Friday, February 25, 2011

Googland

Googland


[G] 5 great user-created maps chronicling Egypt

Posted: 25 Feb 2011 05:08 AM PST

Google LatLong: 5 great user-created maps chronicling Egypt


During the crisis in Egypt, third-party Geo developers helped the international community understand the situation and keep persons affected by the crisis safe through the use of innovative new tools. These same tools can be replicated by anyone in any crisis situation. In the developer examples below, three things jump out as particularly striking: How quickly these maps were built and put into action, some within hours of the first protests; how developers (many contributing independently) from all over the world worked together to get these maps up and running; and how geo-context has become extremely important for the international community in understanding and responding to any crisis, be it natural or man-made.

NY Times - Mapping the Protest in Cairo Day by Day



In this map, the New York Times has plotted the locations of the protests and clashes with police. There are also pictures, videos and contextual information provided in the icon info bubbles.

Al Jazeera - Mapping the Day of Wrath


This website features a video illustrating the geographic spread of the protests using fly-over animations in Google Earth. The same webpage includes maps with information about protests in Cairo and throughout Egypt.

Hypercities Egypt


Twitter's real-time updates have become an invaluable tool for the Egyptian protest organizers, observers and citizens looking to stay safe. Hypercities Egypt used Google Maps to display geolocated tweets as they came streaming in. Also, view another Egypt Twitter map created by MiBazaar.


GeoEye Tahrir Square Imagery


The imagery above is of Tahrir Square on January 29, 2011 at around 10:30am local time from more than 400 miles above. This imagery is exclusively viewable in Google Earth (and the Earth API) using the historical imagery tool. The imagery highlights GeoEye's stunning ability to respond to world events and capture timely imagery.

Egypt Protests in Google My Maps by Storyful.com


During the crisis, many Geo developers and persons without a Geo developer background collaborated on Google My Maps to chronicle the events geographically as they unfolded, such as this one by Storyful. Using the My Maps tool, anyone with access to Google Maps could create a collaborative mash-up with custom icons, colored polygons, content rich info-bubbles and many other features. Once completed, the map can be shared globally through My Maps or embedded on a website. Access can also be restricted to a select group of people if need be. Learn more at http://maps.google.com/getmaps.

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How you can help: During a crisis situation, up-to-date maps are often crucial for organizing humanitarian aid and effective response. In many regions, however, accurate and local map data is sparse, out of date, or not available at all. You can add your geographic knowledge to Google Maps by contributing map edits in Google Map Maker, which is currently available in select countries and territories.

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Posted by Carlos Cuesta, Geo APIs Product Marketing Manager
URL: http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2011/02/5-great-user-created-maps-chronicling.html

[G] Join us on the bridge for International Women’s Day 2011

Posted: 25 Feb 2011 05:08 AM PST

Google LatLong: Join us on the bridge for International Women's Day 2011

[Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog]

I lead a global team at Google and travel extensively. When I speak about my work, the questions I get are often about the efforts we make to bring more women into engineering and how I maintain my work/life balance with two young children. These are very important questions, but I'm acutely aware that they reflect a certain amount of privilege when it comes to issues of women's equality. Despite the incredible advances women have made in the last century, many around the world are still struggling to provide for their families and keep them safe amidst violence and instability.

For the past several years I've been part of a sponsorship program administered by Women for Women International, an organization dedicated to helping women survivors of war rebuild their lives. Every time I receive a letter from a woman I sponsor, each of whom is determined to improve her life despite the terrible odds she faces, I'm reminded of why it's so important that we all—women and men alike—recognize the challenges women continue to face around the world.

That's why I'm so excited to celebrate the centenary of International Women's Day on March 8, 2011. This year Google is collaborating with Women for Women International on their "Join me on the Bridge" campaign. Originally conceived of by women from Rwanda and Congo as a sign of solidarity between women in two conflict-ridden countries, last year's campaign brought together thousands of women and men at more than 100 bridge events on four continents.



This year we're making it simple for you, your friends, your classmates and your colleagues to participate in bridge events on International Women's Day by offering new online resources.

To attend a bridge event, check our map to see all the events that have already been planned. Or you can use our event toolkit to plan your own event on the bridge of your choice. You'll see that there are two kinds of events—physical and online; if you're not able to attend a bridge event in person on March 8, you can lend your support online by virtually attending an event via Street View in Google Maps.




Finally, on our International Women's Day 2011 site, you can to donate to Women for Women International and more than 40 other incredible organizations working in the fields of women's economic security, education, empowerment, equality, health and safety.

See you on the bridge on March 8!

Update 4:50PM: Added YouTube video.

Posted by Claire Hughes Johnson, VP, Global Online Sales and Chair, Google Women's Professional Community
URL: http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2011/02/join-us-on-bridge-for-international.html

[G] Learn about Quality Score in a live, online tutorial (UK only)

Posted: 25 Feb 2011 03:03 AM PST

Inside AdWords: Learn about Quality Score in a live, online tutorial (UK only)

As so many attendees reported finding our last Quality Score tutorial useful, we've decided to re-run the live course in the AdWords Online Classroom (UK) on Wednesday 2nd March for anyone who wasn't able to attend. The key to a successful AdWords account is the relevancy of your ads, keywords, and website. Having a better understanding of Quality Score can help you improve your AdWords performance.

This course will clarify what Quality Score is and provide useful tips on improving your Quality Scores so that you can further optimise your account.

The hour-long interactive course will be delivered by two AdWords Specialists as part of the Adwords Online Classroom (UK) and will include time for Q&A. It will take place on Wednesday 2nd March from 3 pm to 4 pm GMT (7 am to 8 am PST).

If you're interested, make sure to sign up now!

To learn more about Quality Score, you can also visit our Help Center.


Posted by Nathania Lozada, Inside AdWords crew
URL: http://adwords.blogspot.com/2011/02/learn-about-quality-score-in-live.html

[G] Show ads that are most likely to receive conversions more often

Posted: 25 Feb 2011 03:03 AM PST

Inside AdWords: Show ads that are most likely to receive conversions more often

Today we're announcing the launch of a new ad rotation setting in AdWords that allows you to optimize for conversions. Previously, you had two options:
  • Optimize for clicks: Ads that are expected to provide more clicks are shown more often
  • Rotate: Ads are shown more evenly
Now, with a third option, you can choose to show ads that are expected to provide more conversions more often.

We've always encouraged you to test multiple ads in each ad group, and we've offered our help by showing ads with the highest clickthrough rates more often. However, some of you have told us that the ad with the highest clickthrough rate isn't always the ad with the highest conversion rate and that you'd like to be able to optimize for conversions rather than clicks. Starting today, we're allowing you to do just that.

To use the new setting, you'll need to have Conversion Tracking in your account, as we use the data from that tool to determine which ad is the most likely to receive conversions. When we don't have enough data to make a decision, we'll show the ad that is the most likely to receive clicks. If you have Conversion Tracking, the Optimize for conversions option will be available in the Ad delivery: Ad rotation, frequency capping section under Advanced settings on the Settings tab of any campaign. Once enabled, it will apply to all ads that appear on Google and our search and display partners' sites.


By providing another way to define the "best-performing" ad, we hope to make it easier for you to experiment with your ads and learn which ones are the most successful in helping you reach your advertising goals. For more information on ad rotation settings, please visit our Help Center.

Posted by Lisa Shieh, Inside AdWords crew
URL: http://adwords.blogspot.com/2011/02/show-ads-that-are-most-likely-to.html

[G] Finding more high-quality sites in search

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 07:00 PM PST

Official Google Blog: Finding more high-quality sites in search


Our goal is simple: to give people the most relevant answers to their queries as quickly as possible. This requires constant tuning of our algorithms, as new content—both good and bad—comes online all the time.

Many of the changes we make are so subtle that very few people notice them. But in the last day or so we launched a pretty big algorithmic improvement to our ranking—a change that noticeably impacts 11.8% of our queries—and we wanted to let people know what's going on. This update is designed to reduce rankings for low-quality sites—sites which are low-value add for users, copy content from other websites or sites that are just not very useful. At the same time, it will provide better rankings for high-quality sites—sites with original content and information such as research, in-depth reports, thoughtful analysis and so on.

We can't make a major improvement without affecting rankings for many sites. It has to be that some sites will go up and some will go down. Google depends on the high-quality content created by wonderful websites around the world, and we do have a responsibility to encourage a healthy web ecosystem. Therefore, it is important for high-quality sites to be rewarded, and that's exactly what this change does.

It's worth noting that this update does not rely on the feedback we've received from the Personal Blocklist Chrome extension, which we launched last week. However, we did compare the Blocklist data we gathered with the sites identified by our algorithm, and we were very pleased that the preferences our users expressed by using the extension are well represented. If you take the top several dozen or so most-blocked domains from the Chrome extension, then this algorithmic change addresses 84% of them, which is strong independent confirmation of the user benefits.

So, we're very excited about this new ranking improvement because we believe it's a big step in the right direction of helping people find ever higher quality in our results. We've been tackling these issues for more than a year, and working on this specific change for the past few months. And we're working on many more updates that we believe will substantially improve the quality of the pages in our results.

To start with, we're launching this change in the U.S. only; we plan to roll it out elsewhere over time. We'll keep you posted as we roll this and other changes out, and as always please keep giving us feedback about the quality of our results because it really helps us to improve Google Search.

Posted by Amit Singhal, Google Fellow, and Matt Cutts, Principal Engineer
URL: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/finding-more-high-quality-sites-in.html

[G] Finding the right place when you need it

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 04:02 PM PST

Official Google Mobile Blog: Finding the right place when you need it

Over the past few months, we have launched several new mobile search features for iPhone and Android-powered devices that make it easier to find local businesses. In the US, we launched an "open now" feature which lets you filter local search results to show only businesses that are open right now, based on their listed hours. When you're hankering for pizza at 1 o'clock in the morning, this can be really handy:

Other local search options available globally include filtering by star ratings (find a highly-rated restaurant for your first date) and by distance (especially handy when you're on foot).

You may have noticed other improvements as well, like the addition of images, reviews from around the web and bigger buttons for viewing a map or calling a business directly. Each business's open hours are also shown in the result snippets.

If you haven't used local search recently, now is a great time to try it out. Just go to www.google.com in your browser, tap on the "Places" link at the top of the page, and do a search. You can also access these features when searching for businesses on Google Maps for mobile on Android devices.

Posted by Yoshi Matsumoto and Keiji Maekawa, Software Engineers
URL: http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2011/02/finding-right-place-when-you-need-it.html

[G] The freedom to be who you want to be…

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 03:55 PM PST

Google Public Policy Blog: The freedom to be who you want to be…

Posted by Alma Whitten, Director of Privacy, Product and Engineering

Peter Steiner's iconic "on the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog" cartoon may have been drawn in jest--but his point was deadly serious, as recent events in the Middle East and North Africa have shown. In reality, as the web has developed--with users anywhere able to post a blog, share photos with friends and family or "broadcast" events they witness online--the issue of identity has become increasingly important.

So, we've been thinking about the different ways people choose to identify themselves (or not) when they're using Google--in particular how identification can be helpful or even necessary for certain services, while optional or unnecessary for others. Attribution can be very important, but pseudonyms and anonymity are also an established part of many cultures -- for good reason.

When it comes to Google services, we support three types of use: unidentified, pseudonymous and identified. And each mode has its own particular user benefits.
Unidentified. Sometimes you want to use the web without having your online activity tied to your identity, or even a pseudonym—for example, when you're researching a medical condition or searching for that perfect gift for a special someone. When you're not logged into your Google Account (or if you never signed up for one), that's how you'll be using our services. While we need to keep information like IP addresses and cookies to provide the service, we don't link that information to an individual account when you are logged out.
Pseudonymous. Using a pseudonym has been one of the great benefits of the Internet, because it has enabled people to express themselves freely—they may be in physical danger, looking for help, or have a condition they don't want people to know about. People in these circumstances may need a consistent identity, but one that is not linked to their offline self. You can use pseudonyms to upload videos in YouTube or post to Blogger.
Identified. There are many times you want to share information with people and have them know who you really are. Some products such as Google Checkout rely on this type of identity assurance and require that you identify yourself to use the service. There may be other times when it's more desirable to be identified than not, for example if you want to be part of a community action project you may ask, "How do I know these other people I see online really are community members?"

Equally as important as giving users the freedom to be who they want to be is ensuring they know exactly what mode they're in when using Google's services. So recently we updated the top navigation bar on many of our Google services to make this even clearer. In the upper right hand corner of these Google pages, you will see an indicator of which account, if any, you are signed into.



We're also looking at other ways to make this more transparent for users. While some of our products will be better suited to just one or two of those modes, depending on what they're designed to do, we believe all three modes have a home at Google.
URL: http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2011/02/freedom-to-be-who-you-want-to-be.html

[G] Speaker Boehner takes your questions on YouTube as U.S. budget stand-off continues

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 03:55 PM PST

Google Public Policy Blog: Speaker Boehner takes your questions on YouTube as U.S. budget stand-off continues

Posted by Ramya Raghavan, YouTube News and Politics Manager
(Cross-posted from the Official YouTube Blog)

With many U.S. states facing budget crises, and the President's recent budget proposal being met with skepticism by Republicans, the financial health of the U.S. is capturing interest around the world.

As the budget debate heats up on Capitol Hill, we invite you to submit your questions for one of the most vocal opponents to President Obama's proposed budget plan - Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH).

Speaker Boehner will sit down for a special YouTube interview next week, in which he'll answer your top-voted text and video questions about the budget and spending, as well as other hot topics like the economy, jobs, health care and foreign policy.

Visit www.youtube.com/speakerboehner and use the Google Moderator gadget to submit your question and vote on others. Or you can tweet in your question using the hashtag #askthespeaker and it will automatically be eligible for voting in the queue.

A few things to note when asking your question:
  1. Video questions are highly preferred (though we also accept text). Videos should be about 20 seconds long and be sure to ask the question directly.
  2. Speak clearly and try to film in a place with minimal background noise. Keep the camera as still as possible.
  3. Feel free to be creative (use props, charts, etc.) to help your question stand out. If you have time, find an interesting backdrop that may help reinforce your message.
  4. Submit your question early. The final deadline to submit is Sunday, February 27 at midnight ET.
We'll post the final interview next Friday so stay tuned to see if the Speaker answers your question.
URL: http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2011/02/speaker-boehner-takes-your-questions-on.html

[G] Join us on the bridge for International Women’s Day 2011

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 12:38 PM PST

Official Google Blog: Join us on the bridge for International Women's Day 2011

I lead a global team at Google and travel extensively. When I speak about my work, the questions I get are often about the efforts we make to bring more women into engineering and how I maintain my work/life balance with two young children. These are very important questions, but I'm acutely aware that they reflect a certain amount of privilege when it comes to issues of women's equality. Despite the incredible advances women have made in the last century, many around the world are still struggling to provide for their families and keep them safe amidst violence and instability.

For the past several years I've been part of a sponsorship program administered by Women for Women International, an organization dedicated to helping women survivors of war rebuild their lives. Every time I receive a letter from a woman I sponsor, each of whom is determined to improve her life despite the terrible odds she faces, I'm reminded of why it's so important that we all—women and men alike—recognize the challenges women continue to face around the world.

That's why I'm so excited to celebrate the centenary of International Women's Day on March 8, 2011. This year Google is collaborating with Women for Women International on their "Join me on the Bridge" campaign. Originally conceived of by women from Rwanda and Congo as a sign of solidarity between women in two conflict-ridden countries, last year's campaign brought together thousands of women and men at more than 100 bridge events on four continents.

This year we're making it simple for you, your friends, your classmates and your colleagues to participate in bridge events on International Women's Day by offering new online resources.

To attend a bridge event, check our map to see all the events that have already been planned. Or you can use our event toolkit to plan your own event on the bridge of your choice. You'll see that there are two kinds of events—physical and online; if you're not able to attend a bridge event in person on March 8, you can lend your support online by virtually attending an event via Street View in Google Maps.


Finally, on our International Women's Day 2011 site, you can to donate to Women for Women International and more than 40 other incredible organizations working in the fields of women's economic security, education, empowerment, equality, health and safety.

See you on the bridge on March 8!

Posted by Claire Hughes Johnson, VP, Global Online Sales and Chair, Google Women's Professional Community
URL: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/join-us-on-bridge-for-international.html

[G] Mission Blue: Follow an Expedition off Easter Island, Chile

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 11:47 AM PST

Google LatLong: Mission Blue: Follow an Expedition off Easter Island, Chile

Have you ever dreamed of embarking on an exciting expedition? Well, now you can follow a ship traveling the ocean in Google Earth. National Geographic and Oceana scientists in collaboration with the Chilean Navy are traveling on their next Mission Blue expedition to the remote Salas y Gomez Island. This island is 250 miles (390 km) east of Easter Island. They aim to discover what lies beneath these largely unexplored waters.

To follow along, open Google Earth and search for "Easter Island, Chile". Look for the blue ship icon heading eastward as it travels to Salas y Gomez Island. Check back daily through March 10th to track this expedition (make sure the Places layer is turned on). The science team will share updates from the expedition as they travel east from Easter Island toward Salas y Gomez Island - including photographs, videos and links to the National Geographic News Watch blog. National Geographic and Oceana are members of Mission Blue.

We are also excited that we were able to quickly publish new imagery for the island in Google Earth and Google Maps, so that now anyone can visit Salas y Gomez virtually.

Click on the blue ship icon near Easter Island in Google Earth
to see the most recent post from the expedition.


In addition to the ship icon in Google Earth, you can also download the expedition KML or visit the Google Earth Gallery to download the file.

To bring this expedition to life for thousands of teachers and students around the globe, the National Geographic Ocean Education Program is working with Oracle® Education Foundation in the Oracle ThinkQuest online community. Educators can find lesson plans, submit questions to the research team while at sea, discuss with classrooms around the world and more. Visit the ThinkQuest website to apply to join the global community of teachers and students.

We hope you enjoy this virtual adventure at sea with the research team at Mission Blue.

Posted by Pete Giencke, GIS Data Engineer
URL: http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2011/02/mission-blue-follow-expedition-off.html

[G] Easier uploads to Picasa Web Albums

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 11:30 AM PST

Google Photos Blog: Easier uploads to Picasa Web Albums

Posted by Shuangfeng Li, Software Engineer

We've made sharing and storing your images in Picasa Web Albums even easier by improving the image upload process. Now you'll find a smoother upload flow, the five-at-a-time limitation has been removed, and you can upload HD video, too.

To get started from Chrome, Firefox or Safari click the Upload button, select an album and then choose the images and videos you want to upload. After your images have uploaded, you will see large thumbnails where you can easily add a caption, zoom in or delete right from the upload screen.


If you use Internet Explorer, you can continue to use the basic uploader or use the plug-in for drag-and-drop bulk uploading.

Another easy way to upload to Picasa Web Albums is from Gallery on an Android device. For example, with Android 3.0, Honeycomb, you can capture an image or video with your tablet's camera and upload directly to Picasa Web Albums to share with friends.




We're always working to improve Picasa Web Albums, please share your feedback in our forum. Happy uploading!
URL: http://googlephotos.blogspot.com/2011/02/easier-uploads-to-picasa-web-albums.html

[G] Slice and dice your recipe search results

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 10:27 AM PST

Official Google Blog: Slice and dice your recipe search results

As a second-generation Indian who has grown up in the United States, I've developed a taste for great home-cooked Indian food, but not a knack for how to make it. Somehow my cooking efforts result in foods that taste over-spiced yet bland at the same time. My parents follow the art of cooking by intuition, where the right amount of each spice is measured out by gut feel, but that's never worked very well for me. As a math geek and computer engineer, I prefer to work with concrete numbers and instructions, including when cooking, so today I'm very happy about a new feature that helps me find recipes online: Recipe View.

Recipe View lets you narrow your search results to show only recipes, and helps you choose the right recipe amongst the search results by showing clearly marked ratings, ingredients and pictures. To get to Recipe View, click on the "Recipes" link in the left-hand panel when searching for a recipe. You can search for specific recipes like [chocolate chip cookies], or more open-ended topics—like [strawberry] to find recipes that feature strawberries, or even a holiday or event, like [cinco de mayo]. In fact, you can try searching for all kinds of things and still find interesting results: a favorite chef like [ina garten], something very specific like [spicy vegetarian curry with coconut and tofu] or even something obscure like [strange salad].


In the past, you only had one way to specify your recipe searches—with the text you type into the Google search box. Now you can also filter search results based on your ideal ingredients, cooking time and calorie count using the recipe tools on the left hand side of the page. For example, I can now find vegetable biryani recipes (an Indian rice dish) that include cauliflower and take less than an hour to make:


We like to "eat our own dogfood" at Google—meaning we like to test our own products and features ourselves before releasing them for public consumption. With Recipe View, we've taken this more literally than usual. Here's Google Chef Scott Giambastiani to demonstrate how he uses Recipe View to find great recipes for Googlers:



Recipe View is based on data from rich snippets markup, which we first introduced at Searchology in 2009. If you're a recipe publisher, you can add markup to your webpages so that your content can appear with this improved presentation in regular Google results as well as in Recipe View. Recipe View is part of our ongoing efforts to enrich the search experience using structured data, and this release is an exciting technical milestone for our team since it's first time we've built a brand new set of search tools based off of rich snippets data.

Recipe View is rolling out now in the U.S. and Japan, and we'll be adding more countries in the future. We look forward to making further improvements and building more views so you can "slice and dice" your results for other types of searches as well. Bon appetit!

Posted by Kavi Goel, Product Manager
URL: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/slice-and-dice-your-recipe-search.html

[G] New ways to experience better collaboration with Google Apps

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 10:27 AM PST

Official Google Blog: New ways to experience better collaboration with Google Apps

The Google Apps collaboration tools have steadily and swiftly improved over the last couple years, and many companies have found that Google Docs and Google Sites are faster, simpler and more powerful than traditional software for the majority of common tasks, especially tasks where people need to work efficiently together. Today, we're launching two new initiatives to help more people experience the productivity benefits of web-powered collaboration.

First, Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office is now available worldwide. This plugin for Microsoft Office is available to anyone with a Google Account, and brings multi-person collaboration to the Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications that you may still need from time to time. The plugin syncs your work through Google's cloud, so everyone can contribute to the same version of a file at the same time. Learning the benefits of web-powered collaboration will help more people make a faster transition to 100% web collaboration tools.



We're also introducing the 90-Day Appsperience program, a way for companies that currently use cumbersome legacy systems to see how web-powered tools help their teams work together more effectively. A nominal fee covers 90-day access to Google Docs, Google Sites, Google Cloud Connect and more, as well as assistance from Google experts to help coworkers quickly become more productive together. And companies trying Google Apps can use the new collaboration dashboard in the Google Apps control panel to assess the value of our tools. The dashboard provides data on how people are using Apps to collaborate more efficiently without the hassles of document versions, check-in/check-out or attachments.


If you're curious how your company could become more agile, efficient and innovative with better tools for teams to work together, read more about these updates on the Google Enterprise Blog.

Posted by Shan Sinha, Google Apps Product Manager
URL: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/new-ways-to-experience-better.html

[G] Teach your old docs new tricks with Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 08:04 AM PST

Official Google Enterprise Blog: Teach your old docs new tricks with Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office

Millions of businesses are experiencing radical productivity gains with web-powered tools, and today Google Apps collaboration is ready for every employee. We're bringing multi-person, simultaneous editing to the Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications that coworkers may still need from time to time. More people will be able to achieve a 100% web future entirely in Google Docs after learning the benefits of web-powered collaboration within traditional software.

Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office is now available to all users worldwide, letting two or more people work together on the same file at the same time in Microsoft Office 2003, 2007 or 2010 on Windows PCs. For example, you can edit a Word document's table of contents from Dublin while coworkers adjust formatting and make revisions from Denver. Instead of bombarding each other with attachments and hassling to reconcile people's edits, your whole team can focus on productive work together.



Google Cloud Connect vastly improves Microsoft Office 2003, 2007 and 2010, so companies can start using web-enabled teamwork tools without upgrading Microsoft Office or implementing SharePoint 2010.


Comparison of collaboration alternatives


Today we're also introducing the 90-Day Appsperience program globally so businesses encumbered with 1990s technology can experience modern collaboration and the burst of productivity that's possible now. Whether you manage IT for your whole business, lead a department, or manage a complex project like an industry event, a nominal fee covers 90-day unlimited use of Google Apps collaboration plus hands-on support from Google experts. To help companies measure the productivity impact of better teamwork -- and ultimately pay for what they really need instead of desktop software that could sit on the shelf -- the new collaboration dashboard in the Google Apps for Business and Education control panel provides aggregated activity metrics to administrators. Both Google Cloud Connect and this collaboration dashboard are available in English, with many more supported languages to follow soon.


This year we look forward to bringing you countless stories on the Google Enterprise Blog from schools, businesses and other organizations that are becoming much more productive with Google Apps. To get the wheels turning, check out the transformation that's speeding ahead at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca.

Join me for a live webinar on March 3rd, 2011 at 10am PST / 1pm EST / 6pm GMT to learn more about Google Cloud Connect and the 90-Day Appsperience program. Register to attend the live event.


Posted by Shan Sinha, Google Apps Product Manager
URL: http://googleenterprise.blogspot.com/2011/02/teach-your-old-docs-new-tricks-with.html

[G] Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office available to all

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 07:26 AM PST

Docs Blog: Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office available to all

Many of you already use Google Docs for editing your documents, but there are still many people that are tied to desktop applications and haven't experienced the numerous benefits cloud applications to bring. To help bring more people to the cloud and take advantage of features that result, we're happy to announce that Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office is now available to everyone. Google Cloud Connect is a free plugin that improves Microsoft Office 2003, 2007 and 2010 on Windows PCs. It adds simultaneous collaboration, revision history, cloud sync, unique URLs and simple sharing to the Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint applications:



Take it for a spin on your Windows PC by downloading the plugin.

To learn more about how Google Cloud Connect can help businesses, check out the more detailed post on the Google Enterprise Blog.

Posted by: Shan Sinha, Google Apps Product Manager
URL: http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2011/02/google-cloud-connect-for-microsoft.html

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