Archive for September, 2008

Google is redoubling efforts to offer a digital archive of the world’s newspapers. Two years ago, the search giant began indexing the existing digital archives of papers like The New York Times and The Washington Post, and today, with a post to The Official Google Blog, the company said it’s now working with other publishers to bring a much broader range of old newsprint into the project. “We’re launching an initiative to make more old newspapers accessible and searchable online by partnering with newspaper publishers to digitize millions of pages of news archives,” the post says. “Not only will you be able to search these newspapers, you’ll also be able to browse through them exactly as they were printed - photographs, headlines, articles, advertisements and all.”

Partners include the Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph, the oldest newspaper in North America at 244 years. They don’t include even older papers from across the pond. This newly digitized content is available through the Google News Archive, accessible via the main Google News site. “Stories we’ve scanned under this initiative will appear alongside already-digitized material from publications like the New York Times as well as from archive aggregators, and are marked ‘Google News Archive,’” the post continues. “Over time, as we scan more articles and our index grows, we’ll also start blending these archives into our main search results so that when you search Google.com, you’ll be searching the full text of these newspapers as well.”

Source: Register

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Hollywood actor Brad Pitt has bumped Paris Hilton off the top of the list as the most dangerous celebrity to search for on the Web, according to McAfee researchers. Altogether, fans surfing the Web for “Brad Pitt,” “Brad Pitt downloads,” and Brad Pitt wallpaper for items like screen savers and images have an 18 percent chance of becoming infected with online security threats such as spyware, spam, phishing, adware and viruses. McAfee researchers found that when a search was conducted for “Brad Pitt screensavers,” more than half the resulting Websites were identified as malicious, containing spyware, adware and viruses.

“Brad Pitt” Web pages were followed by those of singer Justin Timberlake for riskiest male celebrity search subject on the Internet. Meanwhile, Beyonce and Heidi Montag topped the list for most dangerous female celebrity. Visitors entering Beyonce ringtones into a search engine often are directed to risky Web sites that promote fake offers to gather users’ personal data. A search for “The Hills” star Heidi Montag elicits numerous Web sites offering wallpaper downloads infused with malware.

Malicious sites with Brad Pitt replaced those featuring Hollywood socialite Paris Hilton, who headed McAfee’s 2007 list of most dangerous celebrities. Neither Hilton nor pop singer Britney Spears — ranked fourth last year — made the 2008 most risky celebrity to search for on the Web. Malware generally encompasses any malicious code, including viruses, worms, spyware and Trojans, which are often silently installed on users’ PCs unbeknownst to them. Reasons for planting malware with celebrity lures range from promoting a spam product to more insidious objectives such as stealing passwords or financial and personally identifying information.

Source: CRN

Tags: brad pitt, common malware, malware target
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Have you been drooling over the latest screenshots of Windows Live wave 3? Now get yourself in on the action. Microsoft is launching the official Windows Live Wave 3 beta today. Watcher of all things Microsoft Live, LiveSide.net has the links to the official downloads from Microsoft, that include the latest versions of Live Messenger, Movie Maker, Mail with Calendar synchronization, Writer, Photo Gallery, Family Safety and the Outlook Connector. These downloads have been confirmed as functional, and in the case of Windows Live Messenger will install “Version 2009, build 14.0.5027.908?

Source: Neowin

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The first mobile telephone using Google’s Android software has been unveiled. The T-Mobile G1 handset will be available in the UK in time for Christmas. The first device to run the search giant’s operating system will feature a touch screen as well as a Qwerty keyboard. It will be available for free on T-Mobile tariffs of over £40 ($80) a month and includes unlimited net browsing. Other features include a three megapixel camera, a ‘one click’ contextual search and a browser that users can zoom in on by tapping the screen. The handset will be wi-fi and 3G enabled and has built-in support for YouTube. Users will also have access the so-called Android Market, where they will be able to download a variety of applications.


Google announced its plans for the Android phone software in November 2007 with a declared aim of making it easier to get at the web while on the move. To help develop Android, Google also unveiled the Open Handset Alliance - a partnership of more than 30 firms that would work to make phone software easier to work with. The group includes operators such as Telefonica, handset makers such as HTC and Motorola as well as chip makers such as Intel and Qualcomm. The Android software is squarely aimed at the smartphone segment of the handset market which adds sophisticated functions to the basic calling and texting capabilities of most phones. Current estimates suggest that only 12-13% of the all handsets can be considered smartphones.

Source: BBC

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Google Inc., which is celebrating its 10th birthday this month, today unveiled a $10 million effort to implement ideas that can “change the world by helping as many people as possible.” As part of the Project 10^100 (pronounced Project 10 to the 100th), Google plans to ask its users to submit ideas until Oct. 20 for ways to improve people’s lives. Google will choose what it feels are the 100 best ideas and then allow its users to vote on which of them should be funded. The users will narrow the results to 20 finalists, and a panel of judges will choose up to five ideas that will receive funding, Google said.

Google noted that the ideas can be big or small, technology-driven or not. But they do have to have a potential positive impact on the world. The company cited an example of two people coming up with an idea to help millions of people carry water long distances by designing the Hippo Water Roller, a relatively inexpensive 24-gallon container that can be easily wheeled on the ground. The categories for the project include, but are not limited to, community, energy, environment, health, education, shelter and opportunities for people to better provide for themselves and their families.

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Google Inc has bought Korean blogging software developer Tatter and Company, the two companies said on Friday. The companies did not disclose how much Google paid for the acquisition. Tatter co-chief executive Chang-Won Kim announced the deal on his personal blog in an entry titled “We’ve been Googled!”, saying that the acquisition would help Google increase its market share in the country. Kim described Google’s market share in Korea as “minor” and said Korean Web users mainly use portals such as Yahoo Inc’s.

Korea has the ninth-highest number of Internet users in the world, according to Internet World Stats, a Web site that tracks such data. Google said in an e-mailed statement the acquisition will “allow us to enhance our publishing tools in Korea.” Tatter owns a blogging platform called Textcube, which Kim said was popular among Korean bloggers. Blogs are Web journals where people typically write opinions and link to other material on the Internet. As part of Google, the company will try to introduce Textcube to bloggers outside Korea, Kim added. Google already owns a blogging software called Blogger, which it acquired in 2003.

Source: Reuters

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2ND SITE OF THE MONTH : September 2008
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Tags: chang-photography.com, September. Photography, site of the month


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Google sees the future of computing at sea.

The search giant has filed a patent for a “floating data center” that uses wave motion to power on-board computers and the ocean’s water to cool them.

The patent was submitted in February last year but was spotted in the U.S. Patent & Trademark office’s electronic filings and posted at Slashdot on Saturday.

The system Google engineers sketch out is a self-powered data center placed three to seven miles offshore, potentially operating off the grid. Standard shipping containers would house racks of computers that could be transported by truck and placed onto a boat by crane.

A wave-power generator would be the primary source of electricity. But wind turbines could be used to, for example, run water pumps and a tidal power generator could be used in rivers.

The patent specifies the use of a so-called Pelamis machine, which uses pontoons with pumps to convert wave motion into electricity. A British company, Pelamis Wave Power, is operating a prototype in Scotland and intends to install one off Portugal.

Google engineers calculate that an array of pontoons spread over a square kilometer (a bit more than a half mile) could produce 30 megawatts of electricity, enough to operate a single system.

Also envisioned is equipment to use the direct current electricity to run DC-capable computers, which some people consider more energy-efficient than using alternating current.

Server makers and data center operators are already circulating water to cool computing gear. Google’s patent application envisions using the ocean to act as a giant heat sink, cooling computers through seawater-freshwater heat exchangers.

For the crew and operating staff, there could be living quarters and, potentially, a helipad to get there.

Seeking fortunes at sea
With the rising cost of electricity and concerns over the environment, getting cheaper and cleaner forms of electricity is a big concern for data center operators.

Google argues that floating data centers offer other advantages, such as placing computing closer to consumers, cutting down on transmission distances.

“Also, transient needs for computing power may arise in a particular area. For example, a military presence may be needed in an area, a natural disaster may bring a need for computing or telecommunication presence in an area until the natural infrastructure can be repaired or rebuilt,” according to the patent application.

Google is not the only company to envision modular, container-based data centers or even floating data centers.

A San Francisco company, International Data Security (IDS), plans to pack discarded cargo ships with computing equipment.

The company intends to have its data center ships placed near urban centers and have one operating by the third quarter of this year.

According an IDS company blog, the primary motivation for IDS’s floating data center is the higher cost of building a land-based facility, the resistance to earthquakes and other natural disasters, and the potential to tap water cooling.

“It seems [Google's] plan is slightly different than IDS; IDS floating data centers will be anchored in port the majority of the time, whereas Google’s will be positioned out at sea,” according to a company blog post on Saturday.

The financial model of operating a data center at sea may be the most clever aspect to the patent application, argues Larry Dignan, editor-in-chief at ZDNet Asia’s sister site ZDNet. In theory, a floating data center would not have to pay any property taxes, he said.

Rich Miller at Data Center Knowledge said the Google plan could invoke different legal definitions of territory boundaries.

“The offshore location also raises interesting questions about jurisdiction, and which laws would govern the handling of any consumer data managed from the floating data centers. U.S. territorial waters typically extend 12 nautical miles, but other nations’ claims range from 3 miles (Singapore) to 200 miles,” he wrote.

This article was first published as a blog on CNET News.com.

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The highest resolution commercial Earth imaging satellite to date, the GeoEye-1, was launched over the weekend on a Delta-II rocket that carried the Google logo alongside the GeoEye logo on its side. The satellite was built as part of the U.S. National Geospatial Agency’s NextView program under which the agency shared the costs of engineering, construction and launch of new generation satellites to support the commercial satellite imaging industry. For the GeoEye-1 satellite the agency funded about US$237 million of the total $502 million price tag. The agency has also committed to buying imaging data from the satellite for at least the first year and a half of operations.

Google will also be buying images taken by the satellite to supplement those it already uses in its Google Earth and Google Maps services. GeoEye-1, which was launched at 11:51 a.m. Saturday morning, is capable of shooting 41-centimeter black and white images and 1.65 meter color images. The measurements refer to the size of the smallest thing that it can see from its orbit 681 kilometers above the Earth’s surface. U.S. regulations mean the highest resolution images available to commercial customers will be at 50cm, but while not the best the satellite can offer, is still double that of the current best-resolution image available from GeoEye’s Ikonos satellite.

Source: PC World

Tags: google maps, google new high res maps, maps
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