Porn results in China clean up Google.cn

TechAdGetsdotcom | Google | Saturday, June 20th, 2009

BEIJING, June 20 (Xinhua) — Searching engine giant Google Inc. said Saturday that it would take all necessary steps to clean up pornographic searching results in its Chinese-language portal, Google.cn.

“We are undertaking a thorough review of our service and taking all necessary steps to fix any problems with our results,” a statement from Google’s headquarters in Silicon Valley in the United States said.

The statement given by John Pinette, communications director of Asian-Pacific Region, confirmed that the company’s representative in China had met with government officials to discuss problems with the Google.cn service and its serving of pornographic images and content based on foreign language searches.

The statement came after the Chinese authorities criticized some of the search results served up by Google violated the country’s Internet regulations and laws.

Xinhua





Telecoms firm Nortel to sell assets

TechAdGetsdotcom | Telephone | Saturday, June 20th, 2009

MONTREAL (AFP) — Canadian telecommunications firm Nortel, in bankruptcy protection since January, will sell most of its wireless business to Nokia Siemens Networks for 650 million dollars.

Nortel also announced Friday it was making headway in discussions with other parties to sell its other businesses.

Nortel will apply to delist its common shares from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange, the company said in a statement.

The agreement with Nokia also specifies that at least 2,500 Nortel employees can continue working with the new owner.

Nortel head Mike Zafirovski said the value of Nortel’s wireless business was recognized worldwide and the agreement with Nokia represented the best path forward.

“We have determined the best way to do this is to find buyers for our businesses who can carry Nortel innovation forward, while preserving employment to the greatest extent possible,” he said.

“This will ensure Nortel’s strong assets — technologies, customer relationships, and employees — continue to play an important role in driving the future of communications.

But the announcement foreshadows the liquidation of the struggling Canadian company that was once a pillar of the country’s telecoms industry.

The Nortel wireless business is the second largest supplier of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) infrastructure in the world.

CDMA is a channel access method utilized by various radio communication technologies that allow several transmitters to send information simultaneously over a single communication channel.

Nortel wireless does business with three of the five top CDMA operators globally, including Verizon Wireless, which operates the largest wireless voice and data network in the United States, company officials said.

Nortel said it will file the asset sale agreement with the US Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. A similar motion for the bidding procedures will be filed with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, the company said.

Once Canada’s largest company, Nortel has been struggling since the dot.com collapse.

When it filed for bankruptcy protection in both the United States and Canada in January, Nortel faced some 107 million dollars in interest on its debt alone.

The company lost 3.4 billion US dollars in the third quarter of 2008 as revenues fell 14 percent.

Last year, Nortel said it was slashing 2,100 jobs mostly in North America and would transfer another 1,000 jobs to lower-cost countries, following deep losses.

Nortel, which did business in 150 countries and had about 26,000 employees around the world in February, traces its history back to 1882 as the mechanical department of Bell Telephone Canada.

It was later known as Northern Electric and Northern Telecom before changing its name in 1999 to Nortel Networks Corporation.

AFP





NASA bom moon for water

TechAdGetsdotcom | Astronomy | Saturday, June 20th, 2009

NASA plans to bomb the moon’s south pole with an unmanned spacecraft launched in October 2008, tossing up a cloud of lunar debris that will be visible to Earth-based observatories, the space agency announced Monday.

A satellite will fly through the 30-to-40-mile-high dust plume to search for evidence of water ice left by comets that slammed into the moon billions of years ago.

The crash vehicle, called an impactor, and observational instruments will be added to NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Already slated for launch, the orbiter will map the moon’s surface in unprecedented detail, taking a fresh look at the rugged south and north pole terrain to assist with the selection of landing sites for human expeditions.

The $600 million plan outlined on Monday represents an early milestone in the strategy outlined by President Bush two years ago to send astronauts back to the moon to prepare for the eventual human exploration of Mars.





Google invested $2.6 million in Anne Wojcicki’s and 23andMe

TechAdGetsdotcom | Google | Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Google  just told the SEC it’s invested $2.6 million in Anne Wojcicki’s biotech startup 23andMe.

Wojcicki is Google cofounder Sergey Brin’s wife, and he’s recused himself from the whole deal.

But it’s still a head-scratching investment.  Not because of the family ties between the companies, but because why does Google want or need to own a piece of a biotech company?

Google now is venture capital company





Persian language in Google

TechAdGetsdotcom | Google | Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Google translates Persian
6/18/2009 09:00:00 PM
Today, we added Persian (Farsi) to Google Translate. This means you can now translate any text from Persian into English and from English into Persian — whether it’s a news story, a website, a blog, an email, a tweet or a Facebook message. The service is available free at http://translate.google.com.

We feel that launching Persian is particularly important now, given ongoing events in Iran. Like YouTube and other services, Google Translate is one more tool that Persian speakers can use to communicate directly to the world, and vice versa — increasing everyone’s access to information.

As with all machine translation, it’s not perfect yet. And we’re launching this service quickly, so it may perform slowly at times. We’ll keep a close watch and if it breaks, we’ll restore service as quickly as we can.

We’ve optimized this service for translation between Persian and English. But we’re working hard to improve Persian translation for the additional 40 languages available via Google Translate. If you see something you think is incorrectly translated, we invite you to click on the “contribute a better translation” link and we’ll learn from your correction.

The web provides many new channels of communication that enable us to see events unfold in real-time around the world. We hope that Google Translate helps make all that information accessible to you — no matter what language you speak. So please visit Google Translate and try it out.

SOURCE GOOGLE BLOG





Rajeev Motwani advisor for Larry Page and Sergey Brin has passed away

TechAdGetsdotcom | DotCom | Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Rajeev Motwani, a prominent Silicon Valley angel investor and the Stanford professor perhaps best known for serving as the advisor for Larry Page and Sergey Brin during the formative years of Google, has passed away.

Rajeev was an ardent supporter of Silicon Valley startups, investing and mentoring many of them while continuing his research at Stanford University. With investments in companies that included PayPal and Google, he saw an overwhelming amount of success. And through it all he has continued to give back to the community though his mentorship, investments, and his time at Stanford, where he has continued to teach as recently as last semester.














-