Join the Minimalist Google Homepage Prototype

October 8, 2009 on 9:55 am | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

You might have heard of the new experiment Google is running for its homepage, showing only logo and search box (and apparently search buttons, at times) unless your mouse moves over the page. To join this prototype, you can go to google.com and type the following into the address bar, then hit return and reload the page:

I'm making this my Google homepage for now to see how it goes, I kinda like it (in my browser I often hit Ctrl + N, type google, hit Ctrl + return, then enter some search string, and hit return again).

Kudos go to JEShack for tracking this cookie!

Please comment in the existing thread.

Update: And thanks to Techcrunch, here's the bit needed to trigger the version that doesn't have search buttons, either:

[Thanks Luke!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Join the Minimalist Google Homepage Prototype]


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Google Street View for Canada, Czech Republic

October 7, 2009 on 3:06 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Google has launched Street View imagery for Canada and the Czech Republic. Above are snapshots from Montreal and Prague.
[Thanks TomHTML and Jeffrey!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google Street View for Canada, Czech Republic | Comments]


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Bookmarklet Converts PDF Links to Be Viewed With Google Docs PDF Reader

October 7, 2009 on 3:42 am | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Joen created a JavaScript bookmark snippet that turns any normal links to PDF files into links that will point to Google’s online PDF viewer. Adobe’s PDF viewer tends to freeze browsing, and Joen finds Google’s viewer “far outshines” it. (Would it make sense to turn this into a Greasemonkey script, too? This would help with the occasional surprise effect when you click on PDF links.)

On a related note, in the Blogoscoped forum when you post a link to a PDF, it will automatically be turned into an embedded, expandable Google Docs PDF viewer gadget (with a secondary link to the actual PDF source). You can give it a try by adding a comment if you like.

[Thanks Joen!]

Update: Turns out there is indeed a Greasemonkey script to do this. [Thanks Branco!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Bookmarklet Converts PDF Links to Be Viewed W ... | Comments]


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A Minimalist Google Homepage Prototype

October 6, 2009 on 10:14 am | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

TechCrunch is reporting that people see a Google homepage experiment in which everything but the logo and search box have been removed. When you move your mouse, though, certain elements fade back in, as the video shows.

[Thanks David and Jérôme! Linked image by Techcrunch.]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: A Minimalist Google Homepage Prototype | Comments]


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Google Researches New Captcha Approach In Which Users Rotate Images Upward

April 19, 2009 on 4:09 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Google researchers released a paper [PDF] which explores a new approach to Captchas. Instead of the user entering a string of letters and numbers to prove they’re not a bot – with traditional Captchas often showing visuals that are hard to decipher not only for bots, but also humans – this approach asks users to orient a picture into an upright-facing position. Google shows off below 3 sample images:

A

Google says this set is easy to orient upwards for humans, but bots may also succeed here because they may use face detection.

B

This is the most useful approach: for humans, adjusting to an upwards direction is easy, but for bots it’s not.

C

Sample C is again less useful because it’s hard for humans, too, to adjust this one correctly.

The researchers from Google (Rich Gossweiler, Maryam Kamvar and Shumeet Baluja) explain:

To obtain candidate images for our CAPTCHA system, we start with a large repository and then remove images that a computer can successfully orient as well as those that are difficult for humans to orient.

For example, all of the images returned from an image-search start as potential candidates for our system. We then use a suite of automated orientation detectors to remove those that can be set upright by a computer. (...) We then apply a social feedback mechanism to verify that the remaining images are easily oriented by humans. In order to identify images that people cannot orient, we compute the variance of users’ submitted orientations and reject images which have a high variance. (...)

Our CAPTCHA technique achieves high success rates for humans and low success rates for bots, does not require text entry, and is more enjoyable for the user than text-based CAPTCHAs.

Below is an example interface, where one needs to slide 3 images into their “natural, upright positions”:

For comparison, a traditional text-based Captcha, as used in Google’s tests:

When Google tested their new Captcha approach internally, however, not all of the 16 users were happy. “68.75% of users (11 users) preferred rotating images, and 31.25% of users (5 users) preferred deciphering text,” the research states. One user said, “I prefer [deciphering text] since it requires simple keyboard inputs which are absolute. With rotating pictures I found myself continually making fine adjustments to make them perfectly upright, therefore taking a slight bit longer to accomplish. Also, I’m much more familiar with [deciphering text] since it’s what most internet portals use for security purposes.”

[Thanks Manoj, who saw it at Stephen Shankland’s report on CNet!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google Researches New Captcha Approach In Whi ... | Comments]


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