Mercedes-Benz in 1 million Google+ circles

Mercedes-Benz in 1 million Google+ circles


257 equals 1.000.000. That’s right: Mercedes-Benz is represented in one
million Google+ circles and it took 257 days to get there. To celebrate
this special occasion   Enjoy the full-size view of their infographic here http://bit.ly/fun-fact_one-million and find out, what cats in boxes have to do with an E-Class Estate.

Google Talk Down ~ IBNLIVE

Exasperated users unable to communicate via Google’s instant messaging service, popularly known as GTalk, are venting it out on the not-so-private communication services such as Twitter and Facebook.If Twitter updates are an indication then the latest Google Talk outage has affected users the world over.Many users have reported that their Google Talk contacts have disappeared while many others say that their messages are not reaching the intended recipients.

Google Talk Down ~ IBNLIVE

At 4:10 PM Google posted on its App Status page for Google Talk: “We’re investigating reports of an issue with Google Talk. We will provide more information shortly.”Another update 10 minutes later says, “We’re aware of a problem with Google Talk affecting a majority of users. The affected users are able to access Google Talk, but are seeing error messages and/or other unexpected behaviour. We will provide an update by 7/26/12 5:20 PM detailing when we expect to resolve the problem. Please note that this resolution time is an estimate and may change.”A few days ago online calling service Skype has confirmed that a bug that has caused instant messages to be sent to the wrong contacts.

ARTICLE BY ~ IBNLIVE

Google’s Nexus Q takes on Microsoft, Apple in the living room

WRITTEN BY ZDNET
Google’s Nexus Q is expensive and odd-looking, and it doesn’t play well with devices outside of the Android world. It’s a pretty weak competitor to Microsoft’s Xbox 360, Apple TV, or even Sonos. Here’s what’s wrong.

Google’s Nexus Q takes on Microsoft, Apple in the living room

It’s also pricey, at $299 without speakers or cables, and it works only with Android devices.



Put those pieces together and you have to wonder whether Google is deliberately trying to limit the market for this product to diehard Google loyalists.


In the industrial design of its new media player, Google has broken out of the box, quite literally. The Nexus Q is a black orb, 4.6 inches in diameter, with a ring of 32 LEDs that “shift and change color in time to your music,” Google says. I guess that makes it a 21st Century lava lamp.


It also has its own 12.5 watt/channel amplifier and ports to connect to a living-room audio system or an HDTV. (If you want even more details, read the full specs.)

Google’s Nexus Q takes on Microsoft, Apple in the living room

The odd thing about the Nexus Q is that it doesn’t include a remote control. Instead, you must control it with an Android phone or an Android tablet using the Google Play and YouTube apps for Android. Nothing else will work.

The new $199/$249 Nexus 7 tablets will fill that role quite nicely, but when you add in that cost you’re up to at least $500. Add in Google’s $300 Triad Bookshelf speakers and $49 speaker cables with banana plugs, plus sales tax, and your total is over a grand.


But hey, you can watch YouTube videos and stream your music collection on that setup.


These design and pricing decisions are very odd indeed.


Microsoft’s Xbox 360 already owns the living room, having sold roughly 70 million units. It has announced and demonstrated its Xbox SmartGlass controller app, which will “work with Windows 8 PCs and tablets, and iPads, iPhones, and Android devices.” At Amazon, the Xbox 360 with Kinect costs 5 bucks less than that odd-looking little Google orb.

Google’s Nexus Q takes on Microsoft, Apple in the living room

Apple TV might still be a “hobby” in Cupertino, but at $99 it’s actually a great deal if you’re an Apple loyalist. You can use any iOS device, including iPhones and iPads, to push content to an Apple TV via AirPlay. Or you can buy music and stream TV shows directly from iTunes. It doesn’t have its own amplifier, like the Nexus Q, but if you already have a decent audio system it’s an easy addition. And you just know that someday, probably soon, Apple is going to deliver a big, big upgrade to Apple TV that will make Google’s offering instantly obsolete.

The Xbox 360 and Apple TV also have other advantages that the Nexus Q can’t match. You can run both boxes using a remote control or an app. They have access to impressively large ecosystems of content and apps (and games, in the case of the Xbox 360). With years of experience, Microsoft and Apple have mastered the supply-chain and manufacturing issues, unlike Google, which is a newcomer to the large-scale hardware business.


Google TV, of course, is the logical competitor to both Microsoft and Apple here, but it appears to have been left behind in favor of the newer, hotter Nexus Q.


In fact, the Nexus Q in its current incarnation looks like more of an answer to Sonos, which offers wireless audio systems that you can control with iPads and iPhones and Android devices and via apps on a PC or a Mac. The Sonos 3, which is the same price as the Nexus Q, includes a more-than-adequate speaker and appeals to all sorts of people who don’t want to be locked into an all-Android environment.

Google’s Nexus Q takes on Microsoft, Apple in the living room



There’s no question that Google has created a pretty device in the Nexus Q. The fact that it’s made in the USA is admirable and justifies at least part of the premium price. But it’s hard to imagine that anyone but Android diehards will find it worth buying.

Google Maps New features For Android

Google unveils 3D cities in Google Earth and offline Google Maps for Android
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Offline mapping

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Google’s 3D cityscapes will make their debut in the Google Earth mobile apps
Google has announced several new features for its mapping services, including 3D cityscapes in Google Earth, and an offline mode for its Google Maps Android application.


The announcements today (6 June) will be seen as a pre-emptive strike against Apple, which at its WWDC conference next week is expected to announce that it is ditching Google Maps in favour of its own mapping data and services in its upcoming iOS 6 software.

google maps,google maps,google maps directions,google maps street view,google maps api,google maps mobile,google maps driving directions,google maps pedometer,google maps quest,google maps api key,google maps event

Google has four separate pieces of mapping news. The 3D cityscapes will roll out in Google Earth mobile apps, while the Android version of Google Maps will get the ability to download maps for offline usage in more than 100 countries in the coming weeks.


Meanwhile, an initiative called Google Street View Trekker will send rucksack-toting Googlers off to photograph places that aren’t accessible to Street View cars, trikes and snowmobiles, while Google is expanding its Map Maker tool to 12 new countries for people to help improve the accuracy of its maps – although this doesn’t include the UK yet.


Some big announcements, just days before WWDC. Not that Google is framing the news in terms of any rivalry with Apple.


“It’s covering a number of things that we’ve been doing, and perhaps haven’t talked about as much as we should have done,” said Ed Parsons, geospatial technologist at Google, in an interview with The Guardian.


“There’s a lot going on in mapping right now, and we wanted to be able to tell our story,” added Brian McClendon, vice president of engineering for Google Maps, in a follow-up conference call with a group of European journalists. “We’re very proud of how far we’ve come in comprehensiveness, accuracy and usability.”


3D cityscapes


Those priorities are also reflected in the offline Google Maps for Android announcement, which means people will be able to download the map for a specific city or area before travelling there, and save on data usage/costs when they arrive.


Parsons says it’s one of the most-demanded features from Google Maps users. McClendon said that Google is capping download sizes to around 50MB – “You can get almost all of the San Francisco Bay area… The detail you’ll get down to is all of the streets, all of the labels and all of the POIs [points of interest].”


Its launch may also encourage more Android users to download the standalone Google Maps app from the Google Play store, rather than wait for their operator / handset maker to push out an update to the Android OS (and thus its embedded maps app).


All of this begs the question: what about iOS? All concerned at Google are playing a straight bat, as you’d imagine.


“The maps application on iOS has always been developed by Apple, who made use of our mapping tiles in the background,” said Parsons. “That’s always been something that’s in their control.”


McClendon was equally diplomatic on iOS: “It’s an excellent platform and we see it as one of the many devices that we’d like to provide Google Maps on.”


Of course, Google could launch a standalone Google Maps app for iOS, just as it has on Android. But it will be interesting to see any Apple WWDC announcements on its own mapping plans include offline access to match Android.


Amid the interest in the 3D Google Earth cities and offline Android maps, the Street View Trekker news risks getting sidelined, but it’s noteworthy too.


Once, the technology for capturing images for Google Street View had to be carted around in a car. Then it was shrunk down for a tricycle. Now it can be squeezed into a rucksack, enabling Googlers to explore areas on foot (think canyons, mountains, national parks…) and capture them for Street View too.


“Up Snowdon, down the Grand Canyon, out into the wilds of England, Scotland and Wales… We can take people to places they wouldn’t visit,” said Parsons. “It’s a fantastic opportunity for remote field trips, too.”


From cars to tricycles to rucksacks. How long before the Street View capture technology fits in a smartphone, and could thus be used by anyone?


Parsons said this is already happening, sort of. He cites a product launched by Google six months ago, without much fanfare, called Phototours, which takes photos that people have taken of landmarks and stitches them together. Not quite a user-generated Street View, but a step in that direction.

Car Buyers Study 2011 – Google India

With over 120 million Internet users in India, the Internet is playing a major role in influencing car-buying decisions. An offline study conducted by Nielsen on behalf of Google India at car showrooms of leading carmakers in top eight metros (NCR, Mumbai, Pune, Chennai, Bangalore, Kolkata, Ahmedabad and Kochi) has revealed that one in two car buyers had conducted research online before arriving at the dealership. The survey also revealed that of those who had researched their purchase online, over 50 percent changed their choice of car brands after uncovering new information on the web.

Car Buyers Study 2011 – Google India

The study sheds light on how the Internet influences the purchase decisions. Respondents reported that they used the web to research and compare prices, watch online videos and find images, do competitive analysis, find dealer contacts and read both expert and user reviews. Most car buyers also rated OEMs’ website as the most important and trustworthy source of information. Of the 50 percent respondents who went online, 42 percent said they used the search engine as the first source of information, just behind the opinions of friends and relatives’ (47%).


On average, car buyers spend 9-12 weeks researching before arriving at their final decision, and of those who turned to the web for assistance, over 90 percent of shoppers used a search engine to learn more about the cars they were interested in buying.


The automotive segment is among the fastest growing verticals on Google, with query volume growth of over 70 percent year on year. In terms of query volume growth SUVs was the fastest growing car segment growing at (83% YOY), followed by premium cars (82%), saloons (75%), luxury cars (74%) and hatchback cars (53% YOY).


Speaking about the study’s findings, Rajan Anandan, VP and MD of Google India (pictured), said: “This offline study substantiates the growing number of auto-related searches we’ve seen on Google search in India. Auto is among the fastest growing vertical in terms of query volumes on Google. Most OEMs have not yet tapped the full potential of the digital medium and we hope this study will help them to understand and engage the Indian consumer online.”


The research was conducted between January and February 2012 outside showrooms of leading OEMs: Maruti Suzuki, Tata Motors, Ford India, Chevrolet, Hyundai, Honda and Volkswagen. A total of 234 dealerships across eight cities were covered and the total sample size was 2,791 respondents. Of this 93 percent were males, with 75 percent of the respondents in the 25-44 age group. More than 75 percent of them belong to SEC – A.


Top 10 most searched new car launches in 2011:


● Hyundai Eon


● Mahindra XUV500


● Honda Brio


● Tata Manza


● Maruti Kizashi


● Toyota Liva


● Hyundai Verna


● Nissan Sunny


● Skoda Rapid


● Ford Fiesta


The Automotive India Forums

Google Drive – Apple’s iCloud Alternative ( videos )

Google has finally released Drive, a new cloud storage option for all Google account holders, offering up to 5 GB worth of free storage. While it may be easy to draw comparisons to Dropbox, Microsoft’s SkyDrive, or Amazon Cloud, Google Drive represents the final element of a powerful cloud platform, with services that rival those of Apple’s iCloud.



Last year Apple announced its iCloud platform, giving users the ability to sync music, photos, and any other files they might have across all their iOS devices. The announcement was met with varying levels of fanfare. To those unfamiliar with the concept of cloud computing, it seemed like a powerful new tool. To anyone that had used remote storage before, iCloud was underwhelming, as the technology had been around for years.


However, this is Apple we’re talking about, which has a tendency to make a phenomenon out of just about anything it releases. So, despite numerous teething problems, Apple reported that more than 20 million had signed up to iCloud in the first five days of the release of iOS5.


Enter Google


Google had been building up its own selection of cloud services for years – Gmail has always offered free storage space to its users, as do services like Google Docs. Having said that, it was with Android that Google truly pushed into Apple territory, giving users the ability to remotely sync music, photos, and contacts with their portable devices. With Drive, Google completes the platform, allowing generic file storage synced across PC and Android devices.



Google has a bit of a modesty issue, having never triumphantly paraded its cloud services to the world, for with Android, cloud services have always been there. This is likely why Google felt it necessary to release a video reminding Android fans that Google’s been all cloud for a long time.


Directly comparing iCloud to Google services results in near identical specs. Both offer 5 GB worth of generic storage, both have the ability to sync movies, photos, and music, and both cost nothing to the user. But while iCloud users are required to use iTunes for music and photo syncing, Google Music allows its users to simply select folders on their local hard drive, and any new music is uploaded and synced.


Google Drive also makes it easy to publicly share files and collaborate with other users in real time. And these files can be much larger than iCloud allows – a maximum filesize of 10 GB for Drive compared to just 25 MB for free iCloud accounts, increasing to 250 MB for paid accounts.


Ultimately, the great divider between these two services lies in mobile platform of choice, as it is extremely unlikely that Apple will ever release official iCloud applications for Android devices. However, Google already offers numerous apps for iOS devices with Google Drive apps “coming soon” for iPhone and iPad.


Apple’s closed ecosystem that allows it to seamlessly integrate iCloud into iOS (and Mountain Lion) means that the majority of Apple users will probably stick with the “default” option, but Google Drive’s wider compatibility and the ability to get a total of 10 GB of free cloud storage by signing up for both could help attract some to Google’s offering. For users of existing Google services and Android devices, however, with integration in the “Google bar” found at the top of Gmail and other Google services, Drive seems seems like a winner.



Source:GOOGLE DRIVE

Google Drive offers 5 GB of free cloud storage that can be accessed anywhere on the web

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Unzip Google Today

Gideon Sundback (April 24, 1880 – June 21, 1954) was a Swedish-American electrical engineer. Gideon Sundback is most commonly associated with his work in the development of the ZIPPER 

zipper Google doodle

The unique Doodle is a tribute to Gideon Sundback, the Swedish-American electrical engineer who invented the zip, as today is his 132nd birthday.


The unzipped page brings up a whole host of links with information about Sundback, allowing you to freely peruse and learn more about the important invention, which was initially designed for women’s boots.
 If you are a Firefox user, you might not be allowed to play with the new, interactive zipper Google doodle. This is because the new zipper Google doodle does not seem to be fully compatible with the Firefox browser.

NO MÁS SOPA: Movement and Blackout List Grows



The movement is growing – close to 7,000 sites and counting have announced they will join the blackout. Google has announced a major protest on their homepage and Wikipedia is doing blackout. Will it work? Will it stop SOPA?

Via MSNBC
Opponents of controversial federal anti-piracy legislation known as SOPA seem to be picking up steam. Supporters of the legislation in both houses of Congress appear to have backed off, the Obama administration has expressed concerns with the legislation, and an Internet blackout slated for Wednesday is picking up supporters.

A House subcommittee was slated to prepare the Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA, for a vote later this month; the Senate had planned a vote on the companion bill, PIPA (The Protect IP Act,) even sooner. Now, it appears both votes will be delayed.

SOPA opponents are rallying around an effort to call attention to the legislation by convincing Web sites to “go dark” on Jan. 18, and display only a simple message of protest on a black background. On Monday, Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales announced that his website will go dark for 24 hours starting at midnight ET Tuesday, following the lead of other high-profile promised blackouts. Reddit.com will go black from 8 a.m.- 8 p.m. on Wednesday. The hacker group Anonymous also encouraged others to join in the 12-hour blackout, and garnered a lot of attention with its Twitter post using the hashtag #BlackoutSOPA.
Meanwhile, several signs point to SOPA legislation hitting some serious speedbumps. On Saturday, a statement issued by White House cyberczar Howard Schmidt, and other administration technology officials, threw cold water on SOPA’s anti-piracy efforts.

“Our analysis of the DNS filtering provisions in some proposed legislation suggests that they pose a real risk to cybersecurity and yet leave contraband goods and services accessible online,” says the response, referring to SOPA’s proposal to allow law enforcement officials to blacklist Web sites — cut them off from U.S. users — that allegedly encourage piracy. The response, posted at WhiteHouse.gov on Saturday,does not take a position on SOPA, but it cautioned lawmakers that the administration will oppose anti-piracy efforts that might increase censorship.

“Any effort to combat online piracy must guard against the risk of online censorship of lawful activity and must not inhibit innovation by our dynamic businesses large and small,” the memo reads.

In Congress, supporters of the legislation have recently indicated they are open to changing their proposals.

Late Friday afternoon, Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), said he planned to tone down the enforcement powers that would be granted by the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). A new version would not include the most controversial provision, which would have enabled federal authorities to “blacklist” domains that were alleged to be involved in distribution of pirated content, effectively cutting portions of the Web off from all U.S. users.

“After consultation with industry groups across the country, I feel we should remove Domain Name System blocking from the Stop Online Piracy Act so that the Committee can further examine the issues surrounding this provision,” Smith, one of SOPA’s chief backers, said in a statement. “We will continue to look for ways to ensure that foreign websites cannot sell and distribute illegal content to U.S. consumers.”

The move comes after a similar step taken on Thursday by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), sponsor of the Senate version, PIPA. Leahy said complaints from “human rights groups, engineers, and others” had convinced him to change his thinking on the bill.

“I remain confident that the ISPs — including the cable industry, which is the largest association of ISPs — would not support the legislation if its enactment created the problems that opponents of this provision suggest. Nonetheless, this is in fact a highly technical issue, and I am prepared to recommend we give it more study before implementing it,” he said in a statement on his website.
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“As I prepare a managers’ amendment to be considered during the floor debate, I will therefore propose that the positive and negative effects of this provision be studied before implemented, so that we can focus on the other important provisions in this bill, which are essential to protecting American intellectual property online, and the American jobs that are tied to intellectual property. I regret that law enforcement will not have this remedy available to it when websites operating overseas are stealing American property, threatening the safety and security of American consumers.”

While Senate debate on PIPA is slated for later this month, advocacy group Public Knowledge said on Friday that it believed debate on SOPA was going to be postponed until February.

Either way, removal of DNS blacklisting provision is unlikely to satisfy critics of Congressional anti-piracy efforts. They find other provisions — such as the ability for the Justice Department to cut off payment processing for alleged “rogue” websites — to be nearly as problematic.

“The DNS filtering provisions represent only some of the fundamental flaws in PIPA,” the Electronic Froniter Foundation said in a statement to Geek.com. “This bill, and its House counterpart, cannot be fixed — they must be killed.”

Meanwhile, discussions about SOPA hung over the annual CES geek-fest, held this week in Las Vegas. At the trade show, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) talked up his legislative alternative to SOPA, the OPEN Act, or Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act. He also promised to hold hearings next week on the issue. (For more, see this story.)

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Black Wednesday day In CYBERIA

On Wednesday, a group of technology companies are staging an unusual form of protest: They are shutting down their own popular Web sites for a day to show their unhappiness with two Internet-regulation bills grinding through Congress. They argue that the bills would impose huge regulatory costs and stifle innovation on the Web.                                            



Around the country, Americans will wake up without some of the oddball essentials of online life. NoWikipedia. No Reddit, a compendium of links to stories and funny pictures that draws millions a day. And no icanhazcheeseburger.com, which is the world’s best-known collection of funny cat pictures.


In Washington, however, the day is to have another significance.


It will culminate a surprising lobbying effort in which technology companies such as Twitter, Wikipedia and Google have used their massive reach into Americans’ daily lives as a political weapon, to whip up support from online users.


In this fight, they were pitted against traditional Washington heavyweights, such as Hollywood and the recording industry.


And even before the LOLcats went on strike, it seemed like the tech companies were winning.


This fight is over two similar bills: the House’s Stop Online Piracy Actand the Senate’s Protect IP (intellectual property) Act. Both are meant to attack the problem of foreign Web sites that sell pirated or counterfeit goods. They would impose restrictions forcing U.S. companies to stop selling online ads to suspected pirates, processing payments for illegal online sales and refusing to list Web sites suspected of piracy in search-engine results.


The idea is to cut off the channels that deliver American customers, and their money, to potential pirates. But tech companies see the laws as a dangerous overreach, objecting because, they say, the laws would add burdensome costs and news rules that would destroy the freewheeling soul of the Internet.


“The voice of the Internet community has been heard,” Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), who sided with the tech companies, said in a statement. Issa said he had already been told of a victory: GOP leaders told him that the House would not vote on a version of the bill that those companies oppose. “Much more education for Members of Congress about the workings of the Internet is essential.”


The biggest impact of Wednesday’s blackout may be in the shutdown of the English-language version of Wikipedia, which gets 2.7 billion U.S. visitors per month.


“It is the opinion of the English Wikipedia community that both of these bills, if passed, would be devastating to the free and open web,” said a statement signed by three of the free encyclopedia’s administrators, with the handles “NuclearWarfare,” “Risker” and “Billinghurst.” They said the decision to shut down the English-language portion of the site, starting at midnight Eastern time, had been made after a virtual discussion that involved 1,800 users.


But already, the momentum of the two controversial bills has been largely halted. Just weeks ago, they seemed on their way to passage, having cleared a Senate committee and garnered bipartisan support in the House


Washington Post 

.By David A. Fahrenthold, Updated: Wednesday, January 18, 10:35 AM

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Google has Done it Again !!!

A Very Smart Innovation……………
Awesome…what else can be said?!

Check out this device …


Guess what you can do with a touch screen, camera, scanner, WiFi, and google maps …

View a building through it, and it gives you all the information about that building….
Mobile version

Choose a building and touch a floor and it tells you more details of the building. You can use it when you want to know a car model, an insect name, what kind of food is served at a restaurant and how much, who built a bridge, etc. etc.

Mobile version 

It’s got a scanner built in.

Mobile version 

so you can use it this way when you want to check the meaning of a word in the newspaper, book, magazine, etc. It would be much easier to read a real book. You can use the dictionary, wikipedia, thesaurus and anything else available on the web. What do you think? 

Mobile version 

Indoor guide:Works in a building, airport, station, hospital, etc.


Applications 

Automatic simultaneous translation: here Latin to English.


Applications

Search keyword: Helpful when you want to find out a word from a lot of text in newspaper/book. 
Applications 

Nutrition: This kind of function would be helpful for health freaks..


future mobile search for diet
future mobile search for diet
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