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Category: Google (page 14 of 21)

Test Your Phone Settings (or Find Your Phone) With Wheresmycellphone.com

wheresmycellphone

If you’re a Google Voice user, you’ve probably been there – you want to test out the forwarding on your phone, or see if the call presentation feature is working properly.  If you’ve tied all of your phones to Google Voice, though, and set those phones to have direct access to voicemail, you can’t call yourself to test out your settings.  Enter wheresmycellphone.com.

Whereismycellphone does one thing, and one thing only.  It calls your phone.  The site markets itself as a tool to ring your phone so that you can find it, but I’ve used it to test out my Google Voice settings.  You enter your number, specify when your phone should ring (immediately, or up to five minutes in the future), and hit the “Make it ring” button.

What tools do you use to ring your phone, or test out your forwarding settings?

Where’s my cellphone.com


Is Google A Monopoly?

Today, 40Tech is pleased to present a guest post by Kosmo from The Soap Boxers.

google monopoly

It has been 14 short years since Stanford students Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google. Since then, the company’s market value has skyrocketed to more than $150 billion and the company’s name has become a household word.

Photo by HarshLight

Like many successful companies, Google has decided to diversify rather than putting all of its eggs into the search engine basket. I personally use Google for:

  • Search engine
  • Email
  • Advertising provider
  • Website Analytics
  • RSS Reader
  • Webmaster Tools

That’s a half dozen tools that I use fairly frequently, and I’m not even a real “power user” – there are people who depend on Google products much more heavily. With Google having its hand in nearly every pie these days, have they grown into a monopoly that needs to be regulated or broken up?


They Could Put Me Out Of Business!

A friend of mine runs a successful blog and is concerned about the amount of power that Google has in the search engine space. A considerable amount of his traffic (and revenue) comes as a result of Google (as is the case for a great many bloggers). Changes in Google’s algorithms could result in his traffic being cut dramatically – costing him a considerable amount of advertising revenue.

While I can certainly empathize with my friend – since I also get a considerable chunk of traffic from Google – I happen to think that he (and others) are looking at this a bit backward. Who are the customers of Google’s search engine – the people searching, or the website owners? I see Google as the Lonely Planet guide to the internet – a travel guide to stops along the information superhighway. To take the analogy further, let’s say you own a restaurant that a popular travel guide reviews as a top choice for travelers. Suddenly, you’re booked solid and perhaps even think of opening a second location. Then, the next year, the travel guide doesn’t mention your restaurant at all – and traffic declines sharply. Can you be very upset at the publishers of the guide? Of course not – their job is to make the readers happy. Any benefit to you is incidental. It’s the same thing for Google – it’s nice if they drive traffic your way, but they don’t owe you anything.


Too Hard To Switch?

Is it too hard to switch from Google products, since they have their hand in everything? Earlier in this article, I mentioned that I use six Google products on a regular basis. How hard would it be for me to switch?

Search engine – If I wanted to switch to a different search engine, it’s pretty easy – just plug the URL of the search engine into my browser.

Email – I use Google’s mail servers for my own domain. Since these aren’t @Gmail.com addresses, I could switch by making a few changes to settings on my domain registrar’s site. I’ve done this before, and I can assure you that it’s not a very big deal. For Gmail addresses, this is more difficult, but that has always been the problem with email addresses – unless you own the domain, they generally aren’t portable. There are so many different providers of email service that it seems a bit silly to suggest that Google has undue influence in this market.

Advertising provider – I use Google’s Adsense program for the ads on my site. Google does have some competitors in this space, and I have experimented with a couple of them, and have always come back to Adsense (some of the competitors show ads that aren’t very relevant). I have a WordPress plug-in (WhoSeesAds from Ozh) insert the ad code on the fly. It would be child’s play to replace this code with something from Chitika or a different competitor.

Website Analytics – Google Analytics is one of three products that I use for analytics, and not the one that I rely on most heavily. I think it would be fair to say that I have already switched to WordPress Stats for most of my analytics.

RSS Reader – I really don’t need a lot of bells and whistles, so I don’t have much of a reason to switch to a different RSS reader. However, it seems that there is a standard called OPML that allows you to export information about your subscriptions and then import this information into a new reader.

Webmaster tools – Switching to a different provider would generally mean adding a small bit of code to my site.

In addition to being a user of these six Google products, I am also a former user of Blogger. I made the switch to WordPress back in April of 2009, at the urging of a friend who declared WordPress to be superior. I was able to easily import all of my old articles from Blogger to WordPress in a matter of minutes.


Unreasonable Barriers To Entry?

One characteristic of a monopoly is that their actions cause unreasonable barriers to entry into the market. Certainly, companies wishing to compete against Google have an uphill battle. However, it’s important to note the different between a high barrier to entry and an unreasonable one. There are many industries in which new companies face difficult barriers to entry. If I wanted to start a car company, it would be extremely expensive and quite difficult to succeed – but I can’t honestly say that Ford, Toyota, Honda, Mercedes Benz, or Porsche have a monopoly.

I even question exactly how high the barriers are. Bill Gates famously said that a kid in a garage could put him out of business. This could happen to any number of Google’s businesses as well. If someone is able to find a way to charge advertisers less than Adsense does while paying web site owners more, that would be a sustainable advantage that could be used to drive Adsense out of business. It is unlikely that any one company could completely put Google out of business, but that’s the whole point of diversification – and not the mark of a monopoly.

Kosmo Bio: Kosmo is an aspiring novelist, vehement opponent of the designated hitter, student of true crime, and plays the keyboard for The Soap Boxers – an eclectic, team-written web magazine that touches on a wide variety of topics, including why strikeouts aren’t as bad as people think.


Clean Your Gmail Inbox by Playing a Game

0boxer

If you’re like me, your inbox is not exactly tidy.  Gmail’s recently revealed Priority Inbox feature has helped, but getting through an email backlog can still be a chore.  To make cleaning your Gmail inbox be a bit less tedious, give 0boxer a try.

OBoxer is a service, complete with extensions for Chrome and Safari, that awards points and badges to you for processing messages in your Gmail inbox.  Once you install the extension, 0Boxer works automatically as you process messages.  You get points for every message written, archived, or deleted.  These points are displayed in a bar at the top of your browser window, as shown in the screenshot above.  You can also earn badges for certain achievements, such as reaching a zero inbox.  Your inbox will show a link to 0Boxer’s leaderboard, which displays the usernames of  the users who have the most points for the day, and the week.

You do need to use Gmail’s authorization feature when you set up 0Boxer, to give 0Boxer access to your account.  0Boxer only accesses stats about your activity (such as messages archived), rather than the actual content of messages.

Right now, 0Boxer only has extensions for Chrome and Safari, so you’re out of luck if you’re a Firefox, Opera, or Internet Explorer user.  0Boxer does work with Google Apps email accounts.

Is 0Boxer the type of app that would help you get through your inbox?  Or is it something gimmicky?

0Boxer [via Fast Company]


Internet Explorer is Now Losing the Browser Wars? Magic 8-Ball Says: Doubtful

Internet Explorer is Now Losing the Browser Wars? Magic 8-Ball Says: Doubtful

Internet Explorer has been slowly but steadily losing ground in the “browser wars” since the invention of that little hot little vulpine browser, Firefox. Google Chrome shook up the market even more and is continuing what’s considered to be a fast upward climb. Safari is Safari, and Opera is largely underestimated.

In the article I read about IE’s plummet, on Mashable, the tone was very much in the negative for Internet Explorer, citing phrases such as “to little, to late” and “Hail Mary” in reference to the coming improvements of IE9. Now, I am no fan of Internet Explorer (my web-designer-self hates it with a furious feral fire), and no disrespect intended to the knowledgeable minds over at Mashable, but I think a little bit of perspective may be called for.

Yes, IE has finally hit a downward slide (thank you, powers that be!) — but even with the European ruling that dropped IE from Microsoft Windows installations, and the rise of Google Chrome, Internet Explorer still holds 49.87% of the browser market (as stated in the Mashable article). Another unfortunate truth is that a good percentage of that percentage still uses IE6. The fact that anyone is still using that piece of crap is proof positive that people aren’t as far advanced into the world of technology as we might have hoped. But I digress…

Browser Market Share Chart | Mashable

The point I am making here is that 49.87%, while still a hefty drop for IE when compared to the gains of other browsers, is still the largest segment of the market by nearly 20%. Internet Explorer 9 may be a bit late, but it is still going to compete soundly with the other browsers out there. IE9 may not win back Microsoft’s haters (count me in that batch), but it will win back some people — and it will keep even more. If Internet Explorer is going anywhere, I don’t think it will be anytime soon.

What do you think?

With Less than 50% Market Share, IE Is Now Losing the Browser Wars [Mashable]


What Is Worse: Apple’s Restrictive App Store, or Android Bloatware That You Can’t Remove?

android bloatware vs iphone restrictiveness

Engadget posted an interesting article yesterday, pondering whether carriers are destroying Android, by preloading Android devices with “bloatware.”  The article compared this to what happened in the PC industry, where computer vendors loaded all sorts of crapware on machines, filling up the drive and slowing the system down.

It’s deja vu all over again for mobile phones. More and more devices I look at are coming installed with applications I don’t want, often popping up messages to try and upsell me on services I have no interest in. Even worse, unlike PCs where offensive applications can be removed or the OS reinstalled cleanly, there’s often nothing that can be done to get rid of unwanted mobile software without arduous work.

The iPhone certainly restricts what apps can get into the App Store, but at least the user isn’t forced to keep an undesirable program on the phone (aside from the basics, like the App Store app, the Photo app, Mail, etc.).  Or is it worse to not have access to certain apps at all, like on the iPhone?

You tell us – what is worse, a smartphone where you can’t even get certain applications because of a restrictive app review process, or a smartphone preloaded with garbage that you can’t remove?

Entelligence: Will carriers destroy the Android vision? [Engadget]

Photo by svensonsan.