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Google+ New Multi-Column Masonry-Style Layout, Photos Experience and Tools

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16 May
2013
Google+ multi-column Pinterest Masonry-Style Facebook

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

At the Google I/O conference on 16th May, 2013 in San Francisco, Google announced the updates to its Google+ social networking platform of getting 41 new features including a new image-focused design with the bigger pictures and related hashtags that resembles Pinterest’s masonry-style layout and Facebook’s existing layout.

Google’s Vic Gundotra includes also a multi-column design for stream depending on the screen size and orientation considering its way across devices. Photos take center stage and fill the entire width of the stream. Google announced a series of features to improve photos including Auto Awesome – uses set of photos in your library to create an animated GIF and Auto Backup that automatically back up mobile pictures as soon as they taken specially from mobile device also known as instant upload.

 

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LinkedIn launches redesigned iOS, Android apps ease navigation

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18 Apr
2013
Jerwin Pastoral Website Designer and Developer

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

LinkedIn updates arriving today on the iOS and Android platforms are redesigned for more “delightful interactions” throughout the app to become more visually oriented and to reduce the number of steps needed to reach the most important content.

The redesign scraps the four main navigation boxes in the old app in favor of jumping right into the main LinkedIn stream of updates, news and influencer posts.

The update has three core components: a new design throughout the app, a complete makeover for the update stream, and personal navigation options. The new app has much less chrome — the extra sidebars and space that take up precious real estate — and makes it easier to take actions and navigate through LinkedIn.

Photos posted with updates and shared news also have a larger piece of the screen, following ground already plowed by the likes of Facebook, Twitter and Google+ on their mobile apps.

Like Facebook Inc. already has been doing, LinkedIn for the first time will insert mobile ads within the stream of updates flowing through the redesigned app. The mobile ads are supposed to be tied to LinkedIn’s interpretation of each user’s interests.

The LinkedIn video showing off the new app says it all: you can check LinkedIn while grabbing coffee or waiting for the bus. It’s actually a very similar story to the one Facebook told with Facebook Home. Only in this case, it’s a professional network that wants your attention.

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Microsoft’s new Office puts cloud in its corner

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18 Jul
2012
blog-thumb-office-365

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

[This story is running in the print edition of The Seattle Times July 17, 2012. - Janet I. Tu]

SAN FRANCISCO — For two decades, Office has been one of Microsoft’s strongest franchises, the product most computer users turn to when they think about writing, doing spreadsheet analyses or preparing presentations.

But rival companies — namely, Google and its Google Apps — have chipped away at that franchise in recent years, especially as technology turns more mobile and social.

On Monday, Microsoft unveiled its newest version of Office, which aims to protect this lucrative franchise while adapting to the changing computing landscape.

It’s doing so by introducing Office not only as a software package, but as a service that operates from the cloud first and foremost. That means the suite of programs — along with the content people create by using it — will be stored online in the cloud, readily accessible via virtually any device.

And it’s doing so by including more social-networking and communication tools.

“This is the most ambitious release of Microsoft Office that we’ve ever done,” Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said at a media event Monday at San Francisco’s Metreon Mall, adding that it represented a “new generation” of one of Microsoft’s most profitable products.

Rob Helm, an analyst with independent research firm Directions on Microsoft, said the moves represented Microsoft’s attempt to address how consumers — as opposed to businesses — now exert more control on the way computers are used.

“For a long time, Office’s audience has been companies,” he said. “Now those companies’ users have risen up and taken control of how they use technology, to a large extent. Microsoft is trying to get ahead of where those consumers are going.

“The question is: Are they catching up fast enough” — both with where consumers are headed and what rival companies serving them are doing, Helm said.

Among the highlights of what Ballmer and other executives introduced Monday:

* The cloud-based version of Office, called Office 365, will be expanded from its current target audience of businesses and organizations to consumers. There will be three new editions of Office 365: Home Premium, Small Business Premium and ProPlus for enterprise customers. (The Customer Preview version of Office 365 is available to try at office.com/preview.)

* Businesses and individuals still can buy the more traditional Office software licenses, which will all carry the “2013″ designation, such as “Office Home and Student 2013,” “Word 2013″ and “PowerPoint 2013.”

* Both Office 365 and Office 2013 will store documents to Microsoft’s SkyDrive personal online storage service by default. That means a user’s documents are readily accessible via PC, tablet or smartphone, as well as offline.

* Microsoft highlighted the new Office’s close integration with Windows 8, including the ability to use touch instead of a mouse to perform computer functions. It also showed “inking,” the ability to use a stylus to take handwritten notes or mark up documents.

* Office Home and Student 2013 RT will be included on Windows RT, the version of Windows 8 on tablets running on ARM processors. One version of Surface, Microsoft’s branded tablet, will run on ARM processors.

* The software will have more social features, including Yammer, the business-social network service Microsoft recently bought.

* Skype will be integrated into the new Office.

Just as notable, perhaps, is what Microsoft didn’t announce, including a release date.

It also didn’t give prices for either Office 365 subscriptions or Office 2013 software licenses, saying they will be announced in the fall. And there was no announcement about a specific Office app for iPad/iOS or Android.

“I think they’re headed in the right direction,” said Helm, the analyst with Directions on Microsoft. “But technology is moving so fast it may not be possible for Office to keep up.”

An encouraging sign on that front was Microsoft’s assertion that it would deliver patches and updates more frequently in Office 365, via the cloud.

“If Microsoft starts turning out Office not every three years but every six months, its chances of catching up look lots better,” Helm said.

Several analysts said that, overall, the new features on Office look good and that they mark a step in the right direction for Microsoft, though they’re not industry-disrupting features.

“I think it was more evolutionary than revolutionary,” said Michael Osterman, president of Osterman Research, which focuses on workplace communication and collaboration tools.

“Certainly, Microsoft has had to compete against Google Apps for a while now,” he said. “This was a significant step in that competition,” and toward merging the online and offline experience.

Osterman and other analysts wondered, however, if the new features would be enough.

They also wondered if some people and businesses would be turned off because the user interface — which plays off the tile-based Metro design of Windows 8 — will be so different.

“It will be useful. It will have a nice interface. But it won’t be a compelling reason to buy Windows 8 just to get Office 2013,” Osterman said.

Michael Silver, an analyst with research firm Gartner, said, “it’s hard to say [Microsoft] is playing catch up when they still have 90 percent-plus of the office-productivity market. But they have a lot of heavy competition, especially in Google.”

The cloud integration helps, he said. “But we’re still waiting for an iPad product. Also, timing will be challenging because organizations are still working on Windows 7 and Office 2010.”

Rebecca Wettemann, vice president of technology analysis firm Nucleus Research, said the new version of Office is “interesting if I have a device that supports touch,” but otherwise “there’s little compelling here given the cost and disruption of moving to a new version of an application.”

Moving to the cloud was a smart move for Microsoft, Wettemann said, but the biggest challenge, she believes, simply will be learning the new user interface.

“It’s not that users won’t use it. The problem is that it takes them more time to find the functionality they need,” she said. “It may be a far better car, but if I switch the gas and the brake pedals, the driver’s going to have problems.”

[tweet https://twitter.com/janettu/status/224936485797892096]

 

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Google is acquiring Meebo, will move team to Google+

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20 Jun
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Meebo announced earlier this month that it would be shutting down in July due to its acquisition by Google. The Meebo team is now sending out email notifications to users who might not be in the know about the acquisition as well as reminders about how to retrive chat logs before July 11, 2012. The company said in a note on its website. On that day, Meebo Messenger, Sharing on Meebo, all Meebo Me widgets, and all of Meebo’s mobile apps will be discontinued. The only Meebo product that will live on is the Meebo Bar, which will see “continued improvements and new features,” in the coming weeks and months, Meebo wrote.

Meebo users have the next month to download their chat logs and share histories. To download you chat logs, visit https://www.meebo.com/chatlog-download. To download your sharing data, log on to log in to meebo.com, and you will see a link that will let you download your complete history. Those who want to delete their account can do so at meebo.com/support/deleteaccount/.

The full email follows:

Subject: Meebo Messenger is being retired

You may have heard the news recently that Google has acquired Meebo.

The Meebo Bar for site publishers will continue to be available and will see continued improvements and new features in the weeks and months ahead.

However, as part of this transition, Meebo Messenger will be retired on July 11, 2012.

As a past Messenger user, we wanted you to know that until July 11 you can download your archived Messenger chat logs. Log into your account on Meebo Messenger for a download link. Please act soon — after July 11, chat archives will be deleted.

If you don’t want to retrieve your chat logs, no action needs to be taken.

This is a one-time courtesy email to let you know about the upcoming changes and the availability of your chat logs for download; there is no need to unsubscribe.

Thank you for being a part of the Meebo community. The team here has loved every minute of the past seven years, and we’re honored that you chose to trust Meebo as a place to have conversations with friends, family and colleagues. As we turn our attention to a new chapter, joining forces with the Google+ team, we look back with great appreciation to everyone who used and loved Meebo Messenger along the way.

Sincerely,
Sandy, Seth, and the Meebo Team

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Google Doodle: Pays Tribute to Philippine Independence Day 2012

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12 Jun
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google once again and for the second time gives honor to our country’s National Flag Day. To commemorate the Philippine Independence Day on the web.

Visitors to Google’s homepage were greeted with the Google logo with the letters in blue and red, the colors of the Philippine flag.

The second “o” in “Google” resembled the sun, surrounded by three stars. Clicking on the doodle will take the visitor to a Search Results page featuring Wikipedia entries on the Philippine Declaration of Independence and Philippine Independence Day.

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Google Docs will soon be upgraded to Google Drive

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15 May
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

In addition to Dropbox and Microsoft SkyDrive getting new features, Google has just launched Google Drive, its official cloud storage or file sync solution. According to Walt Mossberg, the new service will replace Google Docs–Docs will soon redirect to Drive, with all your existing files transferred over.

Like Dropbox, SkyDrive, and Box, you can install desktop software on your Windows or OS X computer to “sync” files locally. In Windows, the app creates a new Google Drive folder within your Users folder. However, the Google Docs you created online aren’t actually local files–they’re .gdoc files that are actually just links to your Google Drive account. Google Drive currently has apps for Windows, Mac, and Android , with iOS support coming later.

Users start with 5GB of storage for free to create or upload documents, videos, photos, and other files, with pricing plans that range from 25GB of storage for $2.50 a month all the way up to 1TB for $50 a month. This isn’t the same as the storage used by emails in Gmail, though your Gmail storage capacity will go up from 7GB to 25GB if you opt for a paid Google Drive account.

Google Drive’s strengths lie in its integration with Google’s other services: powerful searching of your documents in the familiarity of Google Docs editing. SkyDrive also lets you edit in-browser with Microsoft Office Web Apps, but in my experience, not as many people use that as they do Google Docs.

Google Drive is the much-anticipated service that Google had always wanted to incorporate into its ever-popular Android OS. Since its release, many users have been thinking of integrating their files with the next-big-thing in cloud storage.

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New UI Design of Google Plus for Profile and Business Page

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18 Apr
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google has rolled out the complete new, neat and decent interface of Google Plus. They added many new features including the Cover Photos for Google Plus Profiles and Pages. The users have option to add scrapbook photos or profile photos to their Google Plus profiles as well as pages. Also, the profile photos are now much larger of 250 x 250 pixels.

Exact sizes of Google Plus Cover Photo is 940 pixels of width and 180 pixel of height. Meanwhile, you still have an option to add five smaller scrapbook photos in the same area with the dimension of 110 pixel of width and height.

The following video has more details on how you can customize the profile page of your Google Plus account. Also, this slide has more detailed information on the layout and dimensions of profile photos.

Navigation that you can make your own
The navigation panel on the left hand side is adjustable based on your preference.
-You can drag apps up or down to create the order you want
-You can hover over certain apps to reveal a set of quick actions
-You can show or hide apps by moving them in and out of “More”

Conversation and Sharing
Google+ is may your favorite for extended conversations with people with the easiest to share with your circles from just about anywhere, and the Hangouts system has proven time and again to be an invaluable.
-Full bleed photos and videos that’ll make you really proud to post
-A stream of conversation “cards” that make it easier to scan and join discussions
-An activity drawer that highlights the community around your content

The chat tool has been moved to the far right, allowing the list of active instant messenger users go all the way down this side of the page. This is a huge improvement for anyone who has more that fifteen users on their list, which was a previous limitation of the chat implementation.

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Google Play is the New Android Market

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10 Mar
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google Play launched on Tuesday and rolling out during the next few days on Android tablets and smartphones.

The new service does not really offer anything new, still the same syncing across devices, play movies on one device then watch on another etc. But the important thing is that Google now have a single store for entertainment, just like iTunes app.

In a move to unify their entertainment divisions, Google are rebranding the Android market and creating ‘Google Play’ which will help Google compete with rival systems from Apple iTunes and Amazon, combines the Android Market, Google Music and the Google eBookstore in a cloud based entertainment system.

Users will get space in their cloud accounts for up to 20,000 music tracks and the Android market has around 450,000 apps and games along with rental or buy options for thousands of movies.

If you have an Android device, you may be wondering how to update it. To answer your question, it will update automatically.

To check the version of Android Market/Google Play on your device:

Press Home, press Menu, and touch Settings
Touch Applications
Touch Manage applications
Touch the All tab (Android 2.2 or higher), or press Menu, touch Filter, and touch All (Android 2.1 or lower)
Scroll down and select Market/Play Store

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Heatmap tools for tracking user behaviour on a website

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07 Mar
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

How to's

A heat map is a graphical representation of data where the individual values contained in a matrix are represented as colors. (Souce: wikipedia )

Click heat maps and click visualizers help you to see where your customers are clicking on your web pages so that you can best optimize the pages to get more page views or more revenue or just better navigation for your customers. Click heat maps display the clicks that are made on your pages in a visual form to help you see where people are clicking. Heatmaps visualize the stream of visitors on your website – showing hot and cold click zones. They provide an overall view of the activity and helps you to see every mouse movement and every click. It will improve web usability, conversions and revenue.

Reasons to use heatmaps

  • See, where people don’t click and why. It helps to…
  • Optimize landing pages
  • Optimize link & advert placement
  • Minimize shopping cart abandonment
  • Maximize conversions of online forms
  • Predict how visitors will use your site in the future.
  • Simplify web usability testing
  • Short: Find problems and fix them to boost your web project!

How to understand and use heatmaps
As an example we will take a look at my website. A heatmap overlay on the right shows the pattern of user behavior for the menu on top and on the main screenshot of my latest projects.

To know what all these different colors mean
The colors show the density of userclicks. Cooler colors such as blue and green get less clicks. Warmer colors get the most clicks.

The color key references the amount of participants whose eyes fixated on certain parts of the page. The red/orange/yellow areas are where the larger amount of the groupd looked most. The dark blue areas are where they looked least (Source: Poynter Online).

The red/orange color indivates that almost all subjects halted their gaze at that part of the page for at least a fraction of a second.

The yellow color indicates that more than half of all subjects haltered their gaze the part of the page for at least a fraction of a second.

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New Google+ iOS app, now with Instant Upload!

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16 Feb
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

This month the Google+ iOS app is getting an upgrade to include a feature that’s been the most demanded by users – instant upload.

Instant upload automatically puts every photo and video that you take using your smartphone into a private album within Google+. From there, you can choose what to share (and importantly what not to share) with your circles. It’s a pretty great feature that takes away the pain of having to upload every single photo you take manually to the network.

Google+ product manager Anton Lopyrev elaborates in a Google+ post:

Instant Upload is only active while the Google+ iOS app is open, and for a brief period after you close it. Re-opening the Google+ app resumes your photo & video uploads exactly where they left off.

Google aired a new commercial during the Grammys on Sunday night called “New Dad.” The ad specifically touted Google+’s instant upload feature, making the case that it will help you “never lose a memory.”

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New Facebook lightbox viewer suchlike Google+ counterpart

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09 Feb
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Facebook tweaked its photo viewer interface, making it look a lot like its counterpart on Google+.

The new display helps make photos more attractive by showing them larger, moving comments off to the side, and graying out the background to minimize distraction.

The lightbox feature has slowly been released to pockets of Facebook users over the last week. The new display helps Facebook compete with other photo services and social networks that already offer bigger, crisper viewers that make photography shine.

In the beginning, photos were small and lived on the actual web page. Then Facebook introduced its Theater feature, which turned the photos into pop-ups. Now, the lightbox feature dims the whole Facebook page and subdues the comments box by moving it to the right side of the screen. When you click on any photo on Facebook, it will now fill your screen and the background becomes a light grey. The photo information and comments are displayed on the right, eliminating the need to scroll down to see comments. When you hover over a photo, two large buttons to like and tag a picture are also available. Ads appear in the lower right corner as well on certain photos.

The new interface has also taken advantage of some under-used advertising real estate and now shows sponsored posts below the comments. However, the advertisements are pushed down as more comments are added.

Photographers are enthusiastic about two other recent photo features on Facebook: the cover photo at the top of the new timeline feature and the new thumbnails. Ever since Google+ has come out and had success with the photography crowd.

Google+ allows you to upload photos up to 2048-by-2048 pixels; any larger will be resized down. In 2010, Facebook increased its maximum photo size from 604 pixels, to 720 pixels on one side. Then, in February 2011, it bumped its photo size to 2048 pixels as well. Whether or not the lightbox feature compresses them down for viewing, however, remains to be seen.

Google, which many people pointed out had the lightbox function first on Google+.

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Picnik: Google Closes Its Cool Photo-Editing Service along with a number of other services

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22 Jan
2012

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google keeps on slimming down its product line to focus on what CEO Larry Page calls its “big bets.” Today it offered updates on five products that will be going dark this year. It’s announced that it’s shuttering even more offerings, and one of them is Picnik, the excellent online photo editor which it bought in 2010 and the team will work on Google’s other photo products. Google is also shutting down its Social Graph API as its Google+ API slowly trickles out. Okay, it looks like Google really is serious about its oft-stated plans to focus on fewer services and do them better.

The closure isn’t abrupt or catastrophic. Google is giving Picnik users plenty of warning–the service isn’t going away until April 19th–and they’ll be able to download their photos. But unlike some of Google’s shutdowns, closing Picnik isn’t a tacit acknowledgment that a service never found an audience. (I never heard of Google’s Gmail Message Continuity and Social Graph API until the company said they were going away.) Picnik is popular, and it’s good, and the world will be a sadder place place without it–at least for folks who already know and love it.

Why is it going away? That’s not entirely clear. Google’s blog post says it’s so “the Picnik team can continue creating photo-editing magic across Google products. ” But when you go to Picnik, you get a message that “Picnik is moving its easy yet powerful photo editing tools to Google+,” which is a slightly different message. In either case, though, it sounds like Google thinks that photo editing is less of a destination, which is what Picnik was, and more of a feature.

It’s also worth noting that Picnik was Flash-based. This is just guesswork on my part, but it likely hastened the service’s demise. It certainly made it harder to integrate its features with other Google services, and probably even reduced Google’s enthusiasm for pointing to Picnik from elsewhere on Google

If Picnik had lived, it would surely have required a rewrite to become a pure HTML5 service, which would have been a major undertaking. I imagine that Google is busily working on improving its HTML5 graphics tools, and decided it wasn’t worth it to try and roll them into an all-new version of Picnik.

In fact, it’s pretty clear that Google circa 2012 is generally less interested in managing a bunch of destinations, and more interested in beefing up Google+. It wants to give you every possible incentive to join and use its social network.

Google will also open-source its Sky Map this year in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon university. The Google Message Continuity service, which backs up email for enterprise customers, will be retired in favor of Google Apps. The Needlebase data management platform will be integrated into other services. Finally, Urchin, whose product ultimately became Google Analytics, still had a standalone client-hosted version, which will be closed in March.

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Facebook sending less email notifications

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21 Sep
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

I just woke up to an email from the Facebook Team which says I’ll get less email notifications from them going forward. In fact, they might already have started doing it as I haven’t received a lot of emails from them in the recent past, or from the 25th of August. I used to get an email notification every time someone commented on any one of my Facebook Pages. By the way, here is the screenshot of the email I received in the morning.

Now, if you really want to turn individual emails back on and restore all your original settings, you can do that at any time. Just click on the above link to go your Facebook Notification Settings and Uncheck the box to change your Email Frequency preferences as shown below.

You might as well want to change the Email Notification settings for individual category such as Photos, Groups, Pages and so on.

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Google Gravity

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18 Sep
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google is always easy to use. Now, you can play with Google. Ricardo Cabello a designer/developer has created Google Gravity. A fun filled site, in which the elements of the Google Home page are subjected to gravitational force and they fall down.

You can still use Google Gravity to search the web. Google Gravity turns of search experience into a fun filled playful one. You can play with the elements in Google Gravity, like the Google logo or the search box or links. You can drag them and throw them or do whatever you want.

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Yahoo Sells Delicious To YouTube Founders

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17 Sep
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Back in December of last year Yahoo released a statement that they would close down several of their web properties. Among them popular social bookmarking site Delicious. The statement turned out to not be entirely true, as Yahoo later reassured Delicious’ users that they would keep the service running.

I read on the official Delicious blog that the “YouTube founders acquire Delicious”. Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, who have founded YouTube and sold it less than two years later to Google have acquired Delicious which will become part of their company AVOS.

A blog post on the Avos company website reveals that they have intentions to improve the site by making it “more fun to save, share and discover the web’s “tastiest” content”. For that, they “plan to work closely with the community over the next few months to develop innovative features to help solve the problem of information overload”.

Delicious users who log into their account will be greeted with a “Delicious is moving to a new home” message. Users have to agree to transfer their bookmarks, account information and other data to the new company. Account data of users who do not agree to move and who do not log into their account in the migration period will become unavailable around July 2011. This screen is shown on every log in.

Users do have the option to export their bookmarks to a local computer

A FAQ has been put online that addresses several pressing questions. One of the interesting tidbits is that AVOS plans to build a Delicious extension for Firefox 4 and publish it as soon as possible.

It is likely that Delicious will lose a good chunk of its bookmarks, at least the private ones, during the transition period. First from users who once used an account but do not anymore, and from spammers who have auto-created hundreds of thousands of Delicious accounts to place links to their sites on the popular bookmarking service. It is not clear how AVOS will handle public bookmarks of users who have not agreed to move their data.

It feels logical that the company could use those bookmarks in anonymized form on the new Delicious, considering that they have been public all the time.

It seems as if AVOS has every intention to improve Delicious, and it will be interesting to read more about the company’s plans and see them in action on the site.

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New Changes To The Google Sign In Pages

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18 Aug
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google the search engine giant and provider of several services like email,advertising programs,social networking etc silently introduced new sign in page for their Google accounts.

I noticed that the page fits better with white space around the left and the right side. In other words if you are using a bigger / wider screen the page will limit itself to a particular width which makes the Google Sign in page look much better as compared with the older one.

The New to Gmail and Create an Account links has now been shifted at the top and there is plenty of blank space below the Sign in Form. The content is the same and so are the links.

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Google’s New Sitelink Format Experimented

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10 Aug
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google is once again testing — or continuing to test — a jumbo-sized search result that displays a whopping 12 sitelinks below the main/top search result. Here’s one example of how it looks:

But the test actually dates back to at least April, when it was noticed on WebmasterWorld and discussed for about a week.

In all of the screenshots and examples that searchers have posted, the dozen sitelinks only show up on specific entity-related queries such as the exact company/organization/location name or its exact URL.

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Preview Pane: Gmail New Labs Feature

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09 Aug
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Google may have announced the impending shut-down of Google Labs, but Gmail Labs is still putting out new optional features for Gmail users.

Google has released the “Preview Pane” as a Gmail Labs feature. This allows users to preview messages in their inbox using a layout similar to how Gmail looks on a tablet device.

“When I check my email, I often rely on the message snippets to figure out which messages to open first,” says Gmail Associate Product Manager Maciek Nowakowski. “Sometimes, though, I want to see more than snippets, which is why I’m happy to announce that you can now preview messages in your inbox using a new feature in Gmail Labs called Preview Pane.”

Like all Gmail Labs feature, you have to enable it in settings. Once you’ve done so, you’ll see a toggle button in the right corner of your message list. This lets you switch between preview and list views. The button looks like this:

“For those of you who have more vertical space you can also move the preview pane below your message list. You can enable this using the dropdown arrow next to the toggle button,” notes Nowakowski. “By default there is a 3-second delay in marking a conversation as read after previewing it. If that doesn’t feel natural to you, you can change the timing in the General tab of settings.”

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Your Google+ URL STINKS Here’s How To Make It Awesome

0
13 Jul
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

The URLs for Google+ profiles include a user number, and they’re huge.
Mine is 112877617361540150611, and it’s a joke to try to remember that.
That’s why I like gplus.to, a URL shortening service for Google+ profiles.
Instead of that nonsense string of numbers, now my user profile lives at gplus.to/jerwinpastoral.
Shorten your profile URL to make it easier to remember!
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Google’s Social Networking Approach called Google+ Project

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05 Jul
2011

by Jerwin Pastoral

Blog

Make no mistake, although Google’s previous approach to social networking, namely “Buzz,” was a failure, the new Google+ Project has been tested by several analysts who give it their approval for bringing innovative features to the table, promising more control over the social networking experience.

Through the conventional social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, the idea of networking revolves around making posts on either your own or your friends’ wall. Something posted is normally viewable for all of your accepted friends to see.

With Google+, Google makes a point: Our comments are not always intended to be a public announcement as such but only for a select, maybe family and close friends.

Google+ builds in this area by giving the user more control over who he wants to share a comment/post with and is betting on this card to differentiate itself from Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook.

The new feature is called +Circles which provides a tech-savvy interface displaying “circles” into which you may simply drag the people you want belonging to the groups you create whether it be “best friends,” “family,” “workmates,” etc.

+Sparks is another feature introduced in Google + which can be described as a search engine for comments or “sharing engine.” Reading comments from other users on topics that interest you ranging from a product, to a dish, to a trip is made easy with this tool.

+Hangouts can be described as “skyping” with several friends at the same time. A feature that allows live camera meetings or hangouts for up to 10 people will also be equipped with a set of live communication tools such as instant messaging.

+Mobile is a set of features that will allow this networking service to be taken to the mobile world. Google released an app for the Android and the mobile version is available for iPhones.

Currently Google+ and its features are available either by being invited into it or signing up and waiting for Google to set up an account for you.

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