Particularly favourable code gives off Dreamhost lead plane again

Filed under: SEO Optimization — Wrote by Lees on Friday, October 10th, 2008 @ 10:37 pm

Before a week, I announced the news that special privilege piles up Dreamhost lead plane on June 10, also the netizen privilege that Email gives those giving out the request is piled up. From tiring-room I also see partial privilege code has been used. Be piled up because of partial privilege and was not used, the netizen that still has other at the same time has Email to need to use, so I am 2 days before had connected cicada to get favourable stack, do not have use public figure however, will call in in 18 days the netizen that favourable code needs to other is used. Particularly favourable code suits this Dreamhost large flow of need large space and preparation buys 5 years or user of 10 years. Its privilege is as follows: * space: 2TB (2, 048GB) , lunar discharge, 20TB (20, 480GB) * chooses 5 years to pay cost the word of the plan, can obtain the discount of 150 dollars, that is to say is in 417-150=267 dollar 5 years. * chooses 10 years to pay cost the word of the plan, can obtain the discount of 200 dollars, be equivalent to 714-200=514 dollar 10 years. Particularly favourable code is announced as follows.

001997742428 377127649077 613914443733 926587526125

The lead plane that if you think,buys Dreamhost in Https://signup.dreamhost.com/ serves registered address, do not be willing to buy 5 years again however so long, can use soG2SAVINGPrivilege is piled up, the discount that you can acquire $50 dollar (maximum now rebate has 50 only) , and I am added additionally those who send is OK and permanent use domain name (this is in Dreamhost itself besides a free domain name, send additionally, had two domain names so) . This station is erect on Dreamhost.

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Developers, start your engines

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:25 am

Posted by Kevin Gibbs, Tech Lead,
Google App Engine

We just launched a preview release of href="http://appengine.google.com/" >Google App Engine, a way
for developers to run their web applications on Google's
infrastructure. In the same way that Blogger made it easy to create
a blog, Google App Engine is designed from the ground up to make it
easy to create and run web applications.

With Google App Engine, developers can write web applications based
on the same building blocks that Google uses, like href="http://labs.google.com/papers/gfs.html" >GFS and href="http://labs.google.com/papers/bigtable.html" >Bigtable.
Google App Engine packages those building blocks and provides
access to scalable infrastructure that we hope will make it easier
for developers to scale their applications automatically as they
grow. This means they can spend less time dealing with system
administration and maintenance, and more time building and
improving their applications. (There's href="http://googleappengine.blogspot.com/2008/04/introducing-google-app-engine-our-new.html" >
more detail on the new App Engine Blog.)

Google App Engine is free to use during the preview release, but
the amount of computing resources any app can use is limited. In
the future, developers will be able to purchase additional
computing resources as needed, but Google App Engine will always be
free to get started.

Today's launch is a preview release. We've got a lot left
to do, and there are a lot of features we still want to add to the
system. What we'd really like is to get your feedback on it, so
we know which features are most important to you. We'll use
your suggestions to keep improving the system.

This preview of Google App Engine is available for the first 10,000
developers who sign up; we will increase that number in near
future. So, developers, please href="http://appengine.google.com/" >sign up, href="http://code.google.com/appengine" >download the SDK, and
start your engines.

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Salesforce for Google Apps

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:25 am

Posted by Scott McMullan, Google Apps
Partner Lead, Google Enterprise

A little less than a year ago, we href="http://www.google.com/intl/en/press/pressrel/salesforce_alliance.html"
id="xvmx" >partnered with Salesforce.com to create Salesforce
Group Edition featuring Google AdWords. It combines
Salesforce.com’s CRM applications with AdWords to make it easier
for businesses to generate leads, track, and close them.

Since then, people have offered up a constant stream of requests to
streamline even more of the CRM process. At the top of list are
everyday tasks like improved efficiency sending and sharing account
emails, easier ways to create and share documents and
presentations, and simpler ways to schedule meetings and
events.

To address these requests, we set out to collaborate on another
product integration. Live today, we're happy to unveil href="http://www.salesforce.com/products/google/apps/" >Salesforce
for Google Apps, a new product for all of those using
Salesforce.com available at no additional charge. It brings the
collaboration and communications features of Google Apps directly
into the user experience of Salesforce.com, and is focused on
streamlining the activities most frequently requested by our users.
(There's href="http://googleenterprise.blogspot.com/2008/04/run-even-more-of-your-business-in-cloud.html" >
more detail on our Enterprise Blog.)

Here's a quick look at the problems we're trying to solve
with Salesforce for Google Apps:

value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Pqe2eCtY4Pg&hl=en" /> type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent"
height="355" width="425" />

Regarding improvements, we'd like to remind developers that
these new features — as well as those announced today by our
partners href="http://www.astadia.com/about/astadia_press_release-salesforce.com-google-products-launch.aspx" >
Astadia and href="http://www.appirio.com/about/pr_products_041408.php" >Appirio
– were created using our respective open APIs. We share with
Salesforce.com a commitment to make the web the best platform for
application innovation.

Thanks to everyone for your good ideas so far. We hope you'll
continue to href="http://ideas.salesforce.com/popular/google" >share your
thoughts

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Custom Search goes global

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, December 12th, 2007 @ 9:56 pm

Posted by Nitin Mangtani, Lead Product
Manager, Enterprise Search and Rajat Mukherjee, Group Product
Manager, Search

In our Mountain View, California lobby, there's an image of a
globe radiating colo(u)red beams of light, representing searches in
different languages in countries all over the world. It's quite
mesmerizing to watch. (You should check it out if you visit.)

onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"
href="http://bp0.blogger.com/_Ap14FtNN91w/R0LgKTjHTAI/AAAAAAAAAWw/FAxvdoK7kTM/s1600-h/search_globe.gif" >
height="1" width="1" />

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Ga-Ga for Gadgets

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 10th, 2007 @ 10:21 pm

Posted by Sep Kamvar, Engineering Lead
for Personalization

Sometimes I think I know a lot. I can code like a champ and also
know the difference between a Monet and a Manet. But on closer
inspection, maybe I don't know very much at all. When it comes
to fine wines, for instance, I can't tell the difference
between Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Chateau-de-Cardboard, and if you
asked me who played in the Super Bowl last year, I'd probably
say the Dolphins. And lots of people at Google are like me: we know
some things, and have some good ideas, but we certainly don't
know everything or have all the good ideas.

So when we designed iGoogle, our personalized homepage, we baked
that recognition right in to the product by developing the

href="http://www.google.com/apis/gadgets/" >Google Gadgets API.
Google Gadgets are applications that developers can create and
anyone can embed into their iGoogle homepage or their own website.
In the year and a half since we launched Google Gadgets, we've
seen a lot of growth in this program. The developer community has
created thousands of gadgets, and the top gadgets get tens of
millions of pageviews per week. This is great for our developers,
as iGoogle gives the gadgets broad distribution, and it's great
for our iGoogle users, as they benefit from a richer variety of
options for their personalized homepage. There have been some
really interesting gadgets created, from href="http://www.google.com/ig/directory?source=gapi&num=24&url=http://www.google.com/ig/modules/todo.xml" >
to-do lists to href="http://www.google.com/ig/directory?source=gapi&num=24&q=zelda&btnG=Search Homepage Content" >
Zelda, from a href="http://www.google.com/ig/directory?source=gapi&num=24&url=http://www.google.com/ig/modules/eyes.xml" >
pair of eyes that follow your mouse around the screen to an
entire customer relationship management ( href="http://www.google.com/ig/directory?source=gapi&num=24&url=http://www.crmforgoogle.com/google/crm.html" >
CRM) application.

We've been hearing from a lot of gadget developers that
they'd like to spend more time developing if they could, and
we've been thinking about ways to help them do that. To that
end, we're happy to announce href="http://www.google.com/gadgetventures/" >Google Gadget
Ventures, a new pilot program that will help fund third-party
gadget development and gadget-related businesses. We plan to offer
two types of funding: $5,000 grants for gadget developers who want
to invest time making their already successful gadget even better,
and $100,000 seed investments for new gadget-related businesses.
For now, applications are restricted to gadget developers who have
more than 250,000 pageviews per week on their gadget.

Our hope with Google Gadget Ventures is to help create an ecosystem
where developers can spend more time doing what they love –
building great gadgets. You'll find more details on how to
apply on href="http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2007/06/google-gadget-ventures.html" >
Tom's post on the Google Code Blog and the href="http://www.google.com/gadgetventures/" >Google Gadget
Ventures web page. I'm extremely excited to see what you
all come up with! height="1" width="1" />

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A simple way to get more storage

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Saturday, December 8th, 2007 @ 6:01 am

Posted by Ryan Aquino, Software QA
Engineer Lead, Picasa Web Albums

As someone who tests Google products daily, I know that the
simplest solution is often the one that works best. In the case of
online storage, whether it's a picture, a video or an email,
you should just, well, be able to store it without having to worry
about whether you've got enough space in each particular
product. That's why the Picasa team is pleased to tell you that
in a few hours we'll be rolling out extra storage that you can
purchase to use across several Google products (today, Picasa Web
Albums and Gmail; soon, other applications like Google Docs &
Spreadsheets). That will help make storage really useful, like
letting you upload lots of full resolution images to Picasa Web
Albums.

When you reach the limit of free storage (i.e., 1GB for Picasa Web
Albums, 2.8GB for Gmail), consider this your overflow solution.
Plans start at $20/year for 6GB (yes, $5 cheaper than before), with
larger plans ranging up to 250GB. If only testing everything were
this easy. We'll update this post as soon as we're ready to
take your order.

Update:
And we're live! To buy more storage, href="https://www.google.com/accounts/ManageStorage"

onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)" >go
here. height="1" width="1" />

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Our plans for Code Jam

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Friday, December 7th, 2007 @ 10:35 pm

Posted by Bartholomew
"Ruberik" Furrow, Technical Lead

What do you do if you've got a head full of good ideas, and
nothing interesting to do with them? You might need a good dose of
competitive programming. During a programming competition you
contort your brain, trying desperately to figure out that tiny
trick that will let your program run a thousand times faster, or
searching for the elusive mathematical fact that will lead you to
the solution. Then you tell your computer what to do, and watch it
solve that torturous problem faster than you can blink. If
you're like me, you eagerly participate in every coding
competition that comes along.

Since 2003, we have supported the fun and intensity of competitive
programming around the world by offering code jams powered by
TopCoder. Contests like the ACM ICPC, the TopCoder Open and our
TopCoder-powered code jams have formed a great community of
contests and contestants; now we're excited to join that
community in our own right, by producing a Google Code Jam of our
own! There aren't too many details to share yet, but we have
some big plans: there are quite a few super-competitive programmers
here, and we've put them to work preparing challenges for
you.

So start brushing up with href="http://services.google.com/blog_resources/Google_CodeJam_Practice.pdf" >
a couple of practice problems — and it's well worth
checking out some old problems from the href="http://acmicpc-live-archive.uva.es/nuevoportal/" >ACM ICPC
and TopCoder too.
We're also excited to hear what you think would make for a
great Google-run programming contest, so send us your href="mailto:Programmingcontest-feedback@google.com" >feedback
– and get ready for a challenge. height="1" width="1" />

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Behind the scenes with universal search

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:11 pm

Posted by David Bailey, Tech Lead, and
Johanna Wright, Product Manager, universal search

So when we were asked to make the vision href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/05/universal-search-best-answer-is-still.html">
Marissa describes about universal search into a reality, we
admit we were a little daunted. Googlers had tried before to do
this without success — several times. Finding the best answer
across multiple content types is a well-known hard problem in the
search field. Besides that, we wondered if we had become too big a
company to pull off a project this complex.

Here's the challenge in a nutshell: Until now, we've only
been able to show news, books, local and other such results at the
top of the page, like this example for [ href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=trends in education &btnG=Google Search">
trends in education]. But it's a tall order to earn
placement at the top of our search results, so plenty often we end
up not showing these kinds of results even when they might be
useful. If only we could smartly place such results elsewhere on
the page when they don't quite deserve the top, we could share
the benefits of these great Google features with people much more
often.

One challenge was being able to regularly search through all of the
additional content types to find relevant results. After all, you
don't know if there might be a minor news story or an obscure
book relevant to your query unless you go and check. But
Google's massive compute cluster — and much effort by our
infrastructure experts — gave us a leg up on that one, and we can
now search these disparate types of information about as
efficiently as we search our massive index of web pages. We may
have melted down a data center or two along the way, but then bugs
are part of life in this business!

The next challenge was deciding when and where such results should
blend in. Fortunately we have some of the world's experts on
ranking, and have been able to apply the lessons learned on web
search to ensure that we show news only for newsworthy queries,
scanned books only when there aren't better web results, etc.
It can be tricky. As we learned the hard way, just because everyone
under the sun is writing about Anna Nicole Smith doesn't mean
news about her should show up for the search [baby names].

Lastly, we faced the challenge of the user interface you see on the
screen — the UI. The new UI for these results is subtle, but this
is one reason why the project is fun for our designers and
usability experts: they get to focus on creating a simple
experience for you. For example, with news results they designed a
compact look for the result that includes helpful items like an
image and a date, but is limited to just the most salient
information. Or take our book search results, which call out the
author and number of pages in the book. (Of course, we learned that
sometimes you don't even need to design a user interface. In
one early usability study, shortly after Barry Bonds broke Babe
Ruth's home run record, we asked people "how many home
runs has Barry Bonds hit?" hoping they would type [barry
bonds] into the search box. Instead, each and every one simply
blurted out "715".)

We also called on experts from each of our feature areas such as
News and Local, and were delighted to find our startup mindset is
alive and well. Folks from all over found spare time and pitched in
to get us to the finish line. There were many nights when we went
to bed knowing that plenty of the team's IM status still
reported they were online.

And after all this elbow grease, finally we have something that
works. What does it mean for you?

Although it's just a beginning, this first pass of universal
search focuses on video, news, local and books. Now you'll be
able to get more information Google knows about directly from
within the search results. You won't have to know about
specialized areas of content. If you're looking for the [ href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=atkins southwestern pork fajitas&btnG=Search">
atkins southwestern pork fajitas] recipe, we can now link you
right to that page in the book. Or if, like me, you've been
busy these past few days and have not caught up with your Tivo,
don't type [ href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=sopranos&btnG=Search">
sopranos] into Google, because our news result will be a giant
spoiler. The search for [ href="http://www.google.com/search?aq=t&oq=rachmaninoff concerto &hl=en&q=rachmaninoff concerto 3">
rachmaninoff concerto 3] includes a video of Vladimir Horowitz
performing this piece (scroll down to see it), and [ href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Animator vs. Animation 2&btnG=Search">
Animator vs. Animation 2] is pretty cool as well. (And as
Johanna notes: I was delighted to see that when querying for my
son's name a video showed up too.)

This is just the tip of the iceberg in making Google results more
comprehensive and useful. It has involved launching a number of new
systems that will make it much easier for us to continue making
improvements so you get the most relevant information from our
varied content areas. We hope you like it. And finally, we're
especially happy to know that Google is still very much a place
where we can get big things done!

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