Easter Eggs Appear at 3:14 AM on Google Personalized Homepage

This article was written on March 21, 2007 by CyberNet.

Yesterday we wrote about the new themes for the Google Personalized Homepage that change to match the time of day and weather. We also mentioned that there were to be hidden “Easter Eggs” that would appear at certain times, and they would “delight high-tech geeks with a sense of humor.” At that point, no one had seen these Easter Eggs, but early this morning they made their grand appearance, and here’s a small glimpse at what you will see (Thanks to Tony Ruscoe):

Egg1 Egg2 Egg3 Egg4Egg5

  • Beach – Loch Ness Monster
  • City Scape – UFOs
  • Pi in the Sky – Sweet Dreams
  • Tea House – Weird creatures in the water? (anybody know what that is?)
  • Seasonal Scape – Northern Lights

Also interesting is that these appear at 3:14 am (Pi = 3.14) and last for a minute. So far there doesn’t appear to be any surprise for those using the “Bus Stop” theme. I’m not up very often at 3:14 am, so thanks to Tony for posting these screenshots!

 

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Google shows off Fragments API for Android 3.0

Following up on its Android event on Wednesday, Google is giving us an in-depth look at Honeycomb’s Fragments API: a tool designed to make developer workflows more fluid. As the name suggests, Fragments are smaller pieces of the larger UI puzzle, allowing you to independently control and reuse certain aspects of an action in their own modular space. These modules, like the panes that came before them, are also meant to make the transition from different screen sizes (tablet to phone, for example) simple and functional. We got a glimpse of Google’s new API in action with a demo of CNN’s new tablet app, and despite its everything-and-the-kitchen-sink aesthetic, it looks like an easily navigable interface. While Honeycomb is currently a tablet-only OS, Matias Duarte hinted strongly that it would eventually make it to phones, and indeed, the screenshots of Fragments in use are all suspiciously phone-sized. What’s more, Google intends to bring Fragments to older Android versions through a static library — there’s no timeline, but the plan is to go as far back as Android 1.6. Now that’s Android fragmentation we can get behind.

Google shows off Fragments API for Android 3.0 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Feb 2011 15:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Developers  | Email this | Comments

Girl Attacks Ex With Google Image Bomb

If living well is the best revenge, then surely SEO must be in second place–with a bullet. Take, for example, this young woman, who followed a bad breakup by bombing Google Image search with unflattering photos her ex.

An image search for the ex-boyfriend now turns up the same headphone a slew of times, each with an accompanying unflattering LOLcat-styled caption, such as “To be or not to be? LOLJK I can’t read” (many of the others are a bit too hot for this here gadget blog).

The victim’s mom flipped out at the discovery, turning to the Google Webmaster Help message board for assistance, writing, in part,

My minor son’s ex-girlfriend took a copyrighted picture of him (we own copyright) and uploaded it more than 60 times to a website. On each image she wrote slanderous, defamatory and pornographic captions. The webmaster of the site states he removed the images 6 weeks ago, but Google Search still shows all the images. My son is so stressed out and embarrassed and we’ve done everything we can to get images

The mother added that she has attempted to get Google to take the photos down on account of copyright infringement, to no avail.

Does Google’s new Android Market website ignore custom ROMs?

Now that the Android Market website has finally launched (and stabilized) we’re beginning to see reports of rooted devices, and some running custom ROMs, not being recognized by the website. We’re having the very same issue ourselves, where a pristine Desire Z running a factory installed copy of Android 2.2 Froyo is listed on the “My Device” page while an old HTC Hero hacked to run Froyo courtesy of FroydVillain ROM does not, even though it’s logged in and syncing using the same Google login ID and the Android Market has been recently used from the device (as Google recommends on the “Trouble Downloading” help page). So what about you oh reader, oh rooter… what are you experiencing?

View Poll

[Thanks, Florian]

Does Google’s new Android Market website ignore custom ROMs? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Feb 2011 05:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome 9 update brings speed, WebGL, and apps

You’re probably a lot like us: more handsome and socially adept, naturally, but with a similar fear of robots and penchant for living fast and loose with pre-release developer builds. As such, the latest changes to the stable release of the Chrome browser won’t be of much use to you. Nevertheless, Google’s official window to the web was just injected with a speed bump, 3D WebGL graphics, Google Chrome Instant search results, and the Chrome Web Store already available in Chrome’s beta channel. If nothing else, please, we beg you, do the right thing and inform the local luddite.

Google Chrome 9 update brings speed, WebGL, and apps originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Feb 2011 02:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google’s paying $20,000 to hack Chrome — any takers?

So far, Chrome is the only browser of the big four — Safari, Firefox, and Internet Explorer being the other three — to escape the Pwn2Own hacking competition unscathed the past two years. (Sorry Opera aficionados, looks like there’s not enough of you to merit a place in the contest… yet.) Evidently, its past success has Google confident enough to pony up a cool $20,000 and a CR-48 laptop to anyone able to find a bug in its code and execute a clean sandbox escape on day one of Pwn2Own 2011. Should that prove too daunting a task, contest organizer TippingPoint will match El Goog’s $10,000 prize (still $20,000 total) for anyone who can exploit Chrome and exit the sandbox through non-Google code on days two and three of the event. For those interested in competing, Pwn2Own takes place March 9th through 11th in Vancouver at the CanSecWest conference. The gauntlet has been thrown — your move, hackers.

Google’s paying $20,000 to hack Chrome — any takers? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Feb 2011 20:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink ComputerWorld  |  sourceTippingPoint  | Email this | Comments

Scrabble-Like iOS App Crosses Platforms to Android

Before Angry Birds mania swept mobile device users everywhere, the masses were interested in words.

The Scrabble-like Words With Friends app, that is. An upcoming new platform release for the game may prove that while pigs may be dying in droves, words are still alive and well.

Previously exclusive to iOS mobile devices, the Scrabble-like Words is coming to the Android OS as soon as next week, says social game developer company Zynga. Playing the game on an Android device will be pretty much the same as if you played it on your iPhone, the company says.

Now, people will also be able to play in the same game across both platforms. That means no more Droid lovers feeling left out while their iOS-using pals are geeking out on triple-word scores.

Words With Friends on the iPhone/iPad platform has proven its immense popularity in the past. The app boasts 2.5 million daily active users, with over 10 million downloads since its creation. Currently supported by ads, the app is free for download from Apple’s app store. A paid version with no ads displayed will be coming soon to the Android Market and Apple app store.

But releasing the app on Android is not as simple as slapping a bunch of iOS code onto your Android phone.

“We wrote Words from the ground up with Android in mind,” Zynga Senior Engineer Jason Tomlinson told Wired.com in an interview. “For instance, because there’s so many different resolutions across Android devices, screen size compatibility is a serious issue.”

Leading a small team of three or four engineers, Tomlinson and his crew worked since October writing code in Java, the primary programming language for the Android OS. Knowing software update fragmentation across devices has been a serious issue for Android users, Tomlinson’s team made the Words app compatible with hardware running the most up to date 2.3 version (Gingerbread) all the way back to 1.6 (Donut). It will also run on Google’s yet to be released version 3.0 (Honeycomb), the version of Android optimized for tablets.

Some transitions to the Android OS environment were easier than others. “The art ports over mostly seamlessly,” Words co-founder Paul Bettner told Wired.com. “Same with the sounds we use. And the same set of servers on the back end are supporting both iOS and Android users,” Bettner said.

But when Bettner founded Newtoy Inc., the developer studio that created Words, in 2008, the whole studio was focused on iOS coding, and has continued to be until last year.

“When a relatively new platform like Android comes along,” Bettner said, “it’s difficult to find coders in the beginning. Even the most experienced Android developers in the world would have only a few months of experience doing it. Once Google’s OS started growing in popularity, the requests for an Android version of the app came flooding in. That’s when we started looking for help.”

Help came in the form of Tomlinson, who has worked with Google on Android since the open-source code’s inception. Tomlinson worked with the existing engineers to help acclimate them to coding in Java rather than the Apple-preferred language, Objective-C.

“Whichever platform an engineer begins programming for, there’s always going to be a few hurdles jumping from one to another,” Tomlinson told Wired.com. “Generally, however, the learning curve for switching from Objective-C to Java is much simpler, as Java is easier to pick up.”

With the success of the iOS version of the game in mind, Zynga is preparing its servers for “the most optimistic projections” of new user adoption rates, says Bettner.

If the game takes off for the Android OS, it’s probably not a stretch to expect other big cross-platform releases in 2011.

Photo: Words With Friends running on a Motorola Xoom tablet.
Mike Isaac/Wired.com

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Motorola’s Atrix 4G coming to AT&T on March 6th for $200, bundled with Laptop Dock for $500

Don’t ever say Ma Bell lacks cahones. On the same day that existing Verizon customers began pre-ordering the CDMA’d iPhone 4, AT&T has come clean with what’s next on America’s largest GSM network. While announced at CES 2011, pricing and release information had eluded the luscious Atrix 4G… until now, that is. AT&T will begin pre-sales for the Froyo-powered Motorola Atrix 4G Android superphone on February 13th, with the standard $199.99 + two-year contract ($50 more than we were led to believe, mind you) getting one into your grubby mitts. We’re told to expect general availability on March 6th “or earlier,” putting it just about in line with the date we’d heard rumored. Moreover, those looking to buy will should have a difficult time laying off of the Laptop Dock bundle, which nets you an Atrix 4G as well as a $499.99 dock for the grand total of $499.99 on contract. You heard right — those who opt to buy the dock at a later time will be asked to shell out five Benjamins, whereas that same tally on day one will also include the phone. It should be noted, however, that the bundle only applies if you also sign your name to a Data Pro plan and tethering add-on, so be sure you’re down for that monthly hit before committing in haste. Oh, and just in case you simply can’t stop spending, the carrier is also offering an Entertainment Access Kit for Atrix 4G customers which includes the Motorola HD Multimedia Dock, a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, and a remote control for $189.99.

Continue reading Motorola’s Atrix 4G coming to AT&T on March 6th for $200, bundled with Laptop Dock for $500

Motorola’s Atrix 4G coming to AT&T on March 6th for $200, bundled with Laptop Dock for $500 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Feb 2011 13:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Wall Street Journal, AT&T  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft Compares Google to Spammers

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Why was Google making such a big fuss over accusations that Microsoft has pilfered its search results for Bing? Simple, says Microsoft–the company was worried about Bing’s success.
Those of the thoughts that Bing SVP Yusuf Mehdi shared on his blog, suggesting that the timing of Google’s very public complaints may have been more than coincidence. Says Mehdi,
[W]e have been making steady, quiet progress on core search relevance. In October 2010 we released a series of big, noticeable improvements to Bing’s relevance. So big and noticeable that we are told Google took notice and began to worry. Then a short time later, here come the honeypot attacks.
Mehdi called Google’s disclosure “feigned outrage” and took the opportunity to deny the charges. “We do not copy results from any of our competitors,” he wrote. “Period. Full stop. We have some of the best minds in the world at work on search quality and relevance, and for a competitor to accuse any one of these people of such activity is just insulting.”
Google’s trap, Mehdi added, was similar to techniques employed by spammers. “Google engaged in a ‘honeypot’ attack to trick Bing. In simple terms, Google’s ‘experiment’ was rigged to manipulate Bing search results through a type of attack also known as ‘click fraud.’ That’s right, the same type of attack employed by spammers on the Web to trick consumers and produce bogus search results.”

Google Bets That Chrome Cannot Be Hacked-for $20,000

 

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for CHROMESCREENSHOT.JPGGoogle is taking a risk in light of the recent news about the new Internet Explorer bug. The company is placing a bet with computer hackers that they cannot hack into the Chrome browser. If they prove Google wrong they win $20,000.00 and a brand new  CR-48 Chrome OS notebook. The contest is called Pwn2Own. It will take place on March 9th through the 11th.

Google appears to believe that the Chrome browser will not be hacked into, but is willing to take the risk to drive home their point. This is the first time ever that any software company has placed a bet and target on their own product. Also, around the same time of this contest, TippingPoint will also host other hacker contest for different devices and other browsers.

I have to say that I am not sure that Google is making the right choice here. In light of the IE bug, why draw attention to your own browser? Also, I am sure Chrome can be hacked into simply because they have had viruses attack the browser before. After all, if you claim something cannot happen it usually does end up happening to you at some point.

Via Digital Trends