Google Reader is a very popular feed reading tool. Earlier there used to be stiff competition between Google Reader and FriendFeed but now there appears to be a perceptible shift towards Google Reader of late.
IMF has yesterday declared that worst is over. Economy has revived and all major economies are showing positive growth. But do we all feel that. Do we see the signs of growth around us. Probably not. IMF chief economist hinted that recovery would be painfully and would take years.
Google has been known for constantly working and making improvements in their ad deliveries. Google has been refining its algorithms to perfect the deliveries of relevant ads.
Webmasters resort to many tools and techniques to get the top listing amongst the first search results. But path to such an outcome needs hard work, ingenuity and sincerity. If at any time you make efforts to outsmart the mighty Google then you are mistaken.
Google Chrome logo has looked very attractive right from the moment it was launched. A spiral mix of vibrant colours, Red, Green, Yellow and Blue looks quite appealing. Google has been heading northwards on the popularity charts and over last one year it has been able to grab substantial market share amongst the web browsers. [...]
If you are a regular visitors and contributors to online image storehouses like Flickr, Picassa etc then you would definitely come across a situation where your image might have been copied, stolen and used by some other internet regular.
Facebook in its effort to catch up with Twitter has acquired FriendFeed. It’s win-win deal for both of them but more so for Facebook. Twitter has over a year or so outsmarted all social networking sites. The rapid rise of Twitter has been helped to the great extent by failures of Facebook and MySpace to [...]
Core professions are back with vengeance. Information Technology remained the most sought after profession for more than two decades. But now its progress has been arrested somewhat. IT purists may not believe in this. But the market statistics emphatically suggests that IT is no longer the choicest profession of young students.
