Google's new toys
Google labs just released for your pleasure, some new toys to play with. The first is Google's Viewer, just type a few words to see a fully working preview of the web site. Another new idea: Google's Webquotes, View search results with quotes about them from other sites, and the last one is Google's Froogle, which aims to be the world's largest catalog.
It seems like google is never content to rest on its laurels. Unlike some of the goneby search engines of the past it seems to be interested in doing more than pimping out its popularity to commercial interests at the cost of its quality. Hopefully they'll continue on this track for a long time to come. None of this stuff is revolutionary, but it does seem to be at least nifty. And that's all google needs at this point.
you can take the road that takes you to the stars...
I've been playing with these since they appeared on The Register a few days ago. I can't say I'm massively impressed. The slideshow is lovely eye candy, but, sadly, the top bit of each web page it shows is all too often just a banner ad and a navbar, which isn't always a lot of use. Froogle is US-centric, and no good for me, but it is the best name I've seen in a long time.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
http://192.17... oh wait!
:)
(someone had to do it
Google labs just released some new toys for your pleasure. The first is Google's Viewer -- just type a few words to see a fully working preview of the web site. Another new idea: Google's Webquotes -- View search results with quotes about them from other sites. The last one is Google's Froogle, which aims to be the world's largest catalog.
Now compare that to what actually got posted above.
Are these new features based on ideas from the Google contest, which took place some time ago? If so, what are the other ideas, which are not yet implemented, but which may be used in the future?
~Christopher Doopov
I was looking for a certain not so easy to come by CD and it actually found a lot of hits including stores with low prices.
Google seems to be innovative on a lot of fronts creating things that are truly helpfull without flashy banners and pop-up ads.
Google knows, the trick is in it's simplictiy for the user.
--
nich
37 - what does it stand for really...
Off course all these playground-features are nice but when will anything become standard. Other beta-stuff like Google Glossary and Google Sets looked very nice but both are still in beta. Google will remain my favourite search-engine but they in my opinion they could be a bit faster in offering new services.
/(bb|[^b]{2})/
I spotted this service a few weeks back when I noticed an increasing number of people browsing our site from the IP address it maps to.
I checked it out and thought "pretty neat", but i don't really see much advantage over the vanilla google.
Anyway, people are already using it and have been for some time...
I think google is the only site that I hit at least 10x per day that doesnt have banner ads or popups. They have those things on the right of the page, but not only are those well priced for the advertiser (lik 1 penny per click) but they are also effective because they come up in a search. If the entire internet STILL had to have ads in my utopia, this is how I would prefer them.
"I feel it is my duty to look at the porn that kids download before I delete it, to be sure what it is."--School Admin
Google has access to so much information. A study of human behavior and interests can be made by just parking yourself at the Google HQ, where apparantly, they have lotsa screens which keep displaying the kinda stuff people are looking for. Beats trainspotting ;)
Another google toy : it's fun to use. The Google Mirror. It's a blast, you actually gotta enter your query the other way around, coz it's a MIRROR silly !!
|/________
|\A|ALYS|
I played with the google viewer a bit, I thought it was pretty cool. Except that when I did not close the window and got back to work, I noticed that it was sucking up bandwidth downloading the next pages to display. All right on my office machine, but at home through a digital straw, it would not be much fun.
-------------------------------END--COMMUNICATION
Yay ! Now I can keep both hands free while browsing pr0n !
I think it won't work.. what i got was the latest quotes from news articles that talked about microsoft.. anyway.. interesting read..
Here's what i got:
Microsoft Corporation (1418 WebQuotes)
http://www.microsoft.com/
Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard on Tuesday released additional details about digital entertainment PCs coming for the holidays. But new anti-copying technology could hamper sales, say analysts and potential buyers.
Source: http://www.privacydigest.com/
Microsoft announced the latest round of Technology Leadership Grants this week. More than $3,350,000 in software will be given to five nonprofit organizations.
Source: http://www.pnnonline.org/article.php?sid=425
Microsoft is the worldwide leader in software for personal and business computing, Microsoft strives to produce innovative products and services that meet our customers' evolving needs.
Source: http://www.avs.com/partners/
Sounds fun, though i wonder how modem users will react to the bandwidth use.
Now i wonder if that'll really be that useful. The risk i see is to create 'closed' communities, ie sites that point mutually at each other, and Google will pick one & use the others' quotes, without seeking quotes from other sites.
Also how do they find quotes ? While indexing pages for search ? How do they determine which quotes will appear ? Based on commercial relations ?
I think the ultimate search tool will be able:
Tsuyoikoto ha taisetsu da ne, dakedo namida mo hitsuyousa (Strength is an important thing, but tears too are necessary)
I did some searches with no luck, then I searched for Slashdot
and it got plenty!
Quotes ? Previews ?
Quite useless if you ask me.
What I would like to see is the google equivalent of metaspy. The zeitgeist thing is nice, but I don't care for most categories.
I guess they see their query database as a valuable marketing resource, but then how come they are not selling access to it ?
PC and Mac: Internet Explorer 5 & above, Netscape 6 & above Unix: Mozilla
Not much use to me until it works in Opera, I'm afraid! Although anything with tabbed browsing makes google searching a much happier place...
I never knew there was a Slashdot: Japan. Is this legit or some another cheap Japanese knockoff? (really, I'm just kidding... *flees* :-P)
In all seriousness... this is pretty neat. I never would have known that if I'd never tried their viewer. This is why google is the best. They're the only search engine that innovates. I just wonder when we'll be able to convince them to give us the source. :-)
Hey have any of you checked out this site , not directly related to google.com but it does use their search results to return some pretty intereting stuff. check it out ... some funny stuff comes up for slashdot and Bill Gates
MoRe... LaTeR... -=PJK=-
shave $30 off an order of glass petri dishses.
So Go froogle!
Google defines 'best practice'. Google is the best thing on the web, bar none. Google, my friends, is God.
"A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard on Tuesday released additional details about digital entertainment PCs coming for the holidays. But new anti-copying technology could hamper sales, say analysts and potential buyers.
Source: http://www.privacydigest.com/
Microsoft announced the latest round of Technology Leadership Grants this week. More than $3,350,000 in software will be given to five nonprofit organizations.
Source: http://www.pnnonline.org/article.php?sid=425
Microsoft is the worldwide leader in software for personal and business computing, Microsoft strives to produce innovative products and services that meet our customers' evolving needs.
:)
Source: http://www.avs.com/partners/
Apart from the somewhat biased results the feature kicks ass
Anataka suki desu. Itsumo. Itsumademo.
The Viewer I'd rate "good", because it shows a path to potential interface improvements in the future, but not something I'd use today.
The WebQuotes is "better" because it leverages the architecture that Google is based on, and lets you see some of the reasons why that link is near the top.
But the Froogle service is clearly the "best". It has the potential to centralize the Internet's consumer marketplaces, enhancing competition and value. My only concern is that the big retailers will put up walls to Froogle's spiders. However, if Froogle becomes popular, they may be forced to join the party, or lose access to a growing meta-internet market.
Ladies and gentlemen, Google is reminding us that we live in exciting times.
Machines take me by surprise with great frequency. -A. Turing
Try FreeNet. :)
Britney's Guide to Semiconductor Physics
From the site:
P.S. Checkout the author's page as well...
I wish I had a sig.
If you can read this, thank an english teacher.
Yeah, it (/. Japan) is official. It started about a year and a half ago (May 28, 2001).
Does Froogle remind anyone else of those websites that show up when you misspell popular web addresses?
Slashdot's first reaction to VMware
Just look at at site that uses CSS instead of tables. The site is perfectly readable, but the design is gone.
The Viewer seems really slick, I'll definately be using that.
However I'd really like to see them push the boat out and give people the option of using froogle outside of the states. Froogle really does look like a great service, which makes it all the more frustrating.
Now that there is a common currency for most of Europe, surely it can't be too hard to extend this.
tom-george.comBecause geeks rate higher t
I disagree with you. I searched for my own name, many pages, no banners. But talk about watching your life flash before your eyes!
google webquotes is awesome. it is just so useful in what i do from time to time: research companies or commercial technology.
but it's like a lawsuit magnet. argh. i fear it will cause more problems then it will solve.
in the meantime, why does the irish linux user's group show up in hotwired japan? (found via: this search)
US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
Search engine for obscure food spread products.
Damn, I was just going to post that. Oh well, can't hurt to reiterate:
TRY FREENET!
And run a permanent node, if possible, but use it either way!
Froogle definately looks cool. I mainly looked through froogle to see how well it pulled up against Pricewatch as far as computer equipment goes. While it had some good deals, it just couldn't keep up with the shear mass amount of resellers that pricewatch lists. I do have to say it looked nice with pretty pictures. Maybe though when froogle gets out of beta they'll list more stores. My little test makes me wonder though if Froogle is a partnered system, where they only list people who sign up to be listed on it. This would be most unlike Google, that scours for every and any link. Well whether people sign up or they have froogle spiders that go out and find good deals.. It'd be great to have a tool like pricewatch that you could find lots of other items besides computer stuff on sale for cheap prices.
Who makes you Sig?
Just to test it out I typed 'Rygar' into Froogle (a new PS2 video game)...one of the resulting prices was a little...off. Visiting the relevant site turns up the same price as everyone else.
Are they already spoofing froogle results?
Wow- heavy troll to noise ratio on this story! What's up with that? Do we have "Troll Fridays" now?
And mods, if you so much as mod this offtopic considering the other posts in this story I will haunt the meta key on your keyboard for ever.
Ok- nothing google has come up with since google images has impressed me. There. Now I'm on fucking topic.
graspee
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
still unfolding
couldn't like it more. that's how IT's going to be from now on? kewl. mod me DOWn robbIE.
My very first impression of Froogle is this: I'd like to see the groupings sorted a lot more finely. For example, I'm looking for a nice coffee thermos or mug or something. The closest I can get is the "Food & Gourmet > Beverages > Coffee" group. I'd really like "beans", "mugs and carrying things", "brewing machinery", etc. sub-groups. Granted, I could search for it, but I've always liked thorough directories when I'm searching for a class of things instead of an actual name of a product.
Searched for a powerbook G4 (gotta get one of those), and up comes up listings of 500mhz G4 for 3500 $US, HELLO GOOGLE FROOGLE TEAM ------- this is very very outdated.
Real men don't need signitures!!!
but it seems the viewer requires tons of bandwidth to be effective
Chris ,
Php Programmers.
I wish they would put more effort into their search engines instead of this. I've recently noticed that google will change your search(!) on you (try kerosune, it doesn't just warn you that you may have a spelling error, it actually changes this to kerosene in the search text box, erasing your search. Well, what if kerosune is a company name and I really did want to search on that and avoid kerosene? It's one thing to offer a different spelling, its another to up and change
something I've specifically told you is what I want to search on (and the back button doesn't keep your search word, so you have to retype it.
Also, google groups doesn't handle phrases at all.
Put in a phrase (with the quotes) like
"and to there" and you get
The "AND"operator is unnecessary -- we include all search terms by default. [details]
"to"is a very common word and was not included in your search. [details]
Huh? What 'AND' operator, 'and' is inside a phrase
and shouldn't be interpeted as a logical operator. And 'to' is part of a phrase and hence cannot be 'a very common word that was not included in your search'. Even when you don't get these kind of messages, the results are for the individual words, not the phrase.
Sorry, but I tried getting some decent quotes and couldn't find anything good. Nowhere near as good as Pricewatch
Read jack phelps dot net
Automated redirection to Google's cached version of the site at the first site of a Slashdotting is also now available as a free service.
There are 01 types of people in this world. Those that understand binary, and me.
These new Google services are more feature creep. How about less frill and better search?
The quality of search results is going down, in my opinion. More often I find myself using other search engines because my Google searches turn up junk. Let us tweak the ranking criteria so we can bypass the web sites that have engineered themselves to be at the top of the results.
at least for me.
the first one is annoying and I have no need at all for it.
the best part about it is the cute little bunny icon.
the second one is also useless to me, I much prefer just a regular search with the small snippet from what is on that page, from that page - I don't care what other's say about it on their pages.
but I really like the froogle thing. aside from the naming scheme that is sesame street in style, it actually provides something useful in today's consumer world.
as long as we can buy things, we are a better people.
bless us jesus.
There are some odd things afoot now, in the Villa Straylight.
At least this works on Mozilla unlike the Google toolbar provided by Google. (I know there's a third party version). I hope this is a sign of things to come.
THIS SPACE FOR RENT
You want to know what my big beef with Google is? Lack of documentation. Lack of an easily-findable page that details what certain things do, and how the team has changed Google's behavior recently. Google also under-advertises its world-accessable beta features. I could have been using Google News, now a staple of my news-finding experience, long before I heard about it on a message board.
Google is the master of clean, intelligent page design. It should be able to unobtrusively work in a link to a page describing advanced functionality and beta features right on its main page. It annoys and amazes me that Google doesn't more actively tout that it is the only group paving new roads in using the Internet.
How can you use my intestines as a gift? -Actual Hong Kong subtitle.
I am quite surprised at this, I would have expected better from them. Unless it is Opera's fault.
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
Isn't this what the semantic web is supposed to achieve, but in the client side not in the server side? Instead of relaying on Google to supply new services from time to time, we would be able to use its database to build our own types of query.
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
Google is featured in this week's Newsweek. You can find an online version of the Google article here.
A search for 'dildo' on google's froogle turns up Sex and the City Season 3.
--
silence is poetry.
IE when does the credit card/Adult verification/ActiveX home dialer funded porn-Google (poogle?) turn up?
Now you can hunt for wabbits on the net
Google has so much more than just their search engine. For a list of other Google goodies, see Google Services & Tools.
Also, there are several more things that Google Labs has already released here. I had fun with the Google Sets...it's a different way to search, but it brings up useful results that you might not have thought of.
Move along...nothing to see here.
Why are people complaining about froogle already? it's beta! Sure, it's not perfect, it's a bit buggy... but that's why it's still beta!
Besides, it's not like you pay for it.
Google Labs is a wonderful company, and I hope they continue to produce great free services for a long time into the future.
Google sets lets you enter a few items. Then it displays "like" items. If you want a list of publishers, enter a few.
h y Online
I tried the following: ultima online, heroin, everquest, crack
And got:
Crack
EverQuest
Ultima Online
Heroin
Asheron's Call
Diablo
Starcraft
Interstate
Quake
Anarc
Cocaine
Marijuana
The Realm
Amphetamines
Alcohol
Baldur's Gate
Shadowbane
Summary
Ecstasy
LSD
Jane's USAF
what happens when you type a nastey word into the viewer.
Being as that I am at work and don't feel like cleaning my firewall's cache. I didn't try it...
The Only Person Willing to be Me is ME!
Google has long said that they have no desire to enter the portal market to compete with the likes of Yahoo!. ("No, our customers are portals like Yahoo! and AOL. We're not a portal...we are just trying to be the best search engine.") While it is true that they are the best search engine, they are using characteristics of search to become a stealth portal.
Consider the following tools available from google and their counterparts on Yahoo!:
There are more analogs between the two sites. But here's the thing: Google offers a value proposition over sites like Yahoo: Much more content and much lower overhead. Why? Because Google, as a "search engine" is simply here to Help People Find What They're Looking For. They will point us to other sites after we see our search results---it's just that our search results happen to look like tradiitonal portal pages. (In other words, news.google.com is a drop in replacement for CNN.com, only google's site is better because it contains fewer ads, less clutter, and much, much, more news.)
I think it is an interesting concept. One other poster said they thought Froogle could put Amazon out of business. In the near term--no. Longer term--yes. And this is because Google's value proposition to the user is better: I would bet money that when Froogle becomes a "release" and not just a "beta", that it has the ability to classify similar products from multiple vendors and search for the one that's the cheapest. If I can find the same books and electronics on Google that I can on Amazon, why would I go to Amazon?
Google is going to preach the "non portal" doctrine forever, however over the next 3-5 years, we will see the Google "portal" owning the web, at the expense of the Yahoo's, Amazon's, Ebay's, and CNN's of the world. This means that ad revenue on other sites will become ad revenue for Google.
Maybe this is a conspiracy theory, but I have to say that I like the way Google works, I like their site, and I'd like to see them succeed in this...they've certainly made my web searching more useful, and I'd like to see them do the same for the other tools I use in traditional portals.
Both Froogle and Catalogues Google are sales-oriented applications. Wonder if the development of these was driven by users/consumers or vendors?
a world in progress...
So I got to wondering, "who thinks that about me and why?". So I highlighted that quote and plugged it into google
Basically, there's some retard on an inline skating forum with my name. Great. Hope my parents don't hear about googlism.
<g>
I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar.
It's impressive to watch Google expand into the powerful internet niches like news and shopping. How long before they come out with SlashGoog and turn this place into a ghost town?
Wasn't that a Jim Henson show? Froogle Rock? But that makes sense. Google shoving it's hands up its ass. Maybe it's trying to find its head.
Try searching Froogle for 'buttplug' and see the first result. It's not quite what you think you'd get for that search term, but funny none the less.
Froogle has so many products in it, you can find almost ANYTHING, rude or not. I even found traditional old Branston Pickle. I also found pantyhole, dildos, and numerous other 'exotic' items.
It's fun for 10 minutes. Go play, and post the funniest searches back here.
mogorific carpentry experiments
It's really too bad that nobody saw this beta until now. It would have been a very nice and useful tool for Christmas shopping. Somewhat like ebay, but a way like finding what you want from retailers.
Online shopping is kicking up. This will be a great tool for shoppers and retailers, so long as it doesn't get hacked or biased towards certain retailers.
but in the past, the stuff coming of of google labs seem to have much more of a cool factor. It was really innovative what they were bringing out...
however, none of these tools seem particularly interesting or even that useful.
I'd much rather use Price Grabber then froogle. I know it's a beta and all, but heck I can't even sort by the lowest price!
I'd say back to the lab with these ones.
Weather.google.como gle.com. comr eBelongToUs.google.com
Jokes.google.com
LanParty.go
StarWars.google.com
NewsForNerds.google
GeeksWhoNeedLovin.google.com
AllYourGoogleA
and my personal favorite..
NataliePortmanNaked.google.com
Internizzle Sizzle Applizzle (Internet Search Appliance) Googizzle.kizzle (google.com) bizzle.googizzle.kizzle (beta.google.com) frizzle.googizzle.kizzle (froogle.google.com) For shizzle my nizzle.
Crystal Meth: Would you ingest somthing made from a poisonous gas and an explosive metal? You do it every day -- Salt!
One line, scrolls over buttons and other links. Dunno if it's Opera not reading it right, or Google not conforming to standards.
I wish they would go ahead and place the keyboard shortcut features on the main search interface. Sure is a PITA to press tab when browsing on a TV display @ 640x480 when you don't want to use the mouse.
Plus I don't touch the mouse all that much.
slashdot.jp loads up waaaaay faster than slashdot.org. Coincidence? Conspiracy?
Everybody has a purpose in life, maybe mine is to lurk in slashdot.
Thanks - I thought it was just me. Tons of Slashdotter praise, and all I'm seeing is crap (same Opera version and same results). So I tried and old version of IE (4) that I still have on my box and same results.
Someone posted above that the site needs "Internet Explorer 5 & above, Netscape 6 & above Unix: Mozilla", so effem, I guess. Opera is too damned good for me to ever go back to IE or Netscape.
Does anyone using Opera 7 see the Google Viewer OK?
Nobody is adding bells and whistles to your basic hammer...
actually, my cousin's husband's family's company has been doing just that for years.
Example in English or in German (better pictures on the German page).
OK, so this has nothing to do with google, but you might still find it interesting. ;)
This Like That - fun with words!
You ask, ``If I can find the same books and electronics on Google that I can on Amazon, why would I go to Amazon? ''
:-)
I go to Amazon because it's convenient. I'm already signed up with them. They have my address and credit card number already. They have a decent UI that I've learned how to use. **I trust them.**
There are some people who will pick the cheapest store on the net. There are other people who will keep going to their familiar/trusted stores.
Amazon is not going away. But they'll feel more price pressure, and their competitors will have more of a chance now. This is good.
labs.google.com - Google Demos
to labs.google.com, Google's technology playground.
labs.google.com/ - 7k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
Google Catalog Search
... Food & Gourmet Harry and David, Starbucks Coffee, ... Toys & Hobbies HearthSong, ... Business to Business Alfa Aesar, OfficeMax, ... ...
Lego,
Description: Applies Googles search technology to catalogs.
Category: Shopping>Publications>Catalogs
catalogs.google.com/ - 8k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
csabo2. Google Two new toys from Google's technology playground
msbetas.net/ - 59k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
Google News by CodingTheWeb.com
... By focusing entirely on product search, Froogle applies the power of Google's ... New Google Lab toys. ...
1 .htm - 13k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
search technology to a very specific task: locating
www.codingtheweb.com/projects/newslog/portal/5_
Small Values of Cool: May 22, 2002 Archives
... Question of the Day at HowStuffWorks. Posted by Simon Brunning at 01:23 PM Google ...
Labs. Check out some of Google's new toys. Pretty cool, most of them.
www.brunningonline.net/simon/blog/ archives/2002_05_22.html - 5k - Cached - Similar pages
Google Press Center: 2002 Year-End Zeitgeist
... Top Destinations 2002, 1. paris. 2. canada. 3. new york. 4. india. 5. las vegas. ... 5. sears. 6. circuit city. 7. costco. 8. toys r us. 9. staples. ...
6. australia.
10.
www.google.com/press/zeitgeist.html - 101k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
news items
... in a toy store, it's the first crack at toys that we ... Froogle is a new service from ... on ...
product search, Froogle applies the power of Google's search technology
www.stargeek.com/link.php?link=4958 - 11k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
marginalia.org: June 2001 Archives
... Google's new images search is good. ... I don't know what's worse, plush toys, new novels, ...
or emphatic assurances that no attempt will be made to correlate the
www.marginalia.org/log/archives/2001_06.html - 12k - Dec. 12, 2002 - Cached - Similar pages
PigeonRank
...By collecting flocks of pigeons in dense clusters, Google is able to process search queries at speeds superior to traditional search engines, which typically rely on birds of prey, brooding hens or slow-moving waterfowl to do their relevance rankings....
I love this:
Playing with Google Sets made me wonder if Google might eventually become sentient... watch out for skynet.google.com
:) But I really want to complain about HeUnique...
That joke will make this post just half off-topic
I usually don't grouse when my submissions are rejected and someone else submits the same story which is then accepted... thems the breaks... but this time an Editor rejected my submission and then posted the same story reworded... yeah my wording wasn't as good (I was tired), but still if Editors will post a story without attributing the submitter it takes all of the fun out of digging around on the web for a good story.
There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
Read the subject line; it seems that some things never change.
Sure is annoying how Google thinks they need to call focus() for each and every one of their windows. I'm halfway through typing a search then BLAM another Google window steals the focus. You'd figure a company trying to make the best search tools would figure THIS IS A REALLY BAD USABILITY "FEATURE".
Boogle
It's Google with quotes.
I just get a big old mess of characters all over the screen. (Opera 6.03 for Linux)
*sigh*. I woulda thought that Google, of all companies, would've worked to make sure their stuff worked on the alternative browsers.
My favorite is Google Sets. I use it to look for new musical artists. For example, if I type in a few band names in a similar genre that I like it returns a list containing other similar bands. If there's a name there I don't recognize, I dig up their music and usually it's pretty good.
(Score:-1, Wrong)
(1) Cheaper will always win.
(2) More info is always better.
But in both shopping and in information, for me at least, trust and reputation matters a lot. For shopping, I'll spend a few bucks more by getting something from Amazon, or Dell, or Apple, or Toyota, because I've been screwed by getting cheaper alternatives. My time and lack of aggravation matter a lot more to me. I'm very wary of trying new brands, especially for anything online.
As for information, reputation and editors matter a lot. Google and any other sort of collaborative filtering depend primarily on mass voting or popularity; but credibility is a nuanced thing. Many national online newspapers might be highly ranked according to Google, but when I see a news headline, I want to know what the point-of-view of the news source is, and not just that it is popular. After all, if popularity mattered above all, Britney Spears would be winning all the Grammys, and Jerry Springer would be winning the Emmys.
I use Google news all the time, but I find that it gives a lot of very obscure news sites. Even Slashdot appears in the headlines, and Slashdot is very highly biased opinion and discussion, NOT news. Basically I use Google news to find and scan for headlines, but invariably I only spend my time on a few trusted news sources. For any other unknown site, I always have to check out the site to determine their bias and credibility. I don't have the spare cognitive cycles to waste on sites that are spinning an unknown agenda.
Basically my point is that news site quality and merchant reputation matter a great deal, and portals like Yahoo or pseudo-portals Google still rely on the human-directed quality control. They are an important part of an information eco-system, as aggregators or popularity filters, but they are not the gatekeepers or the final word.
It seems like the "Unix method" of creating a tool set: create a number of small, simple tools with functional interfaces that each do their job well. Don't worry about flashy graphics or bundle them into one bloat-o-rific monster.
I don't know how other hosting services work , but I'm hosted for free on Planetquake and one of their policies is an ad banner on the top of *every* page, so I don't really have a choice in the matter. Not that I'm complaining or anything, as it's been wonderful to me for years, I'm just saying.
I realize that not every provider is this way, but not everyone really has the luxury of that decision.If I had a choice in the matter I'd do away with it entirely, but TANSTAAFL.
Sounds like it should have the tagline:
"The Premier Search Engine for Gays"
Arrgh... only got one hit for a spacesuit and it doesn't even state if it is O2 clean or not.
Must cancel plans for world domination.
Another fairly new one is https://answers.google.com/answers/main. People can use it to "name your own price" for more complex assisted searches. Looks like some of the researchers make some nice cash.
.... But I think it needs a scrollbar for the page I am viewing, and it also has some javascript errors, I hope this is done before the release.
If you right click on the link instead of left click there will be a little window that pops up and you can choose "open in new window." I use this all the time!
they have sporting goods, and hunting stuff, i wonder though how they actually expect us to hunt, as they don't offer any firearms or anything.
the website previews YOU!
I just tried reading Slashdot.jp translated through Babelfish, and what a trip! I know it's just a crude machine translation, but it just adds to the hilarity. Some exerpts:
* In enthusiasm of fan ring story, Japanese subtitle charge of two towers to modification (this is a story title - ed.)
* As for nine, in subtitle of the destiny which should die from section. (That story's "department" -ed.)
The mod options seem kinda neat:
* (score: It becomes 2, references)
* (score: 2, splendid discernment)
* (score: 3, it is strange funny)
And I think this is a troll:
?????(?????)??????Star Wars Episode I?
?????????
????????(?)
# google?
Star Trek????
?????
??????
SF??????????(?)
???M$?
[PowerPoint] is a tool for capitalist presentation
Judging from most of the entries on Disturbing Search Requests, there would be a hearty market for that service.
Somebody please, tell this machine I'm not a machine.
Wonder why webquotes functionality did not incorporate searches on google groups.
After all, words and their connotations are better understood from a regular conversation. It is something i do regularly to check word usuage.
Siggy Say, Siggy Do
Like this?
No sig for the moment.
When the Universe was not so out of whack as it is today, and all the ...
stars were lined up in their proper places, you could easily count them
from left to right, or top to bottom, and the larger and bluer ones were
set apart, and the smaller yellowing types pushed off to the corners as
bodies of a lower grade
-- Stanislaw Lem, "Cyberiad"
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