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Google Mind Melds With Trekkies

Resistance is futile. You will be compiled.

As part of the 40th anniversary of the legendary science fiction series Star Trek, Google has set up shop in Las Vegas at the 5th Annual Official Star Trek Convention for Trekkies looking to sharpen their programming knowledge.

The Google booth, which has a starship bridge motif, features Google programmers, engineers and product managers who can discuss a variety of APIs, including Google Earth KML, the Google AJAX Search API, Google Calendar's data API and the Google Gadgets API.

Microsoft Extends a Hand To Mozilla

It may be August, but they're having a snowball fight in Hell right about now.

The head of Microsoft's open source lab extended a very public offer to the Mozilla community to work to insure Mozilla software will run properly on Windows Vista.

Firefox 2.0: Mozilla's Tabs Overfloweth

For many Windows users, tabbed browsing is a key attraction for the Mozilla family of browsers. The ability to add multiple 'tabbed' views within one browser window is a feature that some users like to push to extremes.

Microsoft's current stable production version of Internet Explorer does not include tabs, though its next generation version 7 (currently at Beta 3) does.
So how many tabs can you fit in one window? No matter how many you can fit into Firefox 1.5.x, the next release of Firefox 2.0 Beta 2 will give you more.
Using a default configuration in Firefox 1.5.x, at a screen resolution of 1024x768, in tests performed by internetnews.com 34 tabs can be squeezed in before they start to get lost.
A user can add more than 34 tabs but in a default Firefox 1.5.x installation, those tabs will fall off the end of the tab bar and will not be very usable. Even at 34 tabs, the default tab width makes it difficult to figure out which tab is which.

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Cache-Control: max-age=3600, must-revalidate Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 17:16:46 GMT Expires: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 18:16:46 GMT Last-Modified: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 15:30:25 GMT

No Sex Please, We're Online

Despite many months of flailing away at search engines for data to support their claims that casual searches would lead unsuspecting people (especially kids) to adult sites, a study found only about one percent of indexed sites at Google and Microsoft contain explicit content.

"It's not safe out here. It's wondrous, with treasures to satiate desires both subtle and gross. But it's not for the timid."
-- Q chats with Picard about the Borg, Q Who?

 

Similar treasures fill the Internet, but like any physical place one might find, there are parts of it best avoided. How dangerous has been a contention between the Department of Justice and the ACLU, who have been fighting over the Child Online Protection Act for several years.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and lawyers from DOJ attempted to gain access to search engine indexes last summer. The effort would have gone unnoticed had Google not dug in its heels and forced DOJ to publicize their investigation by suing Google in January 2006.

Microsoft, AOL, and Yahoo, along with a number of other parties subpoenaed for volumes of search data, readily handed over the requested information. Google managed to win its case and limit DOJ to 50,000 randomly chosen URLs from its index and no user queries.

Now it appears DOJ may have been a little too overarching in its requests. An AP report noted that out of a government-commissioned study of search indexes, only a small percent of the URLs in them lead to explicit content.

UC-Berkeley statistics professor Philip B. Stark discovered search engines don't contain quite as much bad content as the DOJ appeared to believe. For Google and MSN Search, only 1.1 percent of indexed pages contained "sexually explicit material."

But about six percent of queries to those two search engines plus Yahoo return at least one explicit site, according to Stark.

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Tags: Google, MSN, ACLU, Sex, Department of Justice

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