Posts Tagged ‘Google’

IE8 is finally here.

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Windows Internet Explorer

Image via Wikipedia

IE8 is finally out, well it has been, but it now no longer has the “beta” tag. IE8 has a few upgrades from IE7 in many cases, but it has some major problems that would make it really hard for the masses to sing its praises.

We’ll look at some of the good things first. The look of IE8 doesn’t change much from IE7, so it’s not like you have to learn how to use it all over again or figure out where all the buttons are. The privacy mode is a very helpful tool because it doesn’t store any details of your browsing session, as long as it’s on.

The tab system has a new feature, color-coding. When you open a new tab by following a link on a website, it’s instantly given the same color as the parent tab, helping you keep things in order. As for now, this is where the neat things end.

As for the cons, we’ve found that IE8 is less stable then IE7, and we’re talking more than just crashes. Hang-ups seem to be frequent, to the point where you can’t even close the window. It’s kind of odd considering that IE8 only uses (18MB) of memory upon launching, compared to Firefox (26MB) and Safari 3 at (34MB), so it’s not that it’s gobbling up memory.

You’re also going to see slow page downloads somewhere around 4.3 seconds, compared to 3.4 seconds for IE7, that’s the slowest of the three major browsers. You’re probably thinking “so what? It’s one second”, but when you’re looking at the average user only spending around 9 seconds on a page before he or she bounce’s, that’s not what web designers want to hear.

A new tool that you’ll need a lot is called “Compatibility Mode,” which lets IE8 pretend its IE7. The button is located to the far right of the address bar and the reason is, for years, designers have been making two versions of their site, one that will work in IE and one for everyone else. Now with IE8 finally changing its engine, those “IE” versions wouldn’t look so hot without the use of this feature.

There is also another good reason IE8 is equipped with this feature. Big names like eBay, Apple.com, Facebook, Google, and even their own site, Microsoft.com do not render properly in IE8. Microsoft however has implemented a running table of sites that automatically falls back to “Compatibility Mode” so you won’t even see the icon when you visit these sites.

Are you excited about the new changes IE8 has made to make it more mainstream for designers and viewers? Or has it gone on too long that it just creates more problems trying to fix the existing one?

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Data Center Buildouts Maintain Pace Despite Economy

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Racks of telecommunications equipment in part ...

Image via Wikipedia

We all know the state of the global economy now a days, but despite a number of companies announcing delays of their data center construction projects, users and industry experts say that the facility buildouts are still going relatively strong. Google, Terremark Worldwide and Verne Holdings have all announce delays of their data center projects in Oklahoma, Santa Clara and Iceland, in the past few months.

According to Richard Sawyer, vice president and engineer for EYP mission critical facilities at Hewlett-Packard, construction on financial data centers has slowed down, but new government data centers buildouts continue to pick up. Companies that are directly related to government objective will soon see significant growth, says Tom Roberts, the data center facility management director for healthcare organization Trinity Health.

Roberts says that as the government continues to digitize all health information, Trinity Health will eventually have to double or triple its data center space over the next couple years.
Additionally, data center colocation continues to be a top priority.

However, there has been a shifting approach in building colocation facilities, says Jim Simonelli, APC and a member of AFCOM’s advisory board. He says that companies are more carefully planning these data centers to exact specifications, which can lead to a longer timeframe for construction.

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Google apologizes for Gmail outage

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
Image representing Gmail as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

Business and personal users of Gmail suffered an outage starting about 1:30 a.m. PST Tuesday, but Google said it’s fixed the problem.

“If you’ve tried to access your Gmail account today, you are probably aware by now that we’re having some problems. Shortly after 9:30am GMT our monitoring systems alerted us that Gmail consumer and businesses accounts worldwide could not get access to their email,” said Acacio Cruz, Google’s Gmail site reliability manager, in a blog posting Tuesday. “We’re working very hard to solve the problem and we’re really sorry for the inconvenience.”

“The problem is now resolved and users have had access restored,” Google said on its Gmail status page. “Many” users were affected, Google said.

Google promises that customers paying for the Google Apps service will have access to Gmail at least 99.9 percent of the time each month or Google has to pay a penalty. So far Google hasn’t dipped below that, the company said last year.

The company took advantage of the problem to tout the new Gmail Labs feature that permits offline access to Gmail for customers in the U.S. and U.K. With it, people can read, search, label, and archive their e-mail and compose new messages, but of course messages aren’t sent or received until network access is restored.

Outages pose problems for Google as it tries to persuade companies to buy into its cloud-computing vision, in which applications are hosted on the Internet rather than on corporate computers. But Google argues its service availability is competitive with most organizations’ abilities to run their own e-mail servers.

 

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10 obscure Linux applications you need to try

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

GLASGOW, UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 12: (FILE PHOT...

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

1: Floola

Floola isn’t an open source application, but it does run on Linux (as well was OS X and Windows). Floola takes music management (in particular, synching iPods) one step further. With this nifty application, you can download and convert YouTube videos for playback on your iPod. But unlike some other clunkier applications, Floola does this seamlessly and simply. No commands to enter; it’s all GUI. The only possible gotcha is that before you can add videos from YouTube, you have to install ffmpeg on your Linux box. Floola uses ffmpeg for the conversion process.

Don’t expect Floola to have all the bells and whistles that iTunes has. Floola offers Photo support, Snarl (Windows only) support, Growl (Mac only) support, Notes, repair iPods, export lists to HTML, language support, lyrics, duplicate and lost file search, artwork support, video support, Google calendar support, playlists, podcast, lastfm support, and more. Floola is simple to use in Linux, as it comes in an executable binary that you can simply copy to the /usr/bin directory and run with the commandFloola.

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Can you access your PC anywhere in the world?

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
Google, Inc.
Image via Wikipedia

Google is to launch a service that would enable users to access their personal computer from any internet connection, according to industry reports.  But campaigners warn that it would give the online behemoth unprecedented control over individuals’ personal data.

The Google Drive, or “GDrive”, could kill off the desktop computer, which relies on a powerful hard drive. Instead a user’s personal files and operating system could be stored on Google’s own servers and accessed via the internet.

The long-rumoured GDrive is expected to be launched this year, according to the technology news website TG Daily, which described it as “the most anticipated Google product so far”.

It is seen as a paradigm shift away from Microsoft’s Windows operating system, which runs inside most of the world’s computers, in favour of “cloud computing“, where the processing and storage is done thousands of miles away in remote data centres.

Home and business users are increasingly turning to web-based services, usually free, ranging from email (such as Hotmail and Gmail) and digital photo storage (such as Flickr and Picasa) to more applications for documents and spreadsheets (such as Google Apps). (more…)