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Google's New Personalized Homepage

jgaynor writes "Citing user requests to coalesce its disparate services, Google today released its new personalized homepage service. It allows you to arrange your Gmail, Google News, Google Maps driving directions, weather and a few select news services (including Slashdot) on a single page. Future plans include Universal RSS support. Clearly a shot at existing services like My Yahoo."

26 of 411 comments (clear)

  1. More commentary... by RichM · · Score: 4, Informative

    More coverage at Google Blogoscoped.
    I submitted this story about 30 mins ago but it looks like someone beat me to it.

  2. WTF by The+Bungi · · Score: 3, Informative
    The nice thing about this is that it talks to GMail via something else to create the preview so it gets around proxy blocks.

    I still can't actually read messages, but I can see if I have something that requires immediate attention instead of waiting until I get home.

  3. Re:Uses Gmail Accounts by RichM · · Score: 4, Informative

    You never needed to anyway, the Google Accounts sign-in is a central login which gives you access to GMail, Groups, Video and everything else.

  4. It has slashdot by endx7 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Even has slashdot as one of the things you can put on it.

    At least they didn't put this on the main front page. Stuff like this tends to be cluttered, and I dislike clutter.

  5. Re:There it is! by bob+whoops · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the FAQ:

    6. Why did you mess up the clean, crisp Google homepage?

    We didn't. If you want to keep using the original Google homepage, you can. In fact, we expect that many users will. The personalized homepage is for those users who want to see more of the information that matters to them in the same place. You can always switch back and forth between your personalized homepage and the original Google homepage by clicking "Classic Home" or "Personalized Home."

  6. Re:Notice the differences though by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Informative

    You obviously have not looked at yahoo for a while. Google is cleaner but displays less and their colour scheme chould do with some work. The edit option displays very poorly against a similar shade background.

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  7. Re:One page to rule them all... by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, Microsoft at least it already has a aquivalent with a javascript RSS reader and everything, so Microsoft seems to be "ahead" in this case: http://www.start.com/1/

  8. OT: Contraction translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    First sentence:

    Citing user requests to coalesce it is disparate services, Google today released it is new personalized homepage service.
    Remember, "It's 'its', not 'it's'."

    Or, just read Bob the Angry Flower's Quick Guide to the Apostrophe, You Idiots (his words, not mine!). I mean, sheeh, twice in the first sentence? You idiot. (My words, not his!)

  9. Re:Whoa, custom by bob+whoops · · Score: 3, Informative

    (although it lags a bit, for instance this story hasn't shown up yet).

    Blame Slashdot. The RSS hasn't updated yet.

  10. The UK version is broken by Pete+(big-pete) · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you go to http://www.google.co.uk/ig/customize then try to set and save your settings, you'll find that it's pretty broken...

    It seems to send the page into a loop...in IE you will just receive continuous warnings that you are being redirected to an nonsecure page.

    -- Pete.

    1. Re:The UK version is broken by Pete+(big-pete) · · Score: 2, Informative

      Purge your cookies and see how it's fixed again. :)

      Thanks, I had to do it a couple of times, because if I just tried to log in with my profile, it would try the UK version again and get broken again, but once I went back through the process of setting up the page it worked fine!

      Cheers,

      -- Pete.

  11. Re:Just like Yahoo, except... by kertong · · Score: 2, Informative
  12. Re:I want g-mail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://isnoop.net/gmail/

    Over 1 million invites available and counting

  13. Re:greeeeeeeaaaat by brogdon · · Score: 2, Informative

    " Would be even nicer if i can integrate my yahoo mail too! ;-)"

    That's easy. Just create a Gmail account, and set your Yahoo mail to automatically forward everything there.

    I like helping people.

    --


    This tagline is umop apisdn.
  14. Re:I want g-mail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


    Just pick a nickname and sign it

  15. Re:greeeeeeeaaaat by shird · · Score: 2, Informative

    Thatd be well and good if Yahoo didn't rape this feature out of its services (.com addresses). its gone. thanks guys. If you had told me this was a possiblity when I signed up you can be sure I never would have.

    --
    I.O.U One Sig.
  16. Re:There it is! by Snarfy · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm sorry - have you ever looked at the actual link? No, not the text in the status bar, but the actual link.

    Here is what a search for slashdot says in the status bar:
    http://slashdot.org/

    Here is what the link actually is (copy link location, paste to text editor)
    http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=1&q=http%3A// slashdot.org/&ei=nj-NQobLM7GUaPaJ0XA

    So yes, they do in fact track what you click.

  17. Tell them yourself? by Shazow · · Score: 2, Informative

    Or you can just tell them yourself:

    http://www.google.com/support/fusionph/bin/request .py

    - shazow

  18. Re:There it is! by Michalson · · Score: 4, Informative

    Tracking on the normal search page is done a little differently (though perhaps they just have some server side code that returns different methods based on browser). As you know, account or no account, all Google pages attempt to implant a "never expires" cookie that has a unique ID if a unique ID is not already found on your system. The ID is used to allow Google to associate all requests with you (and if you have an account, multiple computers can be tied to a single person/ID).

    For the regular search, rather then using a redirect script, it seems to use onmousedown javascript (in this way the link you click is a "direct" link to the URL). The mousedown script causes your webbrowser to load a hidden image (which is really a tracking image, the kind used by spammers in their email to report back to them). If you examine the javascript it sends the link you clicked, your unique ID, the position on the page the link was ("1" for the first link and so on) and two type parameters (ct="res" and sa="T") encoded as the URL for the fake image.

  19. Re:greeeeeeeaaaat by siriuskase · · Score: 2, Informative

    Because Gmail won't let me do basic things, like put my own, real address in the "From:" line. They allow "Reply-to:", but it looks so 90s, and Reply-To doesn't work in all mailers.

    You got to think asynchrously. Read your mail with GMail, but use a mail program on your own machine to send mail. Then you can use any address you want, preferably one you can forward to Gmail.

    This gives you the bottomless archive for your messages that you can assess anywhere in the world, plus the ability to compose messages in a more powerful editor, even do it offline if you'd like.

    If you like reading mail with something other than the GMail web interface, they've got pop access, too.

    Oh dear, I'm starting to sound like an ad, they should send me a check.

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  20. Re:There it is! by Michalson · · Score: 4, Informative

    Very interesting. I was right, Google seems to have have multiple formats for what visually looks like the same result page. The underlying format determines if and how Google tracks your clicks. One factor that may play a part is the date - the unique ID in the cookie includes a checksummed date of when the ID was created. Some Google features (like the book excerpts) have already been shown to check this date and give different results based on whether your cookie appears to be an existing cookie, or if it appears that you just created it a short time ago. It would take some time to verify, but I would hypothize Google only starts including link tracking code once the cookie is old enough to mark you as a legitimate or otherwise worthwhile user.

  21. I just wish they'd finally use... by Nailer · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...the nice user interface with proper tabs for Firefox clients.

    Seriously, it's so much nicer than having the page reload when you click another tab. Why doesn't the FF start page use this?

  22. Re:One improvement to decrease clutter by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why suggest it here? Put it in as feedback to Google. They act on feedback, you know.

  23. AdBlock by empaler · · Score: 2, Informative

    Link

    I love that extension.

  24. Re:greeeeeeeaaaat by hritcu · · Score: 2, Informative

    set your Yahoo mail to automatically forward everything there.
    Are you sure that forwarding is free on Yahoo?

    Mail Plus
    Get personalized spam filtering with SpamGuard Plus, 2GB storage, 20MB message size, no graphical ads, POP access and forwarding, and more great features for just $19.99/year - that's less than $2/month.

    --
    If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough. (Alan Kay)
  25. Re:There it is! by Sandor+at+the+Zoo · · Score: 2, Informative
    ...far behind My Yahoo

    I agree. On my Yahoo page I have stock graphs (not just the quotes that Google gives you), mortgage rates, and news feeds hand-chosen from the wide variety that yahoo has listed.

    I might be able to fake up some of these with tailored google searches, but why should I have to?

    Also, I can't order the stock quotes the way I want; they're ordered the way google wants. :-(

    I do like the layout dragging. Very nice.

    Hopefully google will add more stuff to make the homepage more flexible.