The Valentine’s Day gift of Google: Logo, comment, pushbutton

Filed under: Google Blogoscoped — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, March 5th, 2008 @ 9:21 am

Google is displayed went up gift of a few Valentine’s Days, include Logo of a chocolate, to almost everybody * open Gmail is registered, and allow everybody to be in website administrator of the government publishs a comment on rich guest. Google gave him a gift even, become the Checkout mark in advertisement more marked; When using AdWords, the dominant position that supports Checkout becomes apparent, search in American edition Google for instance ” Buy ” :

Google continues to hold to their Checkout plan awkwardly, it is this to be on page of result of search of special before irregular. Probably Chandler can say: “Are those pushbutton again a bit bigger? ! !!

* hum, this news since Gmail since opening, be in keep with different real rate be in the news.

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Happy Valentine’s Day!

Filed under: Google Sightseeing — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, December 19th, 2007 @ 9:53 pm

It’s still the 14th of February for another hour in some time
zones, so we’d like to wish everyone a Happy Valentine’s
Day
with this
heart-shaped swimming pool in Belgium!

>

Yes okay, that’s a stretch. In reality the only places to
actually use http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTC-12 UTC
minus 12 hours are the uninhabited American territories of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baker_Island Baker Island
and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howland_Island Howland
Island in the Pacific Ocean (links are to Wikipedia).

As for the islands themselves,
Baker has no coverage unfortuantely, but 68 kilometres to the
north,
Howland is captured with excellent quality imagery.

>

Not that there’s much to see of course. In fact other than using
UTC-12, the only likely reason you might have heard of Howland
Island is that this is where noted American aviator Amelia Earhart
famously http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_Earhart#Final_approach_to_Howland_Island
failed to reach during her attempt to make a circumnavigational
flight in 1937.

Thanks to http://virtualglobetrotting.com/ virtualglobetrotting.

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