Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Google Translate: leveraging the world's largest data store

Posted by Christopher Dawson @ 12:02 pm

How many of you use Google’s translation tools? They’re built into Google Docs, Gmail, and the Google translate website. With support for 52 languages, the tools are incredibly powerful in an increasingly flat world.

While only human translators can really capture the nuance and connotation of human speech, Google translate is the premier online tool for fast translations. Google Docs can be quickly translated, mail can be automatically translated, and now Google’s automatic YouTube transcription services can potentially translate video into other languages as well.

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Monday, March 8, 2010

New Google Tool Visualizes Public Data in Animated Charts

Google has just launched Google Public Data Explorer. The new Google Labs tool offers a visual way to look at and analyze large public data sets on a variety of popular search topics.
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Sunday, March 7, 2010

Google-as-the-Fonz, or: how search upstarts are--obviously!--going to kill Google in the near future

Newsweek ran an article this week that tried to point out the vulnerabilities of Google as a be-all search portal:

If Google has been able to crush its search competition, it's not because it has perfected the art and science of Web searching. Far from it. Google is what the industry calls a "second-generation" search engine. First-generation engines like AltaVista found Web pages containing words that matched the user's search words. Google's innovation was to further rank a Web page by the other pages that link to it, on the somewhat shaky assumption that if a page is much-linked-to, it must be useful. Charles Knight, an analyst who runs the AltSearchEngines Web site, notes there's a plethora of good ideas for what a third-generation engine might bring to the party, and no shortage of companies trying to prove those ideas. "Each has shown they can do some aspect of a search better than Google can," says Knight.


It goes on to describe three of the most talked-about challengers to date: vertical search engines, search refinement aids, and social search. Google, of course, has integrated each of these techniques into its own engine carefully, and has promised to do even more with vertical search to help users find reliable health information. Already, you can search for "cancer" and see prioritized medical results from Google Health, WebMD, and others.



It's worth a read, but to date, the only non-Google search experiences I've had that lead me astray live inside Apple's Safari browser and are, of all things, visual innovations. Try flipping through your personal history for a page you've recently seen in Safari 4--it blows the text-based histories seen in other browsers out of the water. Or the stolen-from-Chrome (I think) feature: screenshots of your top 8 favorite pages fill a new tab, supplanting bookmarking as the useful way to get to favorite site and more about personal information managemen.t

Friday, March 5, 2010

Apple promo 1987

Bing cashback exploit discovered, Microsoft sends in lawyers

Bing cashback exploit discovered, Microsoft sends in lawyers

By , 10 November 2009 - 14:09

A Bing cashback vulnerability has been discovered by Samir Meghani of the Bountii Team.

The flaw exists due to a software API oversight that allows users to fake transactions to Bing. Currently, Bing does not detect these faked transactions. The flaw affects both the customer and merchant. According to Samir, in his original posting, "merchants have a few options for reporting, but Bing suggests using a tracking pixel. Basically, the merchant adds a tracking pixel to their order confirmation page, which will report the the transaction details back to Bing." Samir detailed that the process was flawed but didn't pin point exactly how to generate fake transactions.

Bing Cashback is an initiative that pays people to search with Bing. Customers can also get cashback rewards, meaning you could get cashback from online purchases made when Bing is used.

In a follow up post over the weekend entitled "Surrendering to Microsoft", Samir posted a legal letter fromMicrosoft's legal team demanding he remove the original blog post to which he complied. Microsoft also terminated Samir's Bing cash back account. Some may argue that this is a heavy handed approach but clearly Microsoft doesn't take kindly to fraud.







Thursday, March 4, 2010

Google Index to Go Real Time

Google is developing a system that will enable web publishers of any size to automatically submit new content to Google for indexing within seconds of that content being published. Search industry analyst Danny Sullivan told us today that this could be "the next chapter" for Google. [Read More]

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Top Ten Mistakes in Web Design

Summary:
The ten most egregious offenses against users. Web design disasters and HTML horrors are legion, though many usability atrocities are less common than they used to be.

Since my first attempt in 1996, I have compiled many top-10 lists of the biggest mistakes in Web design. See links to all these lists at the bottom of this article. This article presents the highlights: the very worst mistakes of Web design. (Updated 2007.) By Jakob Nielsen.


1. Bad Search


Cartoon - Man searching for 'Honalulu' and getting no results. - Woman: 'Oh, forget it. Let's just go visit my mother in Fargo.'

Overly literal search engines reduce usability in that they're unable to handle typos, plurals, hyphens, and other variants of the query terms. Such search engines are particularly difficult for elderly users, but they hurt everybody.

A related problem is when search engines prioritize results purely on the basis of how many query terms they contain, rather than on each document's importance. Much better if your search engine calls out "best bets" at the top of the list -- especially for important queries, such as the names of your products.

Search is the user's lifeline when navigation fails. Even though advanced search can sometimes help,simple search usually works best, and search should be presented as a simple box, since that's what users are looking for.


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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Why the Kindle and the iPad may change the way we search

Apple iPadPosted on Sunday 31 January 2010 From Pandia Search Engine News.

In spite of initial skepticism Steve Jobs has decided that the tablet has a future, and he is right. It will also change the way we search. Pandia argues that publishers should support a tool that lets tablet users surf the web and subscription based content at the same time.


[Read More...]

Monday, March 1, 2010

Today In "Thanks, Patent Office:" Google patents location-based advertising

From ReadWriteWeb, who remind us every day that the media can make us cry:
It looks like while half the Web will be holding its breath over how Facebook will wield its newly-found patent power, with its patent of the news feed, the other half just found a reason to take a big gulp of air and look around. Google was awarded last Tuesday a patent for location-based advertising, the potential bread and butter of a number of emerging mobile applications.