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Investing in news innovation in Europe
February 23, 2011
(Cross-posted from the
European Public Policy Blog
)
Journalism is changing fast. And as news businesses experiment with new ways of creating and delivering journalism in the digital age, Google is keen to play its part on the technology side. Over the last year, we’ve been partnering with publishers around the world to
develop
technological
solutions
—including, most recently,
One Pass
—to find new and engaging ways of presenting stories online and to generate greater revenues.
As well as our focus on technological experimentation, we’re also investing at the grassroots level.
Last October
we announced that we would be giving $5 million in grants to non-profit organisations working on developing new approaches to journalism. At that time, we allocated around 40% of the total fund to the
Knight Foundation
in the U.S.
Today, we awarded a
$2.7 million grant
to the International Press Institute, based in Vienna, which will be used to sponsor the
IPI News Innovation Contest
. The contest seeks to find and fund breakthrough ideas that will have a lasting impact on the future of digital news in communities across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Grants will be awarded to both non-profit and for-profit organisations working on digital journalism initiatives, including open-source and mobile technology projects created by or for journalists and distributed in the public interest. From today until June 1,
the IPI will invite proposals
from around the region for projects devoted to online innovation in journalism, new economic models for news and training in digital reporting.
The IPI has a long tradition of working on innovation in journalism, freedom of expression and other important issues. We’re sure they’ll be able to find and advance some great digital journalism projects over the next couple of years—and we encourage anyone with innovative ideas, large or small, to
apply for a grant
from the IPI. In the meantime, we’ll continue to work with the news industry to help develop new projects, products and experiments that make it possible for journalism to thrive online.
Posted by Peter Barron, Director of External Relations, Google EMEA
International tourists find the Polish seaside through Google AdWords
December 3, 2010
(Cross-posted on the
Google Small Business Blog
)
Sebastian Hejnowski’s parents built the
Villa Zdroj Bed and Breakfast
in 2002 to share Poland’s beauty with weary travelers. Located in Miedzyzdroje, a city on the coast of Polish island Wolin, Villa Zdroj is one of the island’s first modern bed and breakfasts.
Sebastian’s parents handle reservations, property development and sometimes breakfast. Sebastian runs the advertising efforts for his parents’ Villa, including
Google AdWords
. “When we first started our AdWords campaigns, we focused on Poland but we soon realized that there was increasing interest from our neighboring countries,” says Sebastian. When he noticed an upward trend in drop-in visitors from other countries, he decided to launch campaigns across Poland’s borders as well.
Villa Zdroj - courtesy of
Marcin Matecki Photography
According to Sebastian, the variety of outdoor activities combined with the relatively inexpensive cost of Polish tourism make Wolin a vacation paradise for Germans and Scandinavians. “Germans and Scandinavians were coming to Miedzyzdroje, but mostly staying in expensive five-star hotels,” says Sebastian. “B&B’s were never an option since they didn’t know where to find them.” So Sebastian made Denmark, Germany, Norway and Sweden his first international targets. The strategy proved correct: “We were one of the first Polish B&B’s to create a website in English. When we targeted an AdWords campaign to these people, they started calling and booking reservations.”
As time went on, Sebastian noticed that Poland had become more and more accessible to Europeans due to an increase in flights to the area. To capitalize on this trend, Sebastian expanded his AdWords campaigns even beyond bordering countries. “With time we extended the campaign to the Great Britain and the Netherlands.” says Sebastian. “Europeans tend to explore new places and travel extensively.”
Sebastian with his family - courtesy of
Marcin Matecki Photography
Today, foreigners account for more than half of Villa Zdroj’s guests. And Sebastian estimates that up to 60% of those international guests book Villa Zdroj because they found his AdWords ads.
Thanks to his effective targeting, Sebastian now sells out all of the villa’s rooms during peak summer travel season. He adjusts his ad campaigns to reflect availability: “In summer, we track vacancies and adjust our campaigns accordingly. We pause the campaigns if we’re booked a few weeks out.”
In 2012, Poland will host the Euro Cup and Sebastian’s dad is already getting ready for an influx of visitors. “My father is considering buying a big projector so everyone can watch the games together in the communal room,” says Sebastian. “We’re already excited to share the Polish seaside with more out of town visitors!”
Learn more about Villa Zdroj Bed and Breakfast and Sebastian’s success with online advertising in this
short video
(it's in Polish, but you can view captions).
Posted by Piotr Zalewski, Communications Associate, Poland
European Court of Justice rules in Google’s favour
March 23, 2010
Google aims to provide as much information as possible to users so that they can make informed decisions. For this reason, we have been awaiting a series of decisions by the European Court of Justice that explore the extent to which trade mark rights can be used to restrict information available to users. The first of those decisions was delivered today.
The question before the court was whether advertisers should be allowed to choose keywords freely when reaching out to users on the Internet. In other words, if advertisers are allowed to show advertisements when another company's brand name is entered as a search query.
Trade marks are part of our daily life and culture, helping us to identify the products and services that we may be looking for. They are key for companies to market and advertise their products and services. But trade mark rights are not absolute.
We believe that user interest is best served by maximizing the choice of keywords, ensuring relevant and informative advertising for a wide variety of different contexts. For instance, if a user is searching for information about a particular car, he or she will want more than just that car’s website. They might be looking for different dealers that sell that car, second hand cars, reviews about the car or looking for information about other cars in the same category.
And, contrary to what some are intimating, this case is not about us arguing for a right to advertise counterfeit goods. We have strict
policies
that forbid the advertising of counterfeit goods; it's a bad user experience. We work collaboratively with brand owners to better identify and deal with counterfeiters.
Some companies want to limit choice for users by extending trade mark law to encompass the use of keywords in online advertising. Ultimately they want to be able to exercise greater control over the infomation available to users by preventing other companies from advertising when a user enters their trade mark as a search query. In other words, controlling and restricting the amount of information that users may see in response to their searches.
Today, the Court confirmed that Google has not infringed trade mark law by allowing advertisers to bid for keywords corresponding to their competitors’ trade marks. It also confirmed that European law that protects internet hosting services applies to Google’s AdWords advertising system. This is important because it is a fundamental principle behind the free flow of information over the internet.
Our guiding principle has always been that advertising should benefit users, and our aim is to ensure that ads are relevant and useful. We will study the decision as we move forward in order to make sure that we continue to deliver advertising that is perceived as both valuable and relevant by our users.
Posted by Dr. Harjinder S. Obhi, Senior Litigation Counsel, EMEA
A digital renaissance: partnering with the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage
March 10, 2010
The
Renaissance
, Europe's period of cultural, political and scientific rebirth, began in Florence around 600 years ago. At Google we're interested in a (small “r”) renaissance of a different kind — a digital one. Since the launch of Google Books, we’ve been working with libraries and publishers around the globe to bring more of the world's books to more readers around the globe. Any school child should be able to access the works of Petrarch, Dante or Vico (or, if they're so inclined, Machiavelli). In the case of these more famous authors, this is already largely possible, but what about the work of
Guglielmo il Giuggiola
or
Coluccio Salutati
? We want all of the great literature and writings of Italy to be accessible to the general public.
Today we’re announcing an agreement with the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage that will push this vision forward. Working with the National Libraries of Florence and Rome, we’ll digitize up to a million out-of-copyright works. The libraries will select the works to be digitized from their collections, which include a wealth of rare historical books, including scientific works, literature from the period of the founding of Italy and the works of Italy's most famous poets and writers. It marks the first time we’ve ever joined forces with Italian libraries, and the first time we've worked with a ministry of culture.
Around Europe and the rest of the world, we are effectively witnessing a digital renaissance, with an increasing number of organizations running ambitious and promising book digitization projects. We're not the only ones who have seen the need to bring the world's books into digital form. Digitization of books is a tremendous undertaking, requiring the joint effort of a great number of public and private stakeholders. For this reason, we’re supportive of many other efforts at digitization, such as the European Commission's
Europeana
. We want to see these books have the broadest reach possible — the books we scan are available for inclusion in Europeana, of which the Florence Library is a contributing member, and other digital libraries. The more of the world's historical, cultural treasures we can bring online, the more we can unlock our shared heritage.
We believe today’s announcement is an important step, and we look forward to working with more libraries and other partners. We envision a future in which people will be able to search and access the world's books anywhere, anytime. After all,
Antonio Beccadelli
and
Anastasius Germonius
— like Shakespeare and Cervantes — are part of our human cultural history.
Posted by Gino Mattiuzzo, Strategic Partner Development Manager, Italy
A meeting of the minds: Google's 2010 EMEA Faculty Summit
February 25, 2010
As the world's premier athletes assembled in Vancouver for the Winter Games, Googlers in the equally snowy Zurich, Switzerland were preparing for a prestigious event of a different sort. On February 8, 100 top academics from 62 leading universities throughout EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) descended upon our Zurich engineering headquarters for our third annual Faculty Summit — three days of in-depth technical presentations, discussions and networking sessions, all targeted at strengthening partnerships with EMEA's foremost computer science thinkers. Like their athletic counterparts in Vancouver, Faculty Summit attendees face big challenges. EMEA is a huge and very diverse region where companies and universities alike have huge mountains to climb. By sharing information about our projects, plans and initiatives, we hope to foster mutually beneficial relationships with our academic colleagues and their universities — working together to solve the big problems and drive technology forward.
We designed the Summit to allow maximum potential for debate, networking and reflection. Attendees participated in day-long "stream" discussions on themes ranging from privacy and security — with the participation of leading researchers such as
Ross Anderson
(University of Cambridge) — to natural language technologies, featuring
NLP
expert
Fred Jelinek
(Johns Hopkins University). Academics selected from a range of opt-in "teach the teacher"-style workshops on Google tech (including mobile platforms,
MapReduce
and web technologies). Additional events included a
Google Wave
demo geared towards educational use and special sessions for guests from Africa and the Middle East, showcasing Google's ongoing work in these regions. This year, we added extra time for 1-1 break-out sessions, in which academics and Google engineers met, chatted and developed ideas in an intimate, face-to-face setting.
The Summit also gave us a chance to see long-term relationships maturing and generating concrete outcomes inside and outside academic settings. Notable guests included keynote speaker Professor
Andy Hopper
, Head of the Cambridge Computer Lab, whose research initiative
Computing for the Future of the Planet
(CFTFP) received a
Google Focused Research Award
earlier this month. Andy's project promises major results in the areas of privacy and green computing research. We were also happy to welcome back former
Google Visiting Faculty
member Professor
Hannah Bast
(University of Freiburg). Hannah recently completed a year-long sabbatical with our Zurich development team for
Transit in Google Maps
, contributing major improvements to an application that started out as a 20 percent project and is now available in over 400 cities around the world. Privacy and security expert
Dr. Frank Stajano
(University of Cambridge) — our newest Visiting Faculty member — and Sara Adams,
Anita Borg Scholar
, former Google intern and current software engineer, joined us from the Munich office where they're working on privacy-related projects. We also had several
Faculty Research Award
winners in attendance, including
Dr. Simon Harper
(University of Manchester),
Dr. Miles Osborne
(University of Edinburgh),
Lawrence Muchemi
(University of Nairobi) and former Visiting Faculty member
Dr. Hinrich Schuetze
(University of Stuttgart). The Faculty Research Award supports academics working within universities on areas of mutual interest; for instance, Lawrence's Award-funded project creates a new mobile application development course for Kenyan students, while Hinrich and his Stuttgart team are improving search engine results by investigating the structure of queries. Hinrich, Lawrence and our other awardees offer examples of how partnerships can lead to amazing results, on local to global scales. We hope their stories inspired both academic and Googler attendees to take advantage of existing programs and help build new opportunities for all tech users.
Our engineering teams in EMEA and our academic partners have lots of work to do in 2010. This year's Faculty Summit offered an opportunity to explore new solutions, kick-start collaboration and prove, yet again, that our combined efforts always yield results far greater than the sum of their parts! For more information about how Google supports university programs and partnerships, check out our
Google Research
site and stay tuned for news of the North America Faculty Summit — planned for late July.
Posted by Nelson Mattos, VP, EMEA Product and Engineering
Google Flu Trends expands to 16 additional countries
October 8, 2009
If you're like us, you're probably thinking a lot about how this year's flu season might affect you and your community. To help you out, we at
Google.org
are excited to announce the expansion of
Google Flu Trends
to 16 additional countries, including much of Europe. We've also made the site available in 37 languages. Flu is a global threat, affecting millions worldwide each year, so we're pleased to make this tool available in more regions and languages.
Last November
, we launched Google Flu Trends in the United States after finding a close relationship between how many people search for flu-related topics and how many people actually have flu symptoms. By tracking the popularity of certain Google search queries, we are able to estimate the level of flu, in near real-time. While some traditional flu surveillance systems may take days or weeks to collect and release data, Google search queries can be counted immediately. Google Flu Trends provides an additional surveillance tool that may help public health officials and the public make more informed decisions about preparing for the flu season.
In the past year, we've expanded our coverage to include Mexico, New Zealand and Australia and have continued to see a good correspondence between our estimates and official flu activity data. In fact, our analysis of last season shows that Google Flu Trends had a close 0.92 correlation with official U.S. flu data.
An important aspect of Google Flu Trends is that we filter out terms that may be popular because people hear about them in the news. What we do not use in the models is a term like [swine flu] since people are more likely to type that into Google because they want to know more information about it, given the news headlines, and not because they actually have H1N1 or swine flu. For more information about how we built this model, take a peek at this video:
If you visit Google Flu Trends for the U.S., you'll notice that the flu season is starting early this year. For tips on how to stay healthy this season, please visit our friends at the
U.S. CDC
and
the ECDC
.
Posted by Matt Mohebbi and Dan Vanderkam, Software Engineers
YouTube in 9 more domains
June 19, 2007
Posted by Sakina Arsiwala, International Manager, YouTube
The YouTube community began life speaking English, but thanks to the uniquely expressive medium of video, today there is a global village of content makers and viewers. With a noteworthy number of YouTube visitors now coming from outside the U.S., it's high time we go multilingual.
Today at a Google press event in Paris, Chad Hurley and Steve Chen are announcing the launch of nine new domains in
Brazil
,
France
,
Italy
,
Japan
,
the Netherlands
,
Poland
,
Spain
,
Ireland
, and the
UK
.
In response to many requests, each new site is fully translated and localized for each country including content (Featured Videos, Director Videos, Promotions), as well as the interfaces, search, user support, and such community features as video ratings, sharing, and content flagging. And these new localized versions are built using Google search technology, so you can quickly find more of what you want to see. Perhaps best of all, you can continue to use
youtube.com
, or move to one of these localized sites -- and switch seamlessly between the two. Happy creating, viewing and sharing!
Update:
Removed link to user content.
A picture's worth a thousand clicks
May 30, 2007
Posted by John Hanke, Director for Maps, Earth and Local
I am pleased to tell you that we've agreed to purchase
Panoramio
, a website based in Spain that links millions of photos with the exact geographical location where they were taken. (
Our FAQ
has all the details.)
Panoramio is a community photos website that enables digital photographers to geo-locate, store and organize their photographs -- and to view those photographs in Google Earth. Other users can search and browse Panoramio photos and suggest edits to the metadata associated with the photos. Panoramio also offers an API that enables web developers to embed Panoramio functionality into their websites.
Those of you already using Google Earth have no doubt noticed Panoramio's striking images documenting settings from all over the world, like
moonscapes in Croatia
,
dramatic sunsets in Australia
, and innovative
architecture in the United Arab Emirates
.
We've been working with Panoramio for some time -- its photos have been a default layer in Google Earth since the beginning of the year. This layer will remain in place as our teams work together toward further integrating this amazing content, generated by many, into our mapping technologies.
Webmasters, Google Sprechen Deutsch
March 15, 2007
Posted by Vanessa Fox
We love our webmaster community, and with
Webmaster Central
, we provide as much information and interaction about how Google crawls and indexes websites
as we can, in 18 languages. We also regularly provide information and tips in our
webmaster blog
. The blog has been available only in English. Until now. We're very happy to launch our first non-English webmaster blog: the
German Webmaster-Zentrale Blog
. If you speak German, head there to read German versions of the English blog posts, as well as news and tips specifically for the German market. Willkommen!
Mapping Europe
December 18, 2006
Posted by John Hanke, Director, Google Earth & Maps
As part of our ongoing effort to connect people to information about the world -- or perhaps le monde, die welt, el mundo -- around them, I'm pleased to tell you about the addition of a new team to Google. Today we acquired
Endoxon
, an Internet mapping solutions company based in Lucerne, Switzerland.
The Endoxon team has demonstrated passion and innovation in online mapping and has developed compelling technology that will enhance our Google geo products worldwide. We're also excited about having a dedicated team in Europe that can bring a distinctively European focus to our Maps products in those markets.
Google News in Scandinavia
November 15, 2006
Posted by Petter Wedum and Håvard Husevåg Garnes, Google interns
After months of hard work, the day is finally here: we've released Google News in
Norway
and
Sweden
.
At Google News, we cut to the bone -- er, to the core -- searching to get you the freshest takes. We gather the latest news headlines in your language and present a summary of links to you in one single page, freshly ranked by relevance and popularity. Then you just dash off to the sites to read the news stories that take your fancy.
The two of us worked as summer interns with Google in Trondheim earlier this year, with plenty of help from our Swedish colleague Jonas Yngvesson, who's based in Google's Zurich office. Now after some months of public silence, we can finally tell our friends and you all about our work on Google News Scandinavia. It has kind of become our baby. We've cared for it, looked after it, yelled at it and corrected it, and we've come to love it. We hope you will appreciate it as much as we do.
In addition to taming the news, we've enjoyed free lunches and had a chance to learn from some of the best engineers Trondheim and the rest of the world have to offer. Perhaps best of all, we were trusted to work on release-level code for Norway and Sweden. If like us you want to have a say in the inner workings of the world's biggest search company -- to discuss algorithm problems with the guy who wrote your algorithm textbook at college -- you should know that Google wants interns all over the world. Check out the
Google Interns site
.
Before we go, we would like to thank all the Googlers who have helped us and encouraged us and cared for us throughout our internship. Bosses, colleagues, recruiters and caterers, thank you! Our summer would not have been the same without your help.
History is cool for school
November 7, 2006
Posted by Oliver Rickman, UK Corporate Communications Team, and Kate Hammond, UK Product Marketing Team
You might be thinking most kids are only interested in celebrities and the next cool thing -- but not 15,000 British kids. This lot, between the ages of 4 and 18, ditched celebrity-watching in favour of good old-fashioned historical figures when they sent in their drawings to our
Doodle 4 Google competition
. (You may recall our informal name for this contest was
"Day Off for Dennis."
) Given the theme of ‘My Britain’ as their inspiration, school children up and down the UK got creative with the Google logo, hoping to see their entry on the Google homepage. Nearly half (45%) of their entries included monuments and historical figures from Big Ben to the Blackpool tower, and from the Queen to Shakespeare. Everyone at the London Googleplex was really impressed with how passionate the kids were about Britain, not to mention their talent.
And though some of you may laugh about British food, we were proud to see that a quarter of entries featured
fish and chips
, proving what we all already knew – that you can’t beat traditional British grub!
On Monday and Tuesday, we met thousands of children whose entries made it into the finals at the Science Museum in London. The wrapup gave them a chance to check out each others' designs and talk about their Doodles -- and of course it gave us the exciting job of announcing and congratulating the fantastic winner, 13-year-old Katherine Chisnall, from the South West of England. Aside from her day of fame on the Google.co.uk homepage, Katherine and her family will be soon be visiting our
world headquarters
in Mountain View, California. The whole event was great fun, and who knows? Maybe we've identified some rising stars for Dennis' crew.
Code Jamming in Dublin
July 6, 2006
Posted by Jeanne Williams and Anne Driscoll, Staffing Programs Team
On June 29th, Google Dublin hosted the onsite finals for
Code Jam Europe 2006
. This is the third of four code competitions slated for this year, with
China
in January,
India
in April and a Global Code Jam this fall.
After nearly 10,000 registrants and three intense online rounds, the top 50 finalists persevered and flew to Dublin for the final challenge. ACM members also joined the coding community fun, traveling from countries as far afield as Kazakhstan, Russia, Sweden, Egypt, Spain, France, Poland and Bulgaria to celebrate the success of the finalists. Several of the ACMers had qualified for the Code Jam Finals in their own right, and having them in Dublin added a real buzz to the proceedings.
Over 15 countries were represented in the finals, and 31 of the top 50 are from Eastern Europe. We celebrate the success of the top finishers: Tomasz Czajka from Poland took home the €2500 grand prize; second- and third-prize winners were Petr Mitricheve and Roman Elizarov, both from Russia, who won €1000 each.
Watch the fun that defined Code Jam Europe in this
short clip
from the 3-day event -- and keep on coding to prepare for the next one!
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
.
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
.
Thanks Victoria doodlers!
November 23, 2005
Posted by Dennis Hwang, Webmaster and
Google Doodler
.
Last week Google opened our new office in the Victoria area of London, and to mark the occasion we invited students from nearby schools to create their own Google Doodles from our logo. My fellow judges and I were basically considering three qualities: the originality of the doodle idea or topic; integration of the design with the Google logo; and sheer creativity. We received hundreds of entries with all sorts of themes, ranging from serious topics like the Asian tsunami and the Battle of Trafalgar to an entire logo transformed into a bunch of eyes staring at each other. In the end, we chose
these five finalists
. And our winner, which graced our
U.K. home page
for a full day, was this charming doodle from 11-year-old Lisa Waiwaina:
In the end, I was simply blown away by the amazing quality of the work, especially from younger artists up to around age 11 (the bunnies drawn by 5-year-olds were simply awesome). It was a good reminder that staying in touch with one’s inner child can be a key to creativity. Now, back to my secret agenda of searching for a young apprentice...
Get News in Portuguese
November 17, 2005
Posted by Bruno Fonseca, Software Engineer
We've just launched two different editions of
Google News
: one for
Brazil
and one for
Portugal
. Google News gathers stories from more than 200 news sources in Portuguese worldwide, and automatically arranges them to present the most relevant news first. We're very pleased to be able to help Brazilian and Portuguese readers stay informed about the issues that matter most to them.
Read more (in Portuguese)
about this launch.
For a group of Google Engineers, it's especially exciting, because in July, we
opened an engineering office in Brazil
. These Google News Portuguese editions are the first launches our team in Belo Horizonte has participated in. Here's to many more!
Of course, Google News Brazil and Google News Portugal are small steps towards our mission. You can help by sending your
feedback, thoughts and ideas
. Divirta-se!
Mini goes Euro
May 11, 2005
Posted by Rajen Sheth, Google Mini Product Manager
Turns out that businesses in London, Madrid and Dusseldorf have the same headaches as those in Chicago or Vancouver: they can't find that sales presentation on the company intranet. Or customers fill up the support line with calls for info that's actually on the website.
Google Mini
to the rescue. So now it's
for sale in the UK and throughout the EU
.
One more way to access Local UK
May 10, 2005
Posted by Abhijit Kalamkar, Software Engineer
We were on a roll after we launched
Google Local UK
last month, and went on to build a mobile web browser version of Google Local for our UK users. Users can now access Local on their mobile by going straight to the
Local
home page (that's
http://mobile.google.co.uk/local
) or the
Google UK
home page (a.k.a.
http://www.google.co.uk/xhtml
). So we say: step away from that computer. Click a few buttons on your keypad and head to that new Thai restaurant near Piccadilly Circus. If you're slightly disoriented once away from the screen, Local gives you Google Maps and driving directions too.
Updated with visible URLs.
Google does Grimsby, Gateshead and Glasgow
April 18, 2005
Posted by Richard Boardman, Usability Analyst
Sometimes it's hard being a Brit in Silicon Valley. Have you tried to find a decent pint, authentic fish and chips or well-made bowler hats in northern California lately? (Okay, the last one isn't a priority.) There's also that feeling of being left out when new technology gets launched in the U.S. before it reaches the rest of the world.
Take
Google Local
and
Google Maps
, for example - innovative local business search and beautiful interactive maps. However, as per the barrage of emails I got from mates back home: New Orleans, Anchorage and Beverly Hills are all very well, but what about London, Cardiff, and Belfast?
I guess my colleagues got tired of my moaning, so I'm delighted to introduce
Google Local UK
and
Google Maps UK
. The Google UK office and a few of us homesick Brits in California have been helping out with the development.
Engineer
: Why are the streets in the UK such a mess?
Me:
Sadly, the ancient Britons, Romans and Vikings had a different idea of urban planning than do we moderns.
Product Manager:
Manchester's not that important, is it?
Me:
It is if you're a Mancunian! (So watch it, lad.)
Give it a go: your
fish and chips in Plymouth
,
theatres near Piccadilly Circus
, and
haggis in Inverness
await.
P.S. We Brits also love our text messaging, so all this info (and more) can be found on the go by texting your (UK) queries via
Google SMS
.
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