Posts Tagged Google
7 amazing extensions for Google Chrome

Here’s a list of the most essential extensions. If you don’t have these, God help you survive the internet age.
1) RSS Subscription Extension (by Google)
Whenever you see visit a website that has an RSS subscription option, you’ll see a feed icon in the address bar. Click it, and choose one of the feeds. It’ll open up in Google Reader directly (or whatever feed reader you specify). You can then choose to subscribe if you like.

2) Google Dictionary (by Google)
Are you one of those who keeps doing a “define:<whatever word>” search just to check its meaning? This this addon is for you. Double click a word (or ctrl+double click) to check its meaning. Plus you can type in a word to check its meaning too.


3) Proxy Switchy
Do you keep changing proxies? Whether it be for anonymous browsing, or accessing internet through a gateway at your organization. This extension gives you the ability to switch between proxies quickly. Plus, you can define wildcards and regular expressions for different proxies (like, use the China proxy is the URL has the term “hack”
)

4) Google Mail Checker
This addon lets you see the number of unread mails in your GMail inbox. It however does expect that you’ll stay signed in all day long.
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5) Chrowety
This is possibly the best twitter app/extension/addon I’ve seen. It is probably even the prettiest of them all too. It shows images (from twitpic, yfrog, etc) within itself. Amazing extension.

6) SpeedDial
Replace the default “new tab” page with a speed dial page. This one just might get you to type a lot less.

7) YouTube Converter/Downloader
Get links to the video files for every video you watch. Integrates perfectly with the new layout of YouTube.

That wraps up the 7 extensions you MUST have. Or else the devil will eat you.
Anyway, got any extensions that you just can’t live without? Let me know!
April Fools Day

You’ve heard about Google’s April Fools day. There have been some funny hoaxes like Google Gulp, Google TiSP, etc. They’ve even had press releases about the latest technology they’re working on (and you can’t be sure if its a prank or an actual project they’re working on).
And Google had initially used their April Fools Day technique to spread word about Gmail.
In 2004, they announced a free web-based email system, with one whole gigabyte of storage space. This was completely unheard of. Competitors offered 10mb, sometimes even 50mb of storage space. And you had to actually BUY email space if you wanted some 250mb or 500mb of storage.
It was the perfect way to spread word about a radical new service. People didn’t have instant access to it (invite-only). But they heard from those who did get invites (forums, IRC, etc). They’d talk about all the features gmail had, how amazing it was (no eye popping ads? WHAT?).
Spreading through word of mouth, the number of people wanting this service grew exponentially. Ideal for a marketing person.
And on the next April fools day (2005), they announced doubling the storage space. From one gigabyte to two gigabytes of storage. For free.
That was Gmail. Things worked perfectly for Gmail. And that is probably what a large number of people use these days.
Question: Is Google TiSP somehow going to be true? Google is going into the ISP market… so was TiSP metaphorically equivalent to the technology they’re developing right now?
Google’s downfall… is here?

Google shaped the internet.
You’ve probably heard this before. Let’s try and analyze, how Google did that.
Before Google, the internet was a mess. Random links here and there, with pretty weird means of finding what you wanted. Once Google went online, you could search for whatever you wanted, and get relevant and helpful articles.
This was neat. Something people hadn’t experienced earlier. The internet marketeers figured out that Google was the next big thing. They had to make things “searchable”.
Search Engine Optimization became extremely important. People actually designed sites that were made to be found (keyword spamming, etc). But Google found ways to filter those spammers. The spammers found some more ways, and then Google found even more ways.
The “race” to the Google rank #1 is still one that people actually pursue.
But a more general thing was going on. Internet was taking shape into a text based media. That continues even till today. Most websites are textual in nature… because they can be “found” by Google. Their crawlers cannot understand flash, video, audio, and images.
Video, audio and other media based sites exist, but they do not form the bulk… even though we have enough bandwidth to support such websites now. Just because we can’t “search” video like we search “text”, internet marketeers figured out that such sites cannot have much traffic. There can be just a couple of massive video websites, the rest won’t count much (because they cannot be “found”).
That was until recently.
Now, it is the people who do the “searching” for their friends. They “like”, “share” and “retweet” things that their friends might enjoy.
That is social media in action: people linking to things they like the most. And inbound links is what Google’s entire algorithm depends on.
And Google recognizes this. It has identified the “massive link base” that Twitter is. It even wants to buy Twitter, but the creators of Twitter won’t sell it even for $1 billion (so says this post: Twitter wouldn’t sell for 1 billion, says source).
Combine this with the fact that Twitter is working on a contextual search ads. And certain ideas become obvious. Google’s downfall is here. Atleast it is for Google Search. And very likely even Google AdWords (the ads you see on the right when you search).
To prevent itself, Google has been doing a lot of work in the Social Internet arena: Orkut, FriendConnect, buying Aardvark, Reader, and more recently Buzz.
But Neither of them seems to hit the sweet spot. The one which people will embrace wholeheartedly. Just like they accepted Google Search. Could this be the beginning of the end of Google Search?
My first GWT WebApp

For the past couple of weeks, I’ve been experimenting with the Google Web Toolkit v2.0.0. And I just completed my first GWT application today
An application for Contrive (an event for Quark ’10) had to be made. There were many options, Sliverlight, Flash, Java. I decided to go the JavaScript + HTML route. Quite a bizzare choice for an application so complex. But the GWT made life easy.
I’m sure I would have torn apart my hair if GWT hadn’t been developed. It needs to check if the connection to the server is established or not. Then it needs to continuously update according to the moves by other players. And it needs to make sure questions are answered in the given time limit. And all these things need to happen on as many browsers as possible.
I’ve got this application working on almost all major browsers without any glitch (except IE
). It also works on some older browsers with slight graceful degradations in the UI.
The event begins on 15th January… and I’m taking the application through intensive tests, trying to figure out exactly at what load the server fails. We need to get around 600 teams through the eliminations as quickly as possible. That is a HUGE amount of load. And we need to make sure that the thing actually works. But I’m guessing the software can easily handle hundreds of people simultaneously.
Oh, and go register for Contrive right now
It’s a completely online event, and you just might win some money

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