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Coming to a universe near you: YouTube Space Lab
October 10, 2011
(Cross-posted on the
YouTube blog
)
Can plants survive beyond Earth? Can proteins observed in space reveal the mysteries of life? Science experiments aboard the
International Space Station
(ISS) could unlock the answers and now we're giving you a chance to ask the questions. Today, we’re launching
YouTube Space Lab
with Lenovo, in cooperation with Space Adventures, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the European Space Agency (ESA), and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Space Lab is a new galactic channel on YouTube that will lift off from your laptop, taking you to interesting and awesome videos from around the world... and beyond.
Interested students are invited to come up with an idea for a science experiment that can be conducted in space and upload a video explaining it to YouTube by December 7, 2011. The YouTube community and a panel of distinguished scientists, astronauts and expert judges, including
Professor Stephen Hawking
, will pick the best ones. If your video is selected, it will be performed aboard the ISS and live streamed on YouTube to the world in 2012.
We'll also throw in some out-of-this-world prizes for the winners: like
ZERO-G flights
, Lenovo IdeaPad laptops and your choice of either a trip to Tanegashima Island, Japan, to watch your experiment blast off in a rocket bound for the ISS, or—once you’re 18—a one-of-a-kind astronaut training experience in
Star City, Russia
, the training center for Russian cosmonauts. For more information on how to enter, including eligibility requirements and experiment guidelines, check out the competition page on the
channel
or the
official rules
.
All future astronauts and space enthusiasts can find inspiration in the space related content on
YouTube.com/SpaceLab
. Space Lab is just one of many educational channels available under
YouTube.com/EDU
. Educators can also visit
YouTube.com/Teachers
to learn how to better incorporate video into the classroom. We're developing a YouTube for Schools pilot aimed at making YouTube accessible in more schools. If you want to be notified when it's ready, sign up
here
.
Blast off now and be part of a global experiment where your teacher is an astronaut and your classroom, space!
Posted by Zahaan Bharmal, YouTube Space Lab lead
Answering Obama's call to action with STEM 100Kin10
October 7, 2011
Last January, U.S. President Obama challenged the nation to train 100,000 high-quality science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) teachers in 10 years.
Google in Education
decided to answer his call to action and became one of the founding members of a community of action called
100Kin10
.
We shared our plan with U.S. Secretary of Education,
Arne Duncan
, and his staff in April, who gave us their full support. With this backing, we were able to announce 100Kin10 in June at the
Clinton Global Initiative
(CGI) America meeting in Chicago. CGI also identified STEM education as one of its focus areas for its new branch of
U.S. Initiatives
.
This past week,
100Kin10 officially kicked off
with 80 partner organizations, all contributing to a threefold mission: to reverse the United States’ decades-long decline in STEM subjects, to ensure that all children have the basic STEM literacy to be full participants in our economy and democracy and to enable U.S. students to address the most pressing national and global challenges.
Google has made commitments to increase the supply of high quality teachers and retain excellent STEM teachers. Specifically:
Working with
The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
to create a high-profile recognition program for the top 5% of STEM teachers nationwide and are well on our way to this.
Inviting districts nationwide to join us at Google for talent academies that will facilitate and fund HR pilot strategies for education.
Working with university faculty training future teachers throughout California to integrate educational technology across curriculum and scale the practice by funding research on the topic. To that end, we established the
Google Faculty Institute
this August and have already funded nine pilots across the state.
We believe every student should have access to high quality teaching and educational opportunity. We also recognize that as a collective, we can better measure our progress and take significant strides toward fulfilling the commitments the Department of Education has made around STEM teaching.
We welcome big challenges and look forward to helping achieve great success with 100kin10 in the months and years to come. For more information on Google’s efforts in education, please visit our
education website
.
Posted by Jordan Bookey, Manager, K-12 Education Outreach Team
Twenty award winners blaze their way into our Zurich office
October 7, 2011
Last week in our Zurich office, we held a celebratory event for the 20 winners of the second annual European Google Trailblazer Awards, intended to recognize students that exhibit great potential in science and engineering. The eight girls and 12 boys aged 16-19 were selected for their work in national science, informatics and engineering competitions that took place in Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Romania, Switzerland and the U.K. over the past year. Partnering with each of these competitions, Google engineers awarded “Trailblazer” status to the participants who demonstrated an outstanding use of computing technology in their projects. The aim of the distinction is to reward and encourage these students’ achievements, bring talented students to experience life at Google and show them what a career in computer science can look like, with a special emphasis on how computer science touches every discipline.
Every Trailblazer winner this year was truly worthy of the title. Ciara, Ruth and Kate, three of the winners of the the
BT Young Scientist competition
in Ireland, taught themselves to code in order to develop a mobile app for teens to measure their carbon footprints, looking at their use of typical teenage appliances like MP3 players, hair straighteners and computer games. Joszef, one of the winners of the
Scientific and Innovation Contest for Youth
in Hungary, developed a portable heart monitor combined with GPS that would alert medical services instantly if you were having a heart attack, and include your location so they could respond quickly. Tom and Yannick, winners of the
Junior Web Awards
in Switzerland, learned HTML and CSS in order to build an interactive health website—and made it available in French, German and English. These are just a few examples.
While at Google Zurich, the Trailblazers covered a wide swath of material, learning about data centers, security and testing, hearing from the Street View team on managing operations in multiple countries and from recruiters on how to write a strong resume. Google engineers chatted about careers in computer science and then tasked the group to solve problems like a software engineer: imitating how a software program might work, the participants lined up in groups of six and had to create an algorithm to reorder themselves without speaking to each other during the re-arranging. For their most in-depth challenge, the students developed and pitched their own award-winning product with guidance from product managers. In just 20 minutes, each student had to come up with product ideas and a pitch—delivered to the product managers—that would convince even Larry Page that their tech product would be the next big thing.
The students left Zurich buzzing about the pathways a career in tech can lead them down, and we can’t wait to see how these young entrepreneurs develop over the next few years.
If you’d like a shot at becoming a Google Trailblazer in 2012, enter one of our partner competitions in
Germany
,
Hungary
,
Ireland
,
Romania
,
Switzerland
or the
U.K.
(you need to be at high school in one of these countries to be eligible for entry). More countries and partner competitions will be added each year, so keep an eye on
google.com/edu
for further details.
If you’re the organizer of an pre-existing national science and engineering competition in Europe, the Middle East or Africa (EMEA) and would like your competition to be considered for a Trailblazer prize from Google, please complete this
form
.
Posted by Alison Daniel-Cutler, Pre-University Education Outreach, EMEA
National Cyber Security Awareness Month 2011: Our Shared Responsibility
October 7, 2011
(Cross-posted on the
Public Policy Blog
)
On the Internet, as with the offline world, the choices we make often have an impact on others. The links we share and the sites we visit can affect our security and sometimes introduce risk for people we know. Given how quickly our collective use of technology is evolving, it’s useful to periodically remind ourselves of practices that can help us achieve a more secure and enjoyable online experience.
This month, Google once again joins the
National Cyber Security Alliance (NCSA)
, government agencies, corporations, schools and non-profit organizations in recognizing
National Cyber Security Awareness Month
. It’s a time for us to offer education that increases online security for everyone.
It’s fitting that the theme of this year’s Cyber Security Awareness Month is “Our Shared Responsibility.” With ever-increasing ways to access the web and share information, we need to focus on keeping our activities secure. In that spirit, and to help kick off Cyber Security Awareness Month, we’re introducing a new
Google Security Center
. The Security Center is full of practical tips and information to help people stay safe online, from choosing a secure password to using 2-step verification and avoiding phishing sites and malware.
We also continue to develop products and services that help people protect their information online. Examples that have stood out so far this year include the
Chromebook
,
2-step verification in 40 languages
, and Chrome browser warnings for
malicious downloads
and
out-of-date plugins
, among others. We develop free products and tools such as
DOM Snitch
, a Chrome extension that helps developers identify insecure code.
We recognize the importance of security education and are committed to helping make your online experience both exciting and safe to use. We all have a responsibility to take steps to protect ourselves and together develop a culture of security. We encourage everyone to
Stop. Think. Connect.
Posted by Eric Davis, Public Policy Manager, Security
Map Maker Graduation Part V: from Afghanistan to Antarctica
October 6, 2011
(Cross-posted on the
Lat Long blog
)
Google Map Maker
enables local experts to create maps and share their local knowledge with the world. These citizen cartographers help keep maps of their areas accurate and up to date. They add missing roads and new businesses—and even map areas that have little to no data yet on Google Maps.
Today, our latest crop of countries, territories and an entire continent are
graduating
from Map Maker—meaning the user-generated maps of these countries will now appear on Google Maps: Afghanistan, Antarctica, Ecuador, Georgia, Guatemala, Heard Island and McDonald Islands, Honduras, Iraq, Norfolk Island, Saint Pierre & Miquelon and Saudi Arabia.
Here are some before and after pictures that highlight how much detail Map Maker users have added to Google Maps for these regions (as well as some
time-lapse videos
):
Baghdad, Iraq
Kabul, Afghanistan
Tbilisi, Georgia
Each region has an impressive mapping story—from the Georgian Government’s initiative to improve their country’s map, to the group led by six students in
Herat, Afghanistan
who mapped their entire city in a matter of weeks.
Thank you to the Google Map Maker contributors who create better maps for these regions and others; their ongoing efforts can be seen at
Map Maker Pulse
. We encourage all local mappers to continue improving the maps of these areas and the
more than 180 other regions
of the world on
Google Map Maker
.
Posted by Anjali Joshi, Director of Product Management, Google Maps
Google Earth downloaded more than one billion times
October 5, 2011
(
Cross-posted from the Lat Long Blog
)
How large is one billion? One billion hours ago modern humans were living in the Stone Age. One billion minutes ago, the Roman Empire was flourishing. If you traveled from Earth to the Moon three times, your journey would measure one billion meters.
Today, we’ve reached our own one billion mark:
Google Earth
has been downloaded more than one billion times since it was first
introduced
in 2005. That’s more than one billion downloads of the Google Earth desktop client, mobile apps and the Google Earth plug-in—all enabling you to to explore the world in seconds, from Earth to Mars to the ocean floor.
We’re proud of our one billion milestone, but we’re even more amazed at the way people have used Google Earth to explore the world. When we founded
Keyhole, Inc.
back in 2001 (the company was acquired by Google in 2004), we never imagined our geospatial technology would be used by people in so many unexpected ways. At www.OneWorldManyStories.com, we’ve collected
stories
from people all over the world who use Google Earth to follow their dreams, discover new and distant places, or make the world a better place.
Visit
www.OneWorldManyStories.com
to learn about people like
Professor David Kennedy
of the University of Western Australia, who’s used Google Earth to scan thousands of square kilometers in Saudi Arabia and Jordan. Professor Kennedy has discovered ancient tombs and
geoglyphs
dating back at least 2,000 years, all without leaving his desk in Perth. Architect
Barnaby Gunning
, after the April 6, 2009 earthquake near L’Aquila Italy, encouraged his fellow citizens to start rebuilding the city virtually in 3D. Their online urban planning will aid city planners and architects. Retired English teacher
Jerome Burg
created
Google Lit Trips
, which uses Google Earth to match places in famous books to their geographical locations, encouraging students to create connections between the stories they read in school and the world they live in.
We hope you enjoy the site, and that it illustrates how some of those one billion downloads of Google Earth have been making a difference. You can explore these stories right in your browser with the
Google Earth plug-in
or download the KML files to view in Google Earth.
If you have a Google Earth story you’d like to share, we’d love to
hear from you
. If you don’t have Google Earth,
download it now
and be part of the next billion stories. While it’s inspiring to see how Google Earth has touched the lives of so many, we know the best is yet to come.
Posted by Brian McClendon, VP of Engineering, Google Earth and Maps
Ads are just answers
October 2, 2011
When
CafePress
first started printing shirts in 1999, online retail was still a nascent industry and Google had yet to sell its first ad. Soon CafePress started selling products through search ads on Google, and their business took off. Today, CafePress hosts millions of shops online where customers can choose from more than 325 million products on nearly any topic, from wall art to phone cases.
Just as CafePress has broadened its offerings over time, we've also worked to improve and expand our search advertising products. What started as three lines of simple text has evolved into ads that are multimedia-rich, location-aware and socially-amplified.
Today CafePress uses
Sitelinks
to direct people to specific pages of their website, helping customers find what they’re looking for faster. On average, ads with three rows of links, or three-line Sitelinks, are more than 50 percent likely to get clicked on than ads without Sitelinks. More than 200,000 advertisers have joined CafePress in using Sitelinks in at least one campaign.
Monday at
Advertising Week
in New York City, I’ll be talking about how advertisers have been quick to adopt these new formats since we
first began experimenting
nearly two years ago. Businesses from the smallest retailer in Idaho to the largest Fortune 500 company in New York have seen how these innovations in search advertising can help grow successful businesses. In fact, roughly one-third of searches with ads show an enhanced ad format.
Here are a few ways these new ad formats are helping people find valuable information faster:
Visual
. Not only can you find theater times for a new movie, you can watch the trailer directly in the ad.
Media ads
put the sight, sound and motion of video into search ads. With
Product Ads
, people can see an image, price and merchant name, providing a more visual shopping experience. Because this format is often so useful, people are twice as likely to click on a Product Ad as they are to click on a standard text ad in the same location, and today, hundreds of millions of products are available through Product Ads.
Local
. More than 20 percent of desktop searches on Google are related to location. On mobile, this climbs to 40 percent. Location-aware search ads can help you find what you’re looking for more easily by putting thousands of local businesses on the map—literally. More than 270,000 of our advertisers use
Location Extensions
to attach a business address on at least one ad campaign, connecting more than 1.4 million locations in the U.S. via ads. And, with our
mobile ad formats
, not only can you call a restaurant directly from the ad, you can also find out how far away the restaurant is located and view a map with directions.
Social
. With the
+1 button
people are able to find and recommend businesses with their friends. Since introducing the +1 button earlier this year, we now have more than 5 billion impressions on publisher sites a day. If you’re a business owner, the +1 button enables your customers to share your products and special offers easily with their network of friends, amplifying your existing marketing campaigns.
We're continuing to experiment with search ads to help businesses like CafePress grow by connecting with the right customers. Starting today, you can drop by
our site
to check out what’s new with search ads and learn about all the improvements we’ve been working on recently.
We’re developing ads that provide richer information to you because we believe that search ads should be both beautiful and informative, and as useful to you as an answer.
Posted by Nick Fox, Vice President of Product Management
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