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The web operating system is evolving as a form at a rapid pace, promising to free us from Windows once and for all. If you want to take the desktop to your web browser, one contender is well on the way to making it possible. Certainly the last couple of years has seen a flourishing trade in web applications, providing Internet-based alternatives to everything from video remixing and document editing tools to advanced presentation authoring and live video broadcasting services. But as it stands, you need to set up accounts with each service, and access these various tools from separate websites. The notion of the web operating system attempts to unify your web applications to some extent, providing you with …

Looking for an easy way to download your favorite videos from YouTube, Google Video or any other popular video sharing site? Keep on reading, then, because you might find some good hints here. Photo credit: ronen Video sharing sites are increasingly a resourceful destination for entertainment, documentary, indie clips, music and a lot more. The only drawback they video sharing sites have is that in most cases there is no feature allowing the easy and immediate downloading of your preferred clips so that you could actually watch them even when not connected to the Internet. But, unknown to many, there are indeed many easy ways to download your favorite video clips without having to install any particular software and independently …

Wikipedia defines Web Operating Systems (aka WebOS) as: "A software platform that interacts with the user through a web browser and does not depend on any particular local operating system." Web operating systems are also commonly referred to as Web desktops: "A web desktop or webtop is a network application system for integrating web applications into a web based work space. It is a virtual desktop on the web, running in a web browser as software. Web desktops often are characterized by an environment similar to that of Windows, Mac, or Linux, but are now considered to have much more functionality being dependent on the internet. Typical benefits include the ability to save work and settings over the internet rather …

Everybody trusts Google - the name has become synonymous with web searches and contextual advertising, but mounting evidence leads some dissenters to ask the vital question ‘are my privacy and security at risk when using Google services?’

masterplan

This is also the contention of a new short film that attempts to unsettle your assumptions about everyone’s favourite web monopoly: Google.

Take Google Mail for instance - it is open knowledge that Gmail scans the contents of both incoming and outgoing mail, so that well targeted contextual advertising can be placed alongside your inbox. Gmail has been enormously popular, given that it is free, well featured and packs over two gigabytes of storage. But can you be one hundred percent certain that the mails scanned for the purposes of ad placement are not used for other purposes?

In this guide to Googlephobia, I have gathered a range of questions that are starting to be asked about the possible negative impact the web juggernaut might have on your life. In an age in which governments are attempting closer and closer surveillance and control of their citizens, can a private company be trusted to keep private information confidential?

Many would argue not, and yet many people persist in using email, online spreadsheets and documents, and web searches that could well be used against them at a later date. That’s right, even your web searches are stored deep down in the Google vaults, ready to pulled up and examined at a moment’s notice.

Capping this overview of Google’s less sunny side is the short film
http://masterplanthemovie.com/”>Master Plan, complete with a transcription by Executive Editor Livia Iacolare.

So sit back, survey the landscape, and decide for yourself if you have reason to be afraid. Here are the details:

Google and big brother

In trusting Google as your primary source of search information, or as an email, news, and even web application provider, how much are you exposing yourself to surveillance and possible manipulation? Just what information does Google have, and what are they willing to do with it?

Serge Thibodeau at Rank For Sales notes that:

…Google does record and store, as no doubt do other search engines, by individual details of everything searched through the Google engine.

This may be released where legally demanded or to satisfy national security or other state interests…

In other words should you be even so much as suspected of something illegal or of concern to government bodies, Google will happily oblige said bodies with full details of all of the searches you have run, and where they took you. This all comes down to how far you trust your government.

dossier

When Adam L. Penenberg researched Google for his Mother Jones article on the subject he directly questioned a Google official on the point of where the company stands with regards to handing out confidential information:

I asked her if the company had ever been subpoenaed for user records, and whether it had complied. She said yes, but wouldn’t comment on how many times. Google’s website says that as a matter of policy the company does “not publicly discuss the nature, number or specifics of law enforcement requests.”

So can you trust Google only as far as you can trust the Bush administration? “I don’t know,” Wong replied. “I’ve never been asked that question before.”

But Google’s complicity goes beyond subpoenas, according to ex-CIA intelligence agent Robert David Steele. Alex Jones at Prison Planet that:

Steele raised eyebrows when he confirmed from his contacts within the CIA and Google that Google was working in tandem with “the agency,” a claim made especially volatile by the fact that Google was recently caught censoring Alex Jones’ Terror Storm and has targeted other websites for blackout in the past.

“I think that Google has made a very important strategic mistake in dealing with the secret elements of the U.S. government - that is a huge mistake and I’m hoping they’ll work their way out of it and basically cut that relationship off,” said the ex-CIA man.

If Google is indeed in the pockets of shady intelligence agencies, how far can you truly trust them to keep your confidential data to themselves, and not turn it over at the drop of a hat?

‘Okay’, you might say, ‘but I have nothing to hide. The only people that this is going to worry are terrorists and pedophiles’. But whether you have nothing to hide or not, what is it stake here is a matter of civil liberties, the right to privacy and the possibility of state control and surveillance beyond anything known before. We are looking at the possibility of a huge escalation in the erosion of our personal freedom and privacy, beyond any security risks that might come about as a consequence.

But that’s not all.

Google everything

Google being in bed with big brother is a scary thought, but it isn’t such a monumental task to just switch to other services if it concerns you too much. But there are those that suggest that there may be little in the way of an alternative in the coming years, as Google’s master plan would seem to involve constant expansion and the creation of a monopolistic empire that ties up the web, telecommunications and television all in one. Where do you turn when everything has a Google badge on it?

mailscan

Robert Cringely over at I, Cringely details this disturbing possibility - the idea that Google is looking to create a total monopoly not just on the web services that we use, but also our phones and televisions. In Cringely’s discussion of Google’s monopolistic masterplan he details the fact that Google controls more network fiber than any other organization, and that it is buying up data centers by the dozen across America. ‘So what?’ you might ask, but as Cringely goes on to argue, the implications are much graver than they might first look.

Internet use is changing rapidly. As the web moves from being a static medium of words and the occasional picture towards a dynamic medium stuffed full of video and audio, ISPs are facing a big challenge in terms of keeping up with users bandwidth needs. In the next few years the average web user is going to shift from using one or two gigabytes of bandwidth a month, to using the same amount in the average day. For the ISPs this means a huge increase in the bandwidth they are going to be serving up.

Bandwidth, of course, lies in the hands of those who control the network fiber, and increasingly this is going to mean Google. The consequences are simple:

We won’t know if we’re accessing the Internet or Google and for all practical purposes it won’t matter. Google will become our phone company, our cable company, our stereo system and our digital video recorder. Soon we won’t be able to live without Google, which will have marginalized the ISPs and assumed most of the market capitalization of all the service providers it has undermined — about $1 trillion in all — which places today’s $500 Google share price about eight times too low.

So, regardless of whether you trust the Google empire or not, chances are you are not going to have much of choice when it comes to going through them if you want to access the Internet, your phone, or television content.

Masterplan

Posing these questions with panache and style, the short film Master Plan pushes Googlephobia a step further, throwing up questions as to Google’s dicing with DNA, and relationship with the CIA. This student film, put together by Olan Halici and Jurgen Mayer for their Bachelor’s thesis, raises the bar and dares to ask the questions most of us would rather not think about:

Master Plan complete transcript

Google is the most powerful search engine on Earth.

Today, billions of users google for any kind of information. A former student’s project, now rules the World Wide Web. In 1997, Larry Page and Sergey Brin developed the so called “page rank”: a complex mathematical algorithm that ranks websites by their relevance.

This groundbreaking invention profoundly transformed access to information.

Google rapidly became the first choice for internet search. But, this was just the beginning. Today, Google ends huge profits by dominating online advertising; it is well on the way of becoming the most valuable company on the global market. But it isn’t just about money; these men pursue a great vision, a google master plan.

Any kind of information will be accessible to anybody controlled by Google itself, with the credo, “Don’t be evil”.

New features and products are constantly flying out of the Googleplex, all for free. Don’t you worry about your privacy? A perfect blend of software and hardware, called Googleware gives the company more computing power than anyone else.

Google stores the entire known web in its giant database, and there is more. Gmail offers 2.7 GB of free storage; it’s no secret. All your mails - including received mails from your friends - are scanned. Google is methodically collecting personal data in many more ways using cookies and account information merely to offer relevant text ads.

Google can create incredibly detailed dossiers on everyone of us. A former CIA agent claims that Google is cooperating under cover with the U.S government including the CIA. Through appearing to simply want the best for its users, Google has already begun to expand its online domination.

Total control, and not merely on the web. Google is conducting research in the fields of molecular biology and genetics. What if Google had an entire file on you? Even including your entire genetic data? Every human being would become completely transparent.

What do you think? Does Google really worry about our privacy?

Conclusions

dontbeevil.jpg

As Web 2.0 evolves people are increasingly switching their work-based and personal communications to online applications, such as those offered by Google. In so doing, you can afford yourself new freedoms - the freedom to access our information regardless of where you are in the world, the freedom to collaborate with others from remote locations, the freedom to forget about how much space you have left on your hard drive or where you put that elusive file.

But in reaping the benefits of these new freedoms, you also put yourself at risk of being spied on, reported on and sold down the line by companies that will always put the bottom line before their customers. As Google grows from strength to strength as a provider of web services and applications, but also as an owner of all important bandwidth, it would make sense to take stock of their growing monopoly and consider the consequences of the deal you enter into when you make use of their free software.

Google, as a leader in the Web 2.0 landscape, is all about facilitating communication and the free flow of information. But where is all of the information flowing to, and is it always to your benefit? Or that of those who would control and catalogue our everyday lives?

While sincerely hoping that this isn’t the case, it would be wise to allow for the possibility in our day to day actions online.

Additonal resources

If you want to read more on the subject of Google and its master plan, you might want to visit the following websites:

  • Is Google Evil?, Adam L. Penenberg’s investigative think-piece on the subject

  • Robert Cringely’s thoughts on the future of the Google monopoly
  • Is Google A Monopoly? from Evolving Trends
  • Google’s relationship with the CIA explored over at Infowars
  • The Masterplan movie website
  • Online video is a great way to add rich content to your blog or website, whether you are keeping a personal journal or running a for-profit operation. The Google Ajax Search API is a great way of being able to customize the way you display your video content in a visually rich way that you can adapt with the minimum of technical knowledge.

    gsvideobar.jpg

    Think of it as a great way to call search information right out of Google Video, and compile it together into customizable ‘video bars’ that you can resize, position anywhere on your website and let your site visitors browse visually. This adds an intuitive way for your visitors to access targeted video content that goes beyond the simple text-based, descriptive approach.

    The GSVideoBar Solution gives you everything you will need to get these great looking video bars onto your website by copying and pasting a few lines of code into your blog post or website template. While there are Web Widgets like the incredibly impressive Blinkz.TV Video Wall that will do this for you, the advantage of using the API approach is the ability to tinker with its look.

    Want to change the size of the individual video clips? No problem. Want to position your video bars across the top of the screen, the bottom, running along the side? Again, you have the power to choose. This makes for a video search display that will not only be suited to your site visitors tastes, but also to the parameters of your webpage or blog, giving you the flexibility to truly integrate the content into the look and feel of your website.

    In this brief introduction, I take you through the simple process, before showing you the end results in action.

    What is the GSvideoBar Solution?

    To cut a long story short, the GSvideoBar Solution is an application that allows you to tap into the power of Google Video Search and the Google Ajax Search API to gather together videos on a particular search term, and organize them in a film-strip like bar on your website.

    The Google people describe it like this:

    The GSvideoBar Solution is a simple to use application of the Google AJAX Search API that is designed to let you easily add application and page controlled video search and playback capabilities to your pages, sites, and blogs.

    In this solution, the videos are displayed in a horizontal or vertical bar and there is no search form or tag stack. The solution composes nicely with the Video Search Control solution as well as other Video Bar solutions running on the same page.

    horizontal_bar.jpg

    In other words, you can have as many of these bars on your website as you like. The features list is quite impressive, and includes:

    • An ability to display a collection of videos in either horizontal or vertical orientation.

  • A set of four or eight video thumbnails that will play directly on your page.
  • An ability to compose with other instances of the Video Bar solution or Video Search Control solution. The net effect is that multiple solutions may share a single video player. Interaction between your search bars is possible, to create some interesting effects.
  • The solution is designed for extreme easy of use. As a site designer you are able to control the initial search expression, how many search results appear, the search result orientation, the location of both the player and the search results.
  • If, like me, you are scared at the idea of too much code-tinkering they have even supplied a ready to cut and paste version at the bottom of the service’s webpage. So, while there are almost infinite possibilities for those with a bit of javascript know-how, even rank-amateurs like me can make use of this impressive service to brighten up their websites.

    All you need to do is scroll down to the bottom of the page and copy everything in the Hello World of GSvideoBar section, and then change one tiny parameter, which I have highlighted in the image below:

    howtovideobar.jpg

    You just need to swap the part where it says “vw gti” with your own search term, such as “masternewmedia”, “Robin Good” or anything else you might be interested in finding videos about. It’s that simple.

    The results, if you change nothing else, look like this. On your website, the thumbnails on the left will determine the video playing in the player on the right.

    body, table, p{
    background-color: white;
    font-family: Arial, sans-serif;
    font-size: 13px;
    }

    td { vertical-align : top; }

    #videoBar {
    width : 160px;
    margin-right: 5px;
    margin-left: 5px;
    padding-top : 4px;
    padding-right : 4px;
    padding-left : 4px;
    padding-bottom : 0px;
    }

    function OnLoad() {
    var videoBar;
    var barContainer = document.getElementById(”videoBar”);
    var playerContainer = document.getElementById(”videoPlayer”);

    var options = {
    largeResultSet : true
    }

    videoBar = new GSvideoBar(barContainer, playerContainer, options);
    videoBar.execute(”vw gti”);
    }

    Loading…
    Loading…

    The ability to customize the service

    The example above is impressive in its own right, and could be embedded in the appropriate part of your blog or website template as quite a striking way of granting access to online video. If you, or your webmaster do have even the most basic Javascript and CSS skills, a lot more can be achieved, however.

    The examples on the service’s own website illustrate how you can have video bars interact with one another, so that one controls the others, and it is certainly well within the reach of those with a modicum of technical knowledge to arrange several of these video bars on the same page with perfect integration.

    Whatever your level of knowledge about these things, the GSvideoBar Solution offers a great way of tapping into the rich media qualities of online video, and bringing an intuitive and visually-driven approach to the navigation of this content.

    Additional Resources

    If you are interested in learning more, you might like to visit:

  • Rank For Sales article on Google APIs and their uses
  • Robert Scoble’s recent interview with Google’s Marc Lucovsky on Google API’s and what they’re all about
  • My own recent article on Web Widgets, effectively easy-to-plug-in implementations of API’s
  • Personalized home page meets online virtual desktop: YourMinis - allows you to customize your own personal start page through RSS and OPML imports, full widget integration and open sharing of your newly aggregated content.

    my_yourminis.jpg

    The personalized home page has proved itself to be a great way of bringing the web to your desktop without having to go searching for it first.

    Personalized home pages and virtual online desktop solutions allow you to create a “start page” that replicates the experience of using your computer’s desktop from within your browser while serving as a very powerful vehicle for content distribution, for online content providers.

    With the increasing popularity of web widgets, which make it easier than ever to plug content directly into your website or blog, it is now possible to make use of a vast range of web-based applications to achieve almost anything your offline tools are capable of. From RSS feeds to project management, post-it notes to walls of video, there are a vast range of easy-to-embed tools waiting to be put to use.

    YourMinis‘ success lies in its marriage of the start page and web widgets formulas to create feature-packed virtual online desktops that can serve as an instant portal to web content, providing you with a jumping off point to the rest of the Internet, or else a portable desktop that travels with you wherever you surf.

    By allowing you to gather numerous micro-applications into a single, highly customizable space that you can access from any computer at any time, YourMinis personalized home page aggregates your favourite online destinations into an accessible, cohesive environment.

    In this video review of YourMinis central features, I talk you through the process of setting up a personalized home page / virtual online desktop, adapting it to your needs, sharing it with others, and even of something you may have never heard before: embedding your personalized home page into your browser so that it can be called up at any time, even if you are visiting another website.
    /**/

    Online Virtual Desktops

    usergenerated_spielberg.jpg

    YourMinis offers a simple way of gathering a horde of useful, or just plain entertaining, content from across the web to a single, accessible space. It’s usability is in no small part down to its mimicry of the GUI of your computer desktop, a space that all but the most technophobic users will feel an instant affinity for.

    YourMinis gives great credit and tribute to the Mac’s OSX elegant interface, from the design of the widgets themselves, to the decidedly Mac-like desktop wallpapers and the expose-like ability to browse tabs from a single visual interface. This can only be a good thing in terms of YourMinis great looks and intuitive usability.

    The online desktop paradigm serves its function well and the spaces you create with YourMinis are every bit as customizable as the one on your actual desktop. The visual interface theme can be easily changed, the layout is highly adaptable, and it is also possible to create tabbed desktops, something normally only possible off-line using applications like VirtueDesktops. This feature alone is a great idea, that makes it possible to create a number of entirely different virtual desktops that can be switched on in just a click.

    In that sense, YourMinis makes it very easy to create a number of spaces to serve a number of different, dedicated functions.

    You can have a desktop devoted to RSS feeds, or to a specific subject, a wall of video desktop, a place to write and leave notes or check off to-dos, while at the same time this can act as a perfect aggregating space for all of your email and IM accounts in a single, cohesive space.

    Images and text are easy to format, and both can be turned into links, so that you can have images that transport you to the site that they directly reference. In this sense it is possible to create a highly visual navigation hub to websites and sources you are interested in.

    This further extends the interface design potential of this tool while handing it into the control of non-technical users, who, frustrated by their very limited ability to customize their “traditional” computer desktop start to understand and appreciate the advantages of creating a truly personalized space for accessing content.

    Content Distribution and Feed Aggregation

    rss_feeds_yourminis.jpg

    Even if you were to discount the vast range of available widgets, which span from video players, games, comic readers and email aggregators to to-do-lists, calendars and note pads, YourMinis would be valuable alone as an RSS aggregator.

    With OPML and RSS feed creation as easy as dragging and dropping a new widget onto your desktop and tapping in a few variables, YourMinis makes for a great way of being able to watch multiple feeds update simultaneously, rather than having to go through them one at a time. A nice alternative to the “river of news” or “newsradar” style, in which feeds are combined, this lets you cast an eye instantly over multiple sources to see the news coming in.

    The fact that this truly portable personalized home page / virtual desktop can be embedded into your browser, and viewed at any time, superimposed over the website you are currently visiting, makes this a valuable tool for anyone that needs quick and easy access to a number of RSS feeds when and where they want it.

    Furthermore, the browser version of YourMinis provides also, in the bottom corner of your browser window, a RSS-notification facility which lets you know anytime feeds are updated.

    Community and Content Sharing

    user_page_yourminis.jpg

    The latest addition to YourMinis is a social, sharing dimension to the service, which makes it easy to publish your tabbed desktops to the rest of the web, just as you might choose to share your del.icio.us bookmarks. These shared, public desktops and personalized home pages from YourMinis are displayed in a YouTube-like style, with a selection of thumbnails organized by popularity, star ratings and other typical indicators of the social networking world.

    From within the YorMinis’ community portal YourMinis pages can be explored by tags, by the aforementioned popularity, or simply by browsing through thumbnails, and it is possible to interact with a given desktop through a half-page thumbnail without having to commit to visiting it’s URL.

    Also, like most video and image-sharing sites are doing nowdays, it is possible to both link or embed a public page directly into your blog or website, allowing direct and seamless integration of YourMinis content into any web page.

    This could prove very useful if you stumble upon - for example - a nice selection of RSS feeds, or a well presented photo-gallery that you’d like to share with your site visitors.

    On a par with Google Gadgets or even Widgetbox, YourMinis does allow you to pick, choose and easily integrate widgetized content into your site without much of an effort. Going widget-hunting and integrating is certainly a lot quicker and easier on YourMinis than inside Widgetbox, though of course you may find a somewhat less comprehensive inventory in terms of widget coverage.

    Conclusions

    YourMinis is an excellent service for anyone looking to easily gather online content into a single, easy to access space.

    Just as social bookmarking tools allow you to easily transport and share your bookmarks online, so YourMinis allows you to access a content and feature-rich personalized home page which fully acts as a virtual online desktop, regardless of where you are or which computer type you are using.

    The Flash-based interface is smooth and free of glitches, and provides an attractive, easy-to-use interface for anyone.

    In making everything so straightforward, in terms of the ease with which widgets can be customized, resized and dragged and dropped around the virtual desktop, YourMinis will also appeal to those who find embed codes and HTML an unappetizing prospect.

    I feel confident that I could teach my grandmother how to use YourMinis in very little time, as it is really that intuitive.

    Also in YourMinis’ favour is its scalability to the needs of its specific users. For while it is quite possible to set up start pages with a few drags, drops and colour changes, the inclusion of RSS and OPML make it a potentially much more powerful tool for those who want to push its content aggregation capabilities.

    Finally, I have to say that I am very impressed by the fact that I can embed the whole thing into my browser. The ability to be surfing the web, and then to overlay my personalized desktops, feeds, emails and other aggregated services, only to turn them off just as quickly, is a truly impressive one.

    This is, for me, the icing on the cake of what is a powerful, versatile and great looking-resource for anyone looking to aggregate a range of content online with the optimum ease.

    Additional Resources

    If this review of personlized home page builder YourMinis has indeed whet your appetite, you might want to check out some the following links:



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