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Category: Google (page 17 of 21)

Now You Can Reshare Posts On Google Buzz

 Now You Can Reshare Posts On Google Buzz | 40Tech

For those of you who are still interested in Google Buzz, or at least think it’s a good idea that’s still in progress, late last month the always busy bees over at Google released the 16th feature update (in as many weeks) to the Google Buzz platform: the Reshare button. The ability to re-share a post from someone you follow, thereby easily spreading the information to your own network has been a much-requested feature from users since the launch of Google Buzz — and they made it very easy and surprisingly effective.

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Google vs. Apple: Who is More Open?

apple or google and open

“Open” is the new buzzword du jour, with a few of the major tech companies claiming to support open standards.  Two of those companies are Google and Apple.  How open are they?

First of all, what is “open?”  As Wikipedia notes, there is no single definition of an “open standard,” and interpretations vary with usage.  Even the companies themselves seem to have differing definitions of open, depending on the setting.  Let’s take a quick look at Apple and Google, and at how “open” they are.

 

Apple

Apple-logo Open doesn’t necessarily mean Open Source.  Even the iPhone, which is notoriously closed, does sport some Open Source Apps.  The platform itself is about as closed as they come, though.  You can debate the merits of Apple’s ecosystem and the benefits to users, but there is no debating the iPhone’s closed nature.  If you are a developer, your app won’t see the light of day unless Apple says that it can.

Apple went one step further in closing the iPhone ecosystem recently, changing its iPhone Developer Program License Agreement so that developers must use Apple’s proprietary software if they want to get their apps approved for the iPad and iPhone.

So Apple is closed – end of story?  It’s not that simple.  As Steve Jobs pointed out in his somewhat disingenuous dissertation on Adobe’s Flash, Apple at least supports open web standards.  And Apple’s website describes its support for the Open Source community, and its use of Open Source tools and programs.  So in some areas, at least, Apple is open.

 

Google

Googlelogo

Google has a reputation for being “open.”  Android, for example, is open to the extent that anyone can develop for it, and release an app.  And with Wave, Google has announced plans to release most of the source code as open source software, and has already made an open-source release of some Wave components.

At the same time, Google isn’t all about being open, either.  While many of its products are open to some degree, its core product, search, is not.  As any SEO guru will tell you, Google’s search algorithms are shrouded in mystery (albeit with parts that are known to be important, such as a page’s title).  Why is Google so open in some respects, but not in others?

 

The Rub

Google seems to be more open, but the one area where it is most closed, search, reveals the the answer to openness for both Apple and Google.  In short, both are large corporations, and both must make money for shareholders.  As a result, both are open when it makes financial sense, and closed when it helps the bottom line.

For Apple, part of the financial success of the iPhone is due to its ease of use and reliability.  That reliability would be difficult to achieve on an open platform.  For Google, its search business is the core of its existence, which is why we’ll likely never see Google disclose exactly how it works.  Google has said before that the more that people use the internet, the more money Google makes.  If opening products, like Wave, leads to more people using the internet, then we can’t necessarily ascribe altruistic motives to Google’s open ways.

If you are a fan of either company, keep that in mind.  Apple is more closed than Google, but at the end of the day, both Apple and Google are just trying to make a buck.


Salmon Protocol May Be the Future of the Web

 Salmon Protocol May Be the Future of the Web | 40tech

About a month or so ago, I came across a few articles about Salmon Protocol – an open protocol that allows for communication beyond the confines of social networks; as well as a centralized conversation that brings comments from everywhere home to their source. Imagine, if you will, being able to communicate with people on Facebook from Twitter, or on MySpace from Facebook – and without having to join multiple networks. Wouldn’t that just make life peachy? Or maybe you are a blogger and would like to know about conversations that have sprung up around your post on the various social networks out there. Salmon Protocol plans to take you there – and may well be the future of the web.

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Google Wave Gets More Useful With Templates & Remove Users Feature

Google Wave Gets More Useful With Templates, Remove Users Feature | 40Tech When Google Wave hit the world last year, it came with many oohs and ahhs and an onset of geeky people like me and you — then reality set in and, for many, Wave lost its appeal. People complained that it was slow and confusing, often in the same breath as praising it for being brilliant and innovative.

The biggest issue, however, that kept Wave from mass adoption, was that people just couldn’t figure out what to use it for. In an effort to address such concerns and continue building out the platform, Google has released several major feature updates over the past months; the most recent of which aims to increase the usability of Google Wave by adding use-templates for new waves, and the ability to remove a user (including yourself) from a wave.

Hit the jump for details.

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How Google Can Save Buzz and Wave From Irrelevancy

Google buzzwave We have one question for you right off the bat- how many of you are still using Google Wave or Google Buzz?  Have both services flopped?  Back in August, we wrote about 3 reasons why Wave wouldn’t flop.  Has it?  What about Buzz?

My personal take on Buzz and Wave is that  Buzz is a flop, and is useless in its current form, while Wave is useful, but for limited purposes.  Read on, though, for how Google can save both services from irrelevancy.

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