Google Apps Hacks Is Out

April 30, 2008 on 5:42 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

A couple of days ago I received the first couple of copies of Google Apps Hacks* from O’Reilly and today, the book is fully live on Amazon, too! It’s very exciting for me, as this book project was spanning around a year, with about half of that in preparation, and the other half in writing of the book (in Google Docs).

Google Apps Hacks features tips and tricks evolving around not search but the “Google office” consisting of such programs as Gmail, Google documents, spreadsheets, presentations, Google Maps, SketchUp, Picasa, Blogger, Google Calendar, iGoogle, and many more. There are different difficulty levels, ranging from quick tips easily applied, over to spreadsheet formulas or stylesheet hacking or downloading special plug-ins or creating gadgets or maps, towards programming tips. O’Reilly on their site offers a table of contents, a sample chapter and more – and they’re also giving away the book as a prize to one of you.

So, I really hope many of you will be able to put the tips to good use and find the book helpful, and am curious about feedback.

*During early writing the book was called Google Office Hacks.

[Thanks to everyone who helped in writing the book (mentioned in more detail in the beginning of the book), and a special hat tip to my editor Brian Jepson, as well as those who provided tips for the book through pointers or through having great blogs about Google, like Ionut Alex. Chitu’s!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google Apps Hacks Is Out | Comments]


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Artist Themes for iGoogle

April 30, 2008 on 3:57 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Google in the US is currently promoting a new “artist themes” section for iGoogle via a special logo and text below the search box. IGoogle is the name of Google’s personalized homepage, and as it allows skinning with special background graphics and so on, this directory offers works by artists like Jeff Koons, Coldplay, Robert Mankoff, Dolce & Gabbana, Akira Isogawa, Anne Geddes and more who Google says collaborated with them. (Other countries also have interesting iGoogle themes, like an Astroboy one for Japan.)

[Hat tip to Jérôme Flipo, Brinke Guthrie, Ionut Alex. Chitu and Colin Colehour!]

Update: As TomHTML and Colin point out in the comments, the special logo was showing in other countries too. Colin writes, “I have seen it available in the following countries USA, Finland, France, UK, Korea, Japan, Australia and probably many more locales that I haven’t tested yet.” [Thanks Colin and Tom!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Artist Themes for iGoogle | Comments]


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Google Ocean?

April 30, 2008 on 3:46 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Google is planning to map not only the sky and land masses (Google Mars, Moon, Earth, Google Maps and so on), but – according to a report by News.com – also aims to map the oceans:

<<The company has assembled an advisory group of oceanography experts, and in December invited researchers from institutions around the world to the Mountain View, Calif., Googleplex. There, they discussed plans for creating a 3D oceanographic map, according to sources familiar with the matter.

The tool – for now called Google Ocean, the sources say, though that name could change – is expected to be similar to other 3D online mapping applications. People will be able to see the underwater topography, called bathymetry; search for particular spots or attractions; and navigate through the digital environment by zooming and panning.>>

[Thanks WebSonic.nl!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google Ocean? | Comments]


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DomainTools’ Paid Links

April 29, 2008 on 8:33 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Google recently revived their domain information onebox. Enter e.g. whois google.com to find a special link referring you to domain info from domaintools.com. But, as Beussery.com found out, DomainTools is selling ads on their site which use a non-"nofollowed” anchor link wrapped around image ads, with the link pointing to e.g. a vpslink.com sub-page and the alt text reading e.g. “Cheap VPS Hosting”. And this may well be against Google’s own webmaster guidelines, which disallow such paid links unless they come with a “human readable disclosure” (like the “nofollow" value for links).

However, this may also just be a simple mishap and not necessarily bad intention on DomainTools’ side, or the advertiser’s side. For one thing, many text link ad schemes don’t use image content, and they also don’t often use target URLs like “http://vpslink.com/?utm_source=domaintools&utm_medi...”, as that may dillute the goal of gaining PageRank. Or reversely put, it looks like this kind of ad spot may be sold for a similar pricing – currently at $10,000/ month – even if DomainTools would add that nofollow value in their template. Especially now they’re in such close neighborhood to Google (though I might be wrong).

In any case, this still looks like something DomainTools may want to fix, and Google would have an interest too in them fixing it... as it would be quite weird if Google would need to ban a site in organic results and then pick it as preferred onebox target above the same organic results.

[Thanks Beussery!]

Update: DomainTools now fixed their collision with Google’s webmaster guidelines by adjusting the HTML; instead of direct links, ads are now channeled through a /go/ redirect on their server, and their robots.txt disallows Googlebot indexing that directory. [Thanks Matt Cutts!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: DomainTools' Paid Links | Comments]


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Google China Self-Censors Carrefour

April 29, 2008 on 7:42 pm | In Technology, Internet, Google, Search | Comments Off

Many Chinese are currently reportedly angered at France for an attack against a wheelchair-bound Olympic torch bearer that took place in France, as well as Paris awarding honorary citizenship to the current Dalai Lama of the Tibetan Buddhists... so some people in China wanted to boycott French hypermarket chain Carrefour. And now, a search for 家乐福 (Carrefour) in Google.cn does not show any of the 6+ million results it shows in Google.com – instead, Google China returns a nearly blank page with a single message that (if an automatic translation is to be believed) roughly means, “You cannot access information of this search result, please return to google.cn for other information.” While censorship of selected domains is common for Google China, keyword-based censorship is more rarely to be seen. Plus, this specific filter covers not only web search but other services, like news or video search, as well.

If (as is likely) this censorship was ordered from the Chinese government – finding a helping implementor in Google Inc, as well as other search engines, like Chinese Baidu – it may perhaps not so much aim to censor Carrefour... but to quiet down evolving mass protesting against Carrefour. A little patriotism may be wanted by Chinese authorities, but angered masses getting together acting in unity may be too much for the government, as this may be a risk to their own system which normally tries to prevent such demonstrations.

Google in China removed other kind of information before, too. In Google Maps, satellite imagery is missing; in Chinese web search, whole domains are blacklisted (including those of news organizations, or human rights watch organizations); in Google Book Search China, foreign publishers are missing; in Google News for China, Google removed several government-unfriendly sources. Google also agreed to censor information in other countries, like Germany and France, often referring to local laws and policies, sometimes with and sometimes without disclosures printed on the specific search result (e.g. in Germany they didn’t always show it but now we have reason to believe they always show the disclosure for web results, whereas in Google News China or Chinese book search no such censorship disclosure is visible in search results; even in web search, where there is a disclosure printed at the end of results, the disclosure will not tell users just what it is that’s missing).

[Thanks Www!]

Update: Ludwik Trammer, who is very surprised about this censorship, comments, “There is alway a slight chance Chinese Government did that without consulting Google via some automatic or semi-automatic system they established.” I’m currently investigating whether such a thing is possible and applied here; if you have more information in regards to this bit, please comment. In the past, messages from Google with the Google logo showing were indeed by Google. If Google replies with anything official or more information comes in I’ll update. Pinging Garett Rogers of the Googling Google blog, Garett says he wonders if it’s possible “to figure out if the government is intercepting the request and doing what they want to the response” (something which often happens from within China, nonetheless, but even then usually in the form of some non-branded connection error message, as far as I know). [Thanks Ludwik and Garett!]

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google China Self-Censors Carrefour | Comments]


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