Archive for the ‘Make Money Online’ Category

Drug Companies Take Their Pitch to Social Media

On Twitter, professional race-car driver Charlie Kimball’s nearly 1,300 followers monitor his every move: the countdown to key races; television interviews; dinner in Sonoma, Calif. It’s hard not to be inspired by one crucial detail of Kimball’s narrative: the 25-year-old is among the world’s few professional racers to be diagnosed with diabetes. That’s partly why Novo Nordisk, the Danish pharmaceutical giant, pursued Kimball for an elaborate campaign in which he regularly tweets about taking two of the company’s insulin products. “Just used my Levemir FlexPen,” he tweeted last June, referring to Novo Nordisk’s disposable insulin injector. Levemir appears on the front of Kimball’s racing uniform, his car and on his official Twitter page, racewithinsulin. “It’s a great way to connect with the diabetes community,” he says.

Read more on this story here.

The Top 10 Questions Tech Entrepreneurs Ask

LawPivot is an online market for legal services. It’s a way for companies to confidentially obtain crowdsourced answers to their questions from lawyers and to also find lawyers to retain. Two lawyers with tech experience, Jay Mandal (formerly the lead mergers and acquisitions lawyer at Apple) and Nitin Gupta (formerly an intellectual property litigation lawyer at Townsend and Townsend and Crew) are the co-founders. In this post, I asked Nitin to answer the most common questions of high-tech entrepreneurs. Read more on this story here.

Facebook CEO Zuckerberg Agrees to Donate Fortune to Charities

Well, if Mark Zuckerberg’s image wasn’t already bolstered enough by his recent appearance on 60 Minutes, today’s announcement might help polish it a bit more.

Zuckerberg is one of 17 of the latest billionaires to sign the Giving Pledge, a joint effort from Bill Gates and Warren Buffet to encourage wealthy individuals “to commit to giving the majority of their wealth to the philanthropic causes and charitable organizations of their choice either during their lifetime or after their death,” according to the organization’s web site. The Wall Street Journal first reported the news early Thursday morning. More on this story via this link.

How Google’s New eBookstore Might Save Indie Booksellers

Advances in digital bookselling have usually pushed independent bookstores further and further out of the literary game. But Google’s new store is dealing them back in. Here’s how.

If you stroll on over to your corner bookstore this week and ask the person behind the counter about Google’s new ebookstore, which launches today, you probably won’t be greeted with the kind of teeth-gnashing that has accompanied other digital developments, like Amazon’s online bookstore or the advent of proprietary e-readers. Instead, you might actually be greeted with some excitement and delight. That’s because Google is taking a different approach to selling e-books than Amazon or Barnes & Noble. Rather than create a closed system that leaves others out in the cold, Google is actually partnering with independent bookstores to sell its wares–and share the profits. More on this story here.

Google launches eBookstore with choice of sellers and devices

We expected Google to launch its upcoming e-book store before the end of the year, and the company announced Monday that the new Google eBookstore is now open for business in the US. Google is touting the “open” nature of its e-books by making them accessible to the widest array of popular e-reader devices, including the iPad, Nook, and Sony Reader.

Google’s new eBookstore works a little differently than other stores—at least when it comes to reading via computer. All purchased titles are kept in Google’s cloud-based storage and accessed via a browser. When reading via an iOS or Android-based device, a dedicated app can download and cache titles for reading offline. And for devices compatible with Adobe’s DRM-protected e-book formats—including Sony Reader and Barnes & Noble Nook—PDF or EPUB files can be downloaded and transferred to your device using Adobe Editions software. More on this story here.

The Highest Paying Work-from-home Jobs

Technology is continuously opening up new opportunities for people who want to work from the comfort of their own home. Remote workers or Telecommuters as some others call them are finding and landing profitable jobs though it may not come as easy as it was, there are however some great options listed for each aspiring workers benefit. Read more on this link.

Windows Phone 7 Gets Jailbroken

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Who’s Afraid of Apple, Google, Facebook?

GIGAOM November 26, 2010, 6:11PM EST

Google Fashion Shopping Site Makes Debut

Microsoft: Half of mobile searches have a local intent

BizReport : Mobile Marketing : November 15, 2010

Microsoft’s internal analysis of their mobile search query data has thrown up an interesting, yet not entirely surprising, fact about the search behavior of mobile users.

by Helen Leggatt

You’re ambling around town when suddenly you crave Chinese dumplings. You whip out your phone and after a couple of local searches you’re well on your way to getting your fix.

A similar scenario plays out day after day as mobile users refer to their devices for local information – information that will help them navigate their immediate environment and solve their real-time needs and wants.

It’s not surprising, then, to read of recent data from Microsoft that shows over half (53%) of mobile searches on Bing have a local intent.
Hence the development of ads that, quite literally, guide consumers from “search to store”. Such ads, including Google’s Expandable Map ads, appear both on the mobile web and in apps and, when clicked, provide the user with directions to a store.

“Mobile user demand for information that can be acted on in the real world, in real-time is, well, very real,” writes Search Engine Land’s Greg Sterling, who uncovered the data in a recent chat with Bing’s Director of Search, Stefan Weitz.

“That’s what this Microsoft stat reflects. If that’s not an argument for mobile advertising in general and mobile search in particular, I don’t know what is.”

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  • Unicode over 60 percent of the web February 3, 2012
    Computers store every piece of text using a “character encoding,” which gives a number to each character. For example, the byte 61 stands for ‘a’ and 62 stands for ‘b’ in the ASCII encoding, which was launched in 1963. Before the web, computer systems were siloed, and there were hundreds of different encodings. Depending on the encoding, C1 could mean any of […]
  • Mind the Gap: Encouraging women to study engineering February 2, 2012
    Women make up more than half the global population, but hold fewer than a third of the world’s engineering jobs. In the U.S., female students comprise fewer than 15 percent of all Advanced Placement computer science test takers. Even in high-tech Israel, few girls choose computer science. Not only is this a loss to companies like Google and everyone who bene […]
  • Playbook for tackling the Super Bowl with Google February 1, 2012
    While thousands of lucky fans will brave the crowds at the Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Ind. to fill the coveted seats at this Sunday’s Super Bowl, many more in the U.S. will enjoy the game from home—in front of the TV, with mobile phones and tablets at the ready. As the New York Giants and New England Patriots prepare for kickoff, here are several way […]
  • 2012 global award winners RISE to the top January 30, 2012
    Our business at Google is rooted in STEM and CS, so we’re passionate about supporting organizations that are expanding access to these fields, especially for students who might not have the opportunity otherwise. The annual Google Roots in Science and Engineering (RISE) program supports organizations running innovative STEM (science, technology, engineering […]

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