Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

You Can Now Get All the Benefits of Gmail on Your Other Email Accounts

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If you like all the features of Gmail but don’t want to go through the hassle of creating a whole new email address, now you can “Gmailify” your old email accounts.

Google announced on Wednesday it is enabling Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail and Outlook users to link their existing email accounts to Gmail through the Gmail app to take advantage of its features.

See also: When to use emoji in a work email (spoiler: not with your boss)

To get started, you’ll need to open the Gmail app, sign in to your email account(s) and enable the Gmailify button, Google software engineer Michael Käser in the company blog post wrote. This only works in the Gmail app and will not affect your email accounts otherwise.

By Gmailifying your account, you’ll get access to Gmail’s spam protection and inbox organization (social, updates and promotions sections), search functions and notifications. Interacting with your mail, whether reading or deleting messages, will have the same effect in the original email account’s inbox.

If you want to un-Gmailify your account, you can unlink the button at any time without affecting that email address.

According to the blog post, Google is planning to add other email providers beyond Yahoo!, Hotmail and Outlook in the future.

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Friday, December 21, 2012

Google Maps app for iPhone steers right

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It was one of the biggest tech headlines of the year in September, Apple dropped its contract with Google, which had always supplied the data for the iPhone's Maps app. For various strategic reasons, Apple preferred to write a new app, based on a new database of the world that Apple intended to assemble itself.

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As everybody knows by now, Apple got lost along the way. It was like a 22-car pileup. Timothy Cook, Apple's chief executive, made a quick turn, publicly apologizing, firing the executive responsible and vowing to fix Maps. For a company that prides itself on flawless execution, it was quite a detour.

Rumors swirled that Google would create an iPhone app of its own, one that would use its seven-year-old, far more polished database of the world.

That was true. Today, Google Maps for the iPhone has arrived. It's free, fast and fantastic.

Now, there are two parts to a great maps app. There's the app itself - how it looks, how it works, what the features are. In this regard, few people complain about Apple's Maps app; it's beautiful, and its navigation mode for drivers is clear, uncluttered and distraction-free.

But then there's the hard part: the underlying data. Apple and Google have each constructed staggeringly complex databases of the world and its roads.

The recipe for both companies includes map data from TomTom, satellite photography from a different source, real-time traffic data from others, restaurant and store listings from still more sources, and so on. In the end, Apple says that it incorporated data from at least 24 different sources.

Those sources always include errors, if only because the world constantly changes. Worse, those sources sometimes disagree with one another. It takes years to fix the problems and mesh these data sources together.

So the first great thing about Google's new Maps is the underlying data. Hundreds of Google employees have spent years hand-editing the maps, fixing the thousands of errors that people report every day. (In the new app, you report a mistake just by shaking the phone.) And since 2006, Google's Street View vehicles have trawled 3,000 cities, photographing and confirming the cartographical accuracy of five million miles of roads.

You can sense the new app's polish and intelligence the minute you enter your first address; it's infinitely more understanding. When I type "200 W 79, NYC," Google Maps drops a pin right where it belongs: on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

Apple's Maps app, on the other hand, acts positively drunk. It asks me to clarify: "Did you mean 200 Durham Road, Madison, CT? Or 200 Madison Road, Durham, CT?"

Um, what?
And then there's the navigation. Lots of iPhone owners report that they've had no problem with Apple's driving instructions, and that's great. But I've been idiotically misdirected a few times - and the trouble is, you never know in advance. You wind up with a deep mistrust of the app that's hard to shake. Google's directions weren't great in the app's early days either, and they're still not always perfect. But after years of polishing and corrections, they're right a lot more often.

The must-have features are all here: spoken driving directions, color-coded real-time traffic conditions, vector-based maps (smooth at any size). But the new app also offers some incredibly powerful, useful features that Apple's app lacks.

Street View, of course, lets you see a photograph of a place, and even "walk" down the street in any direction. Great for checking out a neighborhood before you go, scoping out the parking situation or playing "you are there" when you read a news article.

Along with driving directions, Google Maps gives equal emphasis to walking directions and public transportation options.

This feature is brilliantly done. Google Maps displays a clean, step-by-step timeline of your entire public transportation adventure. If you ask for a route from Westport, Conn., to the Empire State Building, the timeline says: "4:27 pm, Board New Haven train toward Grand Central Terminal." Then it shows you the names of the actual train stops you'll pass. Then, "5:47 pm, Grand Central. Get off and walk 2 min." Then, "5:57 pm, 33rd St: Board the #6 Lexington Avenue Local towards Brooklyn Bridge." And so on.

Even if public transportation were all it did, Google Maps would be one of the best apps ever. (Apple kicks you over to other companies' apps for this information.)

Google's points-of-interest database also excels. For example, if you look up a restaurant, you can read the Zagat write-up, read customer reviews, read the menu or even book reservations, right there on the info screen. For 100 restaurants, you can even see interior photos. A single button-tap starts navigation to that restaurant. Compass Mode lets you hold the phone in front of you; as you move it left, right, up and down, the phone's view of place changes accordingly, letting you look all around. It's wild. It's "The Matrix." It's visual teleportation.

Google has even managed to incorporate Google Earth, its zoomable photographic model of the entire world and its oceans. You know, just in case you want to know not just where a building is relative to Detroit, but relative to the Mariana Trench.

It's a lot of features. The big question: How well did Google cram them in without sinking the app with featuritis?

This, it turns out, is the best news of all. The brand-new, completely rethought design is slick, simple and coherent. Google admits that it's even better than Google Maps for Android phones, which has accommodated its evolving feature set mainly by piling on menus.

The new software conceit here is the horizontal swipe. Plotting a trip? Maps shows possible routes on the map; a banner at the bottom summarizes the current traffic and time to destination. Swipe the banner to see the next proposed route.

Look up "Italian restaurants?" A banner shows the ratings and average price for the first one; swipe to see the next restaurant's details, and the next.

And when you're navigating, the current driving instruction appears in a green banner; swipe it to look ahead at the next instruction. (Apple's navigation mode doesn't permit you to look as if you're looking down at the world from a plane, the type sizes of place names contribute to the sense of perspective. They get smaller as they get farther away.

So yes, Google Maps for iPhone is a home run. It is not, however, without its footnotes.

The biggest thing you give up is Siri integration. If you say to your iPhone, "Give me directions to the airport," Apple's Maps app opens automatically, your course charted. It takes more steps to get started in Google Maps.

And despite its superior design and fluidity, the iPhone version of Google Maps doesn't have all of the features of the Android version. It still doesn't let you download and store maps for use when you don't have an Internet connection. It doesn't have indoor maps (of shopping malls and airports, for example). And it doesn't have ads or pop-up offers. (I know - boohoo, right?)

Finally, although Google Maps runs fine on the iPad, it's just a blown-up version of the iPhone version. There's not yet an iPad-specific app.

Google says that goodies like those will be coming soon. But for a 1.0 app, created in the space of only a few months, Google Maps for iPhone is an astonishingly powerful, accurate, beautiful tool. For millions of iPhone owners, it's a drive in the right direction.

© 2012, The New York Times News Service

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Google Play growing faster than Apple's App Store: Report

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Google's online Play shop of applications for Android-powered smartphones or tablets is growing fast, a report released Thursday by market tracker Distimo said.

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The aggregate daily revenue at Google Play shops across the 20 largest countries where they are available climbed 43 percent during the past four months, while sales at Apple's online App Store increased 21 percent.

"Google Play is just starting to rival the Apple App Store in a few countries on a worldwide scale, even though it is still losing in terms of daily revenues," Distimo said in the report.

Apple's App Store catering to its iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices took in more than $15 million dollars a day in November, while daily revenue at Google Play was just shy of $3.5 million, according to Distimo.

"There were many success stories in 2012 about applications that became very successful in a matter of a few days and gathered millions of downloads and revenues," the analytics firm said in the report.

"Looking at the worldwide daily download and revenue volumes, the opportunity is really huge."

Smartphone game application "Draw Something" reached a million users in just nine days, while Asian publisher Naver launched five games in November that quickly became hits.

Naver game application Line Pop was downloaded 1.75 million times within three days of its release, according to Distimo.

A report released this month by research firm IDC projected that Android operating system will power more than two-thirds of smartphones sold worldwide in 2012, and will remain the dominant platform for at least the next four years.

IDC also boosted its forecast for global tablet sales for 2012 to 122.3 million, from 117.1 million, in large part due to demand for Android tablets and the new iPad mini.

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

iOS 6 adopters rise by 29 percent after Google Maps hits iTunes

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Google Maps shot up to 7 million downloads within 24 hours of release, and as time has gone by, reports say that so has the number of users using iOS 6 on their iOS devices. Google maps also became the no.1 free app within hours of its release.
iOS 6 adopters rise by 29 percent after Google Maps hits iTunes
After the Apple Maps fiasco became a world wide web phenomenon, many users refused to upgrade to iOS 6, and many downgraded their iOS back to version 5 (at least those who could). While at the time it was not known whether Google would even release a navigation app for the platform, sticking to the older firmware made sense to many just for the sake of Google Maps.

However, last week Google took the App Store by quite a storm when they released their own navigation app with turn-by-turn voice guided navigation. Also included is a completely revamped user interface and integration with the rest of the Google suite of apps. Given how popular and in-demand Google Maps has been, it’s no surprise that there’s been a 29% jump in the number of users that are now running iOS 6 on their iOS devices.

The sharp rise in number of people now using iOS 6 is no surprise, given that the lack of a competent navigation app was what many people kept clutching dearly to their iOS 5. We’re expecting that more people will soon be upgrading to iOS6 in the coming weeks. If you’ve not upgraded yet, you can do so my connecting your device to iTunes and hitting the update button, or just getting the OTA update through the settings tab on your device.

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

Google Now adds traveller-friendly features, updates Voice Search capability

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Google Now adds traveller-friendly features, updates Voice Search capability.
Cards which are synonymous with Google Now are pulled up based on your search habits and location. Cards are now equipped with the ability to tell you what the weather will be like at your destination and can even automatically pull up your boarding pass once you are at the airport, based on your location data (this facility is currently only available with a US airline, but Google says more airlines will be added soon).

Google Now can also give you a list of events around you, that you can check out once you reach your destination along with a suggestion of websites for you to explore your destination. Also, say if you are at a museum or some historical monument, then using Google Goggles you can learn more about that spot.
Cards which are synonymous with Google Now are pulled up based on your search habits and location. Cards are now equipped with the ability to tell you what the weather will be like at your destination and can even automatically pull up your boarding pass once you are at the airport, based on your location data (this facility is currently only available with a US airline, but Google says more airlines will be added soon).

Google Now can also give you a list of events around you, that you can check out once you reach your destination along with a suggestion of websites for you to explore your destination. Also, say if you are at a museum or some historical monument, then using Google Goggles you can learn more about that spot.
The other major update is with regard to Voice Search. You can now find out which song is playing around you by simply saying “What’s this song?” instead of opening a specific app such as Shazam to tell you that. While looking at products, you can say “Scan this barcode” and Google Now will use the camera on your phone or tablet to look up the product information. You can also update your Google+ status using voice.

This upgrade is available on all devices running on Jelly Bean.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Google updates Drive app for iOS and Android

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Google updates Drive app for iOS and AndroidThe updated Google Drive app for iOS includes ability to manage upload progress, check out the recent uploads in new Uploads section, rich text copy-paste within a doc, better speed and stability, improved contact search for sharing docs. Download the updated Google Drive for iOS here.

The Android update for Google Drive v1.1.470.11 includes the ability to edit Google spreadsheets in new native editor, edit contents of tables, format when copy-paste within Google Docs, single tap to enter edit mode, shortcut to Drive files/folders to homescreen of the device, and send link now supports copying links to the clipboard. Download the updated Google Drive for Android here.

Google has been consistently integrating Drive with other products. Google recently updated Drive, adding the ability to upload up to 10GB in Gmail messages. Last month, Google added support for sharing Drive files on Google+.

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Google unveils $249, ARM-based Samsung Chromebook

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The ARM-based Chromebook includes an 11.6-inch, 1,366-by-768 display. It weighs in at 2.5 pounds and is 0.8 inches thin. Google promised over 6.5 hours of battery life and 100GB of Google Drive cloud storage for two years.

The device includes a VGA camera and ports for USB 2.0 and 3.0, as well as HDMI. There's built-in dual band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 3.0 compatibility.

The Samsung Chromebook runs an ARM Cortex A15 processor known as the Samsung Exynos 5 Dual Processor. Its predecessor, the Samsung Chromebook 550, runs an Intel Core processor.

Chromebooks made their debut in May 2011. They tap into the cloud, allowing you to sign in with your Google account and start working no matter which Chromebook you fire up. The Series 5 Chromebook 550 was released earlier this year for $549.99, and PCMag found it to be "an attractive package that does what it sets out to do." But for the same price, we noted, "you can get an inexpensive Windows laptops that stores more and is useful even when the Internet isn't available."



           
           

That's where the new Samsung Chromebook comes in, Google said today.

"In order to have one, two or more computers around the house, they need to be easy to use and much more affordable. So together with Samsung, we designed a new laptop—the new Samsung Chromebook for $249—the computer for everyone," Sundar Pichai, senior vice president for Chrome & Apps at Google, wrote in a blog post.

Pichai promised a 10-second bootup and instant resume. "High-resolution videos (in 1080p) are beautiful to watch and when using the touchpad, you'll notice smooth scrolling due to a hardware-accelerated user interface," he wrote.

The Samsung Chromebook is now available for pre-order online via Amazon, Best Buy, PC World, and other retailers. It will be in 5,000 Best Buy stores in the U.S., 30 PC World and Currys stores in the U.K., and on Google Play next week.

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Google rolls out Play store seller support in India

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Google has finally included India in the list of countries from where developers can register as Google Checkout merchants and sell paid applications on the Play store.
The move comes in the wake of rising Android device activations in the country, which Google says has gone past 400 percent, and has helped bring millions of new users to Google Play.
Google rolls out Play store seller support in India
“In the last six months, Android users in India downloaded more apps than in the previous three years combined, and India has rocketed to become the fourth-largest market worldwide for app downloads. To help developers capitalize on this tremendous growth, we are launching Google Play seller support in India,” Google said in a blog post.

Inclusion of India to the list comes shortly after the company perhaps inadvertently added it to the paid app list, but removed it later.

Developers from India can now sell apps, in-app products and subscriptions. Payments will be released monthly to local bank accounts, according to the announcement.

“They [developers] can take advantage of all of the tools offered by Google Play to monetize their products in the best way for their businesses, and they can target their products to the paid ecosystem of hundreds of millions of users in India and across the world,” added Google.

If you are an Android developer based in India, you have to sign in to your Developer Console and set up a Google Checkout merchant account. If your apps are published as free, you can still monetize them by adding in-app products or subscriptions. For new applications, developers need to publish the apps as paid, along with selling in-app products or subscriptions.

“When you’ve prepared your apps and in-app products, you can price them in any available currencies, publish, and then receive payouts and financial data in your local currency. Visit the developer help center for complete details,” explains Google.

“Along with seller support, we're also adding buyer’s currency support for India. We encourage developers everywhere to visit your Developer Console as soon as possible to set prices for your products in Indian Rupees and other new currencies (such as Russian Rubles).”

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Friday, October 5, 2012

Google warns of more job cuts at Motorola Mobility

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Google Inc raised its estimate of the cost of job cuts at its money-losing Motorola Mobility unit in the third quarter and warned of “significant” additional charges from further restructuring.

The Google Logo is seen in the background. AFP

Severance-related charges at its mobile phone unit will be 9 percent higher at $300 million, Google said, adding the bill may rise another $40 million in the quarter after the exit of facilities and markets.

“Motorola has continued to refine its planned restructuring actions and now expects to broaden those actions to include additional geographic regions outside of the US,” the company said in a statement.

Google’s broader plan for the money-losing cellphone maker remained unclear.

A spokeswoman said the company was not announcing additional job cuts.

Shares of Google were up 0.7 percent at $767.65 in midday trading Thursday, at a record high.

The Google Logo is seen in the background. AFP

Google acquired Motorola in May for $12.5 billion to bolster its patent portfolio as its Android mobile operating system competes with rivals such as Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

But many investors and analysts have questioned Google’s need to be in the hardware business, where profit margins are lower and Google has little experience.

“There’s some lack of fully understanding beyond those patents what there is for Google to do with Motorola,” said Needham & Company analyst Kerry Rice.

“Investors have been waiting to see if Google keeps it as is, or makes any drastic changes by selling off certain divisions or manufacturing operations,” Rice said.

So far, Rice said Google has kept mum on its long-term plans for Motorola and has kept its focus on making the business less of a drag on profitability.

Motorola’s mobile devices unit has lost money in 14 of the last 16 quarters. In the second quarter, Motorola reported an operating loss of $233 million on revenue of $1.25 billion.

Recent media reports have suggested that Google may sell the Motorola Mobility’s television set-top box business.

The world’s No.1 Internet search company, which is due to report its third-quarter results later this month, has found favor on Wall Street despite the questions about Motorola.

Google’s lucrative search advertising business looks increasingly attractive to investors, compared with social Web companies such as Groupon Inc and Facebook Inc, whose long-term money-making capabilities are less clear, say analysts.

Google said in August it would cut 20 percent of the Motorola Mobility workforce as it moves to make more smartphones and fewer simple mobiles.

The New York Times has reported that Google planned to shrink Motorola’s operations in Asia by exiting unprofitable markets and abandoning low-end devices to focus on a few models.

Motorola Mobility, which has 94 offices around the world, has centralized its research and development in Chicago, Sunnyvale, California and Beijing.

“Motorola continues to evaluate its plans and further restructuring actions may occur, which may cause Google to incur additional restructuring charges, some of which may be significant,” Google said in Thursday’s statement.

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Now, Google Street View also accessible through mobile web browsers

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London, October 5 (ANI): Google has dramatically updated its web-based maps app, which iPhone users can access through their phone's web browser, in a bid to lure users away from apple's maps service.

Apple's maps service has come under fire from users for its poor maps and distorted images.

The Street View service now works on both iPads and iPhones without users having to download an app.

The maps include all of Street View's data, including the ability to walk round inside certain venues, such as this San Francisco bar.

To use Street View on the mobile browser, users simply go to maps.google.com and search for a location. Then click the 'pegman' icon at the bottom right of the screen to access Street View.

"To make Google Maps even more comprehensive, accurate and useful, today we're making Street View available on mobile browsers," the Daily Mail quoted Amanda Leicht, Product Manager Google Maps, as writing.

"With access to Street View on your phone, you can use panoramic, street-level imagery to explore and navigate the places around you, even on the go," she wrote.

The move is aimed squarely at Apple, which was last weeks forced to admit its own version of the Maps apps was a failure.

Google is believed to be working on a map app of its own after Apple dumped it from the built in maps app on iPads and iPhones. (ANI)

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Google launches web micropayment service

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Google has launched a micropayments service for purchasing online content. Called Google Wallet for web content, the search giant is describing the new product as an experiment to see if web users would be prepared to pay for individual pages of content if the buying process was sufficiently

Available from October 3, if it proves successful it would no doubt drive users to Google Wallet and therefore mobile payments, but more importantly, it could prove a major step towards finding a payment model for consuming premium web content -- such as video -- that would be simple, affordable and pain-free enough to serve as an alternative to illegal streaming sites, for instance.

That could be a future use. For now, the service is focused on publishing. Businesses that sign up for the experiment will be able to host a Google Wallet banner on their website and sell their content directly to users who already have Google Wallet. And, to make sure that users are not duped into buying something they didn't want, they are given a free sample of the content before agreeing to buy with a single click.

Although the service is designed for selling online content valued at less than $1, Google emphasizes that it takes refunds seriously and if a user is unhappy with the content they have a 30-minute window in which they can click on the instant refund button; their account is then credited and the content returns to its owner.

Otherwise, the content is theirs in perpetuity, or until the website ceases to exist.

Likewise, to make sure that users are honest, the service tracks individual users to make sure they're not simply using the refund option to consume premium content for free.

Peachpit, Dorling Kindersley (DK) and Oxford University Press are among the first companies to sign up to the Google experiment and with the promise of higher search rankings and higher visibility, it hopes to attract many more.

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Google settles digital book lawsuit with publishers

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Google, operator of the world's biggest internet search engine, announced a settlement of a lawsuit with five publishers over the digital scanning of books. The deal doesn't resolve litigation by authors.
Google settles digital book lawsuit with publishers

The settlement ends the publishers' portion of a copyright infringement suit brought against the company in New York in 2005, Google and the Association of American Publishers said on Thursday in a statement. US publishers can choose to make their books and articles available for the project or have them removed, according to the statement.

Google announced in 2004 a plan to digitally scan books from public and university libraries to provide snippets of text to people who use its search engine. The Authors Guild, individual authors and publishing companies sued, claiming Google hadn't sought authorisation from works' owners. They accused Google of infringing copyrights on a massive scale.

"We are pleased that this settlement addresses the issues that led to the litigation," said Tom Allen, chief executive officer of the publishers' association. "It shows that digital services can provide innovative means to discover content while still respecting the rights of copyright-holders ."

The agreement is with The McGraw-Hill Cos, Pearson Education, Penguin Group USA, John Wiley & Sons and Simon & Schuster, which is owned by CBS. The agreement doesn't require court approval , according to the statement.

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Thursday, October 4, 2012

Google announces Doodle 4 Google India 2012 competition

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Google India has announced its Doodle 4 Google competition for 2012 and has invited school students between the ages of 5 to 16 years across the country to create innovative Google doodles. Winning doodle will be featured as the Google logo on the 14th November, which is also celebrated as Children's Day in the country. This year's theme is “Unity in Diversity”.
 Google announces Doodle 4 Google India 2012 competition
Google says the contest had received more than one lakh entries last year. And this year, the company hopes the participation will increase as the contest will reach 40 cities. Announcing this year’s competition, Nikhil Rungta, Country Marketing Head, Google India said, “Doodle 4 Google is a great opportunity for students to explore the intersection of art and technology, while sharing their talents and creativity on a national scale. Through this program we hope participants will have fun, think creatively and learn something new all at the same time.”

As per the tradition, the participants will be divided in three different categories. Group 1 will feature students from class 1 to 3, Group 2 has students from class 4 to 6 and Group 3 has students from class 7 to 10. The new thing introduced by Google is that the participants will divided into four regions – North, South, East and West. Google will shortlist three students from every region across each of the three groups.

The first round of entries will undergo preliminary judging, post which 12 entries will be announced based on a selection by a panel consisting of independent judges. All chosen entries will be exhibited for public voting, and based on the number of votes, one winner from each group will be selected. The Jury along with the original Google Doodler will then choose the final winning Doodle from all the finalists.

The last date to submit the entry is October 23rd, 2012. Check out other submission guidelines for the Doodle 4 Google competition here.



Take a look at the last year's winning doodle from Noida's Varsha Gupta:

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Google Maps goes underwater, adds coral reef panoramas

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Google has added panoramic images of various coral reefs to its Google Maps. Google has also released photos of six underwater locations, including Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the Apo Islands and several other coral-filled spots throughout the Pacific.
“Today we’re adding the very first underwater panoramic images to Google Maps, the next step in our quest to provide people with the most comprehensive, accurate and usable map of the world. With these vibrant and stunning photos you don’t have to be a scuba diver—or even know how to swim—to explore and experience six of the ocean’s most incredible living coral reefs,” says Google in a blog post.

Google's new initiative is part of Google's World Wonders project, a website that uses Google's Street View Technology to map the lesser known sites across the world.
Google has partnered with The Catlin Seaview Survey, a major scientific study of the world’s reefs, to make the images available to users of Google Maps. According to Google, the Catlin Seaview Survey used a specially designed underwater camera, the SVII, to take these photos.

“Whether you’re a marine biologist, an avid scuba diver or a landlocked landlubber, we encourage you to dive in and explore the ocean with Google Maps,” concludes Google.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

New Guaranteed Google Local SEO based Subscription Exceeding Expectations

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Since Google’s algorithm, Panda and Penguin, update implementations began earlier in 2012, monthly search engine optimization services have been a hot topic in the news. These updates increased guidelines on website optimization such as an increase in number of web spam factors, including keyword stuffing, cloaking, unnatural links and content spinning. Due to these changes to Google’s search engine algorithm some “White Hat” or ethical Search Engine Optimization firms are flourishing with new innovative SEO services with true guarantees.

One example of the companies that are very successful with ethical and innovative services is JubilantWeb, a New York SEO Company. Jubilant Web has introduced a new way for companies to target their local community on Google search via a new “monthly targeted SEO subscription.” The process targets and conforms to various Google algorithm SEO factors with monthly friendly vertical campaigns which allow and highlight higher visibility for their clients.

JubilantWeb’s process involves the standard high level link building from related niche directories and high Page Ranked websites but, unlike the other Search Engine Optimization companies JubilantWeb also implements targeted optimized content, social media highlighting, press release optimization, and targeted online reputation enhancements which Google’s search algorithms heavily favor. These services are now bundled for a monthly guaranteed service in order to proactively provide consistent optimization and increasing traffic and relevance for their clients. As further incentive for local businesses, JubilantWeb has slashed the price of monthly SEO services for 10 to 30 key-phrases. Smart businesses are starting to reap the benefits by utilizing ethical SEO companies such as JubilantWeb that provide real guarantees with constant and proactive monthly SEO services which not only translates to maximum exposure on Google and other search engines, but an increase to their bottom line.

JubilantWeb.com: NY SEO Company, NY Marketing Company

For Engage Newswire services contact news(at)EngageNewswire.com

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Google Stock At An All-Time High. Did Apple Help Them Out?

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I know, I know. You’re tired of hearing about Apple Maps in iOS 6, but it’s a hot topic. Because of it, Google is being discussed in the news more and more. The fruits of that labor is now reflected in its stock price, which has surged to an all-time high of $747.90.
103113529_f56de8c39d_z (1)

Does this Apple Maps thing have anything to do with it? Probably not directly, but as people look for places to put their money, it’s safe to say that Google Maps making news lately certainly doesn’t hurt the bottom line for the search giant.

Apple stock is currently down $15.93. That also has a lot to do with Apple “missing” analyst expectations on iPhone 5 sales, which I think is a load of bunk.



I’m certainly no stock expert, but it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know that once your company and products start getting discussed a lot, people are going to take notice. Google Maps is a superior product to one that just got launched as part of the biggest campaign by Apple yet, the iPhone 5.

Will this stock price stick for Google? It’s still early on a Monday, so my guess is…yes. As these two companies continue going toe-to-toe, these kinds of fluctuations will be increasingly more interesting in the future.

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Google updates Android books app to match rivals

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With maps an improbably hot topic in tech these days, perhaps its no wonder that they're coming to more remote corners of Google services. Today's product: the Google Play Books app.

An update pushed today brings location awareness to e-books.
Google Play Books will now include information from Google Maps.
Google Play Books will now include information from Google Maps.
Google Play Books will now include information from Google Maps.
(Credit: Google)

"Starting today, when you come across an unfamiliar geographic location -- a faraway city or distant mountain range -- you can tap on the location to learn more about it," the company said in a blog post. "You'll see an info card with a Google Map and the option to get more information by searching on Google or Wikipedia."

Translation features have also been added to the app -- just highlight words and phrases and tap to see an option to translate them.

Other updates help bring Google Play Books to parity with rival apps from Apple, Amazon and others. A dictionary feature allows users to define a words with a tap; highlights and notes can now be added to the app as well -- and they'll synchronize across devices. A sepia reading theme and new page-turn animation round out the upgrades.

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Today Google's 14th Birthday

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Google Brazil chief arrested over YouTube video

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Police announced the arrest of the head of Google Brazil over his refusal to remove YouTube videos that allegedly slander a mayoral candidate.

But as the crime that Fabio Jose Silva Coelho is accused of has "low potential to offend" he will not remain in custody, federal police said in a statement.

An electoral court has said Silva Coelho committed the crime of "disobedience" by not removing two videos that "slander, insult and defame" Campo Grande candidate Alcides Bernal.

The videos accuse the candidate of "instigating abortion, drunkenness, physical injury of a minor, illicit enrichment, and contempt as well as prejudice against the underprivileged," according to the indictment.

The tribunal, in the southwestern state of Mato Grosso do Sul, also asked Google to block YouTube in the town of Campo Grande, or the entire state, for 24 hours.

The first round of municipal elections in more than 5,000 Brazilian cities is scheduled for October 7.

The arrest warrant against the Google Brazil president was issued last week by a regional electoral tribunal judge, and another judge rejected an appeal by Google this week.

Google denied the videos were negative campaign ads and a spokesman for the Internet giant said the company was not responsible for the content posted on YouTube.

Google is facing similar problems over other Brazilian election campaign videos posted on YouTube.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Google Nexus 7 goes on sale in Japan

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Google Nexus 7 goes on sale in Japan

TOKYO: Google started selling its Nexus 7 tablet in Japan, deepening the competition with Sony, the Japanese hardware maker whose tablets also run on the world's No.1 search engine's operating system.

By taking a greater role in the tablet arena, Google hopes to ensure that its online services remain at the forefront for consumers, as tablets increasingly become gateways to the Web and Web-based content such as movies and music.

Sales of the 7-inch 16-megabit tablet began on the Google Play website on Tuesday with a starting price of 19,800 yen ($250). The device will be available in retail stores from October 2.

Japan is the first country in Asia outside Australia to sell the device. According to the Google Play page it's already available in France, Germany, Spain, Canada, the UK and the US.

Google's Android operating system on smartphones and devices now has over 500 million users, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt said, adding that he predicts that growth in the smartphone market will lead to a boom in new startups around shopping in Japan.

"It is the defining platform and the defining battle in our industry," Schmidt said at a briefing in Tokyo.

The tablet market is dominated by Apple and its iPad, which represented about 70 per cent of global sales in the second-quarter, and includes Amazon.com Inc's Kindle, Barnes & Noble's Nook and Samsung Electronic' s Galaxy Tab.

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