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Google. Buzz. Google Buzz n'existe plus. Si vous n'avez pas lu tous vos posts Google Buzz avant l'arrêt du service, sachez que nous avons archivé votre contenu et l'avons enregistré sur Google Drive. Nous y avons créé deux dossiers : un qui contient un aperçu de vos posts Buzz publics et un autre qui contient tous vos posts. Par défaut, tous les internautes disposant du lien approprié ont accès à vos posts publics. Ils peuvent également apparaître dans les résultats de recherche et sur votre profil Google (dans la mesure où vous l'avez associé à vos posts Buzz).

Tout lien existant vers votre contenu Google Buzz renvoie désormais les utilisateurs vers le dossier contenant vos posts publics. Les fichiers contenant votre contenu Buzz sont traités de la même façon que tout autre fichier stocké sur Drive. Nous vous remercions d'avoir fait confiance à Google Buzz. PeteCashmore googleBuzz Profile. Dan Patterson - Google Profile. Google Buzz Launch Event. Video: Sergey Brin On His Six Months Using Google Buzz, The Chin.

Today, Google’s social strategy took a big step with the launch of Google Buzz — a new FriendFeed-like feature that’s integrated into Gmail, mobile search, Maps, and more (you can see our live notes from the announcement here). Shortly after the event, Google co-founder Sergey Brin fielded questions backstage from members of the press. Our own Steve Gillmor was there to record the conversation (and ask a few questions himself). We’ve embedded the footage below, and have transcribed some of his answers. In the video, Brin answers questions covering a broad array of topics, including Google Buzz, Google’s current situation in China, and the company’s research in clean energy. Note: The video starts off with some loud music in the background, but it gets turned down after a few minutes On getting relevant results, and internal use of Buzz before now: “I think there is huge potential. The conversation then changed to the situation in China. The Location Implications of Google Buzz.

GMAIL USERS: You can now follow Mashable's official Google Buzz profile here: We learned earlier this morning that Google Buzz adds a shared social experience — very similar to FriendFeed and Facebook — to your Google contact circle via Gmail. Google also made it very clear that the mobile component, especially around location, is important to the product as a whole. Location plays a big role in Buzz — we saw this with the introduction of the snap, Google's answer to the check-in. That one key feature demonstrates how right we were when we predicted late last year that "everything points towards Google taking big leaps on the location front in 2010," and that "Google is interested in further assimilating the Latitude and Place Pages products into a more full-fledged location and recommendation service centered around places. " Mobile Feature Run-Down The mobile experience supports all the following features and functionalities: Place Page Significance.

For Twitter + Facebook What It Means. GMAIL USERS: You can now follow Mashable's official Google Buzz profile here: So far, Google has failed to launch a successful social web product to U.S. Internet users. Orkut has taken off in including Brazil and India, but not in North America. Wave is a neat concept, but it has proven too abstract to catch on.

Is Buzz — Google's new Twitter and Facebook-like social stream — the product that's going to win Google a dominant — or at least prominent — place in the social web? That all depends. We ought to consider the consequences of Buzz's relationships with Twitter and Facebook. Google Buzz and Twitter: Probable Peaceful Partners When you post a new tweet using Twitter, Google can import that tweet and send it out to your Buzz followers with the rest of your Buzz updates. However, you won't be able to publish out to Twitter using Buzz, which makes this all seem less useful. Google Buzz and Facebook: Cold Shoulders. Competitors and Experts React. GMAIL USERS: You can now follow Mashable's official Google Buzz profile here: It's no shocker that the web is buzzing about Google Buzz (terrible pun intended), Google's most aggressive push into social media yet.

The new social updating and aggregation feature integrates with your mobile and your Gmail, providing a service that seems like a hybrid of Foursquare, Twitter, Facebook and Yelp. People are already taking sides, including some of Google's competitors. Yahoo struck first, putting out an e-mail about its own previous (and similar) social media efforts before Google even finished its announcement. Microsoft didn't take long to make its thoughts heard, either. Here are some choice reactions from web experts and Google's rivals: Microsoft Microsoft's statement can be distilled into one very simple phrase: Nobody should care about Google Buzz. Here's the actual statement in its entirety: Yahoo Choice quotes: "There are now more than 200 Yahoo! If Google Wave Is The Future, Google Buzz Is The Present.

See our live notes from today’s Google Buzz event here. Google has a problem. Despite having their hands in just about everything online, they’ve never been able to tackle what is a key part of the fabric of the web: social. Yes, they have Orkut and OpenSocial, but no one actually uses them. Okay, some people use them, but not in the meaningful social ways that people use Facebook or even Twitter.

Today, Google may have just solved their social problem. Google Buzz is easily the company’s boldest attempt yet to build a social network. FriendFeed Reborn. Fundamentally, Buzz is a stream of status updates, pictures, links, and videos from your friends. Yes, again, it sounds a lot like FriendFeed. Social Curation Buzz also wants to differentiate itself another way: social curation. For now, this data is sadly only a one-way street.

The Big Mobile Social Play Listening to Google tell it, you’d almost think Buzz is just as much of a mobile product, as a social tool inside Gmail. Social Issues. Google Buzz reaction from the web is more of a 'bzzt' at best | Another early adopter of Google Buzz. Photograph: Stian Lysberg/AFP/Getty Images Google Buzz? It's as popular as a thing that's not very popular, it seems, at least going by the early reactions. A rapid roundup from the web... Dave Winer, of scripting.com and Userland (which made hooking up to RSS easy to do) isn't a fan: "It violates the prime directive of new software. "New software should be easy to try out, and there should be no penalty for doing so. Meanwhile Lifehacker channels Steve Rubel to explain how to remove Buzz updates from your Gmail inbox: "Any Buzz notification automatically matches the Gmail query label:buzz, so all you've got to do is set up a quick filter to keep those Buzz notifications out of your inbox.

" Pity - my email inbox is such a lonely, empty place, like yours, I'm sure. Kevin Rose (of Digg etc fame) has a list of feature requests/complaints, ending up with the slightly hopeful "1. Of course Yahoo is unimpressed (it's had a Buzz for a year - who knew?) SayHelloTo BuzzButton Google Didn’t Make It, So We Did. Love it or hate it, everyone is talking about Google Buzz right now. And, judging from my account, a ton of people are actually using it too. The main use envisioned for Buzz was sharing, but the problem is that for content, you still need to copy a URL and then head over to Buzz to share it. Not anymore. 4 Google Buzz Hacks for Users, Developers, and Haters. Yesterday, Google launched their newest social networking service called Google Buzz. Hooked right into your Gmail inbox, Buzz uses an algorithm to add friends based on those with who you communicate with the most.

Within the newly added "Buzz" section of your Gmail, you and your friends can post status updates as you would on Facebook or Twitter, share links and share photos and videos. You can also integrate other services from around the web with Buzz, including Twitter, Picasa, Flickr, YouTube and Google Reader, all automatically updating your Buzz timeline with your latest activity from around the web.

After spending a day with Buzz ourselves, we came across a few tips and tricks worth sharing with you, our readers. Below you'll find four Buzz hacks, as we'll call them, which help you do more with Buzz... or less, as the case may be. ReadWriteWeb's full coverage and analysis of Google Buzz: 1. Buzz officially launched yesterday, but you may not see it yet in your inbox. 2. 3. 5 Google Buzz Tips for the Advanced User. Yesterday, after spending some time with Google's latest social networking service, Google Buzz, we posted a handful of buzz tips and tricks for those wanting to better manage the buzz, play with its APIs or banish it altogether from their Gmail inbox.

Today, we've come across more even more tips for working with Buzz, including how to add Buzz extensions to your web browser, new ways to subscribe to others' Buzz, and even ways to update Buzz via email. If you're becoming a regular Buzz user, then you'll want to read through this latest collection of tips to take your Buzz skills up another notch. ReadWriteWeb's full coverage and analysis of Google Buzz: First of all, a little known fact: did you know that Google Buzz is supposed to be spelled with a lowercase "b"?

This comes from Google engineer Cedric Beust who posted this info to his Buzz yesterday. Now, onto the tips: 1. The first is the Chrome Buzz extension which adds the Buzz conversation bubble icon to your Chrome browser. 2. 3. Google Buzz TwitterKiller? Don’t Make Me Laugh. With Buzz, Google takes another giant step towards turning into. IF, LIKE MILLIONS of others, you use Gmail, Google's webmail service, you will have been startled last week by the sudden appearance of a cuckoo in your email nest. When you log in to collect your mail, an invitation to "try Buzz in Gmail? " – "no setup needed" – pops up. There's no indication of what this "Buzz" is, but if you click "try" a window opens saying you're now "following" a number of people and that a number of people are "following" you. Below this comes a stream of Twitter-like postings from your followees.

This will come as a surprise, because you have no recollection of making any decision to follow anyone, or of soliciting followers yourself. Google Buzz is a new social-networking tool developed by the search giant and designed to undermine Twitter and Facebook. If this doesn't seem like a big deal, think about the privacy implications. Now think of the implications. In the real world, the devil is in the details. Integrate WordPress Blog. GMAIL USERS: We hope you'll join the discussion over on Mashable’s Google Buzz account. We've discussed how you can integrate Buzz with your other social networks, but what about integrating Buzz with your blog?

If you use a self-hosted WordPress blog (sorry, WordPress.com users), there are already a variety of Google Buzz plugins and add-ons available. While it's clear that people are really taking to using Buzz to share content and communicate, the service will undoubtedly reach more users as its sharing tools are integrated into other social sites. From buttons to social stream in your side bar, here's how you can integrate Buzz with your WordPress blog.

Google Buzz Buttons Mashable started sporting some nifty Buzz buttons a few days ago and lots of our readers have wanted to know how to add a similar feature to their own blogs. Already, a number of enterprising WordPress plugin developers have answered the call to add Google Buzz buttons to WordPress posts. Let's take a look: WPBuzzer. Buzzzy beats Google to a search engine for Google Buzz. In the same way that Summize created a realtime search engine for Twitter, Buzzzy, which just launched, is a realtime search engine for Google Buzz. Though whether it gets aquired, as Summize did by Twitter, remains to be seen. Twitter did not have a search engine. Google Buzz however… For now it appears (stop me if I’m wrong) to be the first search engine for Google Buzz and the founders plan to launch a search API later in the week. The guys who put this together come from the same outfit that brought us TwitJobSearch, a job search engine for Twitter which is fast becoming the new hot way to find a job in these recessionary times.

William Fischer of WorkDigital.co.uk tells me that in order for them to apply their own semantic search layer to Buzzes they needed access to a general Buzz search tool. He thinks other developers will be interested in building products on top of their search product. Buzzzy - A Search Engine for Buzz. How We've Decided to Use Buzz. Hey, RWW friends and fans! As some of you may have noticed, we've been tinkering around with our new team Buzz account today. We've decided to do something a little bit different with this network, and we really hope you'll like it.

We know that a lot of you follow us on Twitter or are our Facebook fans, and sometimes the constant streams of blog posts and observations can be as impersonal as they are informative or interesting. Occasionally, you might also catch a duplicate update. We've decided that the last thing we need to do with Buzz is use it to promote the same stream of blog content - we're not that desperate, and we know you get that news elsewhere. Follow Team RWW on Buzz For conversations! We'll ask questions or give opinions there from time to time each day, and we do hope you'll join us for some friendly debate and fresh perspectives in a real-time setting. But we won't be cluttering up our own Buzz stream with bot-like aggregations and self-promotion. 2 Ways to Sync Google Buzz with Twitter. Have you ever wanted to sync your Google Buzz "status updates" from Google's new social networking service over to the popular microblogging network Twitter?

At launch time, that isn't possible using Buzz's interface. It doesn't allow you to sync your native Buzz posts to Twitter manually or automatically and you can't reply to others' Buzz updates via Twitter, either. However, there are a couple of new third-party tools that at least tackle the first part of the part of this problem - syncing Buzz updates to Twitter. 1) Buzz2Twitter The first tool we discovered (and one I use myself) is a web app from the creator of Reader2Twitter, the tool that automatically syncs Google Reader Shared Items to Twitter. The other features of Buzz2Twitter include: The ability to bind your bit.ly account to the service for link shortening The ability to format your synced tweets For a longer review of Buzz2Twitter, check out Louis Gray's post. 2) Buzz Can Tweet. HOW TO: Integrate Facebook, Twitter, and Buzz into Your Gmail.

Google wins patent for location-based advertising | VentureBeat. Google Patents Location-Based Advertising. Google Secures Broad Patent for Location-Based Advertising. Placing a SketchUp model in Google Earth - SketchUp Help. Latitude google. Google LatLong Blog. Maps Navigation To All Android. Plan a trip in one click. Google City Tours updated: Be your own tourguide. Mobile GeoRSS Map. Suggests New Places You Might Like. GoogleAdds SpatialSearch to Maps API. Flickr Photos In Google Street View. Earth View in Google Maps. Open Handset Alliance Android. HTC Corporation. Nexus One: The Google Phone Has a Name. Google Wave Maps Gadget. Scannable Retail Stickers to Extend Google's Local Presence - Cl. Google Maps To Add “Google Store Views” Google Merges Street View with User Photos. Google UK adds house-hunting to Maps | Technology | guardian.co.

Follow Team HTC-Columbia on Google Maps. An Even Better Way to Find Places Nearby. Google Places API Could Do For Check-ins What Google Maps Did For Maps. Google May Not Have Bought Yelp, But They Sure Are Trying To Own Them With Places. Not Only Is Google Places Going After Yelp, They’re Doing So With Yelp’s Content. Google Opens Places API With Initial Focus On Check-In Apps. Google Pushes Further into Yelp's Territory with Maps for Android Update. Place Pages for Google Maps: There are places we remember! Google launches mobile banner ads which know where you are. Google Tries To Steal Facebook’s Thunder, Plays Up Impressive Maps Userbase.

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