Showing posts with label google update. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google update. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Google Webmaster report may be possible to Update this Month

That time of the month over for the Google Webmaster Report where we abridge any recent findings by savvy SEOs and webmasters via the continuing WebmasterWorld thread and review the top changes and updates in the past 30 days or so.

First, it seems like there may be a small Google update occurrence. According to the WebmasterWorld thread, numerous webmasters over the past 24 hours have been considering moreover traffic fluctuations that are positive and negative.

Some say they have a grouping more traffic from Google and some say a lot less. It is too premature to tell right now, but I'll keep an eye out.

Also, there are grievances, as we reported, of links mortal dropped out via Webmaster Tools and a toolbar Page Rank update.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Google updates Blogger for Android phones and its Supports iPad

Google has rolled out major improves to its free Blogger apps for both Android and iOS, adding sustain for the iPad and other development. "Motivation for a new post can occur at any place and time: on the divan, while shopping, at a game, or in the kitchen. 

Providentially, mobile devices enable you to stay associated anywhere you are," says Google in a blog post. “With that in mind, we just started reorganized apps for both Android and iOS." 

The most illustrious update that has been rolled out is the hold up for iPad. Now users can decide countryside mode to make posts, share posts on Google+ and have the capability to view a planned post time. Google has added sustain for over 30 global languages. 

The modernized Blogger app enables users to create posts and save them as drafts. Users can also instantaneously distribute the content to their blog. There's an option to implant descriptions into posts via photo gallery on mobile phone or tablet, or click straight from the camera. 

Additionally, users can now add labels and position in sequence to their posts. The app also shows a list of saved and available posts, and allows users to switch blogging description.

Monday, June 25, 2012

A tribute to Turing, the father of modern computing

“The past is a foreign country—they do things differently there.” It’s a saying that rings particularly true in the world of technology. But while innovating requires us to focus on the future, there are times when it’s significant to look back. Today—the 100th anniversary of Alan Turing’s birth—is one such moment.

Turing’s life was one of astounding highs and overwhelming lows. While his wartime code breaking saved thousands of lives, his own life was shattered when he was convicted for homosexuality. But the disaster of his story should not overshadow his legacy. Turing’s insight laid the foundations of the computer age. It’s no overstatement to say he’s a founding father of every computer and Internet company today.


Turing’s breakthrough came in 1936 with the publication of his seminal paper “On Computable Numbers” (PDF). This introduced two key concepts, “algorithms” and “computing machines”—commonplace terms today, but truly innovative in the 1930’s:

* Algorithms are, in simplest terms, step-by-step instructions for carrying out a mathematical calculation. This is where it all started for programming since, at its core, all software is a gathering of algorithms.
* A computing machine—today better known as a Turing machine—was the hypothetical device that Turing dreamed up to run his algorithms. In the 1930’s, a “computer” was what you called a person who did calculations—it was a profession, not an object. Turing’s paper provided the blueprint for building a machine that could do any calculation that a person could, marking the first step towards the modern notion of a computer.

Considering the role computers now play in everyday life, it’s clear Turing’s inventions rank among the most significant intellectual breakthroughs of the 20th century. In the development of computing, all paths trace back to Turing. That’s why Turing is a hero to so many Google engineers, and why we’re so proud to help commemorate and preserve his legacy.

In 2010, Google helped Bletchley Park raise funds to purchase Turing’s papers so they could be preserved for public display in their museum. More recently, we’ve been functioning closely with curators at London’s Science Museum to help put on a stunning new exhibition “Code breaker - Alan Turing’s Life and Legacy.” This tells the story of Turing’s vast achievements in a intensely moving and personal way, through an amazing collection of artifacts—including items loaned by GCHQ, the U.K. government intelligence agency, never before on public display. Topics addressed include Turing’s early years, his code-breaking at Bletchley Park, and his designs for the Pilot Ace computer, his later morphogenesis work, as well as his sexuality and death. The exhibition opened on June 21 and is well worth a visit if you’re passing through London in the next year.

And finally, we couldn’t let such an important occasion pass without a doodle. We thought the most fitting way of paying tribute to Turing’s unbelievable life and work would be to simulate the theoretical “Turing machine” he proposed in a mathematical paper. Visit the homepage today— we invite you to try your hand at programming it. If you get it the first time, try again... it gets harder!

Turing was born into a world that was very dissimilar, culturally and technologically, from ours—but his contribution has never been more significant. I hope you’ll join me today in paying compliment to Alan Turing, the forefather of modern computing.