Google Releases GDS 2.0
FansofTech writes "Google (now $4bn richer) has released v2.0 of Google Desktop. Many new features are introduced including improved Outlook filtering, Gmail indexing, and the feature which is most likely to cause the largest stir...a new Sidebar which displays RSS feeds, a Gmail inbox, news, scratch pad and more. Plug-ins for the new Sidebar are also available including a to-do list, clock, and more. As one blogger pointed out this morning...the release of Google Desktop 2.0 is beginning to take shape as a browser in itself as the need for a Firefox or IE is almost eliminated."
It finally supports indexing of files from network shares natively. :)
Since this sounds so intriguing I thought I'd take a quick look-see. Go to the downloads and what do I see? "Currently available for Windows computers only"
I hope some of their new-found wealth goes toward developing some of these nifty tools for other platforms (Fedora? BSD? MAC?)...
"Look, Smithers! I'm Davy Crockett!"
I've been waiting for it to index Thunderbird mail, because Thunderbird's search is pretty slow. It claims to do that now. Yay!
I know Google have some Enterprise level appliances and tools...but we're only 25 people. That doesn't mean we don't generate butt loads of data - just that we can't afford the big kit. Google desktop would be great if it was just a bit more network friendly and configurable, but at the moment it seems targeted strictly for the home user.
I'm hoping that someone will tell me this version will prove me wrong, but I can't see anything to suggest that in the documentation yet...
Try going to the preferences and "Search these locations" and you will be able to add drives to your hearts content.
Did you also know that it is possible to change where the "My Documents" virtual folder refers to? I have all of my data on a seperate drive so changed it to point to there.
Right click on the "My Documents" on your desktop and choose properties and you should see the details for changing the location.
Cheers,
Roger
Do you have any better hostages?
You can't get much more reliable than the contractually binding published privacy policy:
http://desktop.google.com/privacypolicy.html
To quote: "Your computer's content is not made accessible through Google Desktop to Google without your explicit permission."
-- Michael Chermside
It wasn't too long ago that links on google.com went straight to the link... not back through the google servers...
g .net", so it was pretty obvious what they were doing.
This isn't new, and Yahoo does it also.
I remember playing with these rewritten links in 2001 for some SEO projects. Back in 1999, many of the links in Google appeared in the status bar as "http://www.google.com/url?url=http%3A//boingboin
This is how the big search engines determine which links are most popular.
The Holy Grail of Direct Marketing is to personalize advertisements efficiently. This is Google's whole business model.
To do this they collect information from the visitors, deposit the information in a huge database, analyze the data and then programatically determine which advertisements will be most effective based on the target audience.
"Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."