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Google Confirms Bid for Wireless Spectrum November 30, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in android, eric schmidt, google, mobile phone, wireless.
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This from PC Magazine today - what a week for Google!


Google confirmed Friday that it will bid on wireless spectrum, the first step toward the establishment of the company’s long-rumored wireless network.

Google will file a bid with the FCC on Monday for a portion of the 700-MHz band, which the FCC is auctioning off. The bid does not include any partners, Google said.

According to the bidding rules – assisted by Google and public interest groups earlier this year –


the winner of the auction must allow any consumer to download any software they wish onto the mobile phone, and to use and device they can on the wireless network. The rules go into effect if the reserve price of $4.6 billion is met.

Analysts have said previously that actually building the network could cost an additional $17 billion.

“We believe it’s important to put our money where our principles are,” said Eric Schmidt, chairman and chief executive of Google, in a statement. “Consumers deserve more competition and innovation than they have in today’s wireless world. No matter which bidder ultimately prevails, the real winners of this auction are American consumers who likely will see more choices than ever before in how they access the Internet.”

Engadget says “Wake the kids, phone the neighbors, it’s going to get ugly fast.”

See the article here.

Image credit: Engadget

Google to make Renewable Energy Cheaper than Coal November 28, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in alternative energy, going green, google, worldchanging.
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Google announced this morning that they will be pouring potentially hundreds of millions of dollars into achieving their newest goal:

making renewable energy cheaper than coal.


Google has already spent significant resources in reducing their negative footprint at their own facilities and data centers, as we’ve seen with projects like their infamous “solar trees” (see below). But now it is time for Google to take that knowledge and innovation and apply it outside the company.
They will be hiring loads of scientists, engineers, and technologists to develop ways in which to “produce one gigawatt of renewable energy capacity that is cheaper than coal.” says Larry Page, Google Co-founder and President of Products. That’s enough to power a city the size of San Francisco.

Alex Steffen of WorldChanging.com interviewed Karl Schroeder in September. Karl managed to describe the need for this type of investment in one of the best ways I have ever heard when discussing what he would do with a billion dollars:

“[I would invest in] projects that can’t get funding because they have a low probability of success, but massive payoff if they do work. –Which is precisely where our investment should be flowing right now, because we don’t have time for incremental development to solve the climate crisis. We need miracles, and those don’t come from slow, safe R&D projects…”

From what I’ve read so far, some people aren’t so sure what the heck Google is doing in the energy business. My take: Who better to do this?! We’re talking about a corporation with the big, hairy, audacious goal (BHAG - thanks Jim Collins) of “organizing the world’s information and making it universally accessible and useful.” The scariest part is they’ve estimated how long it will take them to complete; 300 years. Maybe this includes organizing the world’s information in regards to technologies, ideas, and innovations that will make energy cheaper and cleaner for everyone.

So, why not let Google go at it? They’ve got the culture, attitude, outreach, brains, and money.

See the press release here.

Myths About the Third World and Poverty November 27, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in Gapminder, Hans Rosling, TED, Trendalyzer, google, poverty, statistics analysis, third world.
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Hans Rosling, professor, doctor, and founder of Gapminder, presents his statistics analyzing software, completely bringing data to life and giving his audience a visualization of changes that have occurred in human development. According to Wikipedia, “In March 2007 Google acquired the Trendalyzer software with the intention to scale it up and make it freely available for public statistics”, however I have had a little trouble getting my hands on it.

“Hans co-founded Gapminder, whose remarkable interactive graphs help deliver profound insights about global trends and dispel myths about the “developing world”. With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, he debunks a few of those myths in this presentation delivered at the 2006 Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) Conference.

To live in “extreme poverty” - with less than 1 dollar a day - means you wake up hungry, you go to bed hungry and you have to use all your resources just to acquire food.

How has the Global Economy effected the income of people across the world? Although the percentage of poverty has gone down, the number of poor people is still very high. Still, the percentage of people living in extreme poverty has gone down from around 40 percent 30 years ago to todays number of around 20 percent.

The good news is that the eradication of poverty is within human range.”

Check out the incredibly cool Gapminder here.

Hans Rosling’s full-length TED Presentation here.

Google Mobile OS - Android November 14, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in android, google, mobile, open source.
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Well, we all, including myself, thought the announcement of a Gphone was just around the corner. Turns out, there is no such thing. What Google has been working on, however, is an open source operating system for mobile phones - Android.

While it does bear resemblance to the iPhone OS, don’t forget that Android is open source, and so the development is completely different.

From the Google info page about Android:

The Open Handset Alliance, a group of more than 30 technology and mobile companies, is developing Android: the first complete, open, and free mobile platform. To help developers get started developing new applications, we’re offering an early look at the Android Software Development Kit. [Android]

Harvard-Google Project October 21, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in Google Book Search, google, harvard.
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Over 3,000 readers took advantage of Harvard-Google Project last month
Published On Thursday, October 18, 2007 3:39 AM
Instead of meandering through Widener’s labyrinthine stacks, Harvard students are now beginning to use a digital alternative: scanned books, courtesy of the Harvard-Google Project.

More than 3,000 users accessed Google Book Search through the online HOLLIS catalog in September, Suzanne Kriegsman, the project’s manager, announced to a library staff e-mail list last week.

That number is still rising as the scanning of Harvard’s library collections continues.

The initiative is part of Google’s larger objective to digitize the world’s libraries into a widely accessible and easy-to-search form.

According to Kriegsman’s e-mail, which was obtained by a Crimson reporter, eight libraries at Harvard have finished scanning their books.

Those libraries are Andover-Harvard Theological Library, Gutman Library, Loeb Library, Arnold Arboretum Horticultural Library, Countway Medical Library, Fine Arts Library, Schlesinger Library, and Cabot Library.

Scanning will progress to Loeb Music Library, the Government Documents collection in Lamont Library, and the Harvard-Yenching Library. Scanning is continuing at Widener Library and the Harvard Depository.

Kriegsman could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Dale P. Flecker, associate director for planning and systems at the Harvard University Library, said that work on the project is going “very well.”

The volumes available online now number in the tens of thousands, but Flecker said that many library users do not know about their availability.

“We have not done very much outreach,” he said.

Flecker said that Pforzheimer University Professor Robert C. Darnton ’60, who became the library’s director in July, has been “very supportive of the project and very involved.”

Jan Merrill-Oldham, the Malloy-Rabinowitz preservation librarian, said she is excited by the implications of a universal library accessible to all with a computer and an Internet connection.

Online availability of library collections has the potential to increase exposure for thousands of little-known books that might have been lost to time, Merill-Oldham said.

She added that the quality of Harvard’s scans of its rare books and illuminated manuscripts is good enough to capture “incredible drawings of plants and animals” and “fine pencil marks.”

Launched in late 2004, the Harvard-Google Project encompasses only the books that are not under copyright protection.

Over a million books are affected by the project, though that is a fraction of the University’s holdings of over 15.8 million volumes.

The Internet search firm is also collaborating with other university libraries in the project, including those at Princeton and Stanford Universities.

Microsoft to Acquire 5% Stake in Facebook September 24, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft, Orkut, Parakey, Yahoo, YouTube, google.
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Rumours are spreading today about the possibility of Microsoft acquiring a 5% stake in Facebook, for anywhere between $300 to $500 million.

If my math is correct, that values Facebook at anywhere up to $10 billion, although Mark Zuckerberg has shown signs of not budging for less than $15bn.

Remember when Yahoo made a run at Facebook for $1bn?

For anyone following Facebook over the last few months, this shouldn’t come as a surprise. After acquiring Parakey and hiring the former CFO at YouTube, it is clear that Facebook has been looking to make some big moves. Could this be it?

It is likely that this is a move from Microsoft which will play part in its larger plan to catch up with rival Google. This would be a key acquisition for either of the companies as they realize how important social networking has become to consumers, not to mention Microsoft’s attempt to dominate Web advertising (more than the already-existing Facebook/Microsoft deal that is set to expire in 2011).

While this is just a rumour, it will be interesting to see what happens. Google and Yahoo could make a comeback offer to Facebook, although Google has been pouring many of its efforts into its own social networking site Orkut (www.orkut.com)

Gmail: Watch the final collaborative video September 17, 2007

Posted by kevinpaulmorris in gmail, google, mass collaboration.
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Google recently asked its users to submit clips of how they imagined a Gmail message traveling around the world. A perfect example of collaboration and the people out there willing to submit a small amount of content to develop a much larger initiative.

Check out the final video!