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News + Suggest join forces
April 28, 2006
Posted by Jon McAlister, Software Engineer
I've always been a big fan of both
Google News
and
Google Suggest
. So in my 20% time, I've worked on a way to bring them together, and I'm now happy to report the launch of
Google Suggest on Google News
, which provides you with search suggestions specific to news in your country, in real time, while you type. If you're already a Suggest user, you'll see this right away, but it's not on by default. Although Suggest + News is currently English-only, the suggestions will reflect the English-language regional edition you're viewing.
I find that this helps me save time while doing frequent searches (e.g. [
google
]. And seeing the Suggest list gives me a sense of the most common news queries. Enjoy!
A great day for 3D
April 27, 2006
Posted by Brad Schell, Product Management Director, Google SketchUp
Last month we
told you
that @Last Software had joined the Google fold. Today we’re releasing
Google SketchUp
, a free version of our 3D modeling software, which makes our long-time vision of making 3D accessible to everyone a reality.
We’re still offering
SketchUp Pro 5
for design professionals like architects, designers, builders, art directors and game developers. Both Google SketchUp and SketchUp Pro 5 enable you to place models in
Google Earth
; Pro users get some additional features.
The new Google SketchUp is for the do-it-yourselfer, the hobbyist — really anyone who wants to build 3D models for use in Google Earth. Go ahead and model that new kitchen, or deck, landscape your virtual garden, or impress your teacher with a roller coaster or medieval castle. When you’re finished, place your model in Google Earth. There! The beginning of a virtual world. Warning: don’t start messing with this stuff after dinner because your first experience could be an all-nighter… making an idea come to life in 3D can be
very
addicting.
And what could be better than that? Well, sharing your work with everyone else through the
3D Warehouse
. Accessible through both versions of SketchUp, 3D Warehouse enables you to upload, search, browse, view, and download SketchUp models. Just as you do with Google search, enter some keywords and the 3D Warehouse shows you all your options. Grab the one you want and import it into your model. (Note that the Warehouse is not stocked up yet — so model something yourself and upload it for all the world to see.)
Visionaries, utopians, virtual world builders: your time has come.
Google Maps in Europe
April 26, 2006
Posted by Steven Crossan, Product Manager, Google Maps Europe
We're excited to announce that we have just launched beta versions of Google Maps for
France
,
Germany
,
Italy
, and
Spain
. These sites include the full suite of interactive street maps, driving directions, and integrated local business search. This has been a global effort with Google teams in Paris, Hamburg, Milan, Madrid, New York, Mountain View, Kirkland, Sydney, London, Dublin, and Zurich working together for much of the past year to build a truly "local" product.
Accompanying this release, we have greatly improved high resolution imagery coverage for Europe in both Google Maps and
Google Earth
. Check out the
Eiffel Tower
in Paris,
Olympiastadion
in Berlin, and the
Grand Canal
in Venice.
To give you a preview of what's to come, we've also rendered street maps for many other countries in Europe. Developers, you can incorporate these maps and imagery into your own websites using the free
Google Maps API Version 2
.
This is a test. This is only a test.
April 24, 2006
Posted by Ambar Pansari, Product Manager, Search User Experience, and Marissa Mayer, VP, Search Products and User Experience
From time to time, we run live experiments on Google — tests visible to a relatively few people -- to discover better ways to search. We do this because there’s no good substitute for understanding how real people, in real-world situations, actually operate. Theories are fine, but “improving the user experience” really happens best when we understand what people do online.
So to learn more, we sometimes randomly select a group of people to see a possible improvement to search options. Or we may select a group of people and try out a new element while they're searching. If you ever wonder why your Google site looks slightly different from that of the person sitting next to you, this is why.
We are currently testing new ways to refine searches so that, for example, a search for jobs might offer a choice of job location or function, rather than forcing you to continually narrow the terms you type in to a standard Google search.
We’ve run another test to learn more about how people navigate to find the information most relevant to them: how you might find image search or information in Froogle, for example, when that might be just the thing you want. Here’s how that one looks.
And we test ways to enrich web results, such as by offering a "Remove Result" option that would omit particular results from future searches if you decide they’re not useful. You'll see this feature if you're already signed in to a Google service when you perform your web search.
There's no set schedule when we'll roll out these sorts of new ideas (if at all), but these tests help us to improve your search experience.
p.s.: Google is also active in CHI, the major organization on user experience and usability. We're participating in the annual conference this week in Montreal.
More here.
Celebrating Earth Day
April 22, 2006
Posted by Cristin Frodella, Product Marketing Manager
To help spread the word about keeping our planet green this
Earth Day
, Google has joined forces with Scholastic – the folks who brought us Clifford the Big Red Dog – to distribute lesson plans (and a contest) to middle-schoolers across the U.S.
Using
Google Earth
, teachers can fly their students around the world to talk to them about issues like climate change and how it has affected places like Glacier National Park, the Chesapeake Bay and Los Angeles. And they can introduce students to community initiatives across the country where volunteers are cleaning up their cities, planting trees and beautifying. Using Google Earth, teachers can show their students placemarks of the towns where outreach projects are taking place and students can get involved in cleaning up their own environment.
As for the contest, students write their own environmental stories by researching a topic of interest and illustrating it with Google Earth images. Following detailed instructions, they can create their own Keyhole Markup Language (KML) files which they will send to us for review. The top three environmental story creators will win prizes for themselves, their class and their teachers, including a week at Earth Camp, technology grants and Lenovo laptops for the classrooms.
This Earth Day project goes to 30,000 middle school teachers across the country in poster form (with placemarks on the front and lesson plan suggestions on the back), and it’s also being emailed to 100,000 more teachers. There’s a Scholastic
website
for teachers and a special
Google Earth page
too.
Avoiding RSI
April 21, 2006
Posted by Dr. Taraneh Razavi, M.D., Staff Doctor
From time to time, a resident physician at Google headquarters weighs in with her thoughts on healthy living. This is not medical advice, and you should check with your own doctor before pursuing any particular course of action.
There is a Chinese saying that "To go beyond is as wrong as to fall short." In other words, how long can you tap on that keyboard or sit in that chair before you hurt yourself. We’re not designed to remain as sedentary or perform the fine motor movements for the long uninterrupted hours that we have to do in so many of our jobs. Evidence suggests that prolonged abnormal posture and repetitive movements contribute to neck, limb and back pain. These conditions are collectively known as overuse syndromes, or repetitive stress injury (RSI).
RSI is no small matter. It accounts for 34% of all lost-workday injury and illness — and costs almost $20 billion annually, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics
.
The National Academy of Sciences
has concluded that an estimated $50 billion is lost by businesses every year from sick leave, decreased productivity and medical costs linked to repetitive stress disorders. The Academy has published two
reports
since 1998 which directly link repetitive motion to workplace injury.
The damage sustained from RSI is due to structural changes in the muscle fiber as well as due to decreased blood flow. Nerves can also be involved. The immobile tissue and surrounding inflammation compress the nerve which can cause numbness or tingling and eventually weakness if the nerve is damaged severely.
For those of you who need evidence, see this study on
"Overuse Syndrome."
In this study, biopsies were taken from hand muscles of injured and normal subjects, which demonstrated the structural damage in the muscle fibers and correlated the damage with the severity of the injury. In
another study
, biopsies were taken from neck muscles, and reduced local blood flow was found in the injured areas. The greater the pain difference, the greater the reduction in blood flow.
Some of the most common RSI injuries are
tendonitis
and
carpal tunnel syndrome
(CTS). Work-related carpal tunnel syndrome now accounts for more than 41% of all repetitive motion disorders in the United States, says
this study
. And here's a telling title:
"Hard work never hurt anyone: or did it?"
-- it's a review of occupational associations with soft tissue musculoskeletal disorders of the neck and upper limb.
So what should you do? The key to treatment is
prevention
. Research shows that injuries decrease and productivity increases when employers encourage stretch breaks and stress the importance of ergonomics. See for example this one at at
Ergonomics Now
.
Here are a few
tips
:
--
Breaks
should be taken every 30-45 minutes for at least 5 minutes. If you need assistance there are
free downloadable timers
that will help remind you to do so.
--
Stretch
your arms, hands, neck, and back during breaks. This
yoga site
demonstrates some exercises. Other sites are listed below.
--
Maintain posture
alignment
. Don't slouch on the couch with the laptop.
--
Work stations
should be reviewed initially and with each office move. Adjust your chair, monitor, keyboard, mouse, laptop. Alternate keyboards and mice periodically.
--
Shift your gaze
from the computer screen to the distance. And don't forget to blink!
--
Limit
non-essential computer use. This may be heresy -- but do give the surfing, gaming, emailing, and text messaging a rest.
-- If pain occurs or persists,
see your doctor,
who may recommend wrist brace, ice packs, anti-inflammatory medication such as ibuprofen, cortisone injections, physical therapy, and most importantly,
rest
to allow healing. Don't procrastinate in addressing your symptoms -- the sooner you tend to them, the better off you are.
And finally, here are more sites that may be helpful:
Safe Computing Tips
Alternative Pointing Devices
Alternative and Ergonomic Keyboards
Harvard RSI Action
RSI exercises
RSI Page
Update:
One more: Boston U.'s
Ergonomics Self-Help Guide
(Flash)
This year's India Code Jam
April 21, 2006
Posted by Posted by Arvind Jain, Google Bangalore
On April 6 and 7, Google India celebrated the coding community in Southeast Asia by hosting the second
Code Jam
competition. At nearly 15,000 entrants, this year’s registrations topped last year’s. The annual software coding fest consists of two online rounds, in which participants competed to solve three coding problems more quickly and accurately than their competitors. The top 50, who came from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Singapore (and included one female finalist, by the way), were invited to compete in the onsite finals. (We made a
video
about the finals.)
Though it was incredibly close, last year's winner, Ardian Kristanto Poernomo, from Indonesia, snagged the grand prize once again. Abishek Kumarasubramanian from Chennai, India was less than 3/100ths of a point behind him.
The two-day event also featured of team building activities and Google engineering presentations. We’re especially delighted that over half of the finalists expressed their interest in working for Google. And if you’re one of those, go
here
.
Back on the map
April 21, 2006
Posted by Thai Tran, Product Manager, Google Maps and Local Search
Last October, we merged our local search site with Google Maps. At that time, we thought it was most appropriate to name the integrated product "Google Local" to emphasize the broad searching capabilities of the site and that it was much more than an ordinary mapping site. But we underestimated how much people
loved
Google Maps. Many have continued to refer to the site by the previous name, and many have explicitly asked us to "bring back Google Maps." Since it's most important to us to give our users what they want, we've decided to change the name officially to
Google Maps
.
Does this mean that local search is no longer important to Google? Absolutely not! Google Maps continues to have the killer combination of maps, driving directions,
and
local business search. And local search has become a fundamental part of the Google search experience; it's now embedded within a number of our products, including Google web search, Google Earth, Google SMS, and Google Mobile.
Easier web page creation
April 20, 2006
Posted by Justin Rosenstein, Product Manager, Google Page Creator
My mother wanted a site for her law practice that potential clients would find when they Googled her. My professor needed a place on the web where he could post assignments and readings for Psych 131. My friend Casey was excited about creating an online encyclopedia of
Big Lebowski
trivia.
All of them wanted simple web pages that looked great, but none of them wanted to take the time to learn HTML, wrangle with complex tools or shell out cash for a designer. They managed to cajole me, their
nerdy
technically-savvy friend, into becoming the neighborhood techie -- but what if you don't know one? Why isn't making a web page as fast and easy as using a word processor?
These frustrations stayed with me when I started working at
a California company full of friendly neighborhood techies
that encourages its employees to devote 20% of their time to scratching their intellectual itches. So I gathered a team of engineers and designers passionate about using their 20% time to make it easy to publish useful, attractive web pages.
After many months of focusing on designing a product that our friends and families would enjoy, and politely coaxing web browsers into doing things they were never meant to do, we're happy that "
Google
Page Creator" is now part of the
Google Labs
family. Labs is Google's technology playground, a place where we can experiment with new services that have us excited, but that aren't all grown up yet. We rely on constructive feedback from early users to help us nurture these experiments from intriguing ideas into mature products.
Google Page Creator
is just a small step in helping people get their words, pictures and ideas on to the web. But it's nice to know that when my friends want to share their experiences from a
Venetian monastery
, or coworkers feel compelled to give their
appropriately-named bowling team
a web presence, I know where to point them.
Keeping up with recent research
April 20, 2006
Posted by Dejan Perkovic, Software Engineer
As a graduate student at the University of Maryland years ago, I took an interesting course on
quantum computing
. The topic intrigued me and, from time to time, I like to go back and and see what is new in the area (for all I know, Google may some day need quantum computers to extend search into the
intergalactic domain
:-) ).
Today we're launching a feature of
Google Scholar
which will make it easier for researchers to keep up with recent research. From
quantum computing
to
copper binding in prion protein
. It's not just a plain sort by date, but rather we try to rank recent papers the way researchers do, by looking at the prominence of the author's and journal's previous papers, how many citations it already has, when it was written, and so on. Look for the new link on the upper right for "Recent articles" -- or switch to "All articles" for the full list.
Scholarly endeavors are about learning what has already been done and building on it. We hope this feature will help researchers worldwide learn from and build on the latest advances.
Update:
Clarified new feature by adding new sentence to end of second paragraph.
Google Calendar data API
April 20, 2006
Posted by Kyle Marvin, Software Engineer
Last week, there was
Google Calendar
. This week, developers can start writing code that uses it. Enter the
Google Calendar data API
, which can be used to write external applications that query, create, and update Google Calendar events, so they're available to Google Calendar users or other API-enabled applications.
Find more details
here
.
OneBox for all your corporate information
April 18, 2006
Posted by Dave Girouard, VP, Enterprise
We added
OneBox
functionality to our
Google Search Appliance
today, which means you can now find just about anything through your friendly Google search box. Lots of folks have been asking us - is this going to kill the corporate portal market? For the record, we have no desire or plans to kill anything. But it's clear to us that people prefer search to having every possible piece of information thrust at them willy-nilly. And they like having search front and center on their screens, not buried, as it is all too often inside company intranets. As industry-watcher
John Battelle
explains, search is so powerful because it responds to an expressed intent by the user. Shouldn't corporate portals do the same?
Google OneBox for Enterprise
is cool because it takes a completely understood and tested design metaphor and extends it to another domain. Um, what I meant to say was, employees already know how to get
movie listings
,
weather forecasts
, and
flight information
through simple Google queries. So it won't surprise them (in fact it may delight them) to learn that they can get real-time contact info, sales forecasts, and customer information the very same way. We launched an initial set of OneBox modules with Oracle, Cognos, SAS and Salesforce.com; some of these partners talk about that
here
.
And there’s one more thing. We're also introducing an all-new
Mini
that's 25 times faster and half the size of its predecessor!
Can you crack the code?
April 14, 2006
Posted by Wei-Hwa Huang, Software engineer and
4-time World Puzzle Championship Individual Winner
Back in college, I had this idea of an Internet-based puzzle extravaganza. It would have one thousand puzzles of various types, more than anyone could ever expect to solve in the time limit provided. It was all going to tie into a central theme and an intricate story.
I got to about two hundred before I got exhausted (in both senses of the word).
Almost a decade later, that dream has come true: a small group of us at Google, in cooperation with
Sony Pictures
, have managed to create 12,358 original puzzles for
The Da Vinci Code Quest on Google
.
That's right, 12,358 (I'd make a joke about
Fibonacci numbers
, but that would be too obvious), all designed to honor both a fanatical puzzler’s sheer love of a mental challenge and the labyrinthine spirit of
The Da Vinci Code
itself. They'll be released over the next 24 days, in the form of six different challenges at four difficulty levels, with enough variety that I think everyone will be able to find something they like and play it over and over -- although if you're in the U.S., you'll want to try to complete all 24 and make it to the Final Challenge, where I hear there's a
pretty nice prize package
awaiting the winner.
I'm rather pleased with how this project fulfilled my youthful dream, and very proud of how well our team's creative synergies were able to mesh with the world of
The Da Vinci Code
, the cinematic version of which will premiere just as the Quest wraps up. Yes, we'll have to turn the puzzles off then -- after all, how else are we going to get you all offline to join the rest of us in the multiplexes?
Good luck, and more importantly, have fun!
P. S. Okay, this wouldn’t be a
Da Vinci
-related post if I didn’t give you a clue: if you really want a mental workout, try solving the Chess Challenges by looking only at the board, without using the multiple choices to help you. The training you get may very well prove helpful should you turn out to be one of the elite few who reach the Final Challenge.
It's about time
April 13, 2006
Posted by Carl Sjogreen, Product Manager
We're all busy people. Whether it's work or play, school or family, every day is filled with stuff that takes time. Keeping track of schedules isn't easy, and frankly we haven't been too happy with the tools available. So we invite you to try
Google Calendar
-- a tool that simplifies keeping track of events, special occasions, and appointments -- whether they’re on your own agenda or on the calendars of contacts who opt to share their schedules with you.
First, we tried to make it
fast and easy
. You can add events just by clicking and entering one line of simple event information. No muss, no fuss, no cumbersome forms to fill out. And it’s integrated with
Gmail
so you can add events mentioned in messages to your calendar with just one click.
Second, we wanted to make sure you could use it to see all the events in your world. It’s drop-dead simple to see calendars from your friends and family, or calendars you find with the built-in calendar search tool, right next to your own calendar. You can choose to share as much or as little of your own calendar, too.
Third, we focused on helping events come alive. You can turn any event on your calendar into an invitation just by adding the email addresses of your guests. They can see and respond to your invitation, whether or not they use Google Calendar themselves. Event reminders by email and text message to your mobile phone help you remember what’s on your agenda.
Finally, we kept it open. Google Calendar supports the
iCal standard
so it cooperates with many other calendar applications, enabling you to easily get event data in and out. Also, webmasters can add customized Google Calendar event
reminder buttons
to their pages, letting visitors quickly add copies of events to their calendars.
We thought it was about time to let you take a look.
Day off for Dennis
April 10, 2006
Posted by Rupert van Millingen, Google UK
From time to time, we like to reflect the world we live in through the logo designs on our home page. These
Google 'doodles'
are designed exclusively by the original Doodler,
Dennis Hwang
. Here in the UK, we wanted to let Dennis have the day off and give someone local the chance to get their artwork in front of millions. After a successful
pilot competition
in 2005, we're pleased to tell you that our 2006 "Doodle 4 Google - My Britain" competition is now open and accepting doodles from pupils ages 4-18 in all schools across the UK.
A panel of experts will judge, narrowing the submissions down to a Top 30 and the public will vote for their favorites. The winning doodle will be hosted on the
Google.co.uk
home page for a day, and also bag the artist a trip for four to the Googleplex in Mountain View, California. To get your (again, UK) school involved, please check out
Doodle 4 Google - My Britain
.
This year's Anita Borg Scholarship winners
April 7, 2006
Posted by April Yu and Jennifer Bostrom, University Programs
It's that time of year when we happily announce the winners of the
2006 Google Anita Borg Memorial Scholarship
. We're awarding 19 $10,000 scholarships to these outstanding young women -- graduate and undergraduate students who are completing degrees in computer science and related fields -- with our
congratulations
:
Brianna Bethel, University of Colorado - Boulder
G. Ayorkor Mills - Tettey, Carnegie Mellon University
Gillian Rachael Hayes, Georgia Institute of Technology
Himabindu Pucha, Purdue University
Karen Fullam, University of Texas at Austin
Kristen Walcott, University of Virginia
Kristina Chodorow, New York University
Laura Rouse, Georgia Institute of Technology
Marta Magdalena Luczynska, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Megan Olsen, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Michele Banko, University of Washington
Neven Abou Gazala, University of Pittsburgh
Parisa Michelle Tabriz, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Rebecca Nancy Nesson, Harvard University
Shana Kay Watters, University of Minnesota
Sharmishtaa Seshamani, Johns Hopkins University
Soumi Sinha, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tracy Westeyn, Georgia Institute of Technology
Vinithra Varadharajan, Carnegie Mellon University
And we also recognize these 28 highly qualified finalists, who will receive $1,000 awards from us:
Alicia Avelon Permell, Michigan Tech University
Anagha Mudigonda, Polytechnic University New York
Anna Tikhonova, University of California, Davis
Annie (Hsin-Wen) Liu, University of Washington
Ashima Kapur, Carnegie Mellon University
Cindy Rubio Gonzalez, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Delphine Nain, Georgia Institute of Technology
Divya Arora, Princeton University
Emily Grace Christiansen, University of Minnesota-Morris
Emily Shen, Stanford University
Erika Chin, University of Virginia
Eva Mok, University of California, Berkeley
Evelyn Mintarno, Stanford University
Gina Upperman, Rice University
Hayley Nicole Iben, University of California, Berkeley
Jiayue He, Princeton University
Jing Chen, University of Pennsylvania
Laureen Lam, San Jose State University
Lingyun Zhang, University of California, San Diego
Lu Xiao, Pennsylvania State University
Meeta Sharma Gupta, Harvard University
Moushumi Sharmin, Marquette University
Neha Rungta, Brigham Young University
Rachel Weinstein, Stanford University
Sunny Consolvo, University of Washington
Tanya Lee Ann Crenshaw, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Valerie Hajdik, Texas A&M University
Xiaonan Zhao, Northwestern University
Out of the Wi-Fi wilderness
April 6, 2006
Posted by Chris Sacca, Special Initiatives
In Wi-Fi terms, I can go just 19 steps from my front door and still get coverage. The nearest coffee shop seems within reach -- but signal strength-wise, there's not enough power to pick it up. And the signal definitely isn't strong enough to get to the restaurant kitty-corner from my place. Frankly, my home Wi-Fi connection works just enough to let me use it in the middle of oncoming traffic (especially dangerous considering that I live on a
Muni
line). As soon as I take that 20th step, I either lose signal altogether, or have to pay some crazy amount of dough to jump onto the Internet at a paid hotspot.
So when I'm out and about, how am I supposed to stay current on the filming of
M.C. Hammer's latest videos
in downtown San Francisco? Of course, I also need constant connectivity to keep tabs on the inventory of pirate supplies at
826 Valencia
. And without Wi-Fi, how else can I check in on
craigslist missed connections
in real time?
This is why I am especially excited to hear that the City and County of San Francisco
just chose the bid
from EarthLink and Google to offer
citywide Wi-Fi access
. If all goes well, construction will commence this year on a network that would provide it for free to virtually the entire city at speeds up to six times dial-up.
I can't wait for Wi-Fi everywhere. Who knows? Pretty soon I might even be able to wirelessly place an order with the
Tamale Lady
. But first, I need to dodge this streetcar bearing down on me -- yikes!
Update:
Revised first 3 sentences for clarity.
Toolbar v2 for Firefox fans
April 6, 2006
Posted by Justin Voskuhl, Software Engineer
Here in the Kirkland, we've had one of the rainiest winters in a long time, giving me extra time to work on the latest release of the Google Toolbar for Firefox. Today, we're happy to release the beta version of
Google Toolbar 2 for Firefox
. If you were wondering what we were doing with that extra time indoors, Toolbar for Firefox is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux -- and in 16 languages.
This new release includes feed integration with the
Google Personalized Homepage
and a number of other feed readers. We've made searching better by including previous queries, spelling corrections, and suggestions for popular choices. Gmail fans might appreciate having the mailto: links in Firefox open a compose window in Gmail -– no more copying and pasting email addresses. And to combat the ever-increasing threat of
phishing
, we've integrated the Safe Browsing extension into Toolbar to alert you when a page is trying to steal sensitive information. Check out everything in the new Toolbar
here
.
As a dedicated
Firefox
user, I think that the latest version enhances an already innovative browser. Meanwhile, you IE Toolbar 4 fans may notice that the feature sets aren't identical. That's because Firefox and IE users have different needs. Rest assured that we're working to get the most popular features in both versions.
Here's my new customized Firefox Toolbar, showing my Google Personalized Homepage (built from feeds I discovered using the feed feature). It also gives me history, popular queries, and query corrections in my search box, which I moved to the upper right with the new custom layout.
More feeds for speed
April 3, 2006
Posted by Adam Sah, Software Engineer
The personalized homepage has a
new directory
with more content and more ways to browse, search and add it to your Google homepage. A lot of content owners have been asking for ways to drive adoption of their feeds and
modules
. One option is the
"Add to Google" button
you can add to your website as a way to quickly connect fans to your content. Enjoy all the new stuff and as always,
feel free to discuss
.
Cupid's algorithms
April 1, 2006
Posted by Michael Krantz, Product Manager, Google Romance
Ever been on a date and wondered "What on Earth am I
doing
with this person?" Or perhaps you wished there was a way that you could instantly find your perfect match, and then go on a date during which everything just went right?
Wish no more:
Google Romance
, a beta product currently incubating in Google Labs, uses cutting-edge personal search algorithms to help you find your soulmate, then sponsors your first Contextual Date with said soulmate-to-be in exchange for showing you highly relevant advertising that just might help Cupid's arrow find its mark. Does it really work? Ask our internal beta testers -- if you can find them, that is. Not a single one has shown up for work in days.
So why not give
it
a try yourself? You've got true love to gain, and only your faith in psychographic and contextual advertising software to lose.
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