Secret Test Tracks
Automobiles, Google
Auto Express has been playing with Google Earth and has found ten of the most covert manufacturers’ test tracks.
|
Category Archive 'Google'
16 Dec 2006
Secret Test TracksAutomobiles, GoogleAuto Express has been playing with Google Earth and has found ten of the most covert manufacturers’ test tracks. 02 Nov 2006
Don’t Be EvilChina, Google, Microsoft, YahooWith Google and Yahoo playing ball with the Communist regime in China, Microsoft (of all companies) is talking about possible non-cooperation.
20 Oct 2006
Good Bye, Hilarious Japanese Game Show ClipsCopyright, Google, Videos, YouTubeEgads!, no more cute screaming Japanese girls and lizards. YouTube, having been bought by Google, is going corporate, and surrendering to a collection of Japanese copyright-enforcement groups. They will be deleting 29,549 videos. Smart move, Japanese broadcasters, you wouldn’t want any free international publicity and recognition adulterating your brands’ prestige, would you? 20 Jul 2006
Curious Model Found in Remote China VillageBizarre, China, Google, India
Playing with Google Earth is pretty popular in tech circles. One can snoop into all sorts of earthly matters from heaven’s perspective. Lester Haines at the Register reports on one of Google Earth-ers’ most al-time intriguing finds: a Chinese military installation at Huangyangtan features an astonshingly detailed 900×700m scale model of a very mountainous landscape. The army of Googlers applied ther obsessive analytic skills and identified the model’s subject location: a disputed region of the China-India border. The extraordinarily elaborate model was obviously painstakingly produced for some sort of military training. The Google General Staff College theorizes that the purpose may be to familiarize Chinese pilots with the landscape in preparation for some future conflict. Considering just how much trouble and expense the Chinese have gone to with this one, India had better be prepared for a renewal of Chinese pressure for concessions, backed up by military force. ——————————————————Hat tip to PJM. 19 May 2006
Ask GoogleGoogle, San Francisco Chronicle, Technology, The InternetThe SF Chronicle profiles an intriguing new Google feature:
—————————————————————Hat tip to Stephen Frankel. 21 Apr 2006
Surrealism on the WebArt, Google, The Internet
Yesterday was the natal anniversary of renowned Spanish (and Catalan) artist Joan Miró, born April 20, 1893 in Barcelona, and Google (in what I would consider a gracious tribute) modified its logo into an homage to Miró. Google had, in the past, similiarly saluted Salvador Dali, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and such occasions as Valentine’s Day. Google’s gesture might possibly have some very modest economic impact, enhancing the value of that artist’s work through such a widely-viewed public acknowledgement of his fame and artistic stature, but it obviously did not make Google one plug nickel. Rather than accepting this one-day tribute, however, in the spirit in which it was offered, some grasping Miró heir, who had stumbled upon the Miró-ified logo, notified the Artists Rights Society, a group representing some 40,000 artists (and their estates). The pettyfoggers and beancounters at the ARS leapt into action, demanding that Google remove the logo, which incorporated some elements from the artist’s (copyrighted) images:
So, if an Internet company, like Google, wishes to pay homage (for one day) to an historic figure in the world of Art, it is not enough that Google donates its time, creative work, and publishing space, it should also donate the time of its executives and attorneys to enter into correspondence, negotiations, the drafting of legal agreements, and possibly pay a fee for the privilege of saying: “Happy Birthday, Joan Miró?” Preposterous. This kind of dog-in-the-manger punctilio over non-economic use of cultural references is crass, absurd, and culturally impoverishing. John Paczkowski is a brilliant reporter on Technology, but I think he is completely wrong on this one. 31 Jan 2006
Google’s SelloutChina, GoogleAndy Kessler, former hedge fund manager and current business book author, in today’s Wall Street Journal reflects critically on the form and manner of Google’s sellout:
Also available at the author’s webpage. 27 Jan 2006
Google’s Chinese SurrenderBlog Administration, China, Corrections and Retractions, Google, The BlogosphereCharles Johnson at Little Green Footballs yesterday illuminated the impact of Google’s shameful surrender to censorship at the behest of the Communist government of China by linking tiananmen – Google Image Search. AND tiananmen – Google Image Search in China. When I visited Little Green Footballs earlier today, and attempted to compare Google image search results, clicking on the China-version link resulted in my browser being automatically redirected to the US version. I found it impossible to access the censored China version. US url: http://images.google.com/images?q=tiananmen China url: http://images.google.cn/images?q=tiananmen I leapt to the conclusion that Google had deliberately arranged to preclude US viewers from accessing the China-censored-version of the Tiananmen Image Search, but my wife informed me that the China url worked on her PC. I found, looking into the matter further, that the url worked in Firefox on my own PC. Subsequent reports from other people tell me that the url works inconsistently in MS Explorer on other machines. It is not possible for me to identify the causes, but it seems most likely that these varying results are occasioned simply by the interactions of different software, and are not the result of any deliberate action by Google. |