Google Summer of Code
Submitted by Bryan on April 29, 2008 - 6:14amGoogle Code: "Google Summer of Code 2008 is on! Over the past three years, the program has brought together over 1500 students and 2000 mentors from 90 countries worldwide, all for the love of code. This year, we're welcoming 1125 student contributors and 175 Free and Open Source projects into the program. You can find out more about each participating organization and abstracts of their accepted students' proposals by visiting each organization's page, below. We'll be posting regular news about the program to the Google Open Source Blog."
How free is free?
Submitted by Bryan on April 27, 2008 - 10:15pmIt looks as if Laura Scott, pingVision, had some free time on her hands. There are reasons free servcies on the Internet are free. Laura wants you to start asking yourself, "why?".
Is the future really free?
It seems we've entered an age where there's a land-grab happening for personal data and attention time. Look at all the web start-ups backed by venture capital. They aren't investing out of philanthropy. There's value there. YouTube is "free" but Google paid over a billion dollars for it. Why?
Here's a hint: It's not about the Tube. [Read more at Laura Scott's Blog]
Personally, I'll need to read her post a few times and soak in on the information from her excerpts. Some things to think about...
OpenSocial gets a group hug
Submitted by Bryan on March 25, 2008 - 6:05pm"It's like the Justice League of social media: Google, Yahoo, and News Corp.'s MySpace.com announced on Tuesday that they have formed the OpenSocial Foundation, a non-profit group to support the OpenSocial initiative that Google kick-started last year as a way to promote a universal standard for developer applications on social-networking sites."
Geek Gestalt: Interactive game mixes Web 2.0 plus classic novels
Submitted by Bryan on March 19, 2008 - 11:05amThe alternate-reality game genre has a new friend, and a new format, thanks to Penguin Books, the famous British publishing house.
On Tuesday, Penguin and startup Six to Start launched their new ARG, We Tell Stories, a new-style game that its creators say is a hybrid of traditional story-telling, Web 2.0-style mashups, interactive games and classic novels.
eWeek: Google Launches Free Ad Server
Submitted by Bryan on March 14, 2008 - 6:09am"Google wasted no time turbo-charging its online ad delivery two days after closing its $3.1 billion deal for DoubleClick, unveiling a free software service that lets Web publishers sell ads and monitor how well they do."
BusinessWeek: Are Ad Concerns Overblown?
Submitted by Bryan on February 28, 2008 - 6:05amThe number of ad clicks fell in January for Google and Yahoo. But how important are those click-through rates, anyway?
SilverStripe: Google Contest ends, Winners to be chosen
Submitted by SigurdMagnusson on February 5, 2008 - 7:05amThe Google Highly Open Participation Contest ended after a hive of stunning work over two months. SilverStripe begun with 60 tasks, and because students get paid for each successfully completed task, SilverStripe had to seek numerous times for Google to increase the funding to enlarge the contest based on unanticipated student demand. In the end, about 180 tasks were completed, three times the initial expectation.
Top 10 Projects to Come Out of Google’s Summer of Code
Submitted by CMS Report on January 9, 2008 - 5:39pm"Every summer since 2005, Google has offered what is essentially a paid internship to open source groups. Students are offered the opportunity to work with open source development groups to complete projects, often resulting in significant advances for both the student’s knowledge and the developments they’ve worked on. These projects, combined or otherwise, are some of the biggest successes we’ve seen come out of Google’s Summer of Code."
Complete Story at Virtual Hosting Blog
Google High School contest helps SilverStripe, Drupal, Joomla! and Plone
Submitted by SigurdMagnusson on December 21, 2007 - 1:05amIn the few weeks since CMSReport wrote about the launch of the Google Highly Open Participation Contest, open source CMS projects SilverStipe, Drupal, Joomla, and Plone have been having a field day.
SilverStripe has been working hard to teach, mentor and review work by students, resulting in batch of new themes and drag-n-drop widgets available for download. A new release came out today with CMS administration translated in a variety of new languages contributed by students. They've had to double the number of challenges for students because the uptake has been so great that tasks have been completed much quicker than anticipated.
Drupal has recieved a dozen of code patches, improvements, videos and other completed tasks, and much like SilverStripe, has also been adding lots of new tasks to keep up with a real thirst for work by the students.
Security flaw in in Google Toolbar
Submitted by Bryan on December 19, 2007 - 7:59amThis is why I'm very cautious in using any type of search engine toolbar (Google, Yahoo, etc).
Google is working to fix a bug in the Google Toolbar that could allow criminals to steal data or install malicious software on a system, a security researcher warned Tuesday.
The flaw lies in the mechanism Google Toolbar uses to add new buttons on the browser. Because the toolbar does not perform adequate checks when new buttons are being installed, a hacker could make his button appear as though it was being downloaded from a legitimate site when in fact it came from somewhere else.
More information can be found at InfoWorld.



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