Attracted ad business of Anna Nicole Smith to death

Filed under: Google Blogoscoped — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, March 5th, 2008 @ 9:22 am

I am searched in Google US now ” Anna Nicole Smith ” hind have 8 relevant ad. These ad business do not have an other place to buy your attention in beautiful money. Among them a few be in the rough-and-ready in haste — new York Times oneself mosaic ” The New York Tmes ” — of other this one incident is used to let you download tool column in the attempt.

Anna Nicole Smith
Find Out About Her
Sudden Death At TMZ
TMZ.com

Anna Nicole Smith
Read Bios, see Photos, browse Movie
Titles&More At AOL? Moviefone
Moviefone.com

Anna Nicole Smith
Anna Nicole, shortly Before Death:
‘ It ‘ S Always A Battle ‘ . Learn More.
ABCNews.com

Anna Nicole Smith
Is Anna ‘ S Sudden Death Drug Related
Find Out W/The Free Gossip Toolbar! Www.Starware.com/CelebrityNews

Anna Nicole Smith Dies
Watch The Anna Nicole Smith Story
ClipBlast Web Video Search - FreeWww.clipblast.com

Anna Nicole Smith
The New York Tmes Reports On TheDeath Of The Actress And ModelWww.nytimes.com

Anna Nicole Smith
Anna Nicole Smith Dead At 39
See Her Life In Photos
People.com

Facebook Virgin Islands
A Simple Variation.
Enter Now! Www.facebook.vg

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Our Corporate Equality effort

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Thursday, December 13th, 2007 @ 2:54 am

Posted by Megan Smith, VP of New
Business Development, and Nicholas Creswell, University Programmes
Manager, EMEA

Googlers care deeply about creating a workplace that affords equal
treatment for all our staff, and while we do it regardless of any
accolades we think our efforts might bring, recognition from
outside organizations does mean a lot to us. Which is why we're
really pleased about our href="http://w3.hrc.org/Template.cfm?Section=Search_the_Database&Template=/CustomSource/WorkNet/srch_dtl.cfm&srchtype=QS&searchid=1&orgid=5117"
id="wah1" >strong performance in the
U.S. Human Rights Campaign (HRC) href="http://www.hrc.org/placestowork/" id="ps-m"
>Corporate Equality Index for
the second year in a row. It's particularly exciting given that
this is a time of rapid growth for our population of gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender employees (whose group name is, naturally,
Gayglers) around the world.

This summer marked the first time Gayglers coordinated a presence
at Pride parades globally. In San Francisco, New York, and Dublin,
we had the largest (and perhaps rowdiest) presence of any
corporation, and href="http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=5qtS9bnQCj4" >we went one
further at Europride in Madrid where we were the only
global company present among 45 floats. We had lot of fun at all of
the marches, and it was a great way to bring Gayglers and their
friends together in the communities we call home. We're
passionate about our href="http://www.google.com/jobs/gayglers/" >diverse workplace,
and we hope anyone who shares our commitment to equality will
consider id="zray" >joining us.

onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"
href="http://bp0.blogger.com/_Ap14FtNN91w/RwuDVMI_8FI/AAAAAAAAASc/7XwelzjkMNs/s1600-h/gayglers_SF_2007.gif" >
alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5119329801496162386"
border="0" /> height="1" width="1" />

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We can’t do it all …

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, December 5th, 2007 @ 8:21 pm

Posted by Kevin Smith, Partner Program
Manager

If you can get href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=weather belfair WA&btnG=Google Search" >
weather forecasts for Belfair, WA from Google.com, why
shouldn’t you be able to access mainframe data from your own href="http://www.google.com/appliance" >Google Search Appliance?
Our 2,000 enterprise customers know that you can. (In fact our
enterprise business has grown more than 100 percent in the first
half of this year over the first half of last year.) The href="http://www.google.com/enterprise/gep/" >Google Enterprise
Professional program will help Google customers extend their
use of enterprise products to previously hard-to-search areas of
their infrastructure, such as legacy data locked in mainframes,
information on a highly secure government network, or real-time
customer data in an enterprise application.

As it turns out, there are plenty of businesses with expertise in
this stuff — systems integrators and independent software vendors
that know more about specialized enterprise environments than we
ever could. So today we're announcing this program to help
customers get more value out of their Google enterprise search
deployments.

We provide training, a development version of the Google Search
Appliance, and the necessary support so Google Enterprise
Professionals can become experts on our enterprise technology. And
they give us expertise in their categories built on years of
experience.

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Discovering hard-to-find books

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

Posted by Adam Smith, Senior Business
Product Manager, Google Print

Tomorrow is the day we said we'd resume scanning in-copyright
works with our library partners as part of our initiative to build
a card catalog of books with href="http://print.google.com/" >Google Print. We are in the
process of resuming scanning (it may take a little time), so you
should soon be able to search across more books from our partner
libraries at href="http://print.google.com/" >print.google.com. We've
already had great success working with publishers directly to add
their works to our index through our href="http://print.google.com/intl/en/googleprint/publisher.html" >Publisher
Program, and when we add books with publisher permission, we
can offer more information and a much richer user experience.

As always, the focus of our library effort is on scanning books
that are unique to libraries including many public domain books,
orphaned works and out-of-print titles. We're starting with
library stacks that mostly contain older and out-of-circulation
books, but also some newer books. That said, we want to make all
books easier to find, and as we get through the older parts of the
libraries we'll start scanning the stacks that house newer
books.

These older books are the ones most inaccessible to users, and make
up the vast majority of books – a conservative estimate would be 80
percent. Our digital card catalog will let people discover these
books through Google search, see their bibliographic information,
view href="http://print.google.com/print?q=pioneer&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&pgis=1&id=hjhu2OaXKw4C" >
short snippets related to their queries (never the full text),
and offer them links to places where they can buy the book or find
it in a local library.

We think that making books easier to find will be good for authors,
publishers, and our users. We're excited to get back to work
making a comprehensive, free, full-text card catalog of the
world's books a reality. Happy searching!

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Buzz about Google Print and the lawsuit

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, December 2nd, 2007 @ 11:12 pm

Posted by Adam M. Smith, Product
Manager

"Making all the Google Print facts clear really does make a
difference."

That's the headline of href="http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/cmusings/2005/09/21#a1396" >Derek
Slater's blog post commenting on href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2005/09/google-print-and-authors-guild.html" >
our recent statement about the Authors Guild lawsuit. Some
others have weighed in, and you can read a sampling from law
professor href="http://scrawford.blogware.com/blog/_archives/2005/9/21/1248170.html" >
Susan Crawford, the href="http://scrawford.blogware.com/blog/_archives/2005/9/21/1248170.html" >
href="http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/003992.php" >EFF,
publisher href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/09/authors_guild_suit_and_googles.html" >
Tim O'Reilly, author href="http://lawlegislationandlunacy.blogspot.com/2005/09/when-pen-picks-up-sword.html" >
David Youngberg, attorney href="http://williampatry.blogspot.com/2005/09/google-revisited.html" >
William Patry, and search analyst href="http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050920-192319" >Danny
Sullivan. Or listen to this href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4857600" >
NPR story.

*Updated with link to Danny
Sullivan commentary.

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