by Nick Wingfield, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
Does this sound familiar?
At the office, you’ve got a sluggish computer running aging software, and the email system routinely badgers you to delete messages after you blow through the storage limits set by your IT department.
by Andrew LaVallee, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
After Google unveiled new features to its search results yesterday, one analyst is saying that the company’s leadership position has become virtually unshakable.
In a research report, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said that while the new products–Google Search Options, Google Squared and Rich Snippets–were “more evolutionary than revolutionary,” they demonstrated the company’s continued ability to innovate.
by Andrew LaVallee, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
Digg modified the toolbar that it launched two weeks ago, a response to Web publishers concerned that it could affect their visibility.
The social-news site released the new feature on April 2. It adds a thin strip to the top of pages submitted to Digg that includes the number of times other users voted on, or “Dugg,” the link, the number of times the page was viewed and other statistics and browsing options.
by Jessica E. Vascellaro, Tech Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
If Yahoo’s search engine made it easier to organize a ski trip or research a new cellphone, would you use it more frequently?
The search engine–a distant second to Google in usage–is hoping so. Yahoo announced plans Wednesday to start testing a new research tool that tries to detect when someone is doing a research-related search and offers to save Web pages and notes in a separate document for future recall.
by Marisa Taylor, Blogger, Digits, The Wall Street Journal
The nonprofit, StopBadware.org, was thrust into the limelight when Google mistakenly implied that it might be partly to blame for the Google malfunction that erroneously labeled every site on the Internet malicious.
If you could search your friends’ thoughts, interests, and activities, would that be a better search experience? In many cases, it would be. Searching for restaurants, books, or movies, would turn up recommendations from people you actually know.
by Eric Savitz, Blogger and Columnist, Barron's, Tech Trader Daily
Baidu, the Chinese analog of Google, is fighting allegations that it has been allowing unlicensed medical groups to purchase the most popular keywords and appear high up in search results. (The offending listings have since been removed.) The company has also been accused of removing unpaid users who decline to become paid users by purchasing keywords. Obviously, there is also a Chinese analog of “The Godfather.”
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