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Entries in Google (3)
Tech of the Week | Project Glass
Thursday, April 5, 2012 at 2:59PM Anything we try to write or summarize about this technology won't do it justice. So we'll just direct you straight to the source.
Tech of the Week | SmartCompliance | Spray-On Antenna
Monday, February 20, 2012 at 10:44AM Yes, you read that title correctly. A startup in Utah, Chamtech Enterprises, showcased it's impressive technology at Google's recent "Solve for X" conference. Chamtech has managed to package signal boosting particles in a spray can. Wherever applied, the substance boosts reception by up to 10%.
"Chamtech has been talking to government customers but they also hope for a wider customer base including mobile phone makers and manufacturers of medical devices. Also, the company is upbeat over successful tests that were run to examine the spray's signal performance underwater. Chamtech promoters say the technology could be used by weather and oceanographic researchers and underwater welders."
And mobile technology just keeps getting more mobile.
Click here to learn more about this spray-on antenna technology
Tech of the Week | SmartCompliance | The Google Knowledge Graph
Wednesday, February 15, 2012 at 11:39AM It seems the search results displayed before us become more intuitive by the day. It's easy to overlook the significance of those improvements, afterall, it's just 'Google improving the algorithm." But there's a lot more to it than that. This week we'd like to highlight the importance of search engine technology and where it's headed - because let's face it, it's probably the technology we use most every day.
Google has traditionally read your query and found any instances where that query was replicated, related or not. Now they are working on improving not only the quality of those results, but the understanding.
"Eventually Google transitioned from examining keywords to meaning. “We realized that the words ‘New’ and ‘York’ appearing next to each other suddenly changed the meaning of both those words.” Google developed statistical heuristics that recognized that those two words appearing together is a new kind of word. However, Google really did not yet understand that New York is a city, with a population and particular location. "
"Google now wants to transform words that appear on a page into entities that mean something and have related attributes. It’s what the human brain does naturally, but for computers, it’s known as Artificial Intelligence.
It’s a challenging task, but the work has already begun. Google is “building a huge, in-house understanding of what an entity is and a repository of what entities are in the world and what should you know about those entities,” said Singhal."
"In 2010, Google purchased Freebase, a community-built knowledge base packed with some 12 million canonical entities. Twelve million is a good start, but Google has, according to Singhal, invested dramatically to “build a huge knowledge graph of interconnected entities and their attributes.”
So we're looking at a future of search that includes not just reading but interpreting our questions. Combining such a "knowledge database" of technology with things like software, social media, and even robotics would mean a whole new era of interacting with the world and its information. Trust us, this could be big.
Click here to read more about Google's Knowledge Graph











