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An Associated Press article about the impact of the internet on journalism has a few interesting findings. A few years ago, it was expected that the internet would democratize news coverage. While print media is being rapidly reborn online, web-based news appears to be constraining the number of conversations instead of expanding them. "The news agenda actually seems to be narrowing, with many Web sites primarily packaging news that is produced elsewhere, according to the Project for Excellence in Journalism's annual State of the News Media report. Two stories - the war in Iraq and the 2008 presidential election campaign - represented more than a quarter of the stories in newspapers, on television and online last year, the project found. Take away Iraq, Iran and Pakistan, and news from all of the other countries in the world combined filled up less than 6 percent of the American news hole, the project said."
According to AP, Swiss media reported that Yahoo will benefit from a special tax break by moving to Switzerland. The total number of employee’s affected by the move was not clear (5% is a figure quoted) with other reports saying that 70 employees in management roles will be told to relocate or lose their jobs. Yahoo follows companies including EA and Cisco Systems that have relocated European Operations to Switzerland in recent times. The move would indicate business as usual for Yahoo despite Microsoft’s hostile takeover bid and rumored negotiations with other possible merger or acquisition partners. Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware. Google Earth has become a staple of its Maps product, with developments and updates coming out on a regular basis. The project has grown to include Google Mars, Google Sky, and Google Moon, and just as Google Earth went from a downloadable application to a web-accessible visual tool, so too will Google Sky, which used to be solely a portion of the Google Earth application. And Google won’t let a little lawsuit stop it from developing its Google Sky efforts. There’s now a web-based version of Google Sky, which doesn’t require a download and can be accessed directly through your browser window. There are a few new exploration features that come with the web-based version of Google Sky, including a search tool for browsing named objects in the sky, multiple optical sky surveys for switching views, and galleries that display images from Hubble and other telescopes. One benefit of having a dynamic web-based version is that you won’t have to rely on downloadable updates in order to get the latest information. Google Sky web version now lets you find current planet positions. Google Sky’s new web version is available on all web browsers, and is being launched globally, in 26 localized languages. A web seminar Google held yesterday at KMWorld Magazine offered a great deal of insight into how Google manages projects and communication internally. The presentation by Google followed an employee through his first few weeks at the company, explaining the many tools he’s using: from the Google intranet MOMA, the Google Ideas site and Google Caribou Alpha, to Google Experts Search, “Googler Search,” and Google Apps. Following is a smaller excerpt of the large-size screenshots & info Google was showing in the 59-page presentation, with thanks to Brian – who has a wrap-up of the presentation as well as the full slides at his blog – for sending this in. KMWorld says the presentation will be archived at their site eventually, so perhaps if you register with them you might still be able to see the event. Google Projects
Google Projects seems to be a dashboard to organize all kinds of tasks. The tabs in this 2006 screen read “My PDB,” “Projects,” “Charters,” “Staffing Requests,” and “Reports.” At the top right there’s something that looks like an Atom feed subscription button. (Note that some of the info in the screenshot was already blurred, perhaps to hide info on unreleased projects, while, as in other screens, I added some more blobs and blurs elsewhere.) Brian at his wrap-up article explains “PDB” means project database. This database is hooked up to another internal collaboration service called “Product Snippets”:
Google Ideas
Google Ideas looks like a forum to submit new product ideas. Others can then rate the product (from “Great idea! Make it so” to “Dangerous or harmful if implemented”) or discuss it, and there’s also a “buzz” factor to evaluate the usefulness of a suggestion. Ideas shown in the screenshot are all from 2006 – like “google talk IM babel fish”, or “UPC database and applications” – and have at least partly already been released. Elsewhere, the presentation noted that Google co-founder Sergey Brin has a resource allocation rule separating products into Search, Ads, Apps (like search quality, AdWords, Google Apps), Strong potential (like Blogger or Google News) and Wild and Crazy (like Google Transit, or Google offline ads). Google Caribou
Caribou may just be (or have been) the name of the latest version of Gmail, used within Google internally, as Garett Rogers speculated in 2006. Indeed, this “Alpha” service looks just like Gmail. Moma Intranet and Search
The intranet homepage of Google at www.corp.google.com offers all kinds of customizable info boxes. At the left side, there’s general information for employees, lunch info, and a pointer to Google Tech Stop, Google’s internal support. At the top, there’s the MOMA search box. In the main content area, a welcome box for the “Noogler” (a new Google employee) links to what seems to be an introductory help page, suggesting the new employee to file a ticket if there’s still an open question. A warning-style message says that the “Trading window closes”. An internal Google news box feeds employees with the latest happening inside and outside Google; one item for instance reads “Setting Our Sites High – Announcing the public release of Google Sites”. Also, several communication tools are linked; Google Mail, Calendar, Talk, Blogger, Mailman (“email-based lists”), Sparrow (“shared lists”), a wiki, Writely & Trix (that’s Google Docs and Spreadsheets), and more. In the top right, links read “Switch to iMoma” and “Send feedback”, as were also visible in a previous post about Google’s intranet.
As above screenshot shows, the Moma search box has a kind of auto-results feature. The employee enters “dasher,” and a box expands showing information like “Dasher ... Code name for Google Apps For Your Domain”. Several “Googler-added” links to Google’s intranet wiki are available as well. A glossary link points to information on “Dasherize”. Auto-completion into terms like “dasher dashboard” or “dasher zoo” are offered as well. To take a look at a Moma search result page, check out the screenshot Google shows off at their blog. Google Expert SearchAt the address https://expert/, employees can find co-workers with a special expertise, perhaps to get help for their own projects. A search for “saml” in the slide screenshot returned 7 people, listing their resumes and more. A specific resume that was shown in the presentation included a detailed listing of all the achievements of a person within Google, i.e. all the projects they are working on; this in turn generates a lot of keywords for the Expert Search engine when you’re querying for a certain technology. The expert search is then linked to the “Googler Search” (a “googler” being a Google employee in Google’s internal wording), also part of MOMA. (Interestingly enough, the URL shown in the original full-size screenshot ends in a PHP extension... which is not to mean, however, that it’s still written in PHP.) An employee detail page includes a photo, the office location, telephone number, blog address, the employee number and department, the linked name of the manager of the employee, and more. A Newer Google Docs
Here’s one of many examples of Google eating their own dog food, as the text editor used is Google Docs... though it may be a newer version of Google Docs; I’m not sure how to get this paper-in-the-middle layout in the current public version of Docs.
Also, the second and third screenshots show an even newer layout for Google Docs. The toolbar on top is now more like a traditional desktop application menu. It includes the entries File, Edit, View, Insert, Format, Tools and Table. The old tab-style buttons seem to be gone, though to the far right there’s still a single “Share” button. On first glance these changes look well, I think. [By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: The Tools Google Uses Internally | Comments] [Advertisement] Want to advertise here? Please contact me (Philipp). Your ad rotates on all blog (graphic + text) and feed pages (text). [Advertise here] Filed under: Cellphones This is just getting silly, don't you think? The iPhone Dev Team has once again proven their totally gnarly talents by freeing up the latest firmware before it's even the latest firmware. Apple, here's our suggestion -- just let people do what they want with your devices, since they're clearly going to do it anyway. That way, instead of making enemies, you're making lifelong buddies. Reasonable, right? Steve, give us a call, we're more than happy to riff on some ideas for playing nice with the end-user.[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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03
2008
F-117 stealth fighters to make final flight no one will know aboutScritto da: Nat in GeneraleFiled under: Transportation Air Force buffs, prepare to salute a true American hero as it makes it way into the annals of military history: the F-117 stealth fighter. The planes -- one of the most enigmatic members of the military's arsenal -- will be making their final trip on April 21st from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico to Tonopah Test Range Airfield in Nevada, the home of their first flight. The aircraft is being replaced by a newer model, the F-22 Raptor, and the government says it has no plans to bring the radar-dodging planes out of retirement. In all, there have only been 59 F-117s that have rolled off the assembly line, 37 of which have already been taken out of the skies, and another seven which have crashed. We'll miss you, F-117, and all the totally awesome, completely secret stuff you did.
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Regulators say the acquisition won't hurt competition for online ads, dealing a blow to Yahoo and Microsoft, who say it will.
After years of close competition, we finally have a clear winner in the “Pollution Capital of Europe” contest. While Milan may be better known for fashion and (everywhere except America) excellent soccer teams, it appears that it’s also the most polluted city in the whole of Europe.
Microsoft's new SQL Server Data Services, a database-in-the-cloud service coming soon, might have been the sleeper announcement of this year's Mix conference.
iGTD2 is a free application for Leopard Only that helps you organize your life by contexts and projects. It provides you an easy way to track all the things that you have to do and makes sure you get them done. iGTD2 takes some concepts from the...
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Yahoo has announced that it will relocate its European head office from the United Kingdom to Switzerland. Yahoo plans to make the move to the shores of Lake Geneva within 18 months.








