Sudesh Mesta http://sudesh.posterous.com Views of Digital World posterous.com Mon, 26 Oct 2009 07:20:48 -0700 Today, 7.5m Web Pages and 8m Images Will Be Deleted from the Internet Permanently http://sudesh.posterous.com/today-75m-web-pages-and-8m-images-will-be-del http://sudesh.posterous.com/today-75m-web-pages-and-8m-images-will-be-del

Yahoo! acquired Geocities in January 1999 and, after operating the service for more than 10 years, they are finally shutting it down today.

Geocities hosts around 7+ million public web pages and 8+ million images according to Google. This number can be much higher because some of the Geocities sites could be private and therefore Google won’t know have details about such pages.

Starting today, Yahoo! will remove each and every Geocities hosted page from the Internet and that means introducing a few hundred million broken links, if not more, on the Internet. Let’s see how how quickly search engines manage to remove this “404″ clutter from their results.

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Wed, 08 Jul 2009 05:46:00 -0700 Introducing the Google Chrome OS http://sudesh.posterous.com/introducing-the-google-chrome-os-3 http://sudesh.posterous.com/introducing-the-google-chrome-os-3

It's been an exciting nine months since we launched the Google Chrome browser. Already, over 30 million people use it regularly. We designed Google Chrome for people who live on the web — searching for information, checking email, catching up on the news, shopping or just staying in touch with friends. However, the operating systems that browsers run on were designed in an era where there was no web. So today, we're announcing a new project that's a natural extension of Google Chrome — the Google Chrome Operating System. It's our attempt to re-think what operating systems should be.

Google Chrome OS is an open source, lightweight operating system that will initially be targeted at netbooks. Later this year we will open-source its code, and netbooks running Google Chrome OS will be available for consumers in the second half of 2010. Because we're already talking to partners about the project, and we'll soon be working with the open source community, we wanted to share our vision now so everyone understands what we are trying to achieve.

Speed, simplicity and security are the key aspects of Google Chrome OS. We're designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds. The user interface is minimal to stay out of your way, and most of the user experience takes place on the web. And as we did for the Google Chrome browser, we are going back to the basics and completely redesigning the underlying security architecture of the OS so that users don't have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates. It should just work.

Google Chrome OS will run on both x86 as well as ARM chips and we are working with multiple OEMs to bring a number of netbooks to market next year. The software architecture is simple — Google Chrome running within a new windowing system on top of a Linux kernel. For application developers, the web is the platform. All web-based applications will automatically work and new applications can be written using your favorite web technologies. And of course, these apps will run not only on Google Chrome OS, but on any standards-based browser on Windows, Mac and Linux thereby giving developers the largest user base of any platform.

Google Chrome OS is a new project, separate from Android. Android was designed from the beginning to work across a variety of devices from phones to set-top boxes to netbooks. Google Chrome OS is being created for people who spend most of their time on the web, and is being designed to power computers ranging from small netbooks to full-size desktop systems. While there are areas where Google Chrome OS and Android overlap, we believe choice will drive innovation for the benefit of everyone, including Google.

We hear a lot from our users and their message is clear — computers need to get better. People want to get to their email instantly, without wasting time waiting for their computers to boot and browsers to start up. They want their computers to always run as fast as when they first bought them. They want their data to be accessible to them wherever they are and not have to worry about losing their computer or forgetting to back up files. Even more importantly, they don't want to spend hours configuring their computers to work with every new piece of hardware, or have to worry about constant software updates. And any time our users have a better computing experience, Google benefits as well by having happier users who are more likely to spend time on the Internet.

We have a lot of work to do, and we're definitely going to need a lot of help from the open source community to accomplish this vision. We're excited for what's to come and we hope you are too. Stay tuned for more updates in the fall and have a great summer.

Via: http://googleblog.blogspot.com

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Sun, 21 Jun 2009 02:57:26 -0700 Invitation to connect on LinkedIn http://sudesh.posterous.com/invitation-to-connect-on-linkedin-21 http://sudesh.posterous.com/invitation-to-connect-on-linkedin-21

LinkedIn

I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn.

- Sudesh

Learn more:
https://www.linkedin.com/e/isd/624657570/czAKHVWn/

© 2009, LinkedIn Corporation

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Sun, 21 Jun 2009 02:57:24 -0700 Invitation to connect on LinkedIn http://sudesh.posterous.com/invitation-to-connect-on-linkedin-22 http://sudesh.posterous.com/invitation-to-connect-on-linkedin-22

LinkedIn

I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn.

- Sudesh

Accept Sudesh Mesta's invite:
https://www.linkedin.com/e/isd/624657571/U8NwgSf5/

© 2009, LinkedIn Corporation

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Fri, 22 May 2009 05:33:43 -0700 Wridea Is an Online Organizer for Your Ideas http://sudesh.posterous.com/wridea-is-an-online-organizer-for-your-ideas http://sudesh.posterous.com/wridea-is-an-online-organizer-for-your-ideas

If you've ever wanted a one-stop shop for saving, organizing, and sharing your ideas,web application Wridea might be just what you are looking for.

Once you've signed up and created a free account, you can add new ideas, categorize them, and share them with your friends using the very simple web interface—in fact, that's the drawback of using this tool instead ofexpanding your brain with Evernote or using OneNote as a powerful note-taking application—it doesn't have enough features for a power user used to tagging and sorting their thoughts.

On the other hand, it does have the ability to share ideas and feedback with your friends, an interesting developer API for third-party add-ons, and a unique "Idea Rain" visualization that drops your ideas into the screen—so it could be worth a look for anybody looking for a completely web-based solution to storing and sharing ideas.

Wridea

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Fri, 22 May 2009 05:32:06 -0700 Gmail Inbox Preview Shows Message Blurbs While Loading http://sudesh.posterous.com/gmail-inbox-preview-shows-message-blurbs-whil http://sudesh.posterous.com/gmail-inbox-preview-shows-message-blurbs-whil

Gmail Labs' newest feature, an "Inbox Preview" on the loading screen, might just be the best thing that ever happened to email checkers working off a shaky or slow connection.

As Gmail's engineers point out, it stinks to wait for Gmail to load up all its AJAX-y, gadget-loaded interface, just to find out there's no new mail. Sure, there's a "Basic HTML" view you can click in the lower-right corner to speed things up, but with Inbox Preview enabled in your Settings/Labs list, you'll get a plain text preview of your 10 newest messages and blurbs from each of them.

For those often facing a weak or restricted connection, this feature seems like a must-enable—even if it might tempt one into futile clicks on static messages. Others might have their new-message bases covered with any of the myriad message checker apps out there, but casual web users will probably dig this feature.

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Fri, 08 May 2009 04:56:28 -0700 How to Make Gmail Your Ultimate Productivity Center http://sudesh.posterous.com/how-to-make-gmail-your-ultimate-productivity http://sudesh.posterous.com/how-to-make-gmail-your-ultimate-productivity

These days there are a proliferation of digital tools we use for productivity, for time management, for communication, for social networking, for keeping track of our lives, online and off.

It can be a nightmare to keep track of it all, and frankly, it’s a bit unproductive to keep switching between a dozen different tools.

Enter Gmail, my favorite solution for just about anything. OK, maybe not for things like solving marital problems or spending time with my kids, but … give it time. :)

It’s already pretty clear that Gmail is the best tool for email, and integrations with calendar and chat have made it the go-to place for much of our information. But Gmail Gadgets have allowed us to bring the rest of the pieces of the puzzle together. Now we can do just about everying in one place - Gmail.

Here’s how:

1. Email: Gmail is how email should be done. With great filters, you can keep your inbox fairly clean. With keyboard shortcuts, you can get through the inbox in minutes. With labels and archiving, you don’t spend time filing. With threaded conversations, your email stays organized. There are dozens of smart little innovations, from automatic contacts to a “send and archive” button and much more. If you’re not using Gmail for email yet, you should strongly consider a change.

2. To-do: Gmail only recently added a Tasks feature, something most of us have been wanting for a long time. It’s just about the simplest to-do list there is. You add a task. You check it off. You can re-order them. That’s about it. But it’s incredibly useful, because here’s the trick: you’re zooming through your inbox, and when you find an email that requires an action … you add it to the task listin Gmail. Then you archive the email, instead of leaving it in your inbox. Result: clear inbox! Cool feature: you can turn an email into a task, which means the task is linked to the email, and you can easily open the email by clicking on the task. Enable Gmail Tasks by going to Labs (in the upper right corner of Gmail). For Remember the Milk users, there’s also an RTM gadget of course.

3. Calendar. Google’s Calendar (Gcal) is hands down the fastest, easiest and best calendar I’ve used (and yes, I’ve tried iCal, Outlook, 30 Boxes and Sunbird). It just works exactly like you’d want it to work. And now it’s in Gmail’s sidebar, so you can see your events at a glance while in Gmail, and even add tasks quickly without having to go to the calendar. Also cool: Gcal, like Google Docs and Gmail (see below) now has an offline mode, so you don’t have to worry about being connected to the Internet. Enable the GCal gadget in Gmail by going to Labs.

4. Docs. Are you still using a desktop word processing or spreadsheet app? Consider switching to Google Docs & Spreadsheets, which I use exclusively now. It’s online (with offline access now), it’s simple, it opens the usual formats, and it’s so much better for collaboration. Seriously — no more emailing different versions to people. Best yet, no need to sync docs between computers or carry them around on a USB flash drive. And now, with the Docs gadget in Gmail, you can open your docs from within Gmail, making it even more of a one-stop center for all your productivity and information needs. Enable the Google Docs gadget in Gmail by going to Labs (in the upper right corner of Gmail).

5. Twitter. A lot of people are finding Twitter to be an incredible place to connect with others, to find great things to read, to keep in touch with what’s happening now. But keeping your Twitter app open all the time can be unproductive. Enter Twitter Gadget, which takes seconds to install into Gmail and lets you have the most important functions of Twitter right within your all-in-one productivity center — you can see your Twitter stream, replies, direct messages, and favorites, and send out Tweets quickly. Granted, it’s not as nice and fully-functional as other great Twitter apps (Tweetdeck comes to mind), but it does the job quickly and painlessly.

6. Bookmarks. Want to look up a site you bookmarked earlier? I’ve been using the delicious gadgetfor Gmail, and it works pretty much as you’d expect — you can see a list of your most recent bookmarks in the Gmail sidebar. You can even see the most popular bookmarks on delicious right now, which is cool. Having your bookmarks right within Gmail is a nice feature that brings together a lot of your online life.

7. Text, voice and video chat. I use the Gmail chat for all my chat needs (which are fairly minimal), because I can do it from within Gmail. And now you can use Gmail chat for video and voice— I’ve done it, and it’s super simple and works great. With these additions, Gmail takes care of all my communication needs.

8. Social media. What about other social media you might use, such as Facebook, MySpace or Friendfeed? Put them right in Gmail with the FacebookMySpace and Friendfeed gadgets. There are even gadgets for Digg and Flickr.

9. RSS feeds. I think Google Reader is the best RSS reader for its speed and simplicity. However, while you used to be able to add Google Reader to Gmail using a Greasemonkey script, with the newer version of Gmail that script became unusable. So what I do now is add Google Reader to my Firefox sidebar, so I can easily check my RSS feeds while in my all-in-one Gmail productivity center (only works in Firefox afaik).

10. Managing your gadgets. As you can tell, this is a lot of gadgets to add to Gmail. You can end up with a ton of gadgets running down the left side of Gmail’s window. I recommend, if you have a fairly wide monitor, that you move the labels and chat boxes to the right side. Also, you can minimize any of the gadgets with a click (there’s a minimize button at the top of each gadget), to keep things manageable. Finally, get rid of gadgets you don’t use very often, to simplify things.

11. Offline Gmail. One of the problems people use to have with Gmail is that it’s online — meaning that if you can’t connect to the Internet (if you’re on the road, on an airplane, or your connection goes down), you can’t use Gmail. Well, that’s now changed with Gmail’s offline mode — you can read, compose and organize messages while offline, which is nice.

Most Important Tip
Finally, now that you’ve set up Gmail to do everything you need it to, here’s the most important tip for staying productive: don’t keep it open all the time.

Ideally, schedule certain times to use Gmail and the other gadgets you have set up — maybe 2-3 times during the day. Or close it when you’re ready to work on an important task, and then open it when you’re done with the task, but only for 10 minutes. Find what works for you, but set your limits and stick to them!

Courtesy: Leo Babauta || zenhabits.net

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Wed, 06 May 2009 05:33:00 -0700 Windows 7 RC Available for Download Now http://sudesh.posterous.com/windows-7-rc-available-for-download-now http://sudesh.posterous.com/windows-7-rc-available-for-download-now


The official Windows 7 Release Candidate is now available for all users through Microsoft's Customer Preview program.

Officially the folks at Redmond had said the release would be available tomorrow (May 5), and while it's not May 5 anywhere in the US at the time of this writing—hey, it's May 5 somewhere.

To download Windows 7 RC, you'll need to hit up the link below, head to the bottom of the page to select which version of Windows 7 you want (32-bit or 64-bit), select your language, and then sign in with your Windows Live account (that means you'll need to get one if you don't have one already). After that, just grab yourself a cold drink and wait. So far the download is moving swiftly for me (around 450KB/s) and should be done in just over an hour and a half. Hopefully they can keep it up, but if not, remember: This download and product keys will be available through the end of June, so you've got plenty of time.

If you give it a go, let's hear how the download goes for you in the comments. Maybe Microsoft won't underestimate the webthis time around.



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Thu, 26 Mar 2009 01:38:26 -0700 Ramit Sethi on Getting Rich and Automating Your Money http://sudesh.posterous.com/ramit-sethi-on-getting-rich-and-automating-yo http://sudesh.posterous.com/ramit-sethi-on-getting-rich-and-automating-yo

Ramit Sethi, author of I Will Teach You To Be Rich and the same-named blog, answered a few questions recently about managing and automating money. Oh, and he's raffling off Kindles to book buyers.

Sethi is a recent Stanford graduate who jumped into personal finance blogging and writing after facing the murky world of money and investing after college. His I Will Teach You To Be Rich blog, and book, takes a different approach to smarter money management, skipping the "buy fewer lattes" route and aiming at changing your mind and creating a system. The blog has garnered acclaim from lots of financial and other news publications, and has gotten more than a few nods from our own site. And we'd be remiss if we didn't mention that our own Gina Trapani contributed to his new book. We interviewed Sethi by phone last Friday to talk about the compatibilities between productivity and smart money, and a few other topics we'd been waiting to ask.

Oh, as for the Kindles, and $5,000 in cash: Sethi's detailed the rules and keeps listing the winners at his blog, but the basics are that if you buy the book on Amazon, Barnes & Noble or elsewhere between 8am - 4pm Pacific time (PST), forward your receipt to iboughtthebook@iwillteachyoutoberich.com, and you'll be entered to win one of the hourly drawings. Now, onto the interview:

Lifehacker: Most personal finance sites have a name or a theme that carries a certain kind of feel-good charm: Smart Spending, Your Money, that kind of thing. Yours is the most blunt, and kinda cocky, name I've ever heard. Was that intentional, and how'd you come up with it?

Ramit Sethi: It's very intentional. If I'd started a site called, say, Conscious Spending Living, you'd be bored to death by the title alone. Instead, I wanted to create a site that was like you and me sitting around a table together, talking about how this friend's spending way too much money, smart saving plans, the way money or deals trick us ... I really want to show people that this is about becoming rich, not just about money. A part of that is money, but we're also talking about philanthropy, about having time for yourself and your family. Rich can be, for some people, finally having a flexible schedule. Chapter 9 is called "A Rich Life," and it's only partially about money.

Lifehacker: How long ago did you start writing this book?

Ramit Sethi: It's been about two years of Hell writing this thing [laughs]. I wanted to die step of the way. The blog is about three years old, but when someone new comes to the site, or anyone, really, some days there's a post about weddings, some days taxes, asset allocation, market investing. I focused the book on writing for someone who wanted to get started and go all the way through, every step of making themselves smarter financially ... Basically, I wanted to write this thing that, I would be proud to hand it to someone just coming out of college, who has a bit of money, but doesn't know what to do with it.

Lifehacker: That situation happened to you, and was the inspiration for starting the blog, right?

Ramit Sethi: Exactly. One thing I realized is, a lot of people think personal finance is about willpower, like dieting or exercise. I think that really has not worked over the last 50 years ... People don't realize how many decisions they have to make with their money, every day. With the money you have today, you could pay off debt, reduce a credit card balance, or start investing it. But we don't, usually, because we're cognitive misers.

We can only have enough cognition to do a few things. If we try to work on 50 things, we're not going to do hardly any of them, and that's where my financial advice comes from. Focus on the two areas you have the most problem with in spending. For most young people, that's entertainment spending or restaurants, bars, that. Your goal should be building a system that doesn't make you think, every step of the way, about how you're spending or saving.

Lifehacker: You challenged people to save $1,000 in 30 days—some of it instantly, some by cutting down on monthly expenses. What were some of the most unexpected successes? Did any challengers surprise you with how they saved money?

Ramit Sethi: The first thing that really surprised me was a lot of negative feedback I didn't expect. "This is ridiculous." "Yeah, but you have to go to Stanford to save $1,000." Those types of comments. To save $1,000 in 30 days, you don't have to cut it all from your budget. Optimizing your existing spending, negotiate with your banks. People saved hundreds of thousands of dollars, cumulatively, and that was inspiring.

To get everyone there, I tried to be deeply practical. One of the fastest, most direct way to save money would be for everyone to pack up and move to Kansas, but nobody's going to do that, or even move into a cheaper apartment, in most cases. So I tell people to pick the stuff they're not thinking of. (For instance), I put up a prompted script for calling your car insurance company, and people saved $600-$700 with a 10-minute phone call.

... The other side is earning more. I advise everyone who wants to make more to become a consultant.

Lifehacker: That probably sounds a bit wishful thinking to a lot of people—or at least like a stretch for someone used to a pre-defined, W2 job.

Ramit Sethi: Absolutely. But what you're doing is not necessarily giving up everything and going freelance. You're just sharing your expertise with somebody else and becoming a tutor. Do you speak English? Than you are an expert to someone who wants to learn it. Do you know 4th-grade math? There are people who need that.

Lifehacker: These days, a book titled I Will Teach You To Be Rich sounds audacious. I Will Help You Pay Your Mortgage This Month sounds more like the current climate. How do you think the recession affects the advice you're giving?

Ramit Sethi: For the people that know about long-term investing, this is basically just a really strong reminder to keep focused on the long-term. You have an emergency fund, and I really hope you're not trying to time the market, because you'll fail over the long term.

... The unfortunate part of this economy is, there is so much gloom and doom in the news. If you watch the news, you'll hear questions and talk about, "Should I take all my money out?" "Where should my money be?" It's overwhelming, so people do what's easy—they read the New York Times, and then complain about it. Or they spend way too much time doing I term debating minutiae, about the stimulus package, who's to blame, predicting when the recover comes. My take is, what did people do to set up their investing accounts? Way too many people feel they only two levers to pull, either investing or pulling money out of the stock market. People need to really learn more about their money, and long-term investing, now, or there's a lot of the same kind of complaining and not much action coming out of it.

Lifehacker: Are you a pretty tech-focused, gadget-hungry guy?

Ramit Sethi: Oh, definitely.

Lifehacker: So how do you rationalize whether a gadget, a new computer, phone, whatnot, are worth the cost, rather than just filling that geeky void?

Ramit Sethi: I believe in paying for value. If you're going to get value out of something, you should pay for it, and you should enjoy it. If you've got your finances in order, for the things you love, you can spend extravagantly on them. If you've set yourself up to automatically invest 5% of your money, set aside money for a down payment on a car in a sub-account, that kind of thing, then go ahead and feel guilt-free when you spend on something that's really important to you.

... At the same time, I will hold something like my iPhone for like 3-4 years, until it doesn't work anymore. You buy the best, and you hold for the long-term. Whether it's a $300 phone, or designer jeans, it's okay to spend if that's what matters, but the flip side is that part of you will always want the best, keep staying up with the newest stuff. It's important to balance those two things. If you find that you're not, either figure out why, just like you'd cut other costs.

Lifehacker: Why is automating your billing so important? I'm cynical, so I might say it doesn't matter if all my bills arrive at the same time, or how many sub-accounts I have set up.

Ramit Sethi: It's a kind of psychology, the same as with dieting. Ask people what they care about in life. They'll clearly say, money. "So you're interested in learning about money and using it better?" "Yeah, sure, I definitely want to do that!" "Okay, so do you max out your 401(k)?" "Oh, no, I reallyshould, but ..." That's free money. Money is so important to people, but the contribution rate for 401(k)s is less than 50%. The way to get around that block is to automate it. You should automatically be enrolled in your work's 401(k), up to their compliance rate. It's the same exact principle with your own money. If you tell yourself, "I really should save for some nebulous goal," you will almost certainly do nothing, and in 12 months, you'll be great at saying you should have. If it's saving itself automatically and your bills are paid, you will not miss that money. If you do, you restructure from there, not from a fake feeling that you're doing everything fine.

What it really comes down to is what my parents tell me all the time: A year from now, you're going to be a year older. What are you going to do?

What that means is, why do we pretend like we won't have things to save for. Why are we all hypocrites about our wedding? We all say we want a "small thing," "nothing big," but the day comes, and it's the best china, the best flowers. And that's fine, but at the same time, if we we were true to ourselves, we would have been puting away money every month from age 20. The fact of the matter is, if you're in your 20s, you're probably going to need money in the next 3-5 years, for a house, a car, things you don't think of day to day. With sub-savings accounts, you'll be ahead of 90 percent of the crowd.

The average Christmas shopper spent $700 on gifts last year, which is down from $900, and that's kind of amazing. But if you pretend like Christmas won't come, you're trying to pull $700 out of one month, December, and that probably means going into debt. If you start saving in January, less than $100 per month, you're covered for Christmas, and you won't feel the expense all at once.

Lifehacker: What's the hardest part of running your blog, and giving out financial advice?

Ramit Sethi: I think it's trying to find ways to create behavioral change. The thing that makes me the happiest, and it basically gives me a birthday present every day, is seeing what kind of behavioral change my blog or my book has affected. It's easy to guilt people into what they should be doing, but to work on high-level attitude changes and hear that it really saved someone money ... that's something else.

So far, I'm really pleased with the blog's reception, the comments ... but it is hard, day by day, to reach people on a level of attitude.
Sethi started his blog
Lifehacker: So, you kind of answered it, but what's the best part?

Ramit Sethi: Real quick, then, it's hearing from someone that, "I decided to go on vacation. I bought a $150 pair of jeans, and it felt fine, because I knew my money was in control."

Lifehacker: That sounds like the ultimate reward of a Getting Things Done system—knowing deep down that your work time was spent efficiently, so you don't worry about how you spend your un-portioned time.

Ramit Sethi: That's exactly right ... For me, every dollar that comes in is routed to the appropriate place. That leaves me free and clear to focus on either my business, my life, or whatever I might want to actually spend on.

Coutesy: Lifehacker

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Thu, 05 Feb 2009 08:56:15 -0800 Portable Chrome 2: Google Browser on a USB Stick http://sudesh.posterous.com/portable-chrome-2-google-brows http://sudesh.posterous.com/portable-chrome-2-google-brows

For people who love to carry software on a USB drive or if you are behind a corporate firewall and can’t install new software, here’s something you have been waiting for - Google Chrome 2.0 in a portable avatar.

Like other portable apps, Google Chrome 2 portable too has all the features available in the main Chrome browser but requires no installation - just unzip the files in a folder and start Chroming.

To download your copy of portable Google Browser, head over to this site and click the download link - the site in German but the software language is English.

google browser portable

You can also consider using the portable version of Google Browser in case you have trouble installing Google Chrome via the standard Google Pack Installer - the other alternative is to use the offline installer of Google Chrome browser available here.

With Google Chrome portable, all user settings including web history and cookies are saved on to the same folder - the program settings are saved in "Chrome" folder while the user settings go in the "Profile" folder.  Portable Chrome was earlier tested on Windows XP SP3 and Windows Vista SP1 machines.

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Thu, 05 Feb 2009 08:16:00 -0800 Google Bus in India http://sudesh.posterous.com/google-bus-in-india http://sudesh.posterous.com/google-bus-in-india

Google India has a launched a very unique initiative to educate the offline population in India about the benefits of Internet.

The project is called The Internet Bus and, as the name suggests, it’s a web connected bus that will travel to different cities of India giving people an opportunity to experience the Internet first hand through the various computers installed inside the bus.

Google Internet Bus in India

google internet bus

computers-inside

computer-bus

google-bus

The Internet Bus website is available at google.co.in/internetbus where you can see the exact itinerary of the bus or check out Picasa for more photos of this Internet bus.

The bus was flagged from Chennai today and will cover most cities in the state of Tamil Nadu over the next six weeks. Prem Ramaswami & Srikanth Belwadi of Google India say that the bus will showcase Internet services like search, email, social networking, maps and others.

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Mon, 12 Jan 2009 09:54:00 -0800 Revealed: the environmental impact of Google searches http://sudesh.posterous.com/revealed-the-environmental-imp-0 http://sudesh.posterous.com/revealed-the-environmental-imp-0

Performing two Google searches from a desktop computer can generate about the same amount of carbon dioxide as boiling a kettle for a cup of tea, according to new research.

While millions of people tap into Google without considering the environment, a typical search generates about 7g of CO2 Boiling a kettle generates about 15g. “Google operates huge data centres around the world that consume a great deal of power,” said Alex Wissner-Gross, a Harvard University physicist whose research on the environmental impact of computing is due out soon. “A Google search has a definite environmental impact.”

Google is secretive about its energy consumption and carbon footprint. It also refuses to divulge the locations of its data centres. However, with more than 200m internet searches estimated globally daily, the electricity consumption and greenhouse gas emissions caused by computers and the internet is provoking concern. A recent report by Gartner, the industry analysts, said the global IT industry generated as much greenhouse gas as the world’s airlines - about 2% of global CO2 emissions. “Data centres are among the most energy-intensive facilities imaginable,” said Evan Mills, a scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. Banks of servers storing billions of web pages require power.

Though Google says it is in the forefront of green computing, its search engine generates high levels of CO2 because of the way it operates. When you type in a Google search for, say, “energy saving tips”, your request doesn’t go to just one server. It goes to several competing against each other.

It may even be sent to servers thousands of miles apart. Google’s infrastructure sends you data from whichever produces the answer fastest. The system minimises delays but raises energy consumption. Google has servers in the US, Europe, Japan and China.

Wissner-Gross has submitted his research for publication by the US Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and has also set up a website www.CO2stats.com. “Google are very efficient but their primary concern is to make searches fast and that means they have a lot of extra capacity that burns energy,” he said.

Google said: “We are among the most efficient of all internet search providers.”

Wissner-Gross has also calculated the CO2 emissions caused by individual use of the internet. His research indicates that viewing a simple web page generates about 0.02g of CO2 per second. This rises tenfold to about 0.2g of CO2 a second when viewing a website with complex images, animations or videos.

A separate estimate from John Buckley, managing director of carbonfootprint.com, a British environmental consultancy, puts the CO2 emissions of a Google search at between 1g and 10g, depending on whether you have to start your PC or not. Simply running a PC generates between 40g and 80g per hour, he says. of CO2 Chris Goodall, author of Ten Technologies to Save the Planet, estimates the carbon emissions of a Google search at 7g to 10g (assuming 15 minutes’ computer use).

Nicholas Carr, author of The Big Switch, Rewiring the World, has calculated that maintaining a character (known as an avatar) in the Second Life virtual reality game, requires 1,752 kilowatt hours of electricity per year. That is almost as much used by the average Brazilian.

“It’s not an unreasonable comparison,” said Liam Newcombe, an expert on data centres at the British Computer Society. “It tells us how much energy westerners use on entertainment versus the energy poverty in some countries.”

Though energy consumption by computers is growing - and the rate of growth is increasing - Newcombe argues that what matters most is the type of usage.

If your internet use is in place of more energy-intensive activities, such as driving your car to the shops, that’s good. But if it is adding activities and energy consumption that would not otherwise happen, that may pose problems.

Newcombe cites Second Life and Twitter, a rapidly growing website whose 3m users post millions of messages a month. Last week Stephen Fry, the TV presenter, was posting “tweets” from New Zealand, imparting such vital information as “Arrived in Queenstown. Hurrah. Full of bungy jumping and ‘activewear’ shops”, and “Honestly. NZ weather makes UK look stable and clement”.

Jonathan Ross was Twittering even more, with posts such as “Am going to muck out the pigs. It will be cold, but I’m not the type to go on about it” and “Am now back indoors and have put on fleecy tracksuit and two pairs of socks”. Ross also made various “tweets” trying to ascertain whether Jeremy Clarkson was a Twitter user or not. Yesterday the Top Gear presenter cleared up the matter, saying: “I am not a twit. And Jonathan Ross is.”

Such internet phenomena are not simply fun and hot air, Newcombe warns: the boom in such services has a carbon cost.

Source: Timesonline, UK


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Tue, 06 Jan 2009 10:10:00 -0800 Best Buy offers used iPhones at lower price http://sudesh.posterous.com/best-buy-offers-used-iphones-a http://sudesh.posterous.com/best-buy-offers-used-iphones-a

Retailer Best Buy Co, seeking new ways to appeal to cost-conscious shoppers, said on Tuesday it is selling refurbished versions of Apple Inc's iPhone 3G at its stores that are priced about $50 less than new iPhones.

The electronics chain said the used iPhones, which were returned within 30 days of purchase, are priced at $149 for the model with 8 gigabytes of storage, while the 16-gigabyte version is $249. A two-year service contract with AT&T Inc is required.

New iPhone 3Gs currently sell for $199 and $299 at Best Buy Mobile stores.

"This is focusing on customers' needs, trying to provide as wide a range of products and networks for our consumers," said Scott Moore, vice president of marketing for Best Buy Mobile.

Buyers of first-generation iPhones can also upgrade to the faster refurbished 3G models at Best Buy, he said.

Moore said AT&T, the exclusive wireless provider for the iPhone, offers refurbished iPhones online.

The sale of used iPhones comes as Best Buy, the top consumer electronics chain, seeks ways to fend off increased competition from discounters such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc, which began selling the popular phone late last month.

Wal-Mart sells a new 8-gigabyte iPhone 3G for $197 and $297 for the 16-gigabyte model. The iPhone is also sold at Apple stores and AT&T stores.

Moore said Best Buy's move was not in response to other retailers' actions.

Source: Reuters

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Tue, 06 Jan 2009 10:05:53 -0800 HP unleashes a series of new low-cost computers at CES http://sudesh.posterous.com/hp-unleashes-a-series-of-new-l http://sudesh.posterous.com/hp-unleashes-a-series-of-new-l HP unleashes a series of new low-cost computers at CES
 
Hewlett-Packard is launching a bevy of new products today that show it
is designing its products to take into account the lighter pocketbooks
and energy usage concerns of consumers.
 
These products being unveiled this week at the International Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas reflect a more focused HP.
 
The company isn't throwing spaghetti at the wall anymore. It quietly
pulled out of the TV market in 2008, but is staying in markets such as
digital photo frames where it feels it can differentiate itself.
 
One of the products that reflects this attitude is the company's
newest gaming computer, the HP Firebird desktop with Voodoo DNA
(left).
 
Before HP bought Voodoo in 2006, the small Canadian PC maker
specialized in custom-designed computers with hand-painted cases.
Gaming freaks happily bought these for as much as $10,000. But the
company will sell this machine for under $2,100. ($1,799 for basic
version and $2,099 for advanced) The system is more power efficient
than typical gaming computers of the past as well.
 
Gone are the days when the Voodoo division designed products without
regard to energy efficiency or cost, said Rahul Sood, the chief
technology officer for the HP Global Voodoo Business Unit. This
machine strikes a balance between performance, style, cost, energy
efficiency and small size. Sood says the design still reflects
Voodoo's style and penchant for cool tech, dubbed Voodoo DNA.
 
"We consider this a high-performance hybrid machine," Sood said. "The
big desktops of the past are not sustainable designs. The economy has
changed, and this segment of the market is changing."
 
As gaming computers go, this one is powerful but it's also geared
toward people who want to do other things with their computers. The HP
computer has Intel's fastest consumer-oriented processor, the Intel
Core 2 Quad Processor Q9400, and dual Nvidia GeForce 9800S graphics
cards in SLI mode. It has a 350-watt power supply but it also has
liquid cooling that keeps the machine fanless and quiet. The machine
uses about a quarter of the power of last year's HP Blackbird 02
gaming desktop. For video, go to http://www.youtube.com/HPVoodooPC.
 
HP is also introducing several models of business laptops in the
ultralight notebook category. Among the bargains is the HP Pavilion
dv2, which has a 12.1-inch screen and weighs 3.8 pounds. It's less
than an inch thick, has a 500-gigabyte hard drive, and has a new
single-core Advanced Micro Devices Neo processor and Yukon platform.
It also has ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3410 graphics. The machines cost
$600 to $800 and come in Espresso Black or Moonlight white. They'll go
on sale in March.
 
HP is also introducing a larger HP Pavilion dv3 notebook model with a
13.3-inch screen, a 2.3-gigahertz AMD Turion dual-core processor, ATI
Radeon HD 3200 graphics, a magnesium case and a price ranging from
$800 to $1,200.
 
There are more variations on these themes, as well as a new HP
MediaSmart home server (for storing and backing up lots of data in the
home) and a new version of HP's Netbook, the thinnest and lightest
portable computer, dubbed the HP Mini 2140. The designs are good and
HP is being realistic about what it can charge for these machines in a
tough economy.
 
In digital photo frames, HP will launch a new line of 3.5-inch to
10-inch frames in March. These LCD displays have Wi-Fi connections so
that they can download pictures from Internet sites such as Picassa,
Flickr, Facebook and MySpace. You can use the Wi-Fi connection to
display widgets, such as traffic information, news and sports scores,
or listen to web radio stations. You can also stream content from an
HP MediaSmart home server, get photos from camera phones via MMS
messaging, and otherwise use the frame to stay in communications with
a distant loved one.
 
The amount of memory included, which is a key determinant of the value
for people who want to store large collections, is yet to be decided.
An eight-inch frame will sell for $179.99.
 
Source: VentureBeat

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Wed, 03 Dec 2008 08:44:40 -0800 Registration for .TEL Domain Names Now Open! http://sudesh.posterous.com/registration-for-tel-domain-na http://sudesh.posterous.com/registration-for-tel-domain-na

 

tel domains

A .tel domain name, is primarily for people / businesses who don’t have a dedicated website but need simple mechanism to put all their contact information on the web.

So if your name is John, you can register a domain like www.john.tel and put your phone numbers, email addresses, IM ids, snail mail address, links to social networks, etc - all in one place.

How is .tel Different from .com

The main difference between a regular .com and .tel domain is that the latter stores all your different contact information at the DNS level (like whois database records) and you don’t have to worry about creating a website.

If you are willing to book a .tel domain for your own self, just head over to Domain Monster as they are now accepting pre-orders. You can even try a .tel domain before buying one using this link.

Personally, I can’t think of a single reason why would someone invest in a .tel domain where there so many other services offering similar features for free*.

*The pre-order price for domain amit.tel is around $400 with a three year registration. Simply not worth it.

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Fri, 28 Nov 2008 10:05:07 -0800 Melt Mail is Another Quick, Disposable Email Service http://sudesh.posterous.com/melt-mail-is-another-quick-dis http://sudesh.posterous.com/melt-mail-is-another-quick-dis

Meltmail
 
3h   6h   12h   24h
     
 
 

Melt Mail is a free email forwarding service that creates a temporary email address that forwards all incoming mail to your real email address. To use it, just enter the email address you want messages forwarded to, select how long you want it to work, then hit Create. Melt Mail generates a random address that you can use with impunity to register on spam-likely sites, for example, and after 3, 6, 12, or 24 hours, the forwarding will stop. We've covered boat loads of similar disposable emailapplications, so Melt Mail isn't breaking any new ground, but since some services won't allow you to register with popular temporary email addresses, it's worthwhile to have another option in your arsenal. Besides, the dead-simple interface is a nice touch.

Melt Mail


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Fri, 28 Nov 2008 09:52:00 -0800 Fedora 10 Officially Released, Ready for Download http://sudesh.posterous.com/fedora-10-officially-released http://sudesh.posterous.com/fedora-10-officially-released

 

Fedora has just released version 10 of the popular Linux distribution. It's only been six months since Fedora 9 hit servers, but the new release boasts all sorts of new features and improvements, including the addition of OpenOffice 3.0, new virtualization features, internet connection sharing, faster booting, and a new security tool. Hit the Fedora 10 release notes for a full rundown of what you can expect. I tend to focus more on Ubuntu Linux, which has caught the attention of a lot of Linux users around these parts, but Fedora's breakneck updates and new look and features since version 9 look great. Keep reading for a quick look at Fedora 10 in action.

I haven't tried it out yet, but if you give Fedora 10 a try, let's hear how you like the new release—and how it compares to Ubuntu—in the comments. Fedora 10 is a free download.

Download Fedora 10

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Fri, 21 Nov 2008 09:11:26 -0800 12 Powerful Life Lessons http://sudesh.posterous.com/12-powerful-life-lessons http://sudesh.posterous.com/12-powerful-life-lessons

Follow your dreams and transform your life
~ Paulo Coelho

By Think Simple Now contributor Vic Stachura.

As my wife and I were planning our last vacation, one of the first things we did was get out a map and plan our route. Whether it was online maps or old fashioned paper maps - they all helped guide us to our destination. As I was looking at the maps spread across our dining room table, I thought, “wouldn’t it be great if there was a map of life” that could guide you along your life’s journey?

A personal motivation map giving you those life lessons that one typically learns way too late in life. Does such a “map of life” exist? It was then that I stumbled upon a tattered copy of The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho in the bottom of my closet.

 

Paulo Coelho in his wildly popular book (65 million copies sold in 67 languages) tells the story of a shepherd boy and his quest to live his dream. Along the way, the boy meets an alchemist who has the power to inspire personal transformation. This Alchemist gives the boy a number of life’s lessons - lessons that are as fresh and applicable today as they were hundreds of years ago. The lessons by themselves are interesting, but it’s only when they are applied, that the power of personal transformation can be unleashed.

So what can Paulo teach us about life and pursing dreams in the face of obstaclesthat caused 65 million people to buy his book?

1. It’s the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary.

I believe this to be true and have experienced this with my own family. When I think of the times where we laughed the most or had the most fun - it was when we were doing the simplest things. Swimming in a pool, combing a beach for shells, playing a board game, or sharing a delicious meal - all simple things making up the best times we’ve had as a family.

Question: What were some of the happiest memories from your past? What were you doing?

2. Support your children in pursuit of their dreams.

In the beginning of the story the shepherd boy (named Santiago) tells his father he wants to travel and see the world. The father explains he wants his son to stay in the village and become a priest. But Santiago persists - being a priest is not his dream. What does his father do? He gives Santiago the small amount of money he had been saving for the boy and wished him well.

How many of us had parents who have - in not-so-subtle-ways - influenced us to take careers that were not in-line with our dreams? Be honest now, did you pick your current career because you’re passionate about the work or were you trying to make your parents proud? How do you feel about your career now?

As a parent, it’s difficult to accept when your child wants to take a path other than the one you had hoped and planned for them. But, it’s ok. Like my wife keeps telling me “give them roots and give them wings”. Give them a solid foundation of love, but give them the freedom to follow their dreams.

Question: What were some of your dreams as a child?

3. There is nothing to hold you back, except yourself.

There is only one question to ask yourself here: “What would you do if you were not afraid?” Think about it.

4. There is only one way to learn, and that is through action.

Trying to learn without doing is like trying to lose weight by watching someone else exercise. It’s just not going to work. We are all fundamentally hands-on learners.

Question: What would you like to learn? What next action step can you take?

5. Trust your gut (or Learn to recognize omens, and follow them.)

Many times our subconscious has already made a decision before we’ve caught up and made the same decision. Sometimes we don’t make the same decision and then ‘something does not feel right’ or there is a persistent naggingthat bothers us. Malcolm Gladwell wrote extensively about this phenomenon in his book titledBlink: The Power of Thinking without Thinking. Trust your gut - it may be more accurate than you think.

6. Follow your dreams.

There are many of us who dream our dreams without ever actually realizing any of them. For whatever reason we get locked in a “dream state” and never take action. We analyze too much and our dreams turn into giant mountains in our imagination that seem impossible to climb. As a result, we never learned that foreign language we’ve always wanted to learn, or traveled, or started that business, or written that book. Just think of the many bestsellers that would have been, but were never written.

The time is now, to awake from dreamland, to live the life we want and to achieve the extraordinary potential within us all.

Question: What are some dreams you’d like to realize now? Write them down on a piece of paper and make sure the success of their attainment is measurable.

7. Know what you want.

Set goals and make a plan to achieve them. It’s like the saying, “a goal that is never written down is nothing but a New Year’s resolution” - and we all know what happens to New Year’s resolutions.

8. Make a decision and dive in with massive action.

The river of life will take you to places that you have never imagined. Once you make a decision, take action. You’ll be surprised to find where it will lead.

9. Move on - always look forward.

It’s ok to look back once and a while, but don’t live in the past. You can visit “pity city” for a short time, but after a while you have to leave it all behind and walk on.

10. You will encounter obstacles and take detours while realizing your dreams.

As you strive to achieve your dreams, you can count on there being some setbacks and disappointments. Don’t get discouraged, the road to your dreams may not be an easy one. Think of these challenges as tests of persistence and courage that life throws at you during your quest. They were necessary and were meant to help you grow as a person.

Learn to adjust the sails of your life to unpredictable winds, while keeping your focus clear on your destination.

11. Don’t fear the unknown.

As long as you’re resourceful and have a few skills, you’ll be able to provide for yourself (and your family). Have confidence in yourselfat all times.

12. Learn to understand the universal language - the language without words.

There is so much more said from a person than just words alone. You can read the expression on someone’s face, sense their body language, or hear the tone in their voice - these thingsare all part of the unspoken language. The more conscious we become at noticing them, the better we become at interpreting them.

 

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Mon, 27 Oct 2008 11:02:00 -0700 Ubuntu goes more mobile with 8.10 release http://sudesh.posterous.com/ubuntu-goes-more-mobile-with-8 http://sudesh.posterous.com/ubuntu-goes-more-mobile-with-8

The gradual and metered improvement with the Ubuntu variant of Linux created and supported by commercial Linux distributor Canonical takes another step forward this week with the release of "Intrepid Ibex", which will be distributed as Ubuntu 8.10.

Ubuntu 8.10 is a regular release of the Linux variant, not one with what Canonical calls Long Term Support, or LTS. Regular releases of Ubuntu come out every six months and have 18 months of support from Canonical for both the server and the client. LTS releases are more hardened and have more stringent testing and certification of Linux applications, and only come out every two years; LTS releases have three years of support from Canonical on desktops and five years on servers.

Back when the feature set for Ubuntu 8.10 was being hammered out by the Ubuntu development community, Mark Shuttleworth, Canonical's chief executive officer and the founder of the Ubuntu project, said that the Interpid Ibex development cycle would have the desktop, not the server, as the focal point "so that Ubuntu works as well on a high-end workstation as it does on a feisty little subnotebook".

The other goal of the 8.10 release was to expand beyond WiFi connectivity and to have the network manager in Ubuntu link into 3G networks, thereby allowing mobile PC users to stay even more connected than they can be with just wired and WiFi networks alone. "Ubuntu 8.10 sees us lay the groundwork for a radically different, more mobile, desktop computing environment of the next two years," explains Jane Silber, chief operating officer at Canonical and the head of online services for the Linux distributor.

"Our rapid release cycle means we can deliver the elements to support this future faster, more fully realized, and more attractively packaged than traditional OS vendors. Ubuntu 8.10 has many features that sign-post how Linux will provide the drive and innovation in desktop computing."

The first step in this process is to embrace 3G networks, and the network manager in Ubuntu 8.10 can detect and connect to 3G networks via 3G modems, through dongles, through a mobile phone attached to a machine, or through a Bluetooth link. There are a lot of different 3G connectivity options, and Canonical wants to simplify it with the Intrepid Ibex. And further enhancing the portability of Ubuntu 8.10, the operating system can write an instance of itself to a USB flash memory stick, which is both faster and easier than burning a CD or DVD and allows end users to carry a copy of Ubuntu with them and use it anywhere.

Another small change in Ubuntu 8.10 Desktop Edition is a single-click button that allows end users to fire up a guest session so someone can borrow your computer and use it to, for instance, check their email or browse the Web without giving the borrower full access to your computer.

Canonical has also, according to Chris Kenyon, who is in charge of OEM services at the company, worked out a deal with the BBC to open up the radio and television content the news organization generates to Ubuntu users and allow them to access this content for free to users of the Totem media player in Ubuntu. The BBC has committed to use open codecs for its content as much as possible as part of its agreement with Ubuntu; the content access is enabled through a plug-in for Totem.

The Ubuntu 8.10 release is based on the Linux 2.6.27 kernel, which Canonical says has better hardware support and a number of bug fixes compared to the Ubuntu 8.04 LTS variant, nicknamed "Hardy Heron", announced in April of this year and based on the Linux 2.6.24 kernel. Ubuntu 8.10 uses the Gnome 2.24, which "has tons of bug fixes and new features", according to the release notes, as well as the X.Org 7.4 X window environment. Network Manager is now at the 0.7 level (more on this below), and the Samba Windows-compatible print and file server is at the 3.2 level. Users of Ubuntu 8.04 LTS can upgrade to Ubuntu 8.10 automatically, but those of earlier releases have to find an upgrade path into Ubuntu 8.04 first and then do a two-step (or, in some cases, a three-step) upgrade. (Just a reminder - Ubuntu 7.04 reached end of life on October 19.)

Like Ubuntu 8.04 LTS, Ubuntu 8.10 runs on 32-bit X86 and 64-bit X64 machinery, but it does not have support for Sun Microsystems's multicore Sparc T1, T2, and T2+ processors. The Ubuntu 6.06 LTS, 7.04, and 7.10 released did have support for the Sparc T1 processors, and a few years ago Sun and Canonical made a lot of noise about this support. But Sparc T processors are no longer part of the standard Ubuntu distribution, and Sparc T support has been put out to the same ports.ubuntu.com pasture where Power processors now graze.

By Timothy Prickett Morgan

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Mon, 27 Oct 2008 10:55:54 -0700 LinkedIn Search: Finding that former colleague of yours just got easier http://sudesh.posterous.com/linkedin-search-finding-that-f http://sudesh.posterous.com/linkedin-search-finding-that-f

By, Esteban Kozak

I'd like to announce today the launch of our new search platform, currently released to a small percentage of our LinkedIn users. In addition, a certain percentage of the remaining users can explore the new search experience by simply clicking on the “Try LinkedIn’s new People Search” link at the top of search results pages.

As the largest global professional network, we’ve had the privilege of having millions of users enter over a billion professional search queries, and we’ve been working hard to build a much more robust professional people search engine. We interviewed lots of users and aggregated thousand of pieces of feedback. The end result is a completely redesigned search experience aimed at making it easier and faster to find the most relevant professionals that you're looking for.

Here is a quick summary of the new features that will be phased out to all of our users in the coming months:

1. Unified search results:

We eliminated the need to switch tabs if you want to see professionals outside your network. The new search will retrieve the most relevant professionals from the entire LinkedIn community.

2. More powerful relevance algorithm:

The new relevance sort not only takes into account keyword relevance but also leverages both the professional graph and the rich profile data to ensure that the most relevant professionals are always shown at the top of your search results page.

3. Redesigned search results page:

Speaking of the search results page, we've redesigned this page from the ground up to make it more readable and actionable. This includes a new streamlined look, the ability to refine you searches from a new “Modify your search” module on the right rail, easily accessible sorts and views, and the ability to take actions from the results page as you mouse over results.

image002.jpg

4. In Common:

"In Common" is a new field in search results that lets you see what connections and groups you share with the selected user.

image003.jpg

5. Saved Searches:

This is one of the most requested features. We’ll allow you to save searches and very soon we’ll let you get reminders over email if we find someone new that meets your criteria.

image006.jpg

6. Views:

We now offer two views as part of the search results redesign, basic and expanded. In addition, we also let you create your own view. You’ll be able to add or remove fields from search results based on what makes the most sense for your type of searches.

image008.jpg
image009.jpg

7. Spell check:

We know how hard typing people’s names is. We hear it from our users and also see it in the data. As a result, we built a robust spell checker for names. We’ll expand the spell checker to other type of keywords very soon.

image010.jpg

8. Type-ahead for connections:

We also saw in the data that many of you use search to get to your connections quickly. In order to make it more efficient, we developed a type-ahead widget that recommends connections as you type from any people search box.

image014.jpg

--

We’ll be testing all of these features over the next few weeks as we fine tune them for full release.  Stay tuned for more here, as these improvements mark just the beginning in helping your professional people search.

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