Maybe people notice that techcrunch articles get upvoted. Hence they submit TC articles (to get karma. humans love to have more than their fellow of anything: green beans, salt rocks, pieces of paper etc).
This can be addressed in two ways:
1) Randomly allow a subset of users to upvote article (like slashdot's moderation system).
2) Cap karma from articles.
Sorry if I'm massively mistaken and people don't get karma from article submissions.
Sorry, I saw the article on Techmeme and posted it here. I didn't think about posting the original blog post, but I realize that would have been better.
I know that submitting articles gets you more karma, but I didn't do this to get more karma. I don't really care about getting more karma as I'm mostly just a passive observer of HN and not really an active participant.
I read a discussion on here the other day about abolishing submission karma, and I agree with it. It doesn't make sense why someone should get more karma just for posting a link, or if they do, more karma should be given for comments than for submissions.
I guess Google should make a point and release a NaCl Picasa version.
If I could grant to a NaCl app the right to read photos from USB attached cameras and a folder on disk with read/write rights then there wouldn't be a need for a dedicated Linux version.
When you utterly own the search marketing space, yeah, you do run up against a hard wall unless you can either get that market to grow, or you can weasel into another market.
Android doesn't seem to have made much of an impact to their profits. Their other web properties, like Google+, make Apple's legendarily empty "eWorld" look like a boomtown. It seems like of all their acquisitions, only YouTube has really changed what Google is.
Still, better to take some projects out back and...bury them...than to Yahoo!-ize yourself with thousands of semi-popular things you have to maintain in perpetuity.
Considering it was only a WINE version that was little-used, I think it makes sense.
(Same with the Mac version...if you're using Picasaweb to host your photos, you're probably already, or would be better off, using Picasa to organize them instead of kludging a plugin into iPhoto.)
We need more open source cloud based software. The trouble with relying on services provided by companies and corporations is exactly this - they make no promise to do a hand-over should the service be discontinued.
Dropping Picasa for Linux is quite okay. Since it's a lame wined one.
I hate it.
Having a good HTML5 version would fulfill my needs to does not need a app for that.
One Pass shutdown is most interesting to me. It isn't old cruft that isn't interesting to Google anymore, it was a pretty bold year old forward looking project that launched with fanfare (mostly due to the in-app purchase controversy of time) and apparently just fell flat. Replacing it with a more Googley type of business like Customer Surveys is probably for the best, but seems like a retreat.
I'm not sure it's even subtle. RIM is circling itself at this point with no one really even caring if they pull out, such have their string of bad decisions come to taint them).
I was using most of them quite regularly. They are doing this so they all can focus on what ? Google+ , the shit that all going to do is wasting my time without helping me in anyway ? Google should change their motto to "Do not do stupid." with immediate effect.
What is the reason why Google is shutting down Patent Search and (they already shut down Uncle Sam)? I mean - does it really cost them a lot of money to keep these sites running but not update them? For search products like that they should at least make a google product archive to at least access some stuff that could be easily found via those search products even though they no longer update or provide support for them anymore.
They are going away from their motto of "organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful". Yes you can find patents via other means or get government info via other means but it's defeating the motto of making it universally accessible.
From TC: "Other tools, like Patent Search, are being integrated into the main Google experience."
From Google's own announcement:
"We're redirecting the old Patent Search homepage to google.com to make sure everyone is getting the best possible experience for their patent searches. Over the past few months, we've been making updates and improvements to the Patent Search functionality on google.com—not only are you able to search the same set of U.S. patents with the same advanced search options, the new experience loads twice as fast as the old Patent Search homepage, contributes to a unified search experience across Google, and sports Google Doodles as well. The team looks forward to including patents from other countries soon, and will be rolling out additional features to Patent Search on google.com in the future."
Please re-read the whole announcement.
Oh and I don't think I see anywhere Google+ being mentioned....
the reason why i said google+ is ruining everything is referring to how they are focusing on one thing and that thing is Google+ as per the convo Sergey had with Jobs about concentrating on one thing and stop turning into Microsoft.
[+] [-] atuladhar|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mdwrigh2|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] luser001|14 years ago|reply
This can be addressed in two ways:
1) Randomly allow a subset of users to upvote article (like slashdot's moderation system).
2) Cap karma from articles.
Sorry if I'm massively mistaken and people don't get karma from article submissions.
[+] [-] sdtransier|14 years ago|reply
I know that submitting articles gets you more karma, but I didn't do this to get more karma. I don't really care about getting more karma as I'm mostly just a passive observer of HN and not really an active participant.
I read a discussion on here the other day about abolishing submission karma, and I agree with it. It doesn't make sense why someone should get more karma just for posting a link, or if they do, more karma should be given for comments than for submissions.
[+] [-] zeruch|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] fierarul|14 years ago|reply
If I could grant to a NaCl app the right to read photos from USB attached cameras and a folder on disk with read/write rights then there wouldn't be a need for a dedicated Linux version.
[+] [-] Codhisattva|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] astrodust|14 years ago|reply
Android doesn't seem to have made much of an impact to their profits. Their other web properties, like Google+, make Apple's legendarily empty "eWorld" look like a boomtown. It seems like of all their acquisitions, only YouTube has really changed what Google is.
Still, better to take some projects out back and...bury them...than to Yahoo!-ize yourself with thousands of semi-popular things you have to maintain in perpetuity.
[+] [-] rhizome|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rkudeshi|14 years ago|reply
(Same with the Mac version...if you're using Picasaweb to host your photos, you're probably already, or would be better off, using Picasa to organize them instead of kludging a plugin into iPhoto.)
[+] [-] jamesaguilar|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Produce|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] arunoda|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Kylekramer|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tomwaddington|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rollypolly|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] andrewpi|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] zeruch|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] iamgopal|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|14 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] arunoda|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] denzil_correa|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dchest|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] juxta|14 years ago|reply
They are going away from their motto of "organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful". Yes you can find patents via other means or get government info via other means but it's defeating the motto of making it universally accessible.
Google+ is ruining everything.
[+] [-] edwinnathaniel|14 years ago|reply
From Google's own announcement: "We're redirecting the old Patent Search homepage to google.com to make sure everyone is getting the best possible experience for their patent searches. Over the past few months, we've been making updates and improvements to the Patent Search functionality on google.com—not only are you able to search the same set of U.S. patents with the same advanced search options, the new experience loads twice as fast as the old Patent Search homepage, contributes to a unified search experience across Google, and sports Google Doodles as well. The team looks forward to including patents from other countries soon, and will be rolling out additional features to Patent Search on google.com in the future."
Please re-read the whole announcement.
Oh and I don't think I see anywhere Google+ being mentioned....
[+] [-] DanBC|14 years ago|reply
(My Google Scholar still has a []patents check box. Will that go?)
[+] [-] juxta|14 years ago|reply