Archive for Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Google joins effort to make more Web sites more sociable
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – The effort to make it easier for Web surfers to connect with their friends is attracting a crowd.
Following similar moves by the two biggest online hangouts, Internet search leader Google Inc. is introducing tools that are supposed to make any Web site more sociable.
The service, expected to be available on a limited basis today, , provides a framework that will enable people to interact with their friends and use favorite applications they have accumulated on social networks like Facebook and Plaxo even when they aren’t visiting those sites.
Google’s initiative, called “Friend Connect,” follows pledges by MySpace and Facebook last week to allow their users to transport their personal profiles and applications to other Web sites.
News Corp.’s MySpace and privately held Facebook – the Internet’s two largest social hubs – announced their plans for wider accessibility late last week.
“Social is in the air,” said David Glazer, a director of engineering for Google.
Only about two dozen Web sites initially will have access to Google’s Friend Connect code to start. The trial run includes a site devoted to musician Ingrid Michaelson and another site providing recipes for guacamole. The coding is expected to become widely available during the next few months.
Without providing specifics, MySpace and Facebook have said it will be several more weeks before their users can transplant their personal information to other Web sites.
Google hopes its latest social tools will encourage people to spend even more time online, giving the company more opportunities to show the advertising that generates most of its profits.
- 7 Christian bikers arrested in Orange County raid
- Movie 'Bottle Shock' recounts the historic 1976 Paris wine-tasting contest
- Orange County hiker says he was attacked by mountain lion
- Thanks to Lopez Lomong, it's good to believe in the Olympics again
- 'The Hills' not a hit with Hollywood neighbors
- Internet security experts racing to patch hole
- Trial begins in suit against Joel Osteen's wife
- Disney to target boys with rebranded cable channel
- White farmer's ordeal in Zimbabwe
- Howard Hughes' Spruce Goose hangar for sale
- White farmer's ordeal in Zimbabwe
- Human rights issues take center stage as Olympics near
- Internet security experts racing to patch hole
- Not-so-bright ideas
- Trial to begin in suit against Joel Osteen's wife
- Jets' interception of Brett Favre makes them a must-watch team
- Trial begins in suit against Joel Osteen's wife
- DWP official withdraws $152,000 pension request
- Guantanamo prosecutors seek 30-year term for Bin Laden driver
- Feinstein could rock the state's political landscape
