17 January 2014

Google Chrome 32 Brings Data Compress To Mobiles, Website Shortcuts to Android



Google-Chrome-32-Android-iOS-Mobile-Reduced-Data-Usage

With each new update of the Chrome browser, Google brings something new to the table. Chrome 32 for mobile has a significant new feature though: the ability to automatically reduce your data consumption. Additionally, Android users can create shortcuts to websites on the homescreen and iOS users get a taste of the Translate feature. But the big news, of course, is data consumption. The new data compression and bandwidth management feature claims it can reduce data usage by up to 50% on either Android or iOS. There are already ways to curb mobile data usage, but this promises to be...


Read the full article: Google Chrome 32 Brings Data Compress To Mobiles, Website Shortcuts to Android



tinySpell Adds Spell Check To Notepad, WordPad, And All Windows Programs



CLICK HERE TO SEE FULL POST



The Notepad program has been the part of all versions of Windows operating system ever since its introduction with Windows 1.0, back in 1995. While Microsoft has enhanced and overhauled most of the areas of Windows operating system in the recent versions of Windows, the Notepad program hasn’t seen much love from the developers at […]

Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



google-smart-contact-lenses

Today in Tech News Digest, Google reveals its smart contact lenses for diabetics, the NSA is accused of collecting millions of random text messages, Facebook announces Trending, Spotify kills its listening time limits, Rdio goes free on the Web, Google Chrome gets a fancy update on Windows 8, and Cecelia Abadie is cleared of driving while Glassing. Google Reveals Smart Contact Lenses I can’t even look at my Google Glass now. Told ‘em, “Why are you so big? Why can’t you be contact lenses.” They’re feeling all bad now. — Danny Sullivan (@dannysullivan) January 17, 2014 Google has revealed it’s...


Read the full article: Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



google-smart-contact-lenses

Today in Tech News Digest, Google reveals its smart contact lenses for diabetics, the NSA is accused of collecting millions of random text messages, Facebook announces Trending, Spotify kills its listening time limits, Rdio goes free on the Web, Google Chrome gets a fancy update on Windows 8, and Cecelia Abadie is cleared of driving while Glassing. Google Reveals Smart Contact Lenses I can’t even look at my Google Glass now. Told ‘em, “Why are you so big? Why can’t you be contact lenses.” They’re feeling all bad now. — Danny Sullivan (@dannysullivan) January 17, 2014 Google has revealed it’s...


Read the full article: Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



google-smart-contact-lenses

Today in Tech News Digest, Google reveals its smart contact lenses for diabetics, the NSA is accused of collecting millions of random text messages, Facebook announces Trending, Spotify kills its listening time limits, Rdio goes free on the Web, Google Chrome gets a fancy update on Windows 8, and Cecelia Abadie is cleared of driving while Glassing. Google Reveals Smart Contact Lenses I can’t even look at my Google Glass now. Told ‘em, “Why are you so big? Why can’t you be contact lenses.” They’re feeling all bad now. — Danny Sullivan (@dannysullivan) January 17, 2014 Google has revealed it’s...


Read the full article: Smart Contact Lenses, NSA Text Collection, Facebook Trending Topics [Tech News Digest]



Find Legal Images On Google With A New Filter



Morguefile-Caprisco-News-1680x840

Contrary to popular belief, pictures found on Google Images are not free to use any way you want. Google has recognized this belief is widespread, so they have now implemented a new filter in their search results that will show you the images which are legal to use. Using it is very simple. After entering your search term, click on the “search tools” option in the menu bar. That will drop down to reveal more options, including “Usage Rights“. Then choose the license you are looking for, and the search results will update instantly. The first results are often from...


Read the full article: Find Legal Images On Google With A New Filter



No More Google Notifier



Google Notifier will no longer be available. It was an app for Windows and Mac that displayed notifications for Gmail and Google Calendar in the system tray, while also allowing you to set Gmail as the default mail client for your computer.






Google sent this message, which suggests some alternatives:



We're writing to let you know about an important change to Google Notifier Beta. Starting on 31 January, Google Notifier Beta will no longer be supported, meaning that the app will no longer show recent emails and calendar events.



Since Google Notifier Beta was launched in 2005, a lot has changed. Smartphones can now notify us of new messages wherever we are, and improvements to web technology enable similar features to be built right into the browser.



If you want to continue to receive notifications, you can use any of the following alternatives to Google Notifier Beta, using the Chrome browser. To see the number of unread messages in your inbox at a glance, install the Gmail Checker Chrome app. To preview new messages on your desktop, go to Gmail's settings and enable Desktop Notifications. You can uninstall Google Notifier Beta by following these instructions.



It's funny to see that the app was still in beta.



{ Thanks, Koen. }

Google Music Timeline



Google found a great way to use the data from the people who uploaded songs to Google Play Music. Google Music Timeline "shows genres of music waxing and waning, based on how many Google Play Music users have an artist or album in their music library, and other data (such as album release dates). Each stripe on the graph represents a genre; the thickness of the stripe tells you roughly the popularity of music released in a given year in that genre."









The timeline starts in 1950, data is is normalized by the total number of albums from a certain year and there's no classical music.



Mouse over a genre to find popular albums, search for an album or artist.



{ via John Mueller }

Google's Experimental Search Box for Financial Sites



Google experiments with displaying a search box next to sites like Google Finance, Yahoo Finance, Reuters. There's a button with the following label: "get quotes" and you're supposed to use this feature if you want to search for share prices.



For example, when you type [Google] or [GOOG], you're sent to the right page from Google Finance, Yahoo Finance and other financial sites. If you search for [computers], you'll get a search results page from the financial site. Is this the first time when Google shows a search box and doesn't return its own results?









I checked the source page and it says that it's a rich snippet, just like those that are used for reviews, music, events, products.



{ via Rubén }

Read Feedly Offline: Download Unread Items To An Ebook



Morguefile-Caprisco-News-1680x840

The Google News downloading service NewsToEbook now works with Feedly. With it you can download your unread items from Feedly to an EPUB or MOBI ebook file, which you can then read on your offline e-reader. Kindle, Kobo, Nook and even your tablet all support one format or the other, so this will work for you. The ecosystem of apps surrounding Google Reader didn’t completely collapse when Google shut down the service in July, 2013 – but it did take some applications longer to adjust than others. NewsToEbook, which could download your Google Reader feeds as an ebook, was basically...


Read the full article: Read Feedly Offline: Download Unread Items To An Ebook



16 January 2014

First-Time Shopper On Ebay? 5 Important Things You Need To Know



ebay-shopping

Welcome to Ebay Shopping 101. You are the select few, chosen to be trained as sharp-shooting Ebay bidders, capable of finding the best deals and winning every auction. So pull up a chair and let’s get started. Shopping on Ebay isn’t really like shopping on Amazon or any other shopping site. On most sites, you search for the product you like, find it, and if there are enough left, you buy it at the best fixed price you can find and then wait for it to arrive in the mail. On Ebay, not so much. There are a few important...


Read the full article: First-Time Shopper On Ebay? 5 Important Things You Need To Know



Google Updates Chrome For Windows 8, Adds Noisy Tab Feature And Desktop-like UI



Chrome-Win8-Update-Featured

Chrome users on Windows 8 can expect an update rolling out to their browser today that includes a “Noisy Tabs” feature and Chrome OS-like desktop environment. The largest visual change is only noticeable if you run Chrome in “Windows 8 Mode”, a special mode Microsoft has set up for Web browsers that allows them to run in a pseudo-Modern app form. Chrome now appears visually like Chrome OS in this mode. There is a grey background and multiple Chrome windows can be opened within the environment. There’s even a “shelf” that can run along the bottom, left, or right side...


Read the full article: Google Updates Chrome For Windows 8, Adds Noisy Tab Feature And Desktop-like UI



Google Updates Chrome For Windows 8, Adds Noisy Tab Feature And Desktop-like UI



Chrome-Win8-Update-Featured

Chrome users on Windows 8 can expect an update rolling out to their browser today that includes a “Noisy Tabs” feature and Chrome OS-like desktop environment. The largest visual change is only noticeable if you run Chrome in “Windows 8 Mode”, a special mode Microsoft has set up for Web browsers that allows them to run in a pseudo-Modern app form. Chrome now appears visually like Chrome OS in this mode. There is a grey background and multiple Chrome windows can be opened within the environment. There’s even a “shelf” that can run along the bottom, left, or right side...


Read the full article: Google Updates Chrome For Windows 8, Adds Noisy Tab Feature And Desktop-like UI



Google Works on a Fitness API for Android



Wearables are now the next big thing. A lot of companies develop smart watches, smart glasses and head-up displays, smart headphones, smart clothes. They all include low-power sensors that can obtain information about your health, your activities, the things you see.



Android 4.4 supports some new sensors for detecting and counting steps. These sensors are implemented in hardware and are only available on Nexus 5.



Google now works on a Fitness API for Android which will allow applications to view and edit fitness data. They can "view and edit your fitness tracking, health and activities data, including reading and writing raw and transformed data". This might allow Google to store data obtained from multiple sources to your Google account so that other applications can process it, show charts and other useful information.









It's not clear if this new API will be available in the next Android release or in Google Play Services.



{ Thanks, Florian. }

Apple Pays, Google Plays, Viddy Sells, Horizon Fixes [Tech News Digest]



smashed-iphone

Today in Tech News Digest, Apple pays for in-app purchases, Google Play Movies & TV arrives on iOS, Starbucks is caught using clear text when storing passwords, Fullscreen acquires Supernova (formerly Viddy), EA backtracks on offline SimCity, and Horizon arrives to kill videos shot in portrait mode. Apple Backs Down Over In-App Purchases Apple to refund change it found in couch to FTC in settlement. — Alex Wilhelm (@alex) January 15, 2014 Apple has agreed to pay full refunds to customers who claimed confusion over in-app purchases led to their kids racking up huge bills. The accord with the FTC...


Read the full article: Apple Pays, Google Plays, Viddy Sells, Horizon Fixes [Tech News Digest]



Google Now in Chrome for Desktop






Google Now cards are available in the latest Chrome Canary build for Windows and Mac. You only need to go to chrome://flags/#enable-google-now , then switch from "Default" to "Enabled" and click "Relaunch Now" at the bottom of the page.






If you're signed into Chrome, you should see a Google Now notification and then a list of cards. "Google Now on your desktop! Stay connected to what you need to know, across all devices," informs the first card. Google Now cards are displayed using Chrome's notification interface in the Windows system tray or the Mac menu bar.



"If you use Google Now on your mobile device, you can see certain Now cards on your desktop computer if you're signed into Chrome, including weather, sports scores, commute traffic, and event reminders cards. Some of these cards may be based on the location of your mobile device. Google Now on Chrome shows a subset of the Now cards you see on your mobile device, which uses your device's location. You can edit your location settings (Location Reporting and Location History) on your Android or iOS device at any time," informs Google.






{ Thanks, Michael. }

I Sold a Chrome Extension but it was a bad decision



When Google decided the pull the plug on Google Reader, I quickly made the switch to Feedly since it was (and still is) the best alternative to Google’s RSS Reader. The one important piece that Feedly did not offer was a Chrome extension that would let users subscribe to RSS feeds on any web page with a click.


Since the extension was something that I needed for my own workflow, I wrote one (writing a Chrome extension is easy) and also published it to Google Chrome store. The last time I checked my Chrome developer dashboard, the extension had gained 30000+ users on Chrome.


Monetizing Google Chrome extensions is tricky


One morning I got an email from someone ( I tried Googling her name but it returned no results ) asking me if I would be interested in selling the Feedly Chrome extension. It was a 4-figure offer for something that had taken an hour to create and I agreed to the deal. I had no clue about the buyer and was also curious to know why would anyone pay this kind of money for such a simple Chrome extension.


The extension was sold, they sent the money via PayPal and I transferred the ownership of the extension to a particular Google Account. It was a smooth transition.


A month later, the new owners of the Feedly extension pushed an update to the Chrome store. No, the update didn’t bring any new features to the table nor contained any bug fixes. Instead, they incorporated advertising into the extension.


These aren’t regular banner ads that you see on web pages, these are invisible ads that work the background and replace links on every website that you visit into affiliate links. In simple English, if the extension is activated in Chrome, it will inject adware into all web pages.


The user ratings of the Chrome extension are headed south.

The user ratings of the Chrome extension are headed south.



No surprises, the ratings of the extension have recently plummeted at the Chrome store but the business model of the buyer is simple – they buy popular add-ons, inject affiliate links and the bulk of users would never notice this since the Chrome browser automatically updates add-ons in the background. And there are no changelogs either.


The extension does offer an option to opt-out of advertising (you are opted-in by default) or you can disable them on your own by blocking the superfish.com and www.superfish.com domains in your hosts file but quietly sneaking ads doesn’t sound like the most ethical way to monetize a product.


It was probably a bad idea to sell the Chrome add-on and am sorry if you were an existing user. Meanwhile, you can switch to the Feedly bookmarklet for the adware-free experience.




This story, I Sold a Chrome Extension but it was a bad decision, was originally published at Digital Inspiration on 16/01/2014 under Feedly, Internet

Do You Value Online Reviews? [We Ask You]



we-ask-you-logo

We all have opinions on things. And the Internet seems to have drawn previously reserved individuals out of their shells until they’re more than willing to tell you their opinion on anything and everything. Whether you asked for it or not. Reviews are everywhere. From websites rating the latest movies, music, and television shows, to online shopping sites such as Amazon ranking consumer products by an arbitrary scoring system. But just because reviews are ubiquitous doesn’t mean they’re actually worthwhile. The Value Of Opinion… We want to know, Do You Value Online Reviews? This questions cuts both ways. Do you...


Read the full article: Do You Value Online Reviews? [We Ask You]



Nest: When Design Gets Expensive



Google's announcement that it will buy Nest was surprising. "Google has entered into an agreement to buy Nest Labs, Inc. for $3.2 billion in cash. Nest's mission is to reinvent unloved but important devices in the home such as thermostats and smoke alarms. Since its launch in 2011, the Nest Learning Thermostat has been a consistent best seller and the recently launched Protect (Smoke + CO Alarm) has had rave reviews."






Back in 2007, Google paid $3.1 billion for DoubleClick, which completely transformed Google's ad business. Why pay $3.2 billion for a home automation company that designs beautiful objects? Maybe because it was founded by Tony Fadell, one of the people who designed the iPod, an iconic product that changed Apple.



Google's 2013 was mostly about hardware. From Chromebook Pixel to HP Chromebook 11, from Nexus 5/7 to Chromecast, from Moto X to Glass, Google designs consumer hardware and it's just getting started. Many of these products bypass OEMs and use Google's brand. It's a major shift for Google and a superstar designer can make Google's products even better.



From Jon Willey, Lead Designer for Google Search:



When Nest first made a thermostat, it seemed a lot of people said "wow, what a great thermostat company." And then they released a smoke alarm and the sense I got from many was "oh, Nest is a great thermostat and smoke alarm company."



But at the heart, Nest is obviously a great design company. Great design is about simplicity, utility, and beauty and Nest products have those qualities in abundance.



And so as Google works hard to bring great design to all of its products, it is very exciting to have the Nest team join Google.


Chrome's Data Compression, Now For Everyone



Chrome's data compression feature is now available for all Android and iOS users. The latest releases of Chrome for Android and iOS add this feature, which was previously limited to Chrome Beta for Android and some randomly picked users.



"When enabled, Chrome's data compression and bandwidth management can reduce data usage by up to 50% while browsing the web on Chrome for Android and iOS. This feature also enables Chrome's Safe Browsing technology which helps protect you from malicious webpages," informs Google.






This feature uses a Google proxy to compress all the pages you visit, except for HTTPS pages and the sites you visit in Chrome's incognito mode.



"When the Data Compression Proxy feature is enabled, Chrome Mobile opens a connection between your phone and one of the optimization servers running in Google's datacenters and relays all non-encrypted HTTP requests over this connection. (...) The browser-to-proxy connection runs over SSL, meaning that your browsing session is encrypted between your device and Google's servers. The proxy also performs intelligent compression and minification of HTML, JavaScript and CSS resources, which removes unnecessary whitespace, comments, and other metadata which are not essential to render the page. These optimizations, combined with mandatory gzip compression for all resources, can result in substantial bandwidth savings," informs Google. DNS lookups are performed by the proxy, while the images are converted to WebP and the resulting images are up to 80% smaller.



Chrome for iOS also adds the page translation feature, which was previously limited to Chrome for Android and desktop, while Chrome for Android lets you add to the homescreen shortcuts to any page or web app.



As usually, "these updates will be rolling out over the next few days", so don't expect to get the latest version of Mobile Chrome right away.