Lookin’ to get a jump on the rest of the folks, eh Onkyo? Rather than waiting for CES to kick off next week, the aforementioned firm has just let loose its TA117, proving that it’s totally kosher with supporting both Microsoft and Google in the tablet…
Category Archives: google
Onkyo blesses 10.1-inch TA117 Android tablet with NVIDIA’s Tegra 250
Exclusive: Sony Ericsson to introduce Android 3.0 gaming platform and PSP Go-like smartphone
There’s no question that gaming on the Android platform has heretofore been relatively underwhelming, but that looks like it’s all about to change. It seems that Sony Ericsson — a company that has yet to even introduce an Android 2.0 device — is at …
Installing Android 2.2 "Froyo" On the Nexus One
gjt writes “I awoke this morning to see TechCrunch’s MG Siegler post what appeared to be the first news of Froyo’s availability. I frantically went to my phone’s settings and tried to check for an update -oe but no luck. Then I went to xda-developers.c…
Inside Google’s Secret Search Algorithm [Google]
Wired’s Steven Levy takes us inside the “algorithm that rules the web"—Google's search algorithm, of course—and if you use Google, it's kind of a must-read. PageRank? That’s so 1997.
It's known that Google constantly updates the algorithm, with 550 improvements this year—to deliver smarter results and weed out the crap—but there are a few major updates in its history that have significantly altered Google's search, distilled in a helpful chart in the Wired piece. For instance, in 2001, they completely rewrote the algorithm; in 2003, they added local connectivity analysis; in 2005, results got personal; and most recently, they've added in real-time search for Twitter and blog posts.
The sum of everything Google's worked on—the quest to understand what you mean, not what you say—can be boiled down to this:
This is the hard-won realization from inside the Google search engine, culled from the data generated by billions of searches: a rock is a rock. It’s also a stone, and it could be a boulder. Spell it “rokc” and it’s still a rock. But put “little” in front of it and it’s the capital of Arkansas. Which is not an ark. Unless Noah is around. “The holy grail of search is to understand what the user wants,” Singhal says. “Then you are not matching words; you are actually trying to match meaning.”
Oh, and by the way, you're a guinea pig every time you search for something, if you hadn't guessed as much already. Google engineer Patrick Riley tells Levy, "On most Google queries, you're actually in multiple control or experimental groups simultaneously." It lets them constantly experiment on a smaller scale—even if they're only conducting a particular experiment on .001 percent of queries, that's a lot of data.
Be sure to check out the whole piece, it’s ridiculously fascinating, and borders on self-knowledge, given how much we all use Google (sorry, Bing). [Wired, Sweet graphic by Wired's Mauricio Alejo]
Google Hacked, May Pull Out of China
D H NG writes “Following a sophisticated attack on Google infrastructure originating from China late last year, Google has decided to take ‘a new approach’ to China. In their investigation, Google found that more than 20 large companies had been infiltrated and dozens of Chinese human rights activists’ Gmail accounts had been compromised. Google has decided to ‘review the feasibility of [its] business operations in China,’ no longer censoring results in Google.cn, and if necessary, to ‘shut down Google.cn, and potentially [Google's] offices in China.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exclusive: Google Nexus One hands-on, video, and first impressions
Continue reading Exclusive: Google Nexus One hands-on, video, and first impressions
Exclusive: Google Nexus One hands-on, video, and first impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 18:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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As everyone knows, Garmin and TomTom have their backs against the ropes in a fight to remain relevant in an age of free GPS turn-by-turn navigation on smartphones (thanks 


Wired looks at HTC’s rise from unknown OEM in Taiwan to creator of some of the most innovative and exciting smartphones around, including the