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Google Pages Launches

An anonymous reader writes "Google released the first public beta of its Google Pages service Wednesday, allowing users who signed up for the service in January and February to begin creating personal websites using an easy-to-use, browser-based tool. The service gives each user 100 MB of free storage space on Google's servers. To use the Google Page Creator tool, users must have an existing Google account. However, only those who signed up early (in January and February) to use Google Pages have access to the current beta. No new signups are being accepted at this time, Google said. The company is expected to open Page Creator to more widespread use over the next few weeks."

2 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. Re:DeJaVoogle by tehshen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... they're just becoming the next Yahoo.

    Is that so bad a thing? I kind of liked Yahoo.

    GeoCities was a nice service, but was let down by the ads pane (pain?) taking over half the screen. Yahoo! mail was nice but suffered from too low storage. Lots of people here are turned off by "portal"-style pages with loads of links on them - Google put their search page first and moved all the links someplace else.

    I've noticed that Google seem to wait for a technology to develop, see where it trips up, then make its own GVersion. Kind of nifty, really.

    --
    Guy asked me for a quarter for a cup of coffee. So I bit him.
  2. Re:Things that make you go hmmm... by cinnamoninja · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The difference is that storage is cheap, but bandwidth is expensive.

    If you store 1 GB of mail, you will probably only access each individual message 5 times, ever. If you put up 1 GB of data on the web, you want it to be downloaded by as many people as possible, every day for the live of the page.

    Cinnamon