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Google Chrome is a web browser developed by Google that uses the WebKit layout engine. It was first released as a beta version for Microsoft Windows on September 2, 2008, and the public stable release was on December 11, 2008. The name is derived from the graphical user interface frame, or “chrome”, of web browsers. As of May 2011, Chrome was the third most widely used browser with 12.52% worldwide usage share of web browsers, according to Net Applications. (source: www.wiki.com)
Chrome Book
Lady Gaga
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Nothing but the web.
Chromebooks are built and optimized for the web, where you already spend most of your computing time. So you get a faster, simpler and more secure experience without all the headaches of ordinary computers.
Instant web
Chromebooks boot in 8 seconds and resume instantly. Your favorite websites load quickly and run smoothly, with full support for the latest web standards and Adobe® Flash®. In fact, Chromebooks are designed to get faster over time as updates are released.
It’s easy to get connected anytime and anywhere with built-in Wi-Fi and 3G. As your Chromebook boots up, it quickly connects to your favorite wireless network so you’re on the web right from the start. 3G models include a free 100 MB per month of mobile data from Verizon Wireless so you can keep working around home and on the go. Learn more about 3G.
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Introducing the Google+ project: Real-life sharing, rethought for the web
+Circles: share what matters, with the people who matter most
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There is something called What do you love? Another service by Google. It’s a search and find very similar like Google.com or like iGoogle. This new Service you can find at www.wdyl.com. Once you search, it gives information from different resources available within Google Products. Few to mentions are:-
Trends
SketchUp
Product Search
Books
Chrome
Blogs
And more to come…
The full service is not yet launched officially. You can also visit the site on http://www.google.com/whatdoyoulove There is something to come up here, what its showing is
Is What do you love just an app?
We have yet to see what service has yet to offer. However it looks very friendly for mobile friendly. As you can see:
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Here are some tips that help you recognize methods for analyzing information about your users. It’s nice to see that the efforts of our SEO are investment fruits by a number of visits up from a period to a period. The question is if that the real situation?? Is the number of visits for a particular phrase really mean that click on my results the same number of times? You can find the answer in Google Analytics. Pairing model say that when a visitor comes to our site through a traffic source and then comes to our site as a direct source.
Google Analytics will give credit to the source of the original movement that led the visitor and not the direct source. For example, if a visitor came from a particular phrase in organic promoting, like the site and keeps it at his Favorite folder, or every time he starts to type the website address in the browser and browser remember and complete the address – so every time the visitor return to our site (even he’s not [...]
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In this article, I am going to discuss the issue related to Google sitelinks. So the article is going to be little technical.
Before three years, webmasters noted that Google has started showing “sub topic” or “sub category” links within the results. Now Google has finally implemented the change and the name given to that service is “Sitelinks”.
Sitelinks are the additional links that appear below search results in Google. They basically serve as a shortcut for internal pages of the website. It allows users to easily navigate through your website.
Google sitelinks are the ultimate endorsement of a website. While there are many clear compensation but knowing how to place site links is always like searching something in a dark art. More guess work and then hard work. But there is always a way out.
Last month in Feb, 2008, I planned to get Google sitelinks for one of my website. It was a very good experience to gain sitelinks as I also learned alot about [...]
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As the primary go-to search engine, Google further lured in more users and loyalists with the addition of iGoogle features. It not only spruced up the otherwise plain white and boring interface, it also maximized Googlers’ homepage use.
iGoogle, previously known as Google Personalized Homepage, is a feature that allows you to personalize the page that displays the Google search engine. But more than that, iGoogle offers gadgets and tools-both from Google and third-party developers-that you can use, share, or have fun with. Here are a few of them:
A. PERSONALIZED DASHBOARD
1. THEMES – The first step perhaps is to customize the background. Choose a design that suits your personality type or mood for the day. You can go from simple lines and hues to whoa!-this-is-cool 3D arts. There could also be a design featuring your favorite basketball team, an advocacy you support, or that musician you wish you could be. Anything that may inspire or perk you up, at the very [...]
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Where you rank within search engines like Google depends largely on the competitiveness of a keyword phrase and how well that competition has done their own on-page and off-page search engine optimization.
However, regardless of the market you’re in there will be sets of words that you can in fact rank well for, and pretty darn easily too.
Here are the top 4 things you need to look for when you’re researching keywords for your own website.
1. How many searches are done on that keyword? At a bare minimum you’d like to see at least 3,000 searches done a month. This works out to be about 100 searches a day on average. Google’s keyword tool can give you a good estimation on how many searches are done a month but no tool is 100% accurate so keep that in mind. A variation of one-hundred searches or so either way can work well too.
2. How many competing sites are there in Google for that term? Do a quick search in Google for the keyword phrase you want to use [...]
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It was inevitable that Google would eventually release its own web browser, but the steadily-growing success of Google Chrome took even the staunchest advocates by surprise. With more than 12% of internet users now using Chrome, it has obviously become the browser of choice for many power users. As a result, a number of extremely useful plug-ins have been created for Chrome, including many which are highly relevant to SEO professionals. What follows is a sampling of the most useful.
Chrome SEO
Without a doubt the most comprehensive SEO tool available for Google Chrome, Chrome SEO offers a number of features that help speed up the process of SEO. Chrome SEO has some innovative features, such as highlighting all no-follow links on a page, allowing webmasters to quickly and easily see whether sites they link to are linking back.
Chrome SEO also has easy access to cached versions of a webpage; full domain information including Whois, IP, DNS, etc.; number of pages indexed on [...]
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The Google Panda update is a game changer in terms of search and website ranking. The last time Google updated their search algorithm this much was back in 2007 when the Google Florida update discounted links and PageRank and re-arranged the search results for thousands of websites. This time it’s no different.
Google’s update is a clear attempt to improve the organic search results by degrading the existing spam sites which pollute them. In order to do this it has upgraded its algorithm to look for specific ‘signature’ elements which now mark a site which has spam content.
By understanding what the characteristics of a spam site are from the perspective of the Google search engine you can reverse-engineer it and begin to understand what you need to do in order to stop your website from being adversely affected by the Panda Update.
What Google Considers now to be ‘Spam’ Websites
1. Websites with content that is not sufficiently original [...]