Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Thursday, April 8, 2010

10 Simple Google Search Tricks



1. Use the “site:” operator to limit searches to a particular site. I use this one all the time, and it’s particularly handy because many site’s built-in search tools don’t return the results you’re looking for (and some sites don’t even have a search feature). If I’m looking for WWD posts about GTD, for example, I could try this search: GTD site:webworkerdaily.com.

2. Use Google as a spelling aid. As Rob Hacker — the WWD reader I profiled last week — pointed out, entering a word into Google is a quick way to see if you have the right spelling. If it’s incorrect, Google will suggest the correct spelling instead. Additionally, if you want to get a definition of a word, you can use the “define:” operator to return definitions from various dictionaries (for example, define: parasympathetic).

3. Use Google as a calculator. Google has a built-in calculator — try entering a calculation like 110 * (654/8 + 3). Yes, your computer also has a calculator, but if you spend most of your day inside a browser, typing your calculation into the browser’s search box is quicker than firing up your calculator app.

4. Find out what time it is anywhere in the world. This one’s really handy if you want to make sure that you’re not phoning someone in the middle of the night. Just search for “time” and then the name of the city. For example, try: time San Francisco

5. Get quick currency conversions. Google can also do currency conversion, for example: 100 pounds in dollars. It only has the more mainstream currencies, though — if you’re trying to see how many Peruvian nuevos soles your dollars might buy, you’ll be out of luck.

6. Use the OR operator. This can be useful if you’re looking at researching a topic but you’re not sure which keywords will return the information you need. It can be particularly handy in conjunction with the “site:” operator. For example, you could try this search: GTD or “getting things done” site:webworkerdaily.com

7. Exclude specific terms with the – operator. You can narrow your searches using this operator. For example, if you’re looking for information about American Idol but don’t want anything about Simon Cowell, you could try: “american idol” -cowell

8. Search for specific document types. Google can search the web for specific types of files using the “filetype:” operator. If you’re looking for PowerPoint files about GTD, for example, you could try: GTD filetype:ppt

9. Search within numerical ranges using the .. operator. Say, for example, you want to look for information about Olympic events that took place in the 1950’s, you could use this search: Olympics 1950..1960

10. Area code lookup. Need to know where a phone number is located? Google will let you know where it is, and show you a map of the area, too. For example: 415

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Nexus One


The Nexus One smartphone has arrived and is on sale at Google.com/phone.



Specs
3D Tour

Nexus One Phone: $529.00 unsubsidized

- T-Mobile: $179.00 (w/ a 2-year contract)
- Verizon Wireless: Spring 2010
- Vodafone: Spring 2010

Also:
* You can only purchase a total of 5 Nexus One phones per Google account
* Family plans, Flexpay, SmartAccess and KidConnect subscribers must buy the phone unlocked and unsubsidized for $530
* Language in the TOS implies shipping availability outside of the U.S.

[http://gizmodo.com/5436673/leaked-nexus-one-documents-530-unlocked-180-with-t+mobile]

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

(Fellow) Bloggers Beware

Fashion Student Blogger Sues Google for $15M

Rosemary Port.

Rosemary Port launches counter-suit against Google after her identity was released to Liskula Cohen, the model she attacked on the web
By Casey Chance
FIRST POSTED AUGUST 25, 2009

Rosemary Port, the New York blogger whose identity was revealed by Google after she called a Vogue model a "skank", is planning to sue the internet giant for $15 million for defamation.

This is the latest twist in a saga which began when Port had used her anonymous blog 'Skanks of NYC', hosted by Google's blogger.com, to call the Canadian model Liskula Cohen the "skankiest in NYC", an "old hag" and a "psychotic, lying, whoring... skank".



Liskula Cohen.

Cohen, 37, then sought the blogger's identity so she could pursue a defamation case against her. Last week, Google took the unprecedented step of releasing Port's details, something it had initially refused to do.

Port, a 29-year-old fashion student [at FIT], originally defended her actions in court, claiming blogs "serve as a modern-day forum for conveying personal opinions, including invective and ranting", and should not be treated as factual assertions, but her claim was rejected by the judge.
Yesterday Port said that Cohen had "defamed herself" by going to the press. "This has become a public spectacle and a circus that is not my doing," Port told the New York Daily News. "Before her suit, there were probably two hits on my website: one from me looking at it, and one from her looking at it," she added. "That was before it became a spectacle."

Port said that in releasing her IP address, Google had put her on a "silver platter for the press to attack me". Her lawyer Salvatore Strazzullo said Google had breached a legal and ethical obligation to protect her expectation of anonymity. "I'm ready to take this all the way to the Supreme Court," he said.

[http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/52702,news,anonymous-blogger-sues-google-after-being-named-rosemary-port-liskula-cohen-skanks-of-ny]


Can we?