Saturday, December 16, 2006
Google Patent Search
With Google's foray into patent search, the war amongst the search engines has hottened up. Though there are a few free patent search engines available, Google as usual intends to rule the roost.
You can access Google Paent Search.
There are FreePatentsOnline and PatentReader, as well as the venerable USPTO search that have the first mover advantage and good user base but then Google has the resources and the w...i...d...e...s...t reach!
It will be interesting to see how these patent search engines fare in the war with Google... or who knows, Google just might decide to acquire one of the existing patent search engines (the ones that do not belong to the governmet, of course) to supplement its database and get the user base!
Very plausible, no? ;-)
Any which way... Yahoo and MSN must be getting worried, with their management having nightmares and losing sleep over the new development!
Tags: Google, Google Patent Search, Patent, Patent Search, Research, Search Engine, Patent Search Engine, MSN, Yahoo, Sleep, Nightmares, Technology, Business, Freepatentsonline, Patent Reader, USPTO
Friday, December 15, 2006
Increase FireFox Speed 10x Faster
Speed up Firefox 10x faster
1. Type "about:config" into the address bar of firefox and hit enter. Scroll down and look for the following entries and make the recommended alterations:
- Set "network.http.pipelining" to "true"
- Set "network.http.proxy.pipelining" to "true"
Note: To set things to TRUE then you have to right click on the item listed and then click toggle - Set "network.http.pipelining.maxrequests" to some number like 30. This means it will make 30 requests at once.
2. Lastly right-click anywhere and select New-> Integer. Name it "nglayout.initialpaint.delay" and set its value to "0". This value is the amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it receives.
Tags: Firefox, Browser, Business, Technology
Friday, December 08, 2006
Dr. Google's Healthcare Plans
Dr. Google's Healthcare Plans
In this interesting post at the official Google Blog, Adam Bosworth, the Vice President of Google, talks about his plans for Google's Health Services.Fuelled by his personal experience with the American healthcare system and processes, and the tragic demise of her monther due to cancer, Bosworth says that Google's healthcare plans are his main focus now!
I have been interested in the issues of health care and health information for a while. It is now one of my main focuses here, and I've decided to start posting about it. I've been motivated in this field in part by my personal experiences helping to care for my mother, who recently died from cancer after a four-year battle. While the quality of the medical care my mother received was extraordinary, I saw firsthand how challenged the health care system was in supporting caregivers and communicating between different medical organizations.
Bosworth looks like he strongly believes that
If patients understand their diseases better -- the symptoms, the treatments, the drugs, and the side effects, they are likely to get better and quicker care -- before, during, and after treatment.
He further says,
Google and the health community have labeled sites and pages across the web making it easier for users to refine their health queries and locate the medical information they need.
The search example by Bosworth throws light at the future direction that Google search algorithm might take, at least with the healthcare search to begin with -
Do a search on Google about a medical issue or treatment like diabetes or Lipitor and you'll see some choices for refining your query, such as "symptoms," "treatments," and so on. If you click on "treatment," your search results are refined and reordered so that sites that have been labeled as being about treatment by trusted health community contributors are boosted in the rankings. Note that how trusted a contributor is -– and thus how much they affect your search results -– is dependent both on Google's algorithms and on who the user decides they trust. For example, if my doctor is a Google Co-op contributor and I indicate to Google that I trust her, then when I search, the sites she has labeled as relevant will show up higher in my search results.
In effect Google says it will allow human intervention to manipulate its search results at least for individuals to deliver more effective and relevant search results.
Whoa... must be another "first", once again by the search engine giant.
However, how much the Americans will believe in the worth of the new healthcare search is anybody's guess.
But one thing is for sure, the privacy issues involved in this must be a point of debate as the patients storing their healthcare related information on Google.
As it is currently with Google's most other offerings, will Google choose to be as off-hand with its privacy policy and how it stores and uses the data as it is now, or will it change its stance to win consumer confidence?
If Google chooses to follow the same privacy policy, it still can manage to net a large user base for its healthcare search services. I is very plausible considering its large base of users, many of whom do not bother themselves with reading the privacy poilcy and those few who do, do not understand the implications!
But one thing can not be denied. The data that Google might collect on patients and the user base of the Google Healthcare Services itself, are of immense marketing value being extremely targeted from the point of view of medica service establishments, individual medical practitioners, prescription drug companies, insurance companies etc.
Now the question is - Is Google really thinking about the welfare of the patients or does it have its eyes focussed on the revenue that this new service has the potential to bring in?!?!
Any which way... Yahoo and MSN must be getting worried, with their management having nightmares and losing sleep over the pace at which Google not only announces but comes out with revolutionay concepts.
Tags: Google, Google Healthcare, Health, Healthcare, Research, Search Engine, MSN, Yahoo, Sleep, Nightmares, Privacy, Doctors, Privacy Policy, Diagnosis, Medical, Medical Practitioners, Prescription Drugs, Privacy Issues, Insurance, Marketing
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
Web 3.0 Coming - Web 2.0 RIP?
Web 3.0 Coming - Web 2.0 RIP?
So, you have heard it already and want to really believe our ears, right? :-)
Yes, my dear friend!
Web 3.0 is well on its way and it won't be too long before Web 2.0 will really RIP! Want some evidence, eh? You, unbelieving soul! ;-)
So, what is Web 3.0 anyways? How will Web 3.0 be better than Web 2.0? How does it affect us all?
For some answers, you may want to check out Phil Wainewright making a case of the online world's transition to Web 3.0 in his blog. Article 1, Article 2 and Article 3.
He insists that like Microsoft's Windows, the Web 2.0 phenomeon will also see its peak in the form of evolution into Web 3.0
Windows was a classic example. 1.0 was so buggy it was hardly worth using. 2.0 fixed some serious problems but still had a lot of shortcomings. 3.0, launched in May 1990, was an instant success, and the rest of the story, as they say, is history. Don’t be surprised, then, if Web 2.0 also turns out to be just a staging post on the way to a much more mature and durable Web 3.0 era.
He makes a case study of the stalwarts of the online economy today including Google, Amazon and eBay and some not so well known but case studies in themselves - WebEx, WebSideStory, NetSuite, Jamcracker, Rearden Commerce and Salesforce.com.
He is also quick to make it a point to his readers that just because these companies find a mention in his analysis of the Web 3.0 story, the reader shouldn’t assume these companies will emerge to be the dominant players of Web 3.0.
He also professes that Web 3.0 will revolutionize delivery of on-demand business applications like never before.
Web 3.0 isn’t just about shopping, entertainment and search. It’s also going to deliver a new generation of business applications that will see business computing converge on the same fundamental on-demand architecture as consumer applications.
He has a very interesting concept of three and a half layered topology for Web 3.0. These are - API services (the foundation layer), Aggregation services (the middle layer), Application services (the top layer) and the Serviced clients (the half-layer).
The series of articles on Web 3.0 are a must read for anyone who's fascinated with the evolution of Web 2.0
As far as I can surmise, there seems to be extremely exciting times ahead!
Tags: Web 3.0, Web 2.0, Microsoft, Windows, Google, Amazon, Ebay, Webex, WebSideStory, JamCracker, NetSuite, Rearden Commerce, Salesforce, Business Applications, API Services, Aggregation services, Application services, Business, Technology
Monday, December 04, 2006
TCS & Bank of China sign deal
Industry sources dubbed TCS’ win in China as one of the major IT deal signed by a Chinese bank ahead of the opening up of that country's banking sector to foreign competition by December 11 under Beijing's commitment to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
This deal came close on the heels of TCS' seven-year, $65 million agreement with Somerfield, a Britain based food retailer, to provide a full range of managed IT services. TCS had announced this deal last week.
Tags: Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, China, Banking, Finance, Information Technology, Outsourcing, India, TCS, Beijing, Bank of China, TCS, World Trade Organization, WTO, Somerfiled, Britain, Business, Technology
Saturday, December 02, 2006
ABN Amro buys stake in Infosys
London based ABN AMRO bank NV has picked up 0.02 per cent stake in India's IT major - Infosys Technologies (INFY) by acquiring 1.21 lakh shares of Infosys at a price of Rs 2,179.71 per share in a block deal on the Bomnbay Stock Exchange (BSE) from Merrill Lynch capital markets.
So, it looks like investors worldwide are more and more convinced that the outsourcing wave to India will only get stronger and players like Infosys, TCS and Wipro are good places to invest in!
What do you say guys? :-)
Tags: ABN Amro, Infosys, Bombay Stock Exchange, Merill Lynch, Infy, BSE, Outsourcing, India, TCS, Wipro, Business, Technology
Infosys amongst Nasdaq 100?
Yeah, very much possible according to this interesting story!
Leading Indian software firm Infosys Technologies could probably be rubbing shoulders with other corporate giants listed on the coveted Nasdaq 100 as a direct consequence of its secondary offering of 30 million American Depository Shares (ADS).TCS and Wipro must be getting nervous now... nah? ;-)
The story further talks about Infosys CEO Nandan Nilekani, who has been named as ‘Businessman of the Year’ for 2006 by Forbes Asia for his contribution towards keeping Infosys ahead of global competition in the outsourcig arena.
Tags: Infosys, Infy, Outsourcing, India, TCS,Nasdaq,Forbes,Nandan Nilekani, Wipro, Business, Technology
Friday, November 24, 2006
Infosys Beats Google
Check this interesting story out that takes into acount the finances, appreciation in stock value and more to deduce what it does.
I wonder how Yahoo and Microsoft (MSN) fare in comparison... ;-)
Tags: Search Engine, Google, King Kong, Finance, Stocks, Yahoo, Business, Technology, Microsoft, MSN
Sunday, November 19, 2006
JotSpot Alternative - Webpaint - Cyn.in
Looking for JotSpot memberships? Those who are, must have noticed that JotSpot isn't offering new memberships till further notice!
Do not despair! I have located a couple of alternatives to your favourite JotSpot.
Try the following two - Webpaint and Cyn.in
I have just created an account in both and the functionality offered by the two looks good. So the me-too campaign has picked up with Google buying JotSpot. All of a sudden, services are spiringing up offering what JotSpot used to.
The effort seems to be directed towards getting the share of the proverbial pie that seems to be getting bigger by the minute.
Why ain't Yahoo and Microsoft stepping in is what I'd like to know? Search Engine wars are getting hotter with Google trying to prove time and again that it is much more than just a search engine :-D
Tags: Search Engine, Google, JotSpot, Microsoft, Yahoo, Business, Technology
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Google Buys iRows
Yes, Google has done it yet again!
After having completed the acquisition of Writely, YouTube and JotSpot, Google has gone out and added another interesting acquisition to its kitty, iRows.
The founders of iRows have joined google and announced on the website and blog that they are shutting down iRows.com.
With this new takeover, Google has strengthened its portfolio yet again and has magnified the headaches for Yahoo and Microsoft (MSN)! What do you say, fellas? ;-)
Tags: King Kong, Writely, Search Engine, iRows, Google, YouTube, JotSpot, Microsoft, Yahoo, MSN, Business, Technology
HP to dethrone IBM
HP has reported fourth-quarter earnings that, thanks to all its business units performing well, exceed the annual sales. However, this wasn't good enough for the share market and its shares have slipped by almost 36% in market value.
Sales for the fiscal fourth quarter increased 7 percent to $24.6 billion, compared with $22.9 billion last year.
HP also cracked $90 billion in annual revenue for the first time, accelerating the competition with IBM Corp. for the distinction of being the world's largest technology vendor in terms of sales.
For the year, the company earned $6.2 billion, or $2.18 per share, compared with $2.4 billion, or 82 cents per share. Sales for the year were $91.7 billion, compared with last year's total of $86.7 billion.
Tags: HP, Hewlett Packard, IBM
Monday, November 13, 2006
Google Health Diagnosis Helps Doctors
The doctors 'Googled' the symptoms of 26 cases for this study and were pleasantly surprised when in 15 of the cases, the results came up with the right diagnosis!
The researchers are of the opinion that Google can be an extremely "useful aid" in diagnosing illnesses.
Doctors have to carry a huge amount of medical information in their heads, almost two million facts in their memory to assist in diagnosing illnesses. As such, the search engine may offer useful help in diagnosing an unusual case.
Google is the most popular search engine on the web, and offers access to more than three billion medical articles; searching for health information on the web is one of the most common uses.
In each of the 26 cases hard-to-diagnose cases which had been published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the researchers selected three to five search terms from each case and did a Google search without knowing the correct diagnoses.
They then recorded the three diagnoses that were ranked most prominently and selected the one which seemed most relevant to the signs and then compared the results with the correct diagnoses as published in the journal.
They found that Google found the correct diagnosis in just over half of the cases and among these were Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), the hormonal condition Cushing's syndrome and the auto-immune disorder Churg-Strauss syndrome.
The team was led by Dr. Hangwi Tang, a respiratory and sleep physician, who says Google could be a "useful aid" in diagnosing conditions with unique symptoms and signs that can easily be used as search terms.
But Dr. Tang also says a successful search needed a "human expert" user, and therefore patients would have less success trying to diagnose themselves on the internet.
Once again, Google has done it yet again! MSN and Yahoo must again be getting nightmares and sleepless nights ;-)
Tags: Google, Googled, Health, Research, Search Engine, MSN, Yahoo, Sleep, Nightmares, Brisbane, Doctors, Australia, Diagnosis, Medical, Illness, syndrome,
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Google launches Gmail Mobile
Earlier it used to take a helluva lot of time to load gmail in my mobile. And it was kinda lengthy procedure to reply to or forward mails but the new app has made my life REAL easy. :-)
I downloaded the 113KB application from my mobile, installed it and lo... a sleek cool interface appeared on my mobile's screen... I could easily access all the options (reply, delete, forward, report as spam etc..) for my mails and that too with shortcut keys.
Earlier I think only few options were available and it used to take ages to load the inbox but now it’s like, Zap!! way too fast... :-)
Kudos to the Google team for coming up with this handy tool for guys like us who are always on the move :-)
With all the recent moves of Google that include acquisition of YouTube and JotSpot, launch of this new mobile application, the executives working for its arch competitors Yahoo and MSN must surely be getting jitters and sleepless nights!
Wad'ya say, guys? ;-)
Tags: Google, Gmail, Mobile, Mobile Application, Search Engine, MSN, Yahoo, Sleep, Java,
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Google buys JotSpot
After having completed the acquisition of YouTube, Google has gone out and added another interesting acquisition to its kitty encroaching a territory dominated by Microsoft Corp till now.
The new acquisition is JotSpot, a Silicon Valley start-up that has virtually pioneered the market for collaborative business software like online spreadsheets.
Three-year-old JotSpot had developed a series of online productivity software programs that offer many of the functions of Microsoft Office programs like Microsoft Word or Excel spreadsheets. But instead of running on individual computers, JotSpot applications are delivered as Web-based services.
Following the lead of companies like JotSpot, Mountain View, California-based Google entered the market this year by acquiring the Writely word processor and introducing other Web-based applications such as Google Spreadsheets and Google Calendar.
JotSpot's programs run on collaborative wiki software, a flexible form of Web publishing for groups that allows any approved user to edit or change individual documents. The idea for JotSpot grew out of using a wiki to brainstorm about potential ideas for founding a company, Kraus recalled.
JotSpot has attracted 2,000 companies to use its software. It counts 30,000 paying customers and about 300,000 free users of its Web software tools. Kraus said his company would continue to support existing customers during the transition.
With this new acquisition, Google has strengthened its portfolio yet again and has dded to the headaches to Yahoo and MSN! What do you say, fellas? ;-)
Tags: Google, YouTube, JotSpot, Wiki, Microsoft, Yahoo, MSN, Business, Technology
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Google cleaning up YouTube
What is it thinking by removing most of the videos that the community is loves YouTube for. I can understand Google being finicky about copyrights issues with it becoming their responsibility after having taken over, but then, what the heck is the whole point of buying up YouTube in the first place if cleaning up what the YouTube community loves is what they wanted to do?
It is over 30,000 videos that have been deleted from YouTube's database. That's one huge loss for YouTube enthusiasts and I'm sure there are more deletions lined up for near future.
How's the community gonna take it is the question that Google must think about, and fast!
Tags:Google, YouTube, Business, Technology
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Google Personal Search
So, the big daddy of 'em all, Google, is at it once again!
Google Custom Search Engine, the tool unveiled by Google, is a custom search engine that allows users to choose which web pages to search.
Users can also customise the look of results to suit their web pages layout, how web content is prioritised or can also include paid ads from the Adsense network with the results.
The new product is to be free for Google's users.
The Search Engine indystry analysts are of the opinion that the new offering from Google makes sense as traditional Google results were often too varied and carried results from too many sites to be relevant enough to an average searcher.
Tags: Google, Yahoo, MSN, Search Engines, Business, Technology
Friday, September 29, 2006
Google Checkout makes its debut!
There has been much anticipation about Google's this particular offering. Google Checkout will literally initiate a war in the domain of online payments, a market that is dominated by the online payment giant, PayPal, an eBay company.
For once, Google might find it difficult to emulate the advantages that its main competitor in this domain, PayPal, obviously enjoys - the recognition, acceptance and vast user database.
Whatever may be the result, the battle will sure be exciting and of course, us users are expected to benefit from it ;-)
I'd personally would like to see PayPal become more empathetic to its users, something it has been lacking for quite some time. The proof of it is well documented by the harangued customers at www.paypalsucks.com
Let's first analyse Google Checkout's features and then we shall discuss this further :-)
Tags: Google, PayPal, eBay, Google Checkout