Geotags.org > Visualizing Google Search

[cdharris] The idea is seductively simple in that it revealed the individual thoughts, motivations, or desires of the people using Google Search, and also persuasively demonstrated that some parts of the United States are already effectively bilingual.

Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

http://jeremy.zawodny.com [Jeremy.zawodny.com] Jeremy Zawodny's blog: Random Archives: Like most normal people, I was just having an interesting telephoneconversation with a friend of mine (at 2am) about Google, Yahoo,Friendster, on-line marketplaces, approximate searches, and somesecret stuff. Along the way I got to thinking about some of thefundamental similarities between Google (those who mapped therelationships among web pages and put them to use) and Friendster(those trying to map human relationships and put them to use).

[Kanai.net] Gen Kanai weblog: News Archives: Clay Shirky writes on the Many-to-Many weblog about a new UN project which touts community but is far from the community that people have come to expect on the Internet. It is resonant for me for many reasons, mainly because companies still have a hard time with the idea that community means that their customers will be talking with each other, sharing both the good and bad aspects of the company's products, services, etc.

http://mp.blogs.com [Mp.blogs.com] *michael parekh on IT*: Wireless: The current investor excitement over the growth of wireless is driven by the notion that we're going to replicate much of the functionality of a PC and/or laptop on cellphones. And it's seductively easy to buy into that notion, given the pace at which hardware and software companies are cramming functionality into the cell phones of today and tomorrow.

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