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Google Gadgets Come to You

An anonymous reader writes "Yahoo is reporting the release of "Google Gadgets", 1,220 dynamic applications for use on your web pages, without needing to connect to Google. 'Google Gadgets range from a miniature look-up for Google Maps or Google Calendar to independent applications ranging from financial information to sports to communication tools and jokes, horoscopes or geometric puzzle game Tetris.'"

16 of 122 comments (clear)

  1. Sorry, but.. by AltGrendel · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... I love the irony of Yahoo reporting this.

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    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

    1. Re:Sorry, but.. by crayz · · Score: 4, Informative

      Try Reuters. The submitter got it wrong

    2. Re:Sorry, but.. by jwest · · Score: 5, Informative

      See how the first words of the article are "SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)" ? The story comes from the Reuters wire service. Yahoo is just passing it along... .

      This submission should have read "Reuters is reporting the release of 'Google Gadgets'".

  2. Google promoting Spyware? by jolyonr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ok, so they have their standard disclaimer, but I saw a "Smiley of the Day" gadget from hotbar.com on offer on the first page of that.

    Doesn't anyone at Google QC this stuff?

    First thoughts are after seeing that - I'm not going to trust ANY of that stuff on websites I have anything to do with.

    Jolyon

    --


    Please read my Canon EOS tech blog at http://www.everyothershot.com
    1. Re:Google promoting Spyware? by johkir · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My thoughts exactly. I assumed Google just put it out there, so anyone could put up a web-widget. And looking at the disclaimer at the bottom of the page, that seems to be the case.

      Much of the content in this directory was developed by other companies or by Google's users, not by Google. Google makes no promises or representations about its performance, quality, or content. Google doesn't charge for inclusion in this directory or accept payment for better placement.

      Maybe Google should protect it's name and prevent spyware garbage.

      --
      These are some of the things molecules do...... given 4 billion years -Carl Sagan
  3. Google Gadgets Come to You! by Orange+Crush · · Score: 3, Funny

    I was going to make a Soviet Yahoo pun . . . but my heart's just not in it.

  4. Some thoughts on Google Gadgets by quokkapox · · Score: 4, Informative

    The deal with these things is, they work with Google Desktop Search, and they pop up when you hit SHIFT-SHIFT.

    Some of them are pretty cool, and some are a pain in the ass. Several I've tried are downright buggy, and I have some serious questions about security.

    You really don't know what you're getting into when you download and allow random code to freely run on your PC. I would assume the gadgets run with the same privileges as GDS itself. Or are they sandboxed?

    Anyway, it sure is handy to know I've made 219,430 keystrokes and 26,690 mouse clicks since Thursday. Oh, and that it's warm and sunny outside. And that my battery is charged. Well, the scratch pad is nice. It always auto-saves.

    --
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    1. Re:Some thoughts on Google Gadgets by thelost · · Score: 3, Funny

      is there a dell batter-explode-o-meter gadget too, so you can see when you battery is going to commit sepuku?

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  5. Reminds me of that one show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Go, go, gadget google!

  6. However, by Shadyman · · Score: 4, Funny

    In Soviet Russia, Gadgets Google YOU!

  7. Am I the only one... by DarthChris · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...who read the title as "Google gadgets come to get you"?

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    Don't you just hate it when people reply to your signature?
  8. Belgium vs. Google exemplified by BeanBunny · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not that I agree with the Belgian government, but this makes it easy to see why they don't want Google to display their news. If this story gets put up like this on a popular edited Web site like Slashdot, it would appear to be safe to assume that many people believe that Google News, Yahoo! News, and MSN news are all authoring their own stories.

    1. Re:Belgium vs. Google exemplified by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 3, Informative

      But there is huge difference between Yahoo News and Google News.

      Google News only reports the synposis of the news, pointing to the original website itself which served the the news. Yahoo News syndicates the news from other syndicating services and displays the news on their own freaking website.

      Stop comparing oranges and apple just to prove your non-existant point.

  9. From TFA : by g253 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Before these mini-Web based applications can go mainstream, however, Google and the others will have to do away with the need to "cut and paste" code and make it possible to install such programs on Web sites in a few clicks"

    Please! Cut and paste is too complicated to create a website? Hello?
    This is in fact something I like about google : they try to be friendly to joe average user, but not to the point of thinking all their users are brain-dead.

    ...
    When I was young we used to write all our html from scratch, using vi, on a vt100. And we didn't complain!

  10. Clearly the best web page gadget on the list. by Critical+Facilities · · Score: 3, Funny

    How can your web page miss with this winner?

  11. I don't like it by Mori+Chu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm sorry, but haven't we already seen this in several different incarnations before? Microsoft's "Active Desktop" in Win98. Konfabulator. Apple's Dashboard.

    What is this obsession with "widgets", "applets", and "gadgets"? They inevitably end up doing the exact same boring things: weather, sports scores, stocks, dictionary, and maybe a little game. Great. The world of computing has changed forever.

    These things are often bloated little programs because they have to run in JavaScript or some other awful language. They never have consistent UIs, so users can't learn many patterns from using one that they can apply to another. Also, it looks like Google doesn't retain any quality control over who can submit "gadgets", so I'm sure it's bound to be abused by people who want to make malware.

    This is a prime example of a "me, too" project, and I fail to see how Google's done it any better than the predecessors. At least with Gmail and Google Maps they innovated those applications compared to what came before. And how does this make Google any money whatsoever? Will they put ads in the gadgets? Why should any stockholder be pleased that Google developers are wasting their time on "gadgets"?

    Thumbs down, Google. I am not impressed.