Tag Archives: Google Chrome

Seamlessly sync your data across devices

Work isn’t anchored to one device or one location. In a typical day, you can go from working on a multimonitor desktop rig in the office to a laptop at a client site to a desktop at home, working in sips on a tablet or smartphone in between.

This unfettered mobility means its more critical than ever that you’re able to access important files across devices, platforms and apps. Follow these tips for keeping all your data in sync, so you can keep doing business wherever your business takes you.

Bookmarks and browser settings

One of the more frustrating experiences of switching between multiple devices is the interruption to your Web browsing experience. Fortunately, popular browsers such as Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox offer built-in support for automatically syncing bookmarks, history, open tabs and even passwords.

When you sign in to Chrome, your browser settings are saved to your Google account to be used by the Chrome browser on any other computer or device. To choose what settings get synced, sign in to Chrome—you will be prompted for your verification code if you have 2-factor authentication enabled—and follow the prompts to to either “sync everything” or select individual items.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Five free Reddit tools cut through the clutter

Reddit is a victim of its own success, with the site and its many “subreddits” quickly becoming unwieldy for browsing. But you’re no victim. You can cut through the clutter with third-party Reddit tools.

The five favorites below are all free, and all of them have such obviously useful features for organizing and navigating the site, it’s surprising that Reddit hasn’t incorporated competitive features (or bought out these tools). Whether Reddit will ever get its act together, however, doesn’t matter—you can do it yourself now.

Reddit Enhancement Suite adds browsing features

Reddit may be the site of the moment, but its design looks like something from the 1990s. Reddit Enhancement Suite drags Reddit’s look into the current century, and brings some useful features along for the ride. This browser plug-in is available for Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera, and Safari.

Reddit Enhancement Suite offers a number of features to improve the Reddit.com interface.

Highlights include a “never-ending” Reddit page layout, in which the next page automatically loads as you reach the end of the current page. You can also subscribe to discussions, an indispensable feature if you make a lot of comments and want to be notified when people reply to them.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Review: Reddit Enhancement Suite makes Reddit browsing easier and more pleasant

Reddit may be the site of the moment, but its design looks like something from the 1990s. Open-source donationware Reddit Enhancement Suite can bring Reddit’s look and functionality into the 21st century. RES provides you with a set of features that enhance the user interface on reddit.com. This browser plugin is available for Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera, and Safari (but not Internet Explorer).

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

How to restore Google Chrome's missing buttons in Windows 8

Now that I’m running Windows 8 for at least part of my workday (much to my chagrin), I’m doing my best to make it hospitable. And for me, the first step is installing Google Chrome, my preferred Web browser.

So I dropped into Desktop, fired up Internet Explorer, downloaded and installed Chrome, and set it as my default browser.

Then I ran it, signed into my Google account, and smiled as my synced bookmarks appeared like magic. This is how the world should work.

But, wait, what’s this? Something’s missing. Three somethings, in fact. When I went to minimize Chrome, I discovered that the Minimize button was gone. And so were the Maximize and Close buttons. That whole area in the upper-right corner of the browser? Empty!

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2033800/how-to-restore-google-chromes-missing-buttons-in-windows-8.html#tk.rss_all

How to switch back to Firefox's old download manager

Firefox 20 adds a handy new Download button.

If you’re a Firefox user, you may have noticed a few changes in the latest version of Mozilla’s browser, which “turned 20” last week.

Among them: a new Download Manager. It’s a small tweak, and I’d say one for the better, but as I noted in Monday’s post about Google Chrome’s bookmark spacing, not everybody appreciates sudden and unrequested changes.

First, let’s talk about what’s new. At the right edge of the search bar, alongside the Home button (unless you’ve moved it), you’ll see a new Downloads button.

In Firefox 20, Download Manager is now a part of Library.

When you’re downloading a file, that button changes to a progress meter, showing you the time remaining. And if you click it, you’ll see a drop-down menu with your three most recent downloads. That’s pretty handy, in my opinion.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

How to decrease the spacing in Chrome's bookmark lists

If you’re a Google Chrome user, you may have noticed a recent change in your browser. About a week ago, Google pushed out an update that increased the spacing between bookmarks.

Google Chrome‘s newly spaced bookmarks.

Specifically, when I click one of the folders in my Bookmarks Bar, I get a drop-down list of all the links in that folder. But now I see fewer bookmarks in that list because there’s extra white space between each one.

In other words, to use a word-processing analogy, it’s like Google bumped up the line spacing from single to double.

No like!

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Google Doodle Easter Dustup Portrays Faithful As Feckless

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Owing to the fact that I use the Google Chrome extension to do all my Web searching, I rarely have occasion to visit Google’s main page, and consequently, I miss out on all of the fun and whimsical Google “doodles” the search company regularly places there. Unless, of course, those doodles “make news.” And over the Easter holiday, one of those doodles did, diddling the domes of conservative Twitter trawlers, outraged that the Easter Sunday doodle celebrated the birthday of labor leader Cesar Chavez, as opposed to, I guess, something Eastery.

And so now we have this whole “Google’s War on Christianity” thing, even though as far as I can tell, everyone who visited the Google home page was mere seconds from being able to visit, you know … the Bible.

The whole kerfuffle was like an early version of the annual “War On Christmas,” in which we are led to believe that adherents of centuries-old religion, privileged enough to live in a country that provides a month of celebration in which every piece of media — from television shows, to the music at the coffee shop, to the lights on the street — inevitably leads back to the gospels and their telling of the birth of Jesus Christ. This includes an enormously popular childrens’ cartoon called, “A Charlie Brown Christmas” in which the gospel of Luke is recited aloud on network television.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Apple Continues Its Mobile-Browser Domination

By Evan Niu, CFA, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

In recent times, Apple has been trying to shift consumer focus away from market share in unit terms while emphasizing different usage statistics, arguing that even though people may buy competing devices, they might not be using them as much.

Well, if the Mac maker is looking for more ammo, it needs to look no further than new data out from Net Applications. The mobile version of Apple’s Safari browser has now reached 61.8% in March, well ahead of Google‘s Android browser at 21.9%. Opera Mini ranked third with 8.4% share, and Google’s Chrome grabbed a 2.4% share. Microsoft Internet Explorer earned just 2%.

Chrome for Android only launched just over a year ago, which means all smartphones running older versions of Android (which is a lot) don’t get the popular browser as a default. It can still be downloaded manually from Google Play, but the figures imply that most users just stick with what’s already there.

Apple’s figure in March was a jump from the 55.4% it posted in February, although its mobile browser share tends to fluctuate between 60% and 66% most of the time. Apple offers other browsers on its iOS platform, but subtly undermines them by only allowing Safari as the default and prohibiting alternatives from using the Nitro JavaScript Engine for better performance (Apple claims this is for security reasons).

Browser usage is just one of the numerous ways in which tech heavyweights vie for consumer mindshare, since browsers allow companies to shape how we view the Internet. Browser choice has even landed Microsoft in hot regulatory water recently, when it agreed to pay up a $732 million fine to the European Commission.

While you may think that Apple’s mobile browser share would draw regulatory scrutiny, it’s still hard to argue that Apple’s mildly anticompetitive practices are translating into total market domination, since regulators tend to focus more on unit share over usage share.

Still, the figures raise an obvious question: Why aren’t Android users browsing the web more?

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The article Apple Continues Its Mobile-Browser Domination originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Evan Niu, CFA, owns shares of Apple. The Motley Fool recommends Amazon.com, Apple, Facebook, and Google. The Motley Fool owns shares of Amazon.com, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Microsoft. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Chrome update polishes spell-check and fixes bugs

Four weeks after the launch of Google’s Chrome 26browser into beta, the final version debuted on Tuesday.

The most notable enhancements in Chrome 26 include a new spell-checking engine, as we saw when the beta version arrived, but also included are several other new features and a few key security fixes.

The software, version 26.0.1410.43 for Windows, Mac and Linux, is being delivered as an automatic update to those already using Chrome, but it’s also available as a free download. Here’s a rundown of what you’ll find.

1. Improved spell-checking

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi now available at Verizon Wireless

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi now available at Verizon Wireless

TROY, Mich.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Together with Verizon Wireless, Delphi Automotive (NYS: DLPH) today released its Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi product that provides a groundbreaking car-to-cloud/cloud-to-car connectivity service.

Unveiled at the 2013 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the product allows drivers to track, locate, access, secure and monitor their select vehicles over the Verizon Wireless network using their current smartphone, tablet or computer. The first-in-its-class product works in most vehicles sold in the United States from 1996 onward.

“For the first time, Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi allows drivers the chance to experience unique telematics and location-based features without purchasing a new car,” said Jeff Owens, Delphi chief technology officer. “Offered together with Verizon Wireless, this product not only offers convenience and connectivity but also peace of mind. For example, drivers can use a smartphone, laptop or tablet as a key fob for their car when they are locked out – regardless of where they are.”

Named a finalist in the 2013 Edison Awards in the transportation category, the Delphi car connectivity service enables drivers to carry out any of the following features remotely:

  • Locate and access family cars without having to tag the vehicle’s original location
  • Monitor overall vehicle health status
  • Receive e-mail alerts for select driving and vehicle performance issues
  • Set up geo-fences and receive e-mail alerts for entry and exit
  • Summarize all trips from engine start to stop (date, times, distance, starting and ending locations)
  • Connect your smartphone to your car via Bluetooth for key fob commands

The system operates through a downloadable Delphi smartphone application, available for Android 2.2 and later and Apple iOS 5.0 and later devices, as well as a Delphi website that is compatible with Internet Explorer 7 and later-version, Google Chrome, Apple Safari and Firefox browsers. Data transmitted through the Delphi connectivity system remains secure and encrypted when sent over the Verizon Wireless network.

To learn if a vehicle is compatible with Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi, please visit www.connectedcar.delphi.com.


About Delphi

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Benjamin Kerensa: Netflix: Still no plans for Linux support

archnetflix 253x300 Netflix: Still no plans for Linux support

I e-mailed Joris Evers, Global Corporate Communications, Netflix again and he indicated that Netflix’s plans have not changed at all for supporting Linux.

I specifically mentioned that I had noticed they switched to a HTML5 Netflix app and that it would be very easy for them to transition that to Linux Users by just supporting Google Chrome or Chromium on Linux and of course they still have chosen not to support Linux even when the overhead cost wise and technology is already there.

This is a fundamental flaw in their business plans… While companies are supporting Linux more and more Netflix is dragging their feet with no reasonable excuse. Why won’t they shut up and take our money? Ask them on Twitter maybe.

The post Netflix: Still no plans for Linux support appeared first on Benjamin Kerensa dot Com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet Ubuntu

The War for Your Next Web Browser Is Heating Up

By Eric Bleeker, CFA, The Motley Fool

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Tech investors who lived through the dot-com crash can remember back to a time when Web browsers were seen as a killer technology. Microsoft made defeating Netscape its defining battle of the late ’90s; competition was so fierce that Microsoft’s tactics in the Web browser space was a central part of the antitrust case that aimed to break up the company. 

In the 2000s, the importance of Web browsers faded. Having defeated Netscape and with little revenue from the browser itself, Microsoft let a full five years pass between the release of Internet Explorer 6 and IE 7. Internet services such as search had become the real moneymakers of the online world, so Microsoft moved its resources elsewhere. 

Yet Microsoft‘s inaction in the browser space led to a host of new competitors such as Firefox and Google‘s Chrome. As these browsers proved faster and more reliable, Internet Explorer‘s share faded. 

In the following video, Motley Fool senior technology analyst Eric Bleeker looks at not only the history of mobile browsers, but also where the next evolution of the browser is headed. He notes that when Android chief Andy Rubin recently departed for a new challenge in the company, Google tapped Sundar Pichai, the senior VP of Chrome, to head up Android. 

Beyond Google‘s structuring of its mobile OS and Web browser under the same leadership, there are other signs of the fusing of browsers and mobile. For example, Mozilla, the organization behind Firefox, has created its own mobile operating system known as Mozilla OS

The key point? Right now the line between mobile and Web browsers is fading. Google has begun running ads highlighting how Chrome easily syncs between PCs, smartphones, and tablets. That’s a move that makes tremendous amounts of sense as we move toward a world where, instead of a single PC, users have several different computing devices. In that world, you’ll want a browser that seamlessly has the same settings and bookmarks and remembers passwords between devices. 

Even further out could be the dream of an operating system that bridges all of these devices itself. Even if Android and Chrome don’t “merge” together, as has recently been speculated, the overlap between the two is a sign that the Web browser wars have moved off the PC, and toward meeting the needs of users across all devices. 

To see Eric’s full thoughts, check out the video.

As one of the most dominant Internet companies ever, Google has made a habit of driving strong returns for its shareholders. However, like many other Web companies, it’s also struggling to adapt to an increasingly mobile world. Despite gaining an enviable lead with its Android operating system, the market isn’t sold. That’s why it’s more important than ever to understand each piece of Google’s sprawling empire. In The Motley Fool‘s new premium research report on Google, we break down the risks and potential rewards for Google investors. Simply click here now to unlock your copy of this …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

New Google Chrome Spell Checker Monitors Everything You Type, While FBI Secretly Watches

By Reuven Cohen, Contributor

I’m the first to admit that I am a big fan of Google’s Chrome browser. Generally it’s the best browser, except for font rendering on Windows, which is awful, but that’s another story. This story is about an interesting new feature released yesterday as part of a Google Chrome update. The “Ask Google for suggestions” is a new spell checking feature, powered by the same technologies used by Google search. The cloud based service supports grammar checking, proper nouns, homonyms, and context-sensitive spell checking in English. It’s a pretty nice feature.Users on Windows, Linux and Chrome OS will receive these enhancements in the coming weeks (they’re still working on Mac support).

Only one problem, there is a catch.

A few weeks ago Google published a “range” of times it receives National Security Letters demanding it divulge account information to the authorities without warrants. According to a recentWired article; “National Security Letters allow the government to get detailed information on Americans’ finances and communications without oversight from a judge. The FBI has issued hundreds of thousands of NSLs and has even been reprimanded for abusing them. The NSLs are written demands from the FBI that compel internet service providers, credit companies, financial institutions and businesses like Google to hand over confidential records about their customers, such as subscriber information, phone numbers and e-mail addresses, websites visited and more as long as the FBI says the information is “relevant” to an investigation.”

Now that both Google and Microsoft have admitted it. You can probably assume every other major cloud service provider is getting these National Security Letters as well. So the question is; How comfortable are you with the possibility that everything you type might be monitored? Then again there is a simple solution. Just disable this feature. Add your comments below.

Update:

You can temporarily disable the spell-checker for the field you’re typing in. Follow these steps:

  1. Right-click the text field.
  2. Select Spell-checker options (Mac: Spelling and Grammar).
  3. Deselect “Check the spelling of this field” (Mac: Check spelling while typing).

Find Reuven on Twitter @rUv | Linkedin | Google+ |Facebook | Blog rUv.net

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

‘Lemme Tweet That For You’: The Scary Twitter Tool That Lets You Fake Tweets

By The Huffington Post News Editors

lemme tweet that for you

No need to constantly tweet at your celebrity crush anymore. A site called “Lemme Tweet That For You” lets you create fake tweets that look like they were written by anyone you choose. This site has been around for a while, but, as Poynter reports, it has just recently been rediscovered.

At first glance, this tool is enticing. Though the site is a little buggy (we’ve discovered that it doesn’t work on Google Chrome, for example), it’s effective. You can create an image that makes it look like literally any Twitter user has said anything you want. We tried it out for ourselves and created the following “tweet”:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

BlackBerry CEO Derides Apple — Australian Financial Review

By 24/7 Wall St.

BlackBerry Z10

Filed under:

In an exclusive interview with The Australian Financial Review, BlackBerry (NASDAQ: BBRY) CEO Thorsten Heins took a swipe at Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) and the venerable iOS operating system. Heins predicted that BlackBerry’s new operating system, BlackBerry 10 (BB10), and the touchscreen Z10 smartphone would have 100,000 apps available by the time of the phone’s U.S. launch later this week.

Heins also had this to say about the iPhone:

The user interface on the iPhone, with all due respect for what this invention was all about is now five years old.

The inference we are supposed to draw is that newer is not only different, but better. That may well be true, but the usual corollary of that inference is that in order for something new to disrupt the existing marketplace it must be 10 times better and cost half as much. Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) tipped the cost scale to free with its Android operating system, and Android is now the global leader in software platforms for smartphones.

BlackBerry, and Heins, then cannot compete with Google on cost or with Apple or Google on apps, so what’s left? Heins points to BB10’s multitasking capability, something neither Apple nor Google yet supports.

But the paradigm Heins appears to be applying is that a smartphone operating system should be more like a laptop’s or a PC‘s. That is not where the industry is headed. The ubiquity of smartphones and tablets is changing the way users interact with devices, and the apps-driven interfaces already have begun to surface, as in Windows 8 from Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Google Chrome.

Heins had a lot more to say and you can read more about it here.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Consumer Electronics, PC Companies, Telecom & Wireless Tagged: AAPL, BBRY, GOOG, MSFT

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Google Chrome: Best security tips for safer browsing

There’s a lot to like about Google Chrome‘s built-in security features. The browser offers unique sandboxing functions and privilege restrictions, and even updates itself in the background to help better protect you from hackers and malware. But like all browsers, Chrome is imperfect, and there are steps you can take to protect it from attack. Here’s how to get the most from Chrome’s built-in security features, and work around its security shortcomings.

Privacy features

Chrome offers several privacy features that help protect you while you browse. The most notable are its phishing- and malware-protection schemes, and a tool that can auto-correct misspelled Web addresses.

Chrome’s phishing and malware protection put up a warning screen whenever you visit a website that Google has identified as potentially malicious, whether it spreads malware or tries to steal your personal information. Meanwhile, Chrome’s URL autocorrect feature usees a Google-provided online service to fix misspelled URLS to help you avoid visiting the wrong site—and perhaps a nefarious site—by accident. Indeed, “typosquatting” is still a threat.

Chrome has several useful features that can help you avoid dangerous sites.

To use these features, open the browser’s Settings panel and scroll down to the Privacy section (you may need to click Show advanced settings to get there), and check the boxes labeled Use a web service to help resolve navigation errors and Use a web service to help resolve spelling errors. Also, be sure to check the Enable phishing and malware protection box.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Google Translate now stores key sayings in custom Phrasebook

When learning a foreign language, a few key words and phrases are essential—like bathroom, train station, and, “How much does this cost?” But what about phrases that are a bit less common? We often need to repeat more random word strings as we travel across the globe for work, school, or vacation. 

On Thursday, Google revealed an answer to this dilemma with a new feature for Google Translate called Phrasebook, which stores your most essential key phrases and words in various languages.

For example, if you review hotels for a living, “What is that smell?” might be an important phrase to have handy whether you’re hunkered down in Paris, Jakarta, or Moscow. And if you’re absolutely committed to daily yoga classes, “Where can I find the nearest Ashtanga studio?” might be relevant whether you’re in Belgium or BrazilWhatever your important translations are, Phrasebook can keep them for later access, saving you from constantly retyping the same few words into Google Translate.

Google Translate Phrasebook lets you save handy translations. (click to enlarge)

To use Phrasebook, you must be signed into your Google account. Saving new translations into Phrasebook is similar to the way you bookmark a web page in Google Chrome. Once you’ve entered your phrase and received a translation you like, hit the star icon at the bottom of the translation window and it is automatically saved to Phrasebook.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Google Revs Up a Radical Innovation Engine

By Anders Bylund, The Motley Fool

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Don’t you wish more companies would dream big? I don’t mean “big” as in, let’s make some more money next year, or adding a new feature to your flagship product. I’m talking BIG, like changing the world for the better. You know, the way Google dreams.

Big G just took steps to make sure that the crazy dreams keep coming. CEO Larry Page just reassigned two of his top dreamers to the division that’s supposed to think up bigger, crazier, and more disruptive ideas without worrying too much about the business side of it all.

I thought Rubin was basically fired?
At first glance, these moves might look like demotions. Andy Rubin was part of the Danger/Sidekick team that arguably invented the first proto-smartphone, and his Android platform is now the biggest mobile computing beast in the world. He’s been replaced by the more even-keeled Sundar Pichai, who already oversees the Google Chrome web browser, Chrome OS, and the Google Drive storage product.

This frees Rubin up to “start a new chapter at Google,” in Page’s words. And what might that new chapter look like? “Andy, more moonshots please!”

The original moonshot on July 16, 1969. Image source: NASA.

Google defines a moonshot this way: “Moonshots live in the gray area between audacious technology and pure science fiction. Instead of a mere 10% gain, a moonshot aims for a 10x improvement over what currently exists. The combination of a huge problem, a radical solution to that problem, and the breakthrough technology that just might make that solution possible, is the essence of a moonshot.”

Keep that far-reaching goal and the CEO‘s gleeful order in mind as you read on.

That’s the first big innovation booster Page launched this week. The second came when mapping and commerce services leader Jeff Huber was told to report for work at Google X Lab, according to a Wall Street Journal report. Huber was champing at the bit “to work in more of a start-up-like environment,” a Google spokeswoman confirmed to the Journal.

On the organizational level, these changes simplify Google from seven core product groups to five, which is a good idea in itself. Fewer divisions means more operational unity, and managers should be able to direct resources more efficiently in a simpler structure.

But that’s not really the goal here. Like I said, it’s all about driving more innovation and more insane moonshot projects.

What is this wacky lab all about?
Huber will definitely land at the X Lab and if the facility is a refrigerator, you can think of Rubin as a giant magnet. They just belong together.

When you hear about silly or outlandish Google projects, you can assume that it started at X Labs. The Google Glass augmented-reality specs that look set to launch at retail this year? An X Lab project.

The most talked-about X Lab project to date. Image source: …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is Microsoft One of the Best Companies in America?

By Tim Beyers, The Motley Fool

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The Motley Fool recently released its list of The 25 Best Companies in America, naming the best businesses the nation has to offer. Yet even among companies that didn’t make the final cut, some stocks distinguished themselves with their high quality and promise. Microsoft is one of those companies, and it definitely deserves at least an honorable mention for its achievements.

The case for Microsoft
Hacking has multiple meanings in the tech world. Most famously, it means to break into a secure system. But for Bill Gates and Paul Allen, hacking was just what they did. The pair, friends since childhood, were looking for a way to cash in on their programming skills when, in 1975, they pitched Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems, or MITS, on a tool for helping its new Altair computer interpret commands written in the BASIC programming language.

The resulting deal introduced the world to Altair BASIC. Microsoft would later develop Windows and grow to dominate the market for personal computer operating systems so completely that, in 1998, the Justice Department sued to stop the company from what they asserted were abuses of monopoly power. The business hasn’t been the same since, which turns out to be good news for most of Microsoft’s stakeholders. Indeed, Mr. Softy garners an honorable mention for its commitment to investors, employees, and the world at large.

Employees
While Microsoft has lost its share of high-profile executives in recent years — former chief software architect Ray Ozzie, product marketing veteran Don Dodge, and one-time Windows chief Steven Sinofsky, to name three — workers tend to give the company high marks as a place to work. More than 77% would recommend Microsoft to a friend, according to Glassdoor.

But that’s also half the story. Workers are far less enthused by CEO Steve Ballmer. Only 48% approved of his performance as of this writing. “If there was a good performance measurement system then a forced stack ranking wouldn’t be necessary. Poor performers would be fired and good performers wouldn’t be forced out of their jobs,” wrote one employee identified as a “curriculum manager.” Another’s advice was simply to “fire” current CEO Steve Ballmer. Investors tend to agree.

And yet with so many executives gone, there appears little chance Microsoft will seek to replace Ballmer. Nevertheless, it’s troubling to see otherwise satisfied employees join a growing chorus of detractors.

Customers
Seeing once-hobbled competitors rise from the ashes can’t be helping improve Ballmer’s image. He famously derided Apple‘s iPhone, only to see it become one of the world’s most popular handheld devices. Google‘s Chrome browser has unseated Internet Explorer as top dog in certain regions.

Smartphones are more important than browsers to Microsoft’s fortunes — for now at least — which is why the company has teamed with Nokia for creating a compelling iPhone alternative. Trouble is, Samsung already has that position locked up thanks to the success of its Galaxy S series. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance