Giants unite against Google

Three technology heavyweights are joining a coalition to fight Google’s attempt to create what could be the world’s largest virtual library.

Amazon, Microsoft and Yahoo will sign up to the Open Book Alliance being spearheaded by the Internet Archive.

They oppose a legal settlement that could make Google the main source for many online works.

“Google is trying to monopolise the library system,” the Internet Archive’s founder Brewster Kahle told BBC News.

“If this deal goes ahead, they’re making a real shot at being ‘the’ library and the only library.”

Back in 2008, the search giant reached an agreement with publishers and authors to settle two lawsuits that charged the company with copyright infringement for the unauthorised scanning of books.
[ad#AdBrite-1]In that settlement, Google agreed to pay $125m (£76m) to create a Book Rights Registry, where authors and publishers could register works and receive compensation. Authors and publishers would get 70% from the sale of these books with Google keeping the remaining 30%.

Google would also be given the right to digitise orphan works. These are works whose rights-holders are unknown, and are believed to make up an estimated 50-70% of books published after 1923.

Comments on the deal have to be lodged by 4 September. In early October, a judge in the Southern district of New York will consider whether or not to approve the class-action suit.

Google is the largest search engine

Google Continues to Satisfy, News Publishers Don’t

Google is the largest and best voted search engine.

Google is the largest and best voted search engine.

The latest American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) shows that Google reigns supreme in the search engines and portal industry when it comes to customer satisfaction. This isn’t hard to believe considering Google’s share of the search market.

There’s a reason why Google dominates the arena. Users are generally satisfied with the results they get, and see no reason to switch engines. That is why Microsoft has its work cut out for it with making Bing a true competitor.

“Google is unquestionably king of search, so the only competition is for second place,” says Larry Freed, president and CEO of ForeSee Results, who released the ACSI along with the University of Michigan. “The research was done before Bing entered the market, so we don’t know what effect its entry will have. But Google’s customers are pretty happy and have little reason to try something new, so Bing has a real uphill battle ahead.”

 

How to Submit URL to Dogpile

Have you ever tried to submit your URL to the search engine named Dogpile? Don’t waste your time. it is not required to submit there . Read this article that an expert has written about dogpile submission.

Before I address how to submit URL to Dogpile you need to know the following. First off it is important to actually be in the know of how the Dogpile search engine works. When you do a search on Dogpile you are not just getting results from one place but several.

These include Google, Yahoo, Live Search and Ask.com websites. Since it uses all of these results to compile its search results it is called a metasearch. This means, in this case, none of the search results you see are actually done by Dogpile. They are pulled from the bigger search engines.

How is This Helpful?

In a normal case this would be a total waste of space to a person but this actually helps. Since each separate search engines gives back different results. Dogpile takes the best results from all of them and gives you the best to choose from. This gives you the best of both worlds. You get the best search engines in the world working for you, but you only have to go to one site instead of six. The website also does an excellent job of getting rid of duplicate results so everything you see is original. This is a definite time saver.

Why Trying to Submit URL to Dogpile is A Big Time Waster???

Now you get what you came here for. If you have tried to look for a way to submit URL to Dogpile I would say give up now! No matter where you go you will never find a form online to just submit to Dogpile alone. This is because it actually grabs its search results from other places, as mentioned earlier. So what is really important is that you submit your URL to the other places. So when someone does a search on your topic, Dogpile pulls your site as a result from the big engines like Google, Yahoo, Ask.com, Live Search and more.

Tired of trying to promote your site and getting no where. > Click here now to find out the advantages of doing website submissions and getting loads of traffic at the same time!

-Online Sources.

Microsoft word sales banned.

A US federal court has ordered Microsoft to pay over $290m (£175m) for wilfully infringing on a patent by Canadian firm i4i.

The patent relates to the use of XML, a programming language that allows formatting of text and makes files readable across different programs.

XML is integral to Microsoft’s flagship word processing software Word.

Texas district court judge Leonard Davis also filed an injunction preventing Microsoft from selling Word.

The row specifically relates to the use of Extensible Mark-up Language, or XML, documents.

facebook mobile version debut

Facebook one of the largest social network has begun tests on a new service tailored for mobiles and low bandwidth internet connections.

Facebook Lite appears to be a cut-down version of Facebook and is aimed at countries where broadband is limited.

The site is currently on trial in India and it is thought there are plans to extend this to China and Russia.

In a statement Facebook said the new service would be a “faster, simpler version similar to the Facebook experience you get on a mobile phone”.

“Facebook Lite is a fast-loading, simplified version of Facebook that enables people to make comments, accept friend requests, write on people’s walls, and look at photos and status updates,” the statement continued.

“We are currently testing Facebook Lite in countries where we are seeing lots of new users coming to Facebook for the first time and are looking to start off with a more simple experience.”

What is a mobile phone virus?

What’s a mobile phone virus?

Moblie phones are not much affected by viruses but smart phones could be due to many softwares are used and ability to access the Internet.

Moblie phones are not much affected by viruses but smart phones could be due to many softwares are used and ability to access the Internet.

A mobile phone virus or mobile malware – malicious mobile software – is a computer virus specifically adapted for the mobile phone environment and designed to spread from one vulnerable phone to another.

A virus is a program code that replicates by being copied to another program. Viruses can be transmitted as attachments to an email or in a download file. Some viruses take effect as soon as their code is executed; other viruses can lie dormant. A virus that replicates by resending itself as an email attachment or as a part of a network message is known as a worm.

Viruses can range from benign to quite harmful; they can erase data from the infected phone or send fake messages purporting to be from the phones owner. How prevalent are mobile phone viruses? The current security risk from mobile phone viruses and worms is low.

Until many more smart phones or PDAs are in use, and users of these phones are regularly exchanging executable files, the risk will remain low. The mobile industry takes the threat of viruses very seriously and is continually monitoring its networks and working to protect users from any future risk from mobile phone viruses. There are also some simple measures that individual users can implement to protect themselves.

What can I do to protect my phone?

Internet:Browse through a wall of images and video

The Cooliris Firefox plug-in (Mac or Windows)is one of the most popular extensions in our library. Fire it up once, and you’ll see why: Cooliris turns your image or movie searches into a 3D wall that is easy to navigate and just plain cool looking.

When they came out with an app for iPhone some time ago, it didn’t have enough of the cool features to make it worthwhile. But they’ve just released version 1.5 for iPhone and after giving it a test drive, I think it might be worthy of another look.

Cooliris for iPhone attempts to move the mostly seamless browsing experience from the Firefox Extension on to your touch screen iPhone, and it does a fairly good job.
You’ll need a fast broadband Wi-Fi connection to get quick load times, but the app is still usable on slower connections. New features in this 1.5 release include faster search results (up to 5-times faster according to Cooliris), the ability to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine for queries, and full Twitter support (read content from the public Twitter feed or read Tweets from the people you follow).

Windows 7 jump lists come to Chrome

Google Chrome fans who live on the edge and use the developer’s build now get access to one of the best features in Windows 7. Browser jump-list access had previously been limited only to Internet Explorer, but Chrome version 3.0.197.11 supports it.

Jump lists in Windows 7 for Internet Explorer 8 (left) and Google Chrome 3.0.197.11 (right).

Jump lists in Windows 7 for Internet Explorer 8 (left) and Google Chrome 3.0.197.11 (right).


The jump list, accessible by right-clicking on the Chrome taskbar icon or by holding down the left mouse button and dragging, mimics the Internet Explorer jump list. What IE calls “Frequent”, Chrome labels “Most Visited Sites”, but both merely show your most frequently visited Web sites. Both lists of URLs are configurable, so you can remove sites from the list.

Publicis Groupe to buy Microsoft’s Razorfish

French advertising group Publicis Groupe SA has agreed to acquire Internet ad agency Razorfish from Microsoft for $530 million in cash and stock.

Razorfish will continue to operate under its own brand name and continue to serve as Microsoft’s “preferred provider” for Internet advertising, the companies announced Sunday in a joint statement. The deal includes a strategic alliance agreement in which Publicis Groupe will purchase display and search advertising from Microsoft over a five-year period.

“The purchase of Razorfish is a new step in our strategic plan to be the unquestionable leader in digital communication,” Publicis Groupe Chief Executive Officer Maurice Levy said in the statement. “Once this acquisition is complete, about a quarter of our revenue will come from digital communication and our ability to grow and conquer will be reinforced.”

What is FFMPEG

FFmpeg is a computer program that can record, convert and stream digital audio and video in numerous formats. FFmpeg is a command line tool that is composed of a collection of free software / open source libraries. It includes libavcodec, an audio/video codec library used by several other projects, and libavformat, an audio/video container mux and demux library. The name of the project comes from the MPEG video standards group, together with “FF” for “fast forward”.

The project was started by Fabrice Bellard (using the pseudonym “Gerard Lantau”), and is now maintained by Michael Niedermayer. Many FFmpeg developers are also part of the MPlayer project, and FFmpeg is hosted at the MPlayer project server.

FFmpeg is developed under Linux, but it can be compiled under most operating systems, including Apple Inc. Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows and AmigaOS. Most computing platforms and microprocessor instruction set architecture are also supported, like x86 (IA-32 and x86-64 ), PPC (PowerPC), ARM, DEC Alpha, SPARC, and MIPS architecture.

Recently version .5 of FFmpeg was released, although previously FFmpeg developers have always recommended using the latest neutral build from their source code Subversion version control system as development attempts to maintain a stable trunk.Published under the GNU Lesser General Public License or GNU General Public License (depending on which sub-libraries one would include), FFmpeg is free software.

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