Feature news

Showing posts with label googleproducts. Show all posts

Google makes ‘$100 laptop‘ a reality



Google began selling basic laptop computers to schools at a price of $99, meeting a price point that prominent MIT professor-Nicholas Negroponte famously held out in 2005 as key to bringing computing power to the masses. 


The internet giant said on Monday that it will be offering the steep educational discount on Series 5 Chromebooks from Samsung Electronics through December 21. They typically retail for $249. 

Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child Foundation failed to meet his ambitious target, which critics said would be impossible to meet when he set it. His XO laptop currently sell for about $200. 

Still, he is widely credited with helping to launch the era of low-cost portable computing. 

The creation of relatively low-cost laptops from his foundation pressured industry giants includingIntel, Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard and Dell to develop inexpensive versions of their products such as the netbook.
Learn more »

Youtube Birthday


It's YouTube's 7th birthday... 

Short Achievement Notes of YouTube

In May 2005 we first shared YouTube with the world. Seven years later, you’re the ones doing the sharing! We’re so honored that you’ve used YouTube to share how-to tips, political momentshome videoscomedymusic, and so much more.

Last year to celebrate our birthday, we wrote you, the YouTube Community, a thank you note for making our first 6 years so special. And on that birthday you gave us a great present by reaching a record rate of 48 hours of video uploaded to the site every minute. Well Community, this year, on our 7th birthday, you’ve outdone yourselves once again.

Today 72 hours of video are uploaded to the site every minute. Like many 7 year olds around the world, we’re growing up so fast! In other words, every single minute you now upload three whole days worth of video instead of two. That's 61 Royal Wedding Ceremonies, 841 Bad Romances, and 1,194 Nyan Cats.

We’ve come along way in the past 7 years. What started as a handful of videos shared among friends has transformed into a global platform delivering the next generation of channels to anyone, anywhere, and on any device. This last year was especially big for us. We helped bring more great channels to YouTube and weredesigned the site, making it easier for you to discover, watch and subscribe to the videos you love. And all 800 million of you all over the world have shown us we’re on the right track by increasing subscriptions 50% and watching over 3 billion hours a month.

Behind the tens of millions of channels on YouTube featuring talented filmmakershome videosskateboarding tricksmusic, and car enthusiasts there has always been one consistent voice: you

Unbelievable Achievement by YouTube
Learn more »

Google Products

GOOGLE PRODUCTS
Those are the logos which were from GOOGLE as their products to market
Mostly well known products are :
--> Gmail
--> Google Search Engine
--> Orkut
--> Google+
--> Maps (Google maps for navigation)
-->Google Earth
--> Youtube
--> Goggles
--> Google Chrome(Web Browser)
--> Latitude
--> Synchronization
-> Google Docs
-->ANDROID (Mobile Operating System)
Learn more »

LG to launch Google TV in US in late May


One of the top most leading company LG Electronics which well known for producing the TELEVISIONS , working with the world's finest GOOGLE to launch GOOGLE TV.
LG Electronics Inc, the world’s No2 TV maker, plans to launch Internet-enabled TV based on Google’s platform in the United States in the week of 21 May, as the South Korean firm seeks to gain a larger share of the emerging Internet TV market, a senior LG executive said on Monday.
The move reflects an aggressive push by the duo to defend against a potential threat from Apple Inc, which reshaped the handset market with its iPhone smartphone and is widely expected to unveil a full-fledged TV product later this year or early next year.
“Production of Google TVs will start from 17 May from our factory in Mexico and U.S. consumers will be able to buy the product from the week of May 21,” Ro Seogho, executive vice president of LG’s TV business unit, told a small group of reporters.
Google TV allows viewers to access Google services such as searches and YouTube videos on their television screens.
Ro said LG will decide whether to expand the offering to Europe and Asia after reviewing sales performance in the US market.

Google TV is all set to relaunch Reuters
LG gave no shipment target or details of prices or screen sizes.
Research firm IHS iSuppli estimates the global Internet-enabled TV market will grow nearly 60 percent this year to 95 million sets, far outpacing the TV market overall, which is expected to expand by just 2 percent.
The second version of Internet TV by Google, which hopes to replicate the success of its Android mobile software in the TV market, comes after its previous model, unveiled in 2010, failed to catch on with consumers.
Google’s attempt to capture the living room audience has seen limited success so far due to a lack of web content or support from hardware manufacturers.
TV manufacturers from LG to its bigger rival Samsung Electronics Co have their own Internet-enabling TV platforms and are aggressively pushing their own technologies, along with Google TV, to gain the initiative and prop up margins with high-end products amid growing competition from low-cost producers.
LG plans to fit around 60 percent of its TVs with its own NetCast platform installed, to allow viewers access to the Internet, social networking and online games as well as LG’s own TV applications.
LG saw its TV division’s profit margin rising sharply to above 4 percent in the first quarter, helped by strong sales of high-end models such as 3D TVs and Internet-enabled sets, just when Sony Corp, Panasonic Corp and Sharp Corp expect to have lost a combined $21 billion in the business year that ended on 31 March.
LG doubled its share of the 3D TV market to 15.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011 from earlier in the year, helped by cheaper and lighter 3D glasses that do not require the batteries and switches used in conventional 3D sets made by Samsung, Sony and others.
Sony’s share of the 3D TV market tumbled to 13 percent in the October-December quarter from 34.6 percent in January-March quarter of last year, according to DisplaySearch.
LG hopes to further steal a march on its rivals by bringing forward the launch of a 55-inch flat-screen TV using next-generation technology, raising the stakes in a cutthroat battle for the living room between Asia’s top tech powerhouses.

Google Ambitions
Google has long held ambitions in the television arena, hoping to extend its online advertising business to the big screens that still command the lion’s share of global advertising budgets, and to make the best use of its ownership of YouTube, the world’s most popular online video site.
But Logitech International, one of Google’s initial partners that developed a set-top box offering the service, said late last year it had lost tens of millions of dollars building set-top boxes for Google devices due to weak sales.
An LG official said retailers’ responses to the latest Google TV were positive.
Learn more »

Driver-less Google cars soon on Nevada roads


One more interesting thing from the GOOGLE products.... have a glimpse here guyz... ,
Google’s self-driven cars will soon be appearing on Nevada roads after the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles approved on Monday the nation’s first autonomous vehicle license.
The move came after officials rode along on drives on highways, in Carson City neighbourhoods and along the famous Las Vegas Strip, the Nevada DMV said in a statement.
The Nevada legislature last year authorised self-driven cars for the state’s roads, the first such law in the United States. That law went into effect on 1 March, 2012.
Google’s self-driven cars rely on video cameras, radar sensors, lasers, and a database of information collected from manually driven cars to help navigate, according to the company.
The DMV licensed a Toyota Prius that Google modified with its experimental driver-less technology, developed by Stanford professor and Google Vice President Sebastian Thrun.
Handout photo courtesy of the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles shows what the Google self-driven car sees while navigating the road network in Las Vegas. Reuters
Google’s self-driving cars have crossed the Golden Gate Bridge and driven along the picturesque Pacific Coast Highway, according to the company.
Autonomous vehicles are the “car of the future,” Nevada DMV director Bruce Breslow said in a statement. The state also has plans to eventually license autonomous vehicles owned by the members of the public, the DMV said.
Legislation to regulate autonomous cars is being considered in other states, including Google’s home state of California.
“The vast majority of vehicle accidents are due to human error. Through the use of computers, sensors and other systems, an autonomous vehicle is capable of analyzing the driving environment more quickly and operating the vehicle more safely,” California state Senator Alex Padilla said in March when he introduced that state’s autonomous car legislation.
Other car companies are also seeking self-driven car licenses in Nevada, the DMV said.
Learn more »