Tag Archive | "Google Homepage"

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Doodle 4 Google Contest Kicks Off


Google said today it is holding its third annual Doodle 4 Google contest that allows K-12 students in the U.S. to create their own logo for the Google homepage.

The theme this year is "If I Could Do Anything, I Would." Google says along with the winners Doodle appearing on the homepage on May 27, 2010, they will also receive a $15,000 college scholarship, a laptop computer and a $25,000 technology grant for their school.

Google has also put together a panel of expert judges. The Google Blog offers more details. "We’re happy to let you know that this year, we’ve also assembled a panel of well-known ‘Expert Jurors,’ including creative directors, cartoonists and famous animators ranging from Sesame Workshop to Pixar Animation Studios. Our Expert Jurors will help us narrow down the cream of the crop to 40 regional finalists, who will come to the Google office in New York City on May 26, 2010."

"For the second year, we’ll also be partnering with the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, where the top 40 regional finalists will get to have their artwork displayed in a national exhibit. And for the first time this year, we’ll give out eight Technology Booster awards to schools that submit maximum number of doodles per school by March 10th and have students in our 400 State Finalists."

Only schoolteachers or administrators can register their schools to participate.  Registration for the Doodle 4 Google contest closes at 11:59 Pacific Time on March 17, 2010, and entries must be submitted by March 31, 2010.

Related Articles:

>2009 Doodle 4 Google Winner Announced

>Google Offers Money, Fame To Young Artists

>Doodle 4 Google Contest Launches

 

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Is Bing Making Google Better?


Since Bing’s launch, the search engine has garnered quite a bit of attention. This is no surprise since Microsoft invested so much money into marketing it. It may still be too early to tell, but it seems to be paying off so far. Bing’s numbers have edged up since its launch.

While Google still dominates the search market share by a very wide margin, the company does appear to view Bing as a legitimate competitor, and while not marketing on the scale that Microsoft is, the company has been quick to highlight some of its own search features that might appeal to those infatuated with Bing’s "decision engine" functionality.

Last month, Google put up a page, highlighting some of the special searches you can perform on Google to get your answers right in the results. These included things like weather, movie times, dictionary, calculator, sports scores, stock quotes, etc. There was even a link to this page right on the Google homepage under the search box (although it no longer appears there now). The move seemed to say, "Hey everybody, Bing’s cool, but you know we already have this stuff right?"

Now Google has quietly added a minor feature to its image search that might look familiar to Bing users. You know how Bing has the little menu under the search box, where you can pick what kind of filter you want on your results? Google is now including a similar feature.

Bing image filter

Google image filter

Perhaps Google saw that Bing users liked this feature and added it themselves. It makes you wonder what other ideas Google might get from Bing. I’m not saying that they need to get too many ideas from Bing. Google is clearly the leader of the market right now, and the company got there by doing something right. I am also not suggesting that Google is going to start copying everything Bing does. But, if there is a little feature (such as the above example) here and there that can enhance the usability of Google and its search products, perhaps the entire search industry can benefit.

The concept is nothing new. Search engines have been getting ideas from each other for years. It’s how they stay competitive. Really what the above example illustrates is how competition makes the entire industry better. You can see this illustrated in the social media space as well, as Facebook adopts more Twitter-like features, while maintaining most of what people like about Facebook at the same time.

Google recently acknowledged that it has plenty of competition. The company says it must keep innovating to stay on top. Adjusting products to accommodate less innovative, but popular features is a good way to do it too. That seems to be the way major Internet players think.

The image filter feature is a small thing, but it reflects a bigger picture. The more competitive the industry is, the better it is likely to become for us users.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Is Bing Making Google Better?


Since Bing’s launch, the search engine has garnered quite a bit of attention. This is no surprise since Microsoft invested so much money into marketing it. It may still be too early to tell, but it seems to be paying off so far. Bing’s numbers have edged up since its launch.

While Google still dominates the search market share by a very wide margin, the company does appear to view Bing as a legitimate competitor, and while not marketing on the scale that Microsoft is, the company has been quick to highlight some of its own search features that might appeal to those infatuated with Bing’s "decision engine" functionality.

Last month, Google put up a page, highlighting some of the special searches you can perform on Google to get your answers right in the results. These included things like weather, movie times, dictionary, calculator, sports scores, stock quotes, etc. There was even a link to this page right on the Google homepage under the search box (although it no longer appears there now). The move seemed to say, "Hey everybody, Bing’s cool, but you know we already have this stuff right?"

Now Google has quietly added a minor feature to its image search that might look familiar to Bing users. You know how Bing has the little menu under the search box, where you can pick what kind of filter you want on your results? Google is now including a similar feature.

Bing image filter

Google image filter

Perhaps Google saw that Bing users liked this feature and added it themselves. It makes you wonder what other ideas Google might get from Bing. I’m not saying that they need to get too many ideas from Bing. Google is clearly the leader of the market right now, and the company got there by doing something right. I am also not suggesting that Google is going to start copying everything Bing does. But, if there is a little feature (such as the above example) here and there that can enhance the usability of Google and its search products, perhaps the entire search industry can benefit.

The concept is nothing new. Search engines have been getting ideas from each other for years. It’s how they stay competitive. Really what the above example illustrates is how competition makes the entire industry better. You can see this illustrated in the social media space as well, as Facebook adopts more Twitter-like features, while maintaining most of what people like about Facebook at the same time.

Google recently acknowledged that it has plenty of competition. The company says it must keep innovating to stay on top. Adjusting products to accommodate less innovative, but popular features is a good way to do it too. That seems to be the way major Internet players think.

The image filter feature is a small thing, but it reflects a bigger picture. The more competitive the industry is, the better it is likely to become for us users.

Posted in Social MediaComments Off


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