Getdrunknotfat has a mission to keep you slim and trim while you drink yourself silly. The website painstakingly compiled the calories and calorie-to-alcohol ratio of many popular alcoholic beverages. All this wonderful data is organized in a searchable chart. More »
![]()
Obama warns of 2nd financial crisis
U.S. President Barack Obama warned Tuesday that Congress must raise the American national debt ceiling or risk causing another global financial crisis.
Schwarzenegger’s mistress speaks out
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s former housekeeper says her son only learned a year ago that the former California governor was his father.
Wet weather affects Prairie wheat seeding
The Canadian Wheat Board said Tuesday this year could be even worse than 2010, sucking an additional $1.5 billion to $2.5 billion out of the
prairie economy.
HP uploads several videos of the TouchPad, plus Canadian distribution revealed
HP’s upcoming Wi-Fi TouchPad will be available for pre-order on June 19th and hitting Canada officially on July 15th. You’ll be able to score either the 16GB or the 32GB version at these locations: Best Buy, Future Shop, The Source, Costco, Staples, London Drugs and Rogers Wireless stores. HP has uploaded a plethora of videos for you to get familiar with this tablet, and how it competes against all the others (such as multitasking, screen size, ability to play flash, notifications…)
Via preCentral
Related posts:
Game 6 of Cup final sets new ratings mark
The CBC says Monday’s Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final between Vancouver and Boston was its highest-ever rated NHL game.
Is Microsoft Azure Powering Apple’s iCloud? [Rumors]
This is curious: InfiniteApple is saying they’ve confirmed that iCloud is powered by Microsoft’s Azure, at least for the moment. More »
![]()
What If You Crammed The Entire Human Population Into a Single City? [Infographics]
Here’s food for thought: Some cities are considerably more densely populated than others. Imagine packing all 6.9 billion people in the world into a city you know. How much space would that megacity take up? More »
![]()
Duke Nukem Forever selling well despite early reviews
Today hell has frozen over, pigs can fly and the Firefly TV series has been revived. Ok, none of those things actually happened but one thing did: Duke Nukem Forever has finally been released after 15 years of development. Developers Gearbox Software, Triptych Games and Piranha Games took over from…
Most Popular Mobile Podcast Catcher: Google Listen [Hive Five Followup]
If you want to stay on top of your audio or video podcast subscriptions on the go without connecting to your computer, you have plenty of options. Last week, we asked you which mobile apps you used to organize and download podcasts on your smartphone. You responded, we put them to a vote, and now we’re back to highlight the winner. More »
![]()
Ottawa stands ready to end Air Canada strike
The federal government is serving notice that it is willing to legislate an end to the Air Canada strike as early as Thursday if the airline and its customer service and sales staff fail to reach an agreement.
Postal strike to disrupt national mail delivery
Mail delivery across Canada is expected to be limited for the rest of the week due to rotating postal strikes in Montreal and Toronto.
When Wives Don’t Sleep, Marriage Suffers
![]()
When couples fight, sleep often suffers. Now a new study shows that the reverse can also true. Not sleeping well, it seems, can make for a rockier relationship.
Toy Story Unleashed

Buzz Lightyear and Sheriff Woody as you haven’t seen them before. Reimagined as action figure “badasses” by designer Luis Eduardo Vargas Montoya. No word if these custom-made “toys” will ever be mass produced, but I’ll be first in line if they are.
(Thanks, Andrew Murray)
Cartoon Brew: Leading the Animation Conversation |
Permalink |
24 comments |
Post tags: Toy Story
‘Gene Simmons Family Jewels’ Is Letting the Warts Show This Season
Knocking down barriers to knowledge
As much as technology has advanced, there are still many barriers between you and the answers you’re looking for—whether you’re juggling a clunky mobile keyboard or waiting for a website to load. Today we held a media event in San Francisco where we talked about some of the latest things we’re doing to tackle these barriers on mobile, announced that we’re bringing our speech recognition and computer vision technology to the desktop, and took the next step for Google Instant—Instant Pages.
The thirst for knowledge doesn’t stop when you step away from your computer, it continues on your mobile device. In the past two years, mobile search traffic has grown five-fold. Mobile search today is growing at a comparable pace to Google in the early years.
One of the technologies driving this growth is speech recognition. With Voice Search, you don’t have to type on a tiny touchscreen. You can just speak your query and the answer is on the way. We’ve invested tremendous energy into improving the quality of our recognition technology—for example, today we teach our English Voice Search system using 230 billion words from real queries so that we can accurately recognize the phrases people are likely to say. As the quality has increased, so has usage: in the past year alone, Voice Search traffic has grown six-fold, and every single day people speak more than two years worth of voice to our system.
We first offered speech recognition on mobile search, but you should have that power no matter where you are. You should never have to stop and ask yourself, “Can I speak for this?”—it should be ubiquitous and intuitive. So we’ve added speech recognition into search on desktop for Chrome users. If you’re using Chrome, you’ll start to see a little microphone in every Google search box. Simply click the microphone, and you can speak your search. This can be particularly useful for hard-to-spell searches like [bolognese sauce] or complex searches like [translate to spanish where can I buy a hamburger]. Voice Search on desktop is rolling out now on google.com in English, but in the meantime you can check it out in our video:
Searching with speech recognition started first on mobile, and so did searching with computer vision. Google Goggles has enabled you to search by snapping a photo on your mobile phone since 2009, and today we’re introducing Search by Image on desktop. Next to the microphone on images.google.com, you’ll also see a little camera for the new Search by Image feature. If you click the camera, you can upload any picture or plug in an image URL from the web and ask Google to figure out what it is. Try it out when digging through old vacation photos and trying to identify landmarks—the search [mountain path] probably isn’t going to tell you where you were, but computer vision may just do the trick. Search by Image is rolling out now globally in 40 languages. We’re also releasing Chrome and Firefox extensions that enable you to search any image on the web by right-clicking.
Whether you type, speak or upload a photo, once you’ve indicated what you’re looking for the next step in your search is to sift through the results and pick one. To make this faster, last year we introduced Google Instant, which gives you search results while you type. We estimated Google Instant saves you between two and five seconds on typical searches. But once you’ve picked a result, you click, and then wait again for the page to load—for an average of about five seconds.
We want to help you save some of that time as well, so today we took the next step for Google Instant: Instant Pages. Instant Pages can get the top search result ready in the background while you’re choosing which link to click, saving you yet another two to five seconds on typical searches. Let’s say you’re searching for information about the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, so you search for [dc folklife festival]. As you scan the results deciding which one to choose, Google is already prerendering the top search result for you. That way when you click, the page loads instantly.
Instant Pages will prerender results when we’re confident you’re going to click them. The good news is that we’ve been working for years to develop our relevance technology, and we can fairly accurately predict when to prerender. To use Instant Pages, you’ll want to get our next beta release of Chrome, which includes prerendering (for the adventurous, you can try Instant Pages today with the developer version). It’s one more step towards an even faster web.
To learn more about today’s news, visit our new Inside Search website at www.google.com/insidesearch. There you’ll find a recording of the event (when it’s ready), answers to common questions and links to other blog posts about today’s news on the Mobile blog and Inside Search blog. The Inside Search website is our new one-stop shop for Google search tips, games, features and an under-the-hood look at our technology, so there’s plenty for you to explore.
We’re far from the dream of truly instantaneous access to knowledge, but we’re on our way to help you realize that dream.
Update 4:38p.m.: Watch the video and see a slideshow of today’s event below.
Posted by Amit Singhal, Google Fellow
Google’s Instant Pages Load Sites Instantly By Prefetching [Google]
Remember the old feature in old Netscape browsers that prefetched links on a page so that when you clicked on it, the page would load from your cache instantly? Google’s Instant Pages seems like that. More »
![]()
Voice Search and Search by Image Are Coming to Google Desktop [Video]
The Grand Poobah of search is taking two ass-kicking steps forward in desktop search. Google just announced that they are bringing voice search and search by image to their desktop client. More »
![]()
Eat Late, Gain Weight?
![]()
A new study suggests that people who snack after 8 p.m. have higher body mass indexes (BMIs) than those who don’t nosh at night, even though they don’t eat significantly more total daily calories.
639 to be Sask.’s 2nd area code
It looks like the second area code Saskatchewan will be getting in two years will be 639 – but people who are already using 306 won’t have to switch.



Jethro Nededog 

