Monday, January 31, 2011
A refresh to the Documents List
First, we added a number of filters in this refresh, making it easier to narrow your search by type, visibility state, and other criteria. We also added priority sorting as a option in all views. Priority sorting is like Gmail’s Priority Inbox, in that we look at a number of signals to put your most relevant files at the top of the list. And you can still use other sort orders like Last Modified Date or by Name.
This update will also improve the experience of exploring and browsing your files. We added a preview panel on the right side of the document list, so that you can see a preview thumbnail, sharing settings and more at a glance. And if the file is a video, you can start playing it directly from the preview panel or from the recently announced video player.
To make it easier to view photos, you can now click on the magnifying glass on a photo to open a full screen slide-show viewer.
There is also a new view called Home. The contents of the Home view are controlled by you so that the content you access the most often is easier to get to. You can remove files from the Home view by right clicking the file and selecting Don’t show in home to hide them. And when you need them, these files can always be found later by selecting All items or using search.
You may also notice Collections have replaced Folders in the left navigation bar. Collections are designed to combine the best features of labels and folders. A file can live in multiple collections, just like with Gmail labels. Collections can also be stored hierarchically, just like folders on your desktop. And of course, collections can be shared, just like you can share docs.
Along with the improved find-ability and browsing experience, we streamlined the interface. For example, instead of using checkboxes to select multiple files, you can just use your Shift or Control (Cmd on Macs) keys.
That’s not all. We’ve also been working hard on increasing the speed of the documents list by overhauling our back-ends to make things snappier.
This refresh is rolling out now and should be available to everyone over the next couple days. For Google Apps for Business customers that don’t have “Enable pre-release features” box checked, this refresh will be coming in a few weeks.
Once the refresh is rolled out to your account, take the in-product tour and let us know what you think.
Posted by: Posted by Vijay Bangaru, Product Manager"
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Social Media 4 Emergency Management
Friday, January 28, 2011
Disabled man rescued from fire by Facebook
Disabled man rescued from fire by Facebook
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Desktop notifications for emails and chat messages
Many of us are guilty of constantly switching back to Gmail to check for new messages. And if you’re like me, you’ve probably missed an important chat message because you weren’t looking at your Gmail window when it came in. If you use Google Chrome, these days can be over since we just launched HTML5 desktop notifications which display pop-ups whenever a chat message or new email arrives.
To turn them on, click on the Settings link in the top right corner of Gmail and scroll down to the “Desktop Notifications” section. If you just want to get notified about chat messages, or if you use Priority Inbox and only want to get notifications for important messages, you can customize your settings from there too.
This functionality is currently only available for people using Google Chrome, but we’re working to make notifications part of the standard Web platform."
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
FCC Launches Framework For Emergency Communications Net
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Motorola XOOM Promo Ad Released, Honeycomb Shines
Motorola has just released this XOOM Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablet ad spot to their YouTube account, and it looks magical. Most of the commercial is one gigantic touchscreen interface where hands reach in and activate wishes and specs for the XOOM, including “software for a tablet,” sharing, webcam with Google Talk, 5 megapixel camera, HD video capture, “I want the web to be the web, without restrictions,” and more.
They tout Adobe Flash Player 10.1, “I want my tablet to be as fast as my PC,” the dual-core processor, “i want to watch movies the way the filmmaker intended,” 16:10 ratio HD display, and what appears to be the birthing of the tablet itself from the face of the gigantic touchscreen computer all of this is written on.
Something to note: they display the words “Adobe Flash Player 10.1″ twice, a move intentional as the blasting funtime music playing throughout the spot. Flash Player? Heck yeah, that means I can do everything I want. That’s what people will be thinking when they see that same thing twice. Additional details provided by the video page are thus:
“Introducing MOTOROLA XOOM, the first tablet featuring Android 3.0 (Honeycomb), with front and rear cameras including HD capture, a dual core processor with 1GB of RAM for lightening quick operation, multitasking, superior graphics, and all played out on a beautiful 10.1″ HD widescreen display.”
Then of course there’s a link to the official Motorola homepage for the XOOM, a place to peek at it in all its lovely angles and gloriousness.
ALSO NOTE: this is a similar/the same version of the video that was previewed to those of you lucky enough to be in the audience at a particular keynote at CES 2011. Take a walk down memory lane and note the differences.
)"
Port your existing mobile number to Google Voice
867-5309 could be one of the most iconic phone numbers of all time, but it’s not the only number that a lot of us remember by heart. Many of us have a phone number that we've shared with family, friends, and contacts over the years and are reluctant to let go.
One of the most frequent requests we hear from people who use (or want to use) Google Voice is that they’d like to get all of Google Voice’s features without having to give up their long-time phone numbers.
Today, we’re excited to announce that Number Porting is available for all existing Google Voice users. This means you can make the mobile number you’ve always used your Google Voice number, so it can ring any phone you want—or even your computer.
To get started with Number Porting, log in to your Google Voice account, visit the Settings page and click on “Change / Port” next to your Google Voice number.
Porting your number to Google Voice costs $20 and is usually completed within 24 hours.
After porting your number to Google Voice your mobile service plan will be cancelled, and there are a couple of steps that you’ll have to take to continue making and receiving calls on your mobile device. For more detailed instructions on how Number Porting works and to find tips for making the process as smooth as possible, visit the Google Voice Help Center.
Number Porting is currently available for existing users and will become available to new users within the next few weeks.
Posted by Robert Dong, Software Engineer"
Weather on your mobile phone, now with added fun
At first glance, you’ll see content that we’d previously shown you before: current conditions and a forecast for the next few days. But by moving the slider over the next 12 hours, you can now see a detailed hour-by-hour breakdown of the changing weather conditions. As you do this, keep an eye on the temperature, wind speed and humidity and see how all these conditions are expected to trend across the day. You may also notice that the background color changes throughout the day. Of course, as you scroll further down you’ll see our regular web search results for your query.
This new weather search experience is available only in English, but we have more updates on the way. We hope you’ll enjoy using it!
Posted by Nick Fey, User Experience Designer and Michael van Ouwerkerk, Software Engineer"
Monday, January 24, 2011
JetBlue Offers Rewards for Checking In on Facebook Places
JetBlue announced today a new program with Facebook Places that lets customers earn rewards when they use the service to check in at airports.
Members of JetBlue’s TrueBlue rewards platform can register on the company’s Facebook Page. Registered users will then receive 25 TrueBlue points every time they check in to an official JetBlue airport location on Facebook Places. The first 100 customers to check in at Boston’s Logan International, Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood International, Long Beach, New York’s John F. Kennedy International or Orlando International airports will receive 100 points. Those who accumulate 5,000 or more points can trade them in for free flights.
JetBlue is the latest to attach a rewards program to Facebook Places. Over the weekend, Sears Outlet, a unit of Sears, ran a promotion that awarded 10,000 Shop Your Way Rewards points to anyone who used Facebook Places to check in at one of its outlet stores and then made a purchase.
Though marketers have been running loyalty programs for ages, a gamification overlay adds another reason — aside from a desire to earn points — for consumers to actually use the programs. Given Facebook’s huge consumer base, the average shopper is more likely to have Facebook on his or her smartphone than a competing location-based service like Foursquare or Gowalla.
What do you think? Would you be more likely to participate in these loyalty programs now?
More About: Facebook Places, jetblue, MARKETING
For more Business & Marketing coverage:
- Follow Mashable Business & Marketing on Twitter
- Become a Fan on Facebook
- Subscribe to the Business & Marketing channel
- Download our free apps for Android, Mac, iPhone and iPad
Cloud printing on the go
Back in April 2010 we announced Google Cloud Print, a service in beta that allows printing from any app on any device, OS or browser without the need to install any software. Just last month we opened Google Cloud Print to users in the Chrome notebook pilot program. Today we are very pleased to announce the beta launch of Google Cloud Print for mobile documents and Gmail for mobile, which we will be rolling out to users throughout the next few days.
Imagine printing an important document from your smartphone on the way to work and finding the printout waiting for you when you walk in the door. Just open a document in Google Docs or an email in Gmail in your mobile browser and choose “Print” from the dropdown menu in the top right corner. You can also print certain kinds of email attachments (such as .pdf or .doc) by clicking the “Print” link that appears next to them.
Posted by: Tyler Odean, Google Cloud Print Team
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Army Social Media Handbook 2011
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
National Public Health Radio Network (NPHRN)
Social Media, Crisis Communication and Emergency Management: Utilizing Web 2.0 Technologies
Law enforcement officials adapting to the cell phone age
Law enforcement officials are collecting more cell phone numbers for emergency alert phone lists as more people move away from land telephone lines; during emergencies land telephone lines are often knocked down and first responders do not have many cell phone numbers on file; emergency cell phone technology is rapidly improving with more accurate traces; 911 first responders hope to incorporate video, text, and photos in the future to better assess emergencies and communicate
Leveraging volunteer groups and technology
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Haiti's viral volunteers: How social media is changing the face of crisis response
Haiti's viral volunteers: How social media is changing the face of crisis response
Syncing and Streaming: Will Android 2.4/3.0 Bring Your Whole Music Library to Any Device? [Or a Music Store?]
Take a walk with me for a moment down a road into the future. Let us begin with a screenshot that’s just popped up on Engadget and originated from GizmoFusion (on the left, below.) It shows an option to Sync Music, this option set right beside options to Sync other things like contacts, Gmail, Picasa Web Albums, and Calendar. This screenshot supposedly comes from an advanced version of Android 2.3 Gingerbread – Engadget hypothesizes it may come from this fabled Android 2.4 (also Gingerbread) build we’ve been hearing so much about.
Next lets take a peek at the picture on the right: it comes from our very own exploration of a leaked Android 3.0 Honeycomb music player app. Here you’ll notice an option to Stream music (and connect to all music libraries) as well as Cache streamed music. What do these two options on different OSs mean for the future of Android music?
I’ll tell you what it means, it means that somewhere in this massively exciting mess of operating systems and boxes to click, you’ll soon (or someday) be able to not only stream your music from the cloud, not only will you be able to cache that music so that you might listen to it without being connected to the internet (kind of like what WinAmp is trying to do as well right now,) but you’ll be able to sync your music in the same way you sync your contacts: instantly and painlessly.
Or it might all just be a music store. Could Google be creating a music store? They’re getting into the ebook business – why not the music business? Heck, why not the whole media business? A movie and television show store on the way?
Google could do that, sure!
Why not?
Again be sure to check out that Honeycomb Music Player Guide we’ve got, and get it for yourself!
)"
Motorola Atrix 4G hints at how Android, Chrome OS, and Google TV will merge
Ever since Chrome OS and Google TV were announced, many Android fans have wondered how those projects would merge with Google’s mobile OS. This past week at CES, Motorola provided a look into the future and revealed exactly where Google is taking their platforms.
The future of Android and mobile computing lies in the smart docks that are being created for smartphones. In the next couple of years, your smartphone will be the most powerful computer you own and smart docks will allow you to change the way you interact with it.
Want to turn you smartphone into a laptop? There’s a dock for that. Want to turn it into a Google TV box, alarm clock, GPS navigation, or Chrome OS desktop? Just plug it in to the according dock.
Android, Chrome OS, and Google TV will continue to be their own projects and appear on specialized platforms, but by the end of this year they will all converge on a single device that fits in your pocket.
[Post image via Pocket-lint]
Related Posts
"Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
A new look for Google Translate for Android
Today, we’re refreshing Translate for Android with several updates to make the app easier to interact with. Among other improvements, we’ve created better dropdown boxes to help select the languages you want to translate from and into, an improved input box, and cleaner icons and layout.
We also want to let you in on an experimental feature that’s still in its earliest stages—Conversation Mode. This is a new interface within Google Translate that’s optimized to allow you to communicate fluidly with a nearby person in another language. You may have seen an early demo a few months ago, and today you can try it yourself on your Android device.
Currently, you can only use Conversation Mode when translating between English and Spanish. In conversation mode, simply press the microphone for your language and start speaking. Google Translate will translate your speech and read the translation out loud. Your conversation partner can then respond in their language, and you’ll hear the translation spoken back to you. Because this technology is still in alpha, factors like regional accents, background noise or rapid speech may make it difficult to understand what you’re saying. Even with these caveats, we’re excited about the future promise of this technology to be able to help people connect across languages.
As Android devices have spread across the globe, we’ve seen Translate for Android used all over. The majority of our usage now comes from outside the United States, and we’ve seen daily usage from more than 150 countries, from Malaysia to Mexico to Mozambique. It’s really rewarding for us to see how this new platform is helping us break down language barriers the world over.
Translate supports 53 languages, from Afrikaans to Yiddish, and voice input for 15 languages. You can download the application, available for devices running Android 2.1 and above, by searching for “Google Translate” in Android Market or by scanning the QR Code below.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Miami Police first to use UAVs in a U.S. city
Eyes in the skyMiami Police first to use UAVs in a U.S. city
Webinar on Collaborative Planning and Engaging the Whole Community
Webinar on Collaborative Planning and Engaging the Whole Community
On behalf of FEMA, I’d like to invite emergency managers, community leaders and the public to participate in a live webinar on the topic of collaborative emergency planning. My colleague Doc Lumpkins and I would love to share newly revised guidance from FEMA's Comprehensive Preparedness Guide 101 and explain how this planning guidance can enhance your community’s ability to respond to and recover from disasters. We hope this webinar will provide the information you need to help build more inclusive, collaborative, and comprehensive plans that strengthen and prepare your community. If you’d like to learn more about how emergency management agencies can build a collaborative preparedness team in their community, please join the webinar:
Date: January 11, 2011
Time: 2 p.m. Eastern Standard Time
Join: Signup for the webinar
The Community Preparedness Webinar Series is hosted by FEMA's Citizen Corps Program and offers up-to-date information on community preparedness topics and resources available to emergency managers, community organizations, and the general public.
The webinar will accept the first 500 participants that log in so we hope you’ll join us. If you’re unable to join, each webinar will be recorded and posted on CitizenCorps.gov for your viewing at any time.
We look forward to your participation!
- Paulette
verizon iphone mobile hotspot
verizon iphone
verizon iphone is on the verizon wireless site
Kick off the year with updates from Picasa Web Albums
We are starting off the year with a few new features in Picasa Web Albums. From metadata, to security, to a new way to zoom, there is a little bit for everyone.
More metadata
For those of you who can’t get enough of the technical side, we expanded the EXIF metadata (information stored inside of your image file) you can view for each photo. You can now get over 200 EXIF tags that are available from your photos including Metering Mode, White Space and Color Balance. From the individual photo page -- where you currently view ‘Photo Information’ like Camera, ISO, Aperture and Exposure -- click on “full details page” to view this new metadata information.
More security
Picasa Web Albums now supports https access. The https protocol encrypts your data as it travels between your web browser and our servers. Using https helps protect data from being snooped by third parties, such as in public wifi hotspots like a library or a coffee shop. We are working to make https the default but for now, to access Picasa Web Albums using this secure protocol, type “https” into your browser instead of “http,” so “https://picasaweb.google.com instead of “http://picasaweb.google.com.”
More oohs and ahhs
Now, you can view images in their full resolution splendor by clicking on the magnifying glass on the photos page. This will bring up your image in a lightbox view, from which you can zoom into the image, up to its full resolution. You will need flash to take advantage of this new feature. This works great for panoramas too.
Thank you to Mike Wiacek for this beautiful image."