You Tube Blocked in China

March 25th, 2009

Access to video sharing Website, YouTube, has been blocked in China. The site has been down in China for over 24 hours. Google seems to be unaware of the reasons for the blockage and is reportedly trying to rectify the situation. According to a Google spokesperson, “YouTube is currently blocked in China. We don’t know the reason for the blockage, but are working as quickly as possible to restore access to our users in China”. Both Google and YouTube have previously been blocked in China according to the company. YouTube was also previously blocked in Thailand and Turkey. China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Qib Gang said that “China’s Internet is open enough, but also needs to be regulated by law in order to prevent the spread of harmful information and for national security.”

The Chinese government is not too keen on its citizens broadcasting themselves on all topics. The government is known for censorship of content it considers offensive or politically disruptive or contrary to its beliefs. The Chinese market is, however, lucrative with a population of 1.3 billion, 300 million Internet users, and 100 million blogs.


Microsoft move on Google

March 3rd, 2009

As I noted earlier on Monday, Microsoft plans to start internal testing later this week of Kumo, the rebranded version of Live Search. Now I have a screenshot to share. Also, here’s the text of an e-mail that search executive Satya Nadella just sent to his staff. Keep in mind, even though he talks about checking out the site, his e-mail is to Microsoft staff with access to it.

Us outsiders will have to chew on the screenshot (see below). From this screenshot (and two others I have seen), it appears the biggest change in Kumo is the way that it shows in the first results the query narrowed by a couple of different things the searcher might be looking for.


Finally its here!!

February 25th, 2009

The beta tag is gone, the use of extensions seems to be imminent, and Google Chrome looks poised to become the next big thing on the Web-browser market. I’ve been using it for a while, and grow to like it more and more every time I discover something new and excellent that Chrome can do to make my browsing even better.

And there sure are a lot of things that fall into that category. Chrome does neat things with your history, your searching, your most visited pages, and a number of other parts of the browsing experience.

Here’s a few tips to get the most out of Google Chrome: click here


Google’s hour of fame!

February 5th, 2009

It was the weekend which shook Google to its very foundations… possibly. All around the world, users of the search engine which prides itself – and has built a multi-billion dollar business – on providing the best, most useful answers to every query were greeted with a message warning that “this site may harm your computer”.

The same text was pasted next to every search result – for everything from Aardvarks to Zoroastrianism. In effect, Google was warning users that the entire internet was sick and shouldn’t be touched with an electronic bargepole.

Panic spread as the global web community told each other about this apparent breakdown. Google eventually fixed the problem, explaining that an update of a list of malicious sites somehow ended up including every web address, instead of one specific URL. But what a textbook example of a corporate disaster allowed to rage out of control…

…hold on a minute. The entire incident lasted just 55 minutes. And if you were on the West Coast of the USA, where Google is based, you are unlikely to have been affected, because it started at 0630 your time on a Saturday morning and was over by 0725. So why all the hoo-hah?

Well, news spread like wildfire around the blogosphere – or more accurately the Twitterverse – as everyone seemed determined to pass on their panic, along with rumours that Google’s Gmail was also misfiring. So far. more people knew about the “may harm” incident than were affected by it. I got off a plane on my way home from a holiday on Saturday afternoon, asked online whether I’d missed any big tech stories, and was bombarded with messages about the Google crash.