Engadget Knocks $4 billion off Apple Market Cap on Bogus iPhone email Comments

TechCrunch by Michael Arrington - May 16, '07 7:05pm
What a day for Apple investors. The stock started off strong today on a lot of pre-market buying, despite news that Amazon will finally start competing on sales of DRM-free music. Then, whoops, at 11:49 AM EST Engadget posted saying that the iPhone and Leopard operating system launches would be seriously delayed. They based the story [...]
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Behind the scenes with universal search Comments

Official Google Blog by Karen - May 16, '07 7:32pm
Posted by David Bailey, Tech Lead, and Johanna Wright, Product Manager, universal search

So when we were asked to make the vision Marissa describes about universal search into a reality, we admit we were a little daunted. Googlers had tried before to do this without success -- several times. Finding the best answer across multiple content types is a well-known hard problem in the search field. Besides that, we wondered if we had become too big a company to pull off a project this complex.

Here's the challenge in a nutshell: Until now, we've only been able to show news, books, local and other such results at the top of the page, like this example for [trends in education]. But it's a tall order to earn placement at the top of our search results, so plenty often we end up not showing these kinds of results even when they might be useful. If only we could smartly place such results elsewhere on the page when they don't quite deserve the top, we could share the benefits of these great Google features with people much more often.

One challenge was being able to regularly search through all of the additional content types to find relevant results. After all, you don't know if there might be a minor news story or an obscure book relevant to your query unless you go and check. But Google's massive compute cluster -- and much effort by our infrastructure experts -- gave us a leg up on that one, and we can now search these disparate types of information about as efficiently as we search our massive index of web pages. We may have melted down a data center or two along the way, but then bugs are part of life in this business!

The next challenge was deciding when and where such results should blend in. Fortunately we have some of the world's experts on ranking, and have been able to apply the lessons learned on web search to ensure that we show news only for newsworthy queries, scanned books only when there aren't better web results, etc. It can be tricky. As we learned the hard way, just because everyone under the sun is writing about Anna Nicole Smith doesn't mean news about her should show up for the search [baby names].

Lastly, we faced the challenge of the user interface you see on the screen -- the UI. The new UI for these results is subtle, but this is one reason why the project is fun for our designers and usability experts: they get to focus on creating a simple experience for you. For example, with news results they designed a compact look for the result that includes helpful items like an image and a date, but is limited to just the most salient information. Or take our book search results, which call out the author and number of pages in the book. (Of course, we learned that sometimes you don't even need to design a user interface. In one early usability study, shortly after Barry Bonds broke Babe Ruth's home run record, we asked people "how many home runs has Barry Bonds hit?" hoping they would type [barry bonds] into the search box. Instead, each and every one simply blurted out "715".)

We also called on experts from each of our feature areas such as News and Local, and were delighted to find our startup mindset is alive and well. Folks from all over found spare time and pitched in to get us to the finish line. There were many nights when we went to bed knowing that plenty of the team's IM status still reported they were online.

And after all this elbow grease, finally we have something that works. What does it mean for you?

Although it's just a beginning, this first pass of universal search focuses on video, news, local and books. Now you'll be able to get more information Google knows about directly from within the search results. You won't have to know about specialized areas of content. If you're looking for the [atkins southwestern pork fajitas] recipe, we can now link you right to that page in the book. Or if, like me, you've been busy these past few days and have not caught up with your Tivo, don't type [sopranos] into Google, because our news result will be a giant spoiler. The search for [rachmaninoff concerto 3] includes a video of Vladimir Horowitz performing this piece (scroll down to see it), and [Animator vs. Animation 2] is pretty cool as well. (And as Johanna notes: I was delighted to see that when querying for my son's name a video showed up too.)

This is just the tip of the iceberg in making Google results more comprehensive and useful. It has involved launching a number of new systems that will make it much easier for us to continue making improvements so you get the most relevant information from our varied content areas. We hope you like it. And finally, we're especially happy to know that Google is still very much a place where we can get big things done!
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State of the Computer Book Market, Part Four - Programming Languages Q1 07 Comments

O'Reilly Radar by Mike Hendrickson - May 16, '07 7:36pm
In this fourth post [one, two and three are found here] on the State of the Computer Book Market, I will look at programming languages and drill in a little on each language area.
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Researcher Reveals 2-Step Vista UAC Hack Comments

eWEEK Technology News - May 17, '07 7:23am
The technique involves attaching a Trojan to what could otherwise be a legitimate file that the victim must be tricked by social engineering into downloading.

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Senators demand more regulations on Net pharmacies Comments

CNET News.com - May 16, '07 7:51pm
Politicians mull forcing ISPs to block "rogue" pharmacies or monitoring customers' Web traffic to block ads.
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Searchology Comments

InformationWeek RSS Feed - May 16, '07 1:23pm

The entire Bay Area tech press corps seems to be here at Google this morning for an event the company is calling "Searchology." No less than five professional video cameras, plus the odd consumer camcorder, have been trained on the front of the room, where two video screens display "Search ] ology" above a bar of the blue, red, yellow, and green that most everyone now associates with Google.

Elliot Schrage, VP of global communications and public affairs is scheduled to speak shortly, followed by Craig Silverstein, Google's technology director, Ben Gomes , software engineer, and Kerry Rodden, senior user experience researcher.

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[Web Security Magazine] Securing PHP Applications Comments

PHP Magazine - May 16, '07 10:57am

Ilia Alshanetsky posted his talks over the PHP|Tek 2007. The two tutorials took 6 hours of talking, waw ! And it's quite interesting. One of the tutorials is about Securing PHP Applications (PDF) and include a security roundup for PHP application development. "Security is a road, not a destination!" is self explanatory.

There are some recommendations that I find very useful for example about reducing the number of PHP extension currently installed, also about securing sessions and files and how to protect your scripts from injections, XSS and different kind of exploits. Ilia is author of php|architect's Guide to PHP Security, an excellent security reference for PHP developer, check it out if you are looking for more detailed PHP security analysis.

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Google launching 'Universal Search' Comments

CNET News.com - May 16, '07 2:58pm
Blog: Say so long to the Images and Video search silos: Google is finally bringing its search results together.
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VoiceXML rocks Comments

Computerworld Blogs - May 16, '07 2:47pm

I'm in the middle of writing some articles at the moment on a technology called VoiceXML.

I've only recently become aware of VoiceXML, but I have to admit that I am very impressed by what I've seen so far, not only in terms of the standard itself, but also the tools that fit round it.

In a nutshell, VoiceXML enables you to create voice-based interfaces to applications and systems, with a voice browser converting your VoiceXML definition into speech, a voice recognition (or keypad recognition) system accepts responses and can then make decisions about what to do next, including loading over VoiceXML or providing simple responses.

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Engadget sends Apple stock plunging on iPhone rumor Comments

CNET News.com - May 16, '07 1:25pm
Blog: Rumors that iPhone and Leopard were about to be delayed caused a stock market panic until Engadget retracted its post, saying it was based on a fake internal memo.
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