Google Local For Mobile: Not Just The USA

Google Local For Mobile: Not Just The USAFor those who have better thing to do with their lives than fanatically watch every twist and turn of online technology, or if you’re living outside the US of A, you may well not have been using Google’s recently launched Google Local For Mobile (GLM)- or even have heard of it.

Here’s the heads-up – it’s a service that runs through a downloaded Java application on a number of mobile phones, giving on-the-move mapping, route planning and local information.

As with their browser-based mapping services, you can view either a map, satellite view or a overlaid combination of the two.

Superimposed on this is local business information, currently, but we can see that with Google’s penchant for adding advertising to everything, this may be soon added to.

Google Local For Mobile: Not Just The USAYesterday we revealed how GLM has GPS hidden inside, but isn’t currently enabled and it was while playing around with this, we discovered another interesting undocumented feature.

Google are telling everyone that it just covers the US. Quoting from their FAQ

Does Google Local for mobile work everywhere?
Not yet. Local for mobile is currently available in the US only. We’re working to increase its availability as soon as possible.

We found that with a little playing around, you can investigate around Europe and plot routes using the click to select mapping.

So, how do you explore Europe?
Here’s how we discovered it, there may be other ways.

  • Download the app to your mobile using the ‘Other’ mobile provider option
  • Select a handset close to your own (we’ve found that it doesn’t need to be your exact handset)
  • Download and run the app
  • Shift to satellite view and you’ll see the whole of the USA
  • Scroll right towards Europe
  • Zoom in to your desired Euro location
  • Select 2 (Directions) to find route
  • Use ‘Select point on map’ to select the starting point, then finishing point
  • The route will be calculated
  • Click 3 to start stepping through your route
  • Have fun

Google Local For Mobile: Not Just The USAMore detail than the browser version
The discovery doesn’t end there. After chatting further to Cristian Streng, we now also realise that there’s detail on the Mobile version that isn’t available via the ‘normal’ Web-based Google Maps.

To illustrate it, he sent us some screen grabs showing mapping data of Germany that is currently only available in GLM.

If you fancy having a look around too, but want to save the mobile phone data charges, we’ll pass on a tip from Cristian. He very sensibly did his investigation using a PC-based Java Virtual Machine rather than spending money on GPRS charges. Smart.

If you didn’t know it already, this makes is clear that software is there to play with, and if you do, you may find lots of areas and features that you’re officially told aren’t there. So, go, explore.

Google Local For Mobile
Cristian Streng Mobile GMaps app

GPS Discovered In Google Local For Mobile

GPS Discovered In Google Local For MobileDespite their emphatic denial, Google appear to be planning to bring GPS to the recently announced Google Local For Mobile.

Clever clogs, Cristian Streng has been digging around in his Google Local For Mobile .jad, the downloaded binary file for his Nokia 6600 and he found the following “GpsEnabled: false.” Well I never.

Just to refresh you, here’s what Google say in their FAQ

Does Google Local for mobile use GPS to figure out where I am?
Google Local for mobile doesn’t use any GPS technology, even if your phone has a built in GPS location device.

It looks like v2.0 could well be different.

GPS Discovered In Google Local For MobileCurrently the users of the service have to key in or select the desired starting and destination points, and press a key to mimic their progress in the real world. Using GPS eradicates the need to tell the system where you are, or update the system to your progress.

With GPS Google’s service becomes a huge threat to many of the companies that already sell handheld navigation system like TomTom and Navicore. The disadvantage of Google’s approach is that the phone must be connected to the network, racking up data charges for the mobile owner. This disadvantage vanishes when the phone user had an all inclusive data rate.

GPS Discovered In Google Local For MobileThe GPS feature could well be waiting for a second release of the service, or waiting for next-gen handsets with aGPS built into them, to become more widely used.

Google isn’t alone in their desire to provide mapping services to mobiles. Guy Kewney tells us that there have been mutterings about Yahoo Maps linking up with mobile phone companies too.

Google Local For Mobile
Cristian Streng Mobile GMaps app

All Your Google Base Are Belong To Us

All Your Google Base Are Belong To Us – headline explained

All Your Google Base Are Belong To UsThe web wires are waxing wildly with rumours about Google Base, a hush-hush Google project that “accidentally” appeared on the Web for a few hours yesterday.

The “inadvertent” (yeah, right) unveiling of base.google.com sent bloggers into a screengrabbing frenzy, prompting the search engine giant to confirm that the fleeting snapshot was indeed a legitimate Google page.

All Your Google Base Are Belong To UsUnder pressure from bloggers, Google company product manager, Tom Oliveri, revealed a little in his blog:

“You may have seen stories today reporting on a new product that we’re testing, and speculating about our plans. Here’s what’s really going on.

We are testing a new way for content owners to submit their content to Google, which we hope will complement existing methods such as our web crawl and Google Sitemaps.

We think it’s an exciting product, and we’ll let you know when there’s more news.”

All Your Google Base Are Belong To UsThe screenshots revealed an entry page where Google suggests the type of information to submit to Base, with one sharp eyed Dutch blogger Wouter Schut, saying that the test pages also included presets for housing, products, reviews, services, travel, vehicles and want ads.

A Google Base screengrab posted on flickr revealed the following text:

Post your items on Google.

Google Base is Google’s database into which you can add all types ofcontent. We’ll host your content and make it searchable online for free.

Examples of items you can find in Google Base:

• Description of your party planning service
• Articles on current events from your website
• Listing of your used car for sale
• Database of protein structures

You can describe any item you post with attributes, which will helppeople find it when they search Google Base. In fact, based on therelevance of your items, they may also be included in the main Google search index and other Google products like Froogle and Google Local.”

Naturally, the speculation-o-meter has been in overdrive ever since, with many believing it to be the start of a foray into the online classified field, with Google placing popular services like eBay and Craigslist directly in their sights.

All Your Google Base Are Belong To UsThis service would let individual punters submit classified adverts for free on Google Base and could possibly signal the imminent arrival of the much rumoured Google Payment (aka Google Wallet) product.

Rumours have spun up to tornado force by a recent Classified Intelligence report which claimed that Google had been discretely asking job boards and other classifieds providers to submit feeds of their listings.

And while we’re speculating with such wild abandon, we can’t help thinking that if Google Base does indeed materialise, Google could offer sellers a GoogleTalk button for their listings and offer similar functionality to the much-anticipated SkypeMe buttons on eBay listings…

Google Base

Gmail UK -> GoogleMail – The background

Gmail UK The backgroundGoing into Gmail today we noticed “Google Mail in the UK” highlighted in red on the top line. Ever curious, clicking it revealed that from today, 19 October 2005, all new accounts created in the UK will use the domain googlemail.com, not the previous Gmail.com.

Sensing a story, we dived onto Google news to find a number of publications had got there first. Figuring if you can’t be first, be thorough, we present the following.

The details below come from extended digging and a long conversation with Shane Smith, CEO of Independent International Investment Research (IIIR), the company in dispute with Google over Gmail. At the end of the piece is a copy of the press release from Google.

There has been a long running trademark dispute in the UK between Google and an UK AIM-listed company, Independent International Investment Research (IIIR), who claim trade mark confusion with their G-mail service.

Given it has been such a long running dispute and anything that Google is close to is so news worthy, it’s not clear why it’s taken so long for this to get on to the news radar.

Google’s free email service, Gmail, started in April, 2004. IIIR’s Mr Smith told us that on that day he’d sent a letter to Larry and Serge at Google pointing out that IIIR already had a service called G-mail, and suggested that at this early stage, they could quickly change its name to GoogleMail to avoid confusion. There was no reply from Google central.

Gmail UK The backgroundIIIR’s G-mail is an email service that is part of their offering to their clients, enabling them to send IIIR’s research to their clients clients (if you follow). G-mail is an abbreviation of the full name – Graffiti-mail.

Speaking to Smith we learnt that IIIR felt that they had common law in certain jurisdictions, but in their words, “to ensure protection”, applied for trade mark protection in the EU block and the US. Surprisingly this was not something that Google had done already.

Discussions with Google did start, at this point on a friendly level. Smith told us that Google requested that IIIR get an independent valuation carried out for a basis for their discussions, which they duly did.

Back in December 2004, IIIR received a valuation report from Valuation Consulting Ltd putting the value of the trademark at between £25m-£34m.

The document is an interesting read with the crux of it being …

“that a large amount has been written about the free email based service using the Mark and that to re-establish the brand presence would be very costly for Google, we are confident that conservative assumptions should yield a solid valuation as follows.

We have used a very conservative royalty rate of 0.5%, applied to Google’s annualized revenues of $3,224million to give revenues of around $16million attributable to advertising promoted by use of the Mark. Using a very conservative multiple range of 3 to 4 to capitalize this amount gives a range of values of, say, $48million to $64million or, using an exchange rate of 1.9:1 £25million to £34million.”

Smith told us that following this Google rejected the reports findings and counter-offered an amount “seemingly picked out of thin air”, that “couldn’t be justified”.

To add to the complexity of this tale, there’s a separate dispute in Germany over the Gmail name, by a company separate to IIIR (as mis-reported in many publications). Back in September, this other company had their injunction against Google upheld (PDF).

Reading through past press releases of IIIR it’s clear that one of their concerns has been having sufficient funds to pursue Google, whose pockets are significantly deeper. In their September release we not that IIIR points out that “the Board (IIR’s) notes that it has received three expressions of interest in providing finance for costs of litigation and these approaches will be explored further.”

Gmail UK The backgroundGiven Google’s world-shattering valuation, it’s hardly surprising (if not a little disheartening) to hear that there are people queuing up to find a dispute with Google.

__We wonder …
We’ve been wondering for a while at Digital-Lifestyles towers, why we’ve been seeing news stories to the right of email in Gmail, rather than the pure commercials that were previously being shown. Given IIIR’s estimated values are based on a percentage of Google advertising revenue, we wonder this has lead to the new mixture of news stories and advertising.

There was a buzz around the office when we wondered if the use of the new googlemail.com domain is a chance to get a better/more personal username on the service. A dash to the browser and some frantic keying later revealed nothing of the sort. It appears that the both gmail and googlemail accounts are drawn from the same pool.

Another thing we learnt reading through the papers prepared for IIIR is that Google didn’t invent the technology behind AdSense themselves, they bought a company back in April 2003, Applied Semantics, who provided it. This was news to us.

__Summary
When I asked what Smith thought of Google’s Don’t be evil mantra, he suggested they might add that “to be pretty nasty is OK.”

We’ve got no idea who is right and who is wrong here, we’re just reporting what we’ve been told. We leave the legal wrangling to overpaid lawyers.

It’s clear that many Gmail users are pretty unhappy today, Smith said he’d received a large number of mail from Gmail users asking why he was ‘bullying’ Google.

————————–
Google’s Press statement – On record
From today, Google is changing the name of its web-based email service, Gmail, to Google Mail in the UK.

Another company has claimed the rights to Gmail but their applications are still pending and they have not provided sufficient evidence to establish common law rights based on use in the large number of countries it claimed use. In spite of the tenuous nature of their claims, we still tried to resolve this matter through negotiations.

This company has been very focused on a monetary settlement. We went back and forth trying to settle on reasonable terms, but the sums of money this company is demanding are exorbitant.

We are still working with the courts and trademark office to ensure our ability to use the Gmail name, but this could take years to resolve, and in the meantime, we want our users to have an email address and experience they can rely on.

We also want to relieve both Google and our users of the distraction of the dispute, so that Google can focus on providing a great product, and our users can enjoy a consistent, positive email experience.

So, we are voluntarily making the switch from Gmail to Google Mail and have now begun to issue new users ‘@googlemail.com’ addresses.

Starting October 19, 2005, all new accounts will have @googlemail.com addresses. We believe this is the most simple solution rather than having what could be years of distracting negotiations and disputes for the company and uncertainty about the name for our users.

We want to reassure our users that the service itself it not changing: all messages are being sent and delivered as before

On background

  • Google first offered the Gmail service on April 1st, 2004. Immediately after we offered this new product – which made front page news worldwide – the CEO of a company called Independent International Investment Research (IIIR) filed a trademark application in the US for the name ‘Gmail’.
  • IIIR’s G-mail (note that IIIR uses the mark with a hyphen but filed for Gmail without a hyphen) is a feature in IIIR’s Pronet financial analytics software that a Pronet user can click on to send a report to someone else who also has Pronet software.
  • It appeared that our product and their feature seemed to have two different audiences and uses, and were fairly distinct from one another. (We do not believe their product is a web based email service; to say that it is would be like saying Picasa is an email service because it allows you to email photos.)
  • Shane Smith, IIIR’s chairman and chief executive, contacted us in June 2004 and claimed rights to ‘Gmail’ and sought a “business solution”; in other words, they wanted money.
  • In usual circumstances, when a trademark owner who cares about and wants to protect the rights of their mark approaches the user of the mark with a claim, they take a fairly standard number of actions: they seek to prevent further use (often through a cease and desist or an injunction) and determine ways to reduce consumer confusion.
  • IIIR did not take any of these standard courses – they did not ask us to stop using the name until almost a year after first contacting us and never went to court to ask for an injunction – they just asked us for money.
  • Gmail is obviously a name we care about and millions of users around the world are now familiar with, so we of course began negotiations—starting with asking for details of their product and instances of their usage of the name.
  • While we only received more letters and a few company brochures, we really wanted our users to keep the name Gmail and thus we went back and forth trying to settle on reasonable terms. IIIR rejected our offers.
  • Bear in mind that IIIR’s claim to rights in the Gmail mark is tenuous at best. They do not have a trademark registration (they have a pending application). They do not use Gmail, they use G-mail (with a hyphen). They don’t use G-mail for an email service.
  • During our negotiations, we asked for evidence to support their assertion that they had common law rights in 80 countries, and evidence of their actual user base. To date, they have still not sent us that information. But they have continued to ask for money.
  • Last June, more than a year after Gmail was launched and over which time the product had become well liked by users, IIIR finally asked us to stop using the name.
  • They asserted that our use of “Gmail” was not respecting their intellectual property rights and was tainting the integrity of their business.
  • At the same time, Mr. Smith decided to go to the UK media with his story, despite having asked us to keep our discussions confidential. When we tried to respond to media inquiries, IIIR became incensed and provided more alleged ‘information’ about our confidential email discussions.
  • Trying to work things out has become distracting, and annoying. We feel like we are being taken advantage of.
  • We believe that we have a good case for the trademark rights, and would be willing to leave it up to the courts to decide. Unfortunately, this process can take years.
  • We do not want new users to constantly wonder whether they’ll need to change their email address. We do not want users caught in the middle of what has become a very public debate. We do not want to be continually distracted by this while we’re trying to build a better email service.
  • So starting October 19, 2005, everyone in the UK will see Gmail as Google Mail. All new email accounts we issue will be @googlemail.com accounts.
  • This change seemed a good way to resolve this to the benefit of our users.

T-Mobile Web’n’Walk – Is Google Behind It?

Anybody who really thinks that T-Mobile is behind the new “Web’n’Walk” offering it trotted out last week, has really not being paying attention. It’s Google Talk, a VoIP service normally available for PC users, now sneakily able to go out over 3G data services.

The question to ask is: if Web’n’Walk is all T-Mobile’s doing, why is Google the Home Page of the new service?

Answer: the system is seen, inside Google, as a Trojan Horse to hook the mobile phone companies on VoIP and other Google Web services – and it is really part of the fierce rivalry building up between Skype (eBay) Yahoo (France Telecom) and Google (T-Mobile) to control the nascent “presence” business, with Instant Messenger and voice as the lever.

Exactly why all these people want to be in the presence business is another story – but anybody who knows what is really happening in the advertising business won’t need an explanation. The question, as far as the mobile phone operators is concerned, is whether they will actually end up with the slightest profit.

Officially, the new service gives you the Web in your pocket. This is not new; the Opera press release went out announcing Web’n’Walk back in June! it would only have been in any sense new last month, if we were discussing the “3” Internet service was being leaked, since Hutchison had previously been resolutely adamant that its users would have access only to the “3” web in a walled garden. That news was known to NewsWireless readers back in broke in early September: Hutchison will be opening up its 3G phones to full Internet browsing shortly.

Indeed, the only real surprise in today’s announcement is the discovery that the Danger-designed HipTop phone, which achieved such fame as the Sidekick in the North American market, will be one of the 3G announcements from T-Mobile later this year (according to Silicon.com).

But 3G phones that can access the Internet are not a T-Mobile invention. There’s no sudden change in the way people use the Internet, and 40 megabytes of data per month isn’t worth £30 of anybody’s money, even with 100 minutes of talk time. As Tim Richardson reported on The Register, it’s hype: “Hyping up the launch of its new service T-Mobile said it believes Web’n’Walk will lead to a considerable growth in total internet usage and, ultimately, more internet traffic being carried by mobile than by fixed line.”

It will do no such thing. What it does, is open up the mobile companies to a cuckoo’s egg; Google Talk, Yahoo! Messengerwith Voice, or even MSN Messenger – not to mention Skype- all on an IP backbone.

The idea that UMTS is a suitable IP backbone will be exposed in due course. Some of the gilt will flake off as soon as next week, when the first nationwide Flash-OFDM technology network will be rolled out by Flarion in a major European capital.

UMTS will work – sort of – but it adds latency to voice which rival systems won’t suffer from – rivals like IP Wireless, like Flash-OFDM, like WiMAX-WiFi mesh networks. Effectively, it turns the expensive mobile data networks into bit pipes, fit for carrying Internet Protocol traffic – at several times the price of rival systems.

Can UMTS really compete?
T-Mobile group CEO Rene Oberman [right] either knows nothing about home broadband, or this is an attempt to bamboozle the market. “T-Mobile will turn on a High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) network next year that will provide download rates of up to 1.8Mbps” he told Iain Thomson, who reported that T-Mobile appears to believe that the average download speed for home fixed line broadband ranges from under 264KB to 1MB.

In fact, by the time T-Mobile gets HSDPA working for a minority of its 3G users (a tiny fraction of its market) typical cable modem speeds will be ten megabits in the UK, and ADSL2 will be matching that.

Costs of home broadband, however, will continue to be flat rate, not £30 and upwards for no more data than will allow you to transmit a couple of dozen five megapixel photos. And you will only ever get 1.8 megabits out of a 3G HSDPA wireless mast if you are right next to it, and nobody else is trying to use the same cell for mobile data. Let’s not even mention the fact that the upload speed will remain below 64 kilobits per second – slow modem speeds.

What T-Mobile gets out of this deal, is some breathing space. It is making forward-looking pronouncements, and allowing investors to imagine that this will mean “jam tomorrow” after all.

NewsWireless

Microsoft In The Sights As Google And Sun Announce Deal

Microsoft In The Sights As Google And Sun Announce DealGoogle and Sun Microsystems have come up with a broad, but fuzzy, deal which will see the two companies developing and distributing each other’s technology in a move to challenge Microsoft’s Office suite dominance.

“We’re going to put our assets together so we can leverage one another’s distribution,” said Eric Schmidt, Google’s chief executive officer (and former Sun executive).

Under the deal, Sun will bundle the Google toolbar as an option when consumers download the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) from Java.com, while Google will distribute the java technology.

With Sun’s JRE already registering 20 million downloads per month, the move looks set to dramatically increase the number of Google toolbar deployments.

Microsoft In The Sights As Google And Sun Announce DealIt’s also expected that the deal will make it easier for freeloading punters to obtain OpenOffice, Sun’s well-regarded, freely distributed office productivity suite which directly competes with Microsoft Office.

“Working with Google will make our technologies more available more broadly, increase options for users, lower barriers and expand participation worldwide,” said Scott McNealy, Sun’s chief executive officer.

“We want to leverage the network economics. There are 80 million unique Google site users per month,” he added.

Both companies have suggested that the toolbar bundling is merely the start of a beautiful friendship, although neither would offer any specific details.

Schmidt dropped a few hints, “Google and java are two of the most widely recognised technology brands because they provide users with online tools that enhance their lives on a day to day basis,” he said. “We look forward to exploring other areas of collaboration.

Microsoft In The Sights As Google And Sun Announce DealBundling the two products together seems a wise move, increasing the appeal of the Google Toolbar and making Java a more attractive proposition for software developers.

Although Schmidt wasn’t in the mood to chat about it at the launch event, many pundits are expecting Google to offer a hosted version of the OpenOffice productivity suite.

“We will work to make the distribution of [OpenOffice] become broader. We are not announcing specifics,” he said.

Execs were equally tight-lipped when asked about the financial terms of the deal, although they expected it to generate substantial revenue.

“We’ll use their advertising and they’ll use our technology,” said Sun’s McNealy.

“There is going to be a lot of money flowing both ways if we do this thing right,” he added.

Java

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And Timewasters

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And TimewastersOh we like this!

Seeing as we’re nowhere near New York right now, it’s of absolutely no practical use to us whatsoever, but – hey! – that’s no reason to stop us wasting precious time playing about with this brilliant implementation of Google Maps.

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And TimewastersNYSee – a Web project by developers alkemis – uses Google’s mapping system to provide up to date traffic news and display traffic cam feeds from in and around Manhattan.

The information is presented via the familiar system of different coloured pins stuck on the map, and clicking on a green pin will bring up a live video feed for the traffic cam at that particular location – great fun!

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And TimewastersThe locations of the cams can be viewed via the Google maps interface as a map, satellite view or hybrid.

Live cams that aren’t working are – appropriately enough – shown as black pins while gray pins seemed to indicate cams on the blink.

The NYSee map also offers regularly updated traffic news (sourced from Google rivals traffic.yahoo.com) displayed as yellow pins on the map.

If clicking on Web cams in foreign countries doesn’t take your fancy, you can always waste away a few more idle minutes calculating national and international areas using the Google Planimeter.

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And TimewastersGoogle Sightseeing, another Google maps-based site, asks, “why bother seeing the world for real?”, inviting surfers to visit the “best tourist spots in the world via satellite images from Google Maps & Google Earth.”

ViaVirtualEarth uses the MSN map interface to graphically show the location of MSNBC news stories on a world map, while ChicagoCrime lets surfers view the locations of specific crimes from the database of crimes reported in Chicago.

Google Maps-Based Toys, Distractions And TimewastersFinally, we took a shine to Found City, a community-generated map of interesting places in New York City, with growing resources for Brooklyn, San Francisco, LA, London, Boston, Chicago and Portland.

Google Is 7; Asteriod Impacts; Blackberry 8700 – A Teenage Tech News Review

Google's Seventh BirthdayHappy Birthday!
Here’s a news item that probably slipped through the mesh, as it was quite low-key: Google is now 7 years old! This came as a bit of a shock to me in a way, and it probably will to you too: Nowadays, I would find it impossible to live and work as I do without Google. In fact, this one corporation has a pretty good monpoly on my life. I use Google on my mobile to find anything from street directions to the meaning of the word “vehement”. I get my email from them, and of course I use it to browse the Internet. It’s hard for me to imagine, then, that seven years ago, people managed to survive without Google.

Google as it was seven years agoI found a screenshot of what Google used to look like on the Internet archive, and although it does obviously look a little old-school, it’s still much the same interface-wise as it is today:

That was at a time when Google was still hosted on the Stanford University servers and had a staff of two. All I can say is that they’ve come a long way.

For me, this is a reminder that I am a part of the generation that has grown up at the same time as consumer technology: The children of tomorrow will grow up taking things like Google and the Internet for granted, and will never be able to experience a world without technology, and so will never fully appreciate it. I personally don’t think that technology will continue to evolve as fast as it has done so far, simply because I don’t think that there is anywhere for it to go. Off the top of my head, there isn’t anything that I can think of that I would really like, but can’t have, because it’s simply not technically possible. Still, time will tell, and I suppose in 70 years time I will be the one saying to a group of grandchildren while they mock me: “In my day, we had to look through books to find what we wanted you know!”

There’s a fascinating history of Google available on their corporate history page here.

Asteroid impactIt’s in Space, it’s got to be cool. Oh, actually, no nukes, so forget it
In a development reminiscent of the movie Deep Impact”, scientists have revealed a few ideas about what to do in case of an imminent asteroid impact. Their ideas just aren’t as cool as those in the movie though in my opinion: I mean, come on, you need a few nukes in there to make it look cool! Ah well, never mind, I just hope that in case of there being any danger of an impact, the scientists responsible will find some way of saving us. There have, afterall, been a fair few objects that have come close in history, and the dinosaurs can surely (or rather not) testify that sometimes, these things do actually hit Earth.

The new Blackberry 8700“Batman’s Blackberry”, but I still want one!
The story on the new Blackberry 8700, due to be released “in the neighborhood of December of this year or very early 2006,” hit this week. Having previously reviewed a Blackberry 7100v, I am very keen to have a play with the new phone. Apparently, it sports a 312mhz processor, which will hopefully make the browser a viable option for browsing anything but the most minimal of Web pages. We shall see, now all I have to do is get my hands on one ;-)

Admittedly, the styling does remind one of a phone tailor-made for Batman, but then it’s kinda cool anyway, and the screen looks like it’s going to be great! The screens on the 7100 and the 7200 were already some of the best seen on mobile phones, and so I have high hopes for the 8700. I bet Robin’s already got one, lucky sod! The rest of us will have to wait until December.

Pixel Ads; gWiFi; WoW Plague – Teenage Tech News Review

Million Dollar HomepageNeat Idea!
A UK student has thought up a unique way of financing his way through university: Selling online advertising space. That on its own isn’t unique, but the twist he has applied to it is: He is selling it by the pixel on his “Million Dollar Homepage”.

This guy is getting so much media attention as a result of the novelty value of his site that a lot of companies are getting interested in buying pixels from him. The going rate is $1/pixel, and there are 1,000,000 up for grabs… I wonder if he can make it to a million bucks?

This revenue concept started me thinking about what I could do to finance my way through University… I have just under 3 years to come up with something, and it better be good! It seems that finding a niche in the market for something unique and not actually that useful, and then attracting a load of media attention to give it artificial value is a good way of making cash on the Internet. Look out for me following suit in a few year’s time!

WifiThey’ve done it again
Done what? I hear you ask. Google have launched a Beta version of their Wi-Fi service following a host of rumours since an article mentioning a possible Google Wi-Fi appeared in Business 2.0 back in August.

The service is only available in selected parts of San Francisco Bay (well two locations) for now, but knowing Google I am sure that it will spread relatively quickly.

Part of the evidence is a new product, for free download, that basically works as a VPN client and encrypts all data sent over the Google Wi-Fi hotspots to secure it. Only downside with this is that this application could cause privacy concerns, as Google will apparently record data about people’s Web-browsing habits. Still, it has to be paid for somehow and recording the sites people visit fits in with their analysis of the Web so as to aid its online advertising business, Ad-sense. A link to Google’s FAQ about their Secure Access product can be found here.

From the point of view of a teenager like me, this sort of service is very good: I don’t personally mind giving up a small amount of my privacy to be able to use a service that I could no way afford if it wasn’t free. Hell, at 16 I’m not even legally allowed a credit card with which to pay for commercial Wi-Fi services!

As regular readers, Mike caught this story earlier on in the week.

World of WarcraftIt’s like the Middle Ages all over again!
This story is quite apt as I am currently suffering from the current real-life equivalent of the virtual plague documented by The Register. Yes, that’s right, I’ve caught the flu :-(

Anyway, according to The Register, World of Warcraft, a popular massively multiplayer online role playing game (MMORPG), has been hit by a plague. Blizzard, the company behind the hugely succesful game, introduced a new god character to their game called Hakkar. What’s special about him is that he carries some sort of disease, similar to HIV, that spreads to some of the people that he attacks. These people then spread the disease further and further, which has resulted in a large quantity of the World of Warcraft servers becoming infected by it.

It’s a new concept and just brings us even closer to where we start blurring the line between reality and virtual reality. It also shows that virtual reality can have all the nasties that the real world does too.

Anyway, I am off to bed, forget World of Warcraft, I’m ill and need to go to school tomorrow. Just hope I don’t spread the “plague”>

Google Blog Search Launches

Google Launches Blog SearchGoogle’s virtual world domination plans continue afoot with the beta launch of their new blog search service, making the company the first major search engine to offer comprehensive blog and feed search capabilities.

After snapping up Pyra Labs – the folks behind the hugely popular Blogging publishing service – over two years ago, bloggers have been waiting patiently for Google to implement their promised blog search.

Although Google’s current Web search lets users rummage around blog formats such as RSS and XML, the new search facility aims to include all blogs that publish a site feed (either RSS or Atom).

According to Jason Goldman, Google product manager for blog search, their shiny new search engine scans content posted to blogs and feeds in virtually real-time.

“We look for sites that update pinging services, and then we crawl in real-time so that we can serve up search results that are as fresh as we can,” said Goldman.

Google Launches Blog SearchGoogle’s new service (sporting its trademark, no-frills interface) can be found at google.com/blogsearch and at www.search.blogger.com with a Blogger branded design.

How the searching works

The Google Blog Search works exactly the same as the regular Google search with results being sorted by date and recent posts appearing at the top of the list.

Results can also be searched by relevance, using a technology based on Google’s Web search ranking algorithms.

An advanced search interface is available with options to specify titles, authors, languages and more.

Google Launches Blog SearchThe Blogger version comes with a branded interface with an extra “use search options” link giving access to most common search advanced options, like searching in specific posts, entire blogs or specifying a date range to search within.

Results can also be limited to a specific language, with the option to apply the Safe Search filter to results.

You can discover who’s linking to a post or blog using the link: command, and blog searches can be saved as an alert that gets updated any time new content is posted matching you query.

Getting your blog listed

You can’t manually submit your site at present, but Google say that they’ll be introducing the feature shortly.

Currently, Blogs that publish a site feed in any format which automatically pings an updating service (such as Weblogs.com), should be picked up.

Google Blog Search is available in English as well as Brazilian Portuguese, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Korean, Russian, and Spanish, with additional languages on the way.

google.com/blogsearch
www.search.blogger.com
Google Blog Search FAQ