacGene noted that Google has announced plans to include Flash with Chrome. This step will make Chrome easier for Mom & Pop to use, but comes with a host of issues that have been discussed here before. I expect them to announce Silverlight Thursday.

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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  • Beijing: “Google is Not God”
    By on March 26, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Google’s (GOOG) principled stand in China has very quickly turned into an ugly clash with the country’s government. On Wednesday, The People’s Daily, a mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, lobbed a searing editorial at the company decrying its arrogance and accusing it of collaborating with U.S. intelligence agencies.

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  • Google Hands Out Web Security Scanner
    By on March 22, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    An anonymous reader writes “Apparently feeling generous this week, Google has released for free another of their internally developed tools: this time, a nifty web security scanner dubbed skipfish. A vendor-sponsored study cited by InformationWeek discovered that 90% of all web applications are vulnerable to security attacks. Are Google’s security people trying to change this?”

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

    (more…)

  • Google Reported Ready To Leave China April 10
    By on March 20, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    A number of readers including tsj5j and bruleriestdenis wrote to alert us to this CNET story: “Google is expected to announce on Monday that it will withdraw from China on April 10, according to a report in a Beijing-based newspaper that cited an unidentified sales associate who works with the company. ‘I have received information saying that Google will leave China on April 10, but this information has not at present been confirmed by Google,’ the (more…)

  • Google Awarded Broad Patent For Location-Based Advertising
    By on March 1, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Mashable has a report of a patent that just issued (6-1/2 years after filing) — apparently Google now has a lock on location-based advertising. It’s not clear that the search company intends to assert the patent against any other companies (such as emerging rival Apple), but it’s useful as leverage. Here is the patent.

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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  • Google Phasing Out Gears For HTML5
    By on February 19, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Kelson writes “Have you noticed that there haven’t been many updates to Gears in a while? That’s because Google has decided to focus instead on similar capabilities in the emerging HTML5 standard: local storage, database, workers and location cover similar functionality, but natively in the web browser. Of course, since Gears and HTML APIs aren’t exactly the same, it’s not a simple drop-in replacement, so they’ll continue supporting the current version (more…)

  • Buzz off: Disabling Google Buzz
    By on February 13, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    My colleague Molly Wood called it a privacy nightmare, but to many, Google’s new social-networking tool Buzz is at its root an unwanted, unasked for pest. We didn’t opt in to some newfangled Twitter system and we don’t particularly want to see updates from contacts we never asked to follow creep up in our Buzz in-box.

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  • 10 coolest experiments of Google Labs
    By on February 2, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    When you’ve got thousands of the world’s most brilliant engineers spending 20% of their time on whatever takes their fancy, you get some cool software.

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