Tag Archives: google

Is Google looking at a rough 2015?

Screen Shot 2014-12-18 at 10.09.15 AMInteresting read about possibly looming troubles for Google. I will say that in the past I used Google to look for products, but most of the items I found that way were from shaky looking distributors, or links to Amazon, where I found they had a very competitive price.

Perception is reality, my personal perception is that Amazon is a trustworthy enough for me to buy from them. Over the last few months I’ve simply quit Googling for products and checked Amazon first, and only using Google if I felt that Amazon didn’t offer the product or the price was more than I wanted to pay.


Google’s stocks have taken a dive recently. It was a rocky 2014 but the last month has seen a nose dive in stock trading value:
Screen Shot 2014-12-18 at 10.12.44 AM

That’s not all. As the Mercury News (headquartered in Silicon Valley) reported last month, FireFox has dropped Google as it’s default search engine:
http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_26971412/firefox-drops-google-yahoo-default-search-engine

Here is a link to an opinion piece on LinkedIn that discusses this further:

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/googles-very-rough-transition-nicholas

Today’s Tidbits – Video, Google and an SLS

Sorry!

Mazda and Google give Laguna Seca the Street View Treatment

Leverkusen, 04 September 2009. The legendary Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in California can now be viewed from your PC on Google Street View. Racing fans can travel the entire circuit – starting at Andretti’s Hairpin to the infamous Corkscrew Curve – from the perspective of a race car participating in the final leg of the 2008 American Le Mans Series. The tour was filmed using a spherical, multi-lens camera mounted to a vehicle, and combined with additional photographic imagery, GPS and other geo-spatial data to produce a true image of the race track at eye level.

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Incredible new Mercedes Benz SLS

Mercedes-Benz  SLS
Mercedes-Benz SLS

Finally, one amazing looking car from Mercedes-Benz. An homage to the old SL300, including gull wing doors! If only it were not 177,000 Euros.

Due to be revealed at next week’s Frankfurt Motor Show, the 300SL-inspired “Gullwing” is packing a front/mid-mounted version of the venerable 6.3-liter V8 fitted to the majority of AMG’s offerings, mated to a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox channeling 563 hp and 480 lb-ft of torque to the rear wheels. Weight is pegged at around 3,500 pounds, allowing the SLS to run from a rest to 60 in 3.7 seconds. Top speed is 197 mph and optional carbon ceramic discs should bring the party to a halt with supreme authority.

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Google Chrome OS to take on Windows

A LOT of press over the last week has been produced regarding Googles announcement to go head-to-head with Microsoft with is Open Source (LINUX) based OS. They dominate the search market and are now going to go after the 9000 lb. gorilla on the desktop. It’s about time we had another player in the sector.

Google calls time on the Age of Windows

Google announced on Wednesday that it was developing its own computer operating system. It will be secure, fast, lightweight and – most of all – free. And it presents the biggest challenge yet to the long-standing dominance of Windows.

The idea behind Google ChromeOS is nothing new – it’s built on a Linux foundation and will no doubt share many of the features of other open-source operating systems. But Google is the only computing brand with more might than Microsoft: it’s trusted, and has a proven track record of building brilliant, free services, from search to instant messaging.

Trust is the key here.  I don’t know many that trust Microsoft to either do it right, nor do it ethically.  The funny thing is, I don’t know anyone that belives Google will either.   They are the kings of data warehousing, and data reselling.   The big concern in the technical community is,  what will Google do with the data it can aquire, once it ‘owns’ your desktop too?

I know people who simply won’t use Google for searches (I use it exclusivly).  They fear that Google is profiling them (and it is) and will resell their searching patterns (and it dose) to other parties.  Valid concerns, to an extent, but really, anyone that think they are using the web annonymously, unless they are making heavy use of fully annonymizing proxies, is dillusional.    Even those bent on covering their tracks have to be careful what cookies they except, how long they  remain on the system, what they are caching, what proxies they are using (what are those proxies doing with their traffic, are they considering that?).

The internet is a dangerous place for you data.  Either you have to be OK with people warehousing your activities, or you’re going to have to go to some extreme measures to thwart the data transfer.

Now, if you ever want to look at what YOU might be sending to 3rd parties from your own computer, I suggest running a tool like  WireShark.   Now here is a neat little site benefit od doing something like that.  A lot of the most sophisticated malware out there, looks for such tools runing on systems and will modify it’s behavior from malicious, to begnin, to conceal itself.   So, running network profiling tools, perhaps even if you don’t ever LOOK at them, can help prevent some of the worst expoits out there.  It’s like taking a vaccine of sorts.  It’s not going to prevent everything, but some of the worst of the web will simply move onto easier marks.

I for one will be getting ahold of Chrome OS as soon as I can to istall on a laptop for examination.  I have some internet neophytes in the house, and they are a good test of how easy an OS is to use.   Right now I’ve given them a new Acer laptop running Ubuntu.   My house is a Windoze Free Zone.  I look foward to hearing the feedback on Chrome OS when I give them the option to use either.

OTHER RELATED:

SlashDot:   Google Announces Chrome OS, For Release Mid-2010

“After years of speculation, Google has announced Google Chrome OS, which should be available mid-2010. Initially targeting netbooks, its main selling points are speed, simplicity and security — which kind of implies that the current No.1 OS doesn’t deliver in these areas”

CNET: What will Google’s Chrome OS watch you do?

Google has a long history of tracking user activity, and the introduction of its Chrome operating system later this year is sure to follow suit. While we know that it’s being built off of Linux, one big thing we don’t know is how its terms of service will differ from those found in other Google products, and what kinds of user data it will be collecting. Based on the company’s track record of watching and monetizing user data, it could be anything from which applications you’re using, to all the information that’s coming in and out of your computer.