Monday, August 16, 2010

Google is sneaking into every corner of our lives...

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"I actually think most people don't want Google to answer their questions," he elaborates. "They want Google to tell them what they should be doing next."

Let's say you're walking down the street. Because of the info Google has collected about you, "we know roughly who you are, roughly what you care about, roughly who your friends are." Google also knows, to within a foot, where you are. Mr. Schmidt leaves it to a listener to imagine the possibilities: If you need milk and there's a place nearby to get milk, Google will remind you to get milk. It will tell you a store ahead has a collection of horse-racing posters, that a 19th-century murder you've been reading about took place on the next block.

Says Mr. Schmidt, a generation of powerful handheld devices is just around the corner that will be adept at surprising you with information that you didn't know you wanted to know. "The thing that makes newspapers so fundamentally fascinating—that serendipity—can be calculated now. We can actually produce it electronically," Mr. Schmidt says. Full story...

Don't miss:

  1. Google to use 'spy drones' for street mapping?
  2. 10 ways we are being tracked, traced and data-based...
  3. What does Microsoft know about you?
  4. The Google toilet, it's way up your ass...
  5. Google unveils the TV that also lets you surf the net...

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