11 Results for google

OStatic Buffer Overflow.....

Feeling the storage pinch? Try open source disk space analyzers.....

Yahoo! open strategy is not enough.....

Why Linux owes (part of) its success to Microsoft.....

Google launches App Engine dashboard.....

UnChrome removes the unique ID from Chrome.....



Google and Chrome: How Much Does the Company Really Care About Firefox?

Ever since Google unveiled its open source Chrome browser, I and others have been wondering what its stance toward Mozilla Firefox will be going forward. Firefox, of course, has proven to be the little engine that could among really ubiquitous open source applications, with more than 20 percent market share now. Firefox has also been subsidized by Google for years, to the tune of tens of millions of dollars, and Google recently pledged to continue that funding through 2011. Still, there are some signs that Google's long-term plan may be to promote Chrome at what could be the expense of Firefox. Is Firefox's future in peril?


OpenX's Open Source Ad Serving Showing Signs of Strength

OpenX, the open source ad server for web publishers, is out with some very strong statistics today.? We've written about the company before, and how it lets you manage a mix of ads from multiple networks. While many have questioned how the small? company can compete with Google Ad Manager, there are some signs that it is doing an effective job, and many large sites, including TechCrunch, use OpenX. Here are some thoughts on the company's results.


Google Chrome's Kimono Opened--A Little

Stephen Shankland from CNet has an interesting item up today about the very first non-Google coder getting an invitation to add code directly to the open source browser project. In a blog post, Evan Martin, a software engineer at Google, nominates University of Warsaw computer science student Pawel Hajdan Jr. to move from contributor --submitting patches and the like to the Chrome team--to committer, working directly on the browser's code. The nomination provides a glimpse of how high-profile open source projects truly treat openness.


Yes, Chrome Loses Its Beta Status -- Already

When Google's Marissa Mayer told TechCrunch's Michael Arrington that Chrome would drop the beta designation less than two days ago, the implication was that it would happen pretty quickly. When you consider the length of some beta stages (and drawn out, fanfare driven gold releases), Chrome's 1.0 release yesterday was fast and relatively quiet.

InformationWeek shares a little of my aforementioned concern that taking an application out of the testing stage prematurely can have some serious consequences, and it does offer some insight into Google's thought processes.



Chrome to Lose Beta Status -- Already?

TechCrunch's Michael Arrington is reporting that Google's vice president Marissa Mayer told him in an interview that Chrome will be coming out of beta.

Mayer didn't give a definite time frame, but one would assume that this would mean sooner rather than later. This announcement is a little surprising for a few reasons.



Google Squashes the Rumor: Announces Native Client Technology

Though the majority of companies have policies pertaining to responding to speculation, sometimes it just gets to a point they have to. For instance, say a rumor makes the rounds (with at least some supporting evidence) that Google has something up its sleeve that might possibly have to do with an operating system. Google can keep mum for a while, but it obviously has to be formally addressed, sooner or later.

It's unclear whether Google originally intended on announcing its Native Code Project last night, or if it hoped it could squeak out some more prep time before anyone noticed something was afoot. Either way, Google has unveiled Native Client, a technology that Google says will give web developers the full power of the client's CPU while maintaining browser safety, complete portability, and safety. And yes, it is open source.



Keeping Tabs (Virtually) on the Ubuntu Developer Summit

Are you an Ubuntu developer/Launchpad member who had fate conspire against you, keeping you from the the Ubuntu Developer Summit this week at the clandestine Google Crittenden Campus in Mountain View?

It's not quite the same, but Mike Basinger has the details on how to be there without actually attending. For Launchpad registered developers, the UDS schedule page has links to live streams (video and audio) for the talks and presentations, as well as instructions on how to use VOIP to participate.

Not registered with Launchpad? More of an interested onlooker than a developer? The Jaunty Jackalope UDS attendees have rigged a number of virtual postcards for the event featuring more than the local weather and obligatory wish you were here.



Operating System Grist for the Google Rumor Mill

Last week, Net Applications reported Microsoft's operating system share had fallen below the 90 percent mark on the 40,000 or so websites where it gathers its traffic statistics. InternetNews is reporting that Net Applications made another interesting, if puzzling, discovery.

It seems the statistics gathered from Google.com (this only includes Google employees -- not the public using the search engine) were showing that a third of these users were accessing sites with an unknown operating system. It's more interesting when you consider that proxy servers block all identifying information, but the Google.com unknown systems only had the operating system information obscured.

Theories abound, of course, as to what Google might have up its sleeve. There's the Google is bringing Android to the PC school of thought, and the networking application infrastructure development theory.



Windows Drops Below 90% Market Share--Firefox Above 20%

NetApplications is out with a couple of new metrics of market share for operating systems and browsers, and the news is good for open source. Topping their findings, Microsoft Windows' market share has dropped below 90 percent for the first time in its measurements. The share erosion is largely attributed to increased interest in the Mac platform, but Linux is cited as on the rise as well. In addition, for the first time since it launched its metrics, NetApplications' data shows Firefox's market share topping 20 percent.


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