Tarun Reflex

November 11, 2008

Now Google Trends Shows Traffic Stats

Google Trends no longer displays only information about searches, now you can use it to compare the daily unique visitors for two or more sites. To see the actual numbers, you need to log in using a Google account.

It’s interesting to find the sources used by Google to estimate the traffic of a web site. According to the help page, “Trends for Websites combines information from a variety of sources, such as aggregated Google search data, aggregated opt-in anonymous Google Analytics data, opt-in consumer panel data, and other third-party market research. (…) Additionally, Google Trends for Websites only shows results for sites that receive a significant amount of traffic, and enforces minimum thresholds for inclusion in the tool.”

For example, Google Trends estimates that the number of daily visitors for Facebook.com is 30 million, 3 times bigger than one year ago. You can also find the countries where a site is popular, related sites and searches.

One interesting tidbit: you can’t see traffic data for most Google sites, although there are some exceptions. “We have policy of not providing interim financial guidance, and have decided not to release Google numbers in accordance with that policy,” explained a Google spokesperson. I don’t think this makes sense, as Google wouldn’t release its internal traffic data, but only a rough estimation.

Google’s blog for webmasters warns that the data may not be very accurate. “Keep in mind that Trends for Websites is a Google Labs product and that we are experimenting with ways to improve the quality of the data. Because data is estimated and aggregated over a variety of sources, it may not match the other data sources you rely on for web traffic information.” 

There are other services that show web traffic stats: CompeteQuantcast (for US traffic),Alexa, but it’s difficult to compare Google’s data with the information provided by those services because they use different measures: daily uniques vs monthly uniques, actual numbers vs reach, worldwide visitors vs US visitors.

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  • World Without Engineers
  • Microsoft’s Dream Spark launches in India
  • Google’s G1 Android phone – 1.5 Million Pre-Orders
  • Google Adsense – Tips and Tricks for better utilisation
  • All About Google (All posts tagged with Google in my Blogs)
  • September 30, 2008

    Confessions of a banned book lover!

    The Stage Zero : My Love for books

    My love for books dates back to Stone age,i read as many books as possible in school days and gradually developed a habit of reading.When i found out that there are ebook that i can download for free and read on somputer ,it was like i was standing before an ocen of free knowledge. All I needed was a method to seive this ocean and filter out the relevant content. Google proved to be the best tool for the purpose and provided me with gazillions of links and titles.

    This was the first stage : Discovering Google as a means to satisfy the need for books.

    Then one day,I came across Project Gutenberg (If you remember , Gutenberg invented the first printing Press and the first book to be printed was Bible that came to be known as Gutenberg Bible!). This project aims to compile all the world’s literature as a single,searchable archive! But mostly the books were all in free domain means you can find Shakespeare but could not find Paulo Coelho. A book comes into Public(Free) Domain if it has no copyright associated with it or it is an anonymous creation of the author has died 100 (I dont remember exactly..) years ago. But you can not find magaziens,comics,computer books ,tutorials and other study material there.

    Second Stage : Discovering Project Gutenberg.

    Inspired by Project Gutenberg and having studied its shortcomings, I decided to start a collection of my own. Since there was no use re-inventing the wheel, I aimed to collect the books that were not in public domain (means copyright protected!!) and the books that most of us needed (like new authors,thrillers,tutorials,study materials etc etc). So I started my collection . Searched the books on Google ,downloaded them,organised them, If there was some problem with the fonts ,i fixed it . If it was a document, i converted it to pdf. Converted it into other formats like chm,hlp,lit,jar etc etc. I did this for almost two months and had a pretty decent collection when i decided to share it with the rest of the world. This was going to be a big step as i was going to violate some serious copyrights.(I Will get back to it later.)

    Third Stage : My Romance with esnips

    Having figured that i was going to share the collection, I opened an account on esnips (in 2004) it provided 1 GB free space at that time. The name of the account was “Tarun Reflex” (as usual) . That was the first time i used the handle “Reflex” (‘Reflex’ also has a story behind it that is too personal, will definitely blog on it whenever i’ll feel over-expressive). I started uploading books and books after books.. Soon it grew to be the biggest collection on esnips with more than 10,000 books in 92 organized folder. All of them free to download and share. Most of the major authors were there (As you will find in the list that is given at end of this post).. I had more than 10,00,000 visitors in 6 months. Moe than 3000 comments and hundreds of daily-emails requesting for ebooks. It was also the time when Orkut was just started.

    Fourth Stage : Break-Up With esnips.

    Efrat Moshkovich. You know him? You better not. You don’t know this guy unless you break thousands of copyright laws.I assume him to be the copyright in-charge of ensips who mailed me about the repeated copyright violations. I was too much in love with esnips to accede this warning by my so-called father-in-law and then one hot morning in July of 2005, I woke on my hostel bed feeling alone & divorced-before-marriage. I was banned from esnips for ever,My all accounts were banned,my email id was banned from future registration,  they even banned the tag ‘Tarun Reflex’!! You can stil find traces of mt esnips account in google’s seacrh result while searching for ‘best ebooks site’.

    It was really a bad day! But i still have a new esnips account that is still active and you can find few books here (Besides there is complete collection of Mills and Boon for all those romance lovers.)

    Fifth Stage : Heaven behold the faith departed!

    By now, I had a personal collection of over 1,00,000 ebooks ranging from fiction to bedas, Comics to whitepapers, science to jokes,biographies to movie scripts, magazines to audio books,study material for IAS,CAT,GATE,GRE,TOEFL,French,AFCEH,EC etc etc.. Books on computers acquired 15 GB alone! As i was interested in troubleshooting and hacking, i had pretty good material on the subject includin hacking using Blue Boxes to new tunneling and proxy techniques .. Banned from esnips, i started a new community on Orkut by the name BOOKS AND BOOKS that is still active and growing (Why don’t you join it?). this time i didnt want to take any chances so i decided to send books by email as an attachment. Now there are more than 5000 email ids in my gmail contacts . I have sent 78 ebooks deliveries (containing 8-10 books each in delivery,on average!) Sent 22 Parts of Mills and Boon (approx 15 books in each part.) and thousands of requests. (Check the community for more details).

    Sixth Stage : Sharing the Sources.

     I have more links to ebooks than i have ebooks. The job of sending books by email is becoming more and more difficult day-by-day. Google changed its way of adding contacts to gmail making it hard to add bulk-contacts.  I get banned for 24 hours after every 500 emails i send , It takes around one week to send single delivery to all. recently i started a new blog for sharing all the links i have collected over the last 4 years.  I gave a seminar on Intelligent Information Retrieval that can be downloaded/viewed here..

     However, I am posting my favorite technique here, Its just a single trick for google that will lead you into world of freedom.

     This trick is based on simple observation  : Don’t search for books,Search for servers that host the books. In this way you are searching for a wider domain that is specific to the subject of your choice.

    Find Apache’s (default) Index page (Apache is a web server)
    Try this query:

    +(“index of”) +(“/ebooks”|”/book”) +(chm|pdf|zip|rar) +apache

    Find a particular eBook file
    Try this query:

    allinurl: +(rar|chm|zip|pdf|tgz) TheTitle 

    My Collection Of Books

    New Books Blog

    September 5, 2008

    A decade on | Google’s Internet Economy

    It’s the success story to beat all internet success stories.
    Ten years ago, on 7 September 1998, two young graduate students at Stanford University incorporated a company with the (then) odd-sounding name “Google”.

    Today, Larry Page and Sergey Brin are billionaires. Their company is hugely profitable; between April and June this year alone, it reported a turnover of $5.7bn (£3.2bn) and generated a net profit of $1.25bn (the first quarter was even more profitable).

    Not bad for a company that makes its money being a broker for and publisher of online advertising.

    The secret of Google’s success, of course, is the algorithm driving its internet search engine. In fact, it is so good that it has entered our dictionaries.

    People don’t search the internet any more, they google it.

    The secret sauce
     
    Some critics accuse Google of being a one-trick pony and warn that competitors, newly emerging and potentially better search engines, are a mere mouse click away.

    But Google’s secret sauce has more ingredients than its clever way of organising and ranking search results.

    Equally important is the technology underlying the vast data centres that give Google the scale, speed and efficiency to serve its rapidly growing number of users.

    And finally there are Google’s two money spinners: AdWords – which puts relevant advertisements next to Google’s own search results – and AdSense, the revenue-sharing deals that put Google’s context-driven adverts on third-party websites.

    The clever thing here is Google’s restraint. It auctions advertising space not to the highest bidder but the most relevant advertiser, making Google users happy and generating more lucrative click-throughs to the websites of the advertisers.

    Google’s real ambition
     
    Google may be a money spinner, but the company says it has much more high-minded aims than making a fast internet buck.

    “Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful,” claims its corporate vision statement.

    Note the word universal. Whether high-minded or not, it is this “Google everywhere” ambition that makes it such a successful company.

    Over the years, Google has been releasing a steady stream of innovative tools and services – some of them developed in-house, many others bought in from start-ups: Gmail, Google Docs for word processing and spreadsheets, Picasa for picture editing, Google Earth and Maps for location-based search and display of information, Blogger, YouTube’s video service … the list is seemingly endless.

    Not that long ago this looked like random growth. But as these services get a more coherent look and feel, the pieces of Google’s puzzle are falling into place.

    Every search we do, every tool we use helps Google to gather more information and organise the artefacts of our knowledge society.

    The price to pay

    Providing an entry point to Google’s search engine at every level keeps feeding our Google habit, and creates a virtuous circle: the more information Google has, the better its search results, the happier its users, the higher the click-throughs on adverts, the bigger the profits, the more money for new “free” services that entice users to surrender yet more information.

    It may leave us happy and Google profitable, but is it a corporate disaster waiting to happen?

    Messrs Page and Brin may famously – or notoriously – promise that Google “can make money without doing evil”.

    But with Google hoarding all this personalised and traceable information in its vast data centres, issues of data safety, privacy, and corporate Big Brothership are looming large.

    The chrome Android
     
    Google is expanding because the internet is expanding. The definition of where the internet ends is getting hazy, with devices like fridges, digital picture frames and mobile phones becoming part of the internet-enabled world.

    The company’s next steps are already mapped. This week it launched its very own internet browser, called Chrome.

    Today’s browsers were built to show web pages, says Google, not to be platforms for complex applications. Chrome promises to bring stability to our online experience – and the more computing happens on the internet, the more information Google can gather.

    Coming shortly is an even more important piece of software called Android, Google’s (Linux-based) operating system for internet-enabled telephones.

    Google makes the same business case as for Chrome: today’s smart phones were not designed for the mobile internet, so Google steps into the breach.

    Partner or rival?
     
    The company started ten years ago by two students has the size to do it all.

    At the end of 2007 it had 16,800 employees, and is reportedly hiring about 100 new people each week.

    But with Google spreading its wings and complementing more and more parts of our lives, a rapidly growing number of companies in ever more industries have to ponder whether this “search engine” is a partner, a competitor or a destroyer of business models.

    Google’s company motto could quite as well be: “Anything you can do I can do better – and for free.”
    It leaves even Google’s largest rivals constantly stressed out – whether it is Microsoft (who saw the beta launch of its new browser Internet Explorer 8 overshadowed by Chrome), or ailing web portal Yahoo, which was forced to agree a revenue-sharing deal by outsourcing some of its advertising to Google.
    Even the people who happily pay Google top advertising dollar are getting worried. They complain that Google’s dominance could result in a lack of choice, not least since the company bought its way into the world of traditional display advertising on the web, through the acquisition of Doubleclick.

    Triumvirate

    This is especially true during the current economic downturn. Google expects that its revenue is going to hold up, because its advertising service is highly targeted and its success measurable. It’s the old media with their mass medium approach that have to worry.

    And to reassure investors, Google executives are pledging that they won’t fall into the Yahoo trap of trying to turn Google into a media company.

    Google chief executive Eric Schmidt told Conde Nast Portfolio that “one of the general rules we’ve had is ‘don’t own the content; partner with your content company'”.

    But even here the lines are blurring. Is there a lot of difference between “old media” publishing the pictures and videos supplied by news agencies, freelance photographers and their own audiences, and Google News or YouTube?

    For now, the Google juggernaut rolls on.

    The two founders keep driving the company’s technical excellence, and Mr Schmidt – a veteran of the technology industry – ensures that the money keeps coming.

    This triumvirate has made an informal deal to stick together for at least 20 years, says Mr Schmidt.

    Plenty of time for Google to secure its position as the lynchpin of our internet economy.   

     

    August 19, 2008

    Intelligent Information Retrieval via Google

    My College Presentation on Intelligent Information Retrieval via Google that i gave in my Final Year(Engineering). it will help you understand search basics and tricks/techniques to optimize your search :

    Intelligent Information RetrievalUpload a Document to Scribd
    Read this document on Scribd: Intelligent Information Retrieval

    July 8, 2008

    The Internet Knows What You’ll Do Next


    A FEW years back, a technology writer named John Battelle began talking about how the Internet had made it possible to predict the future. When people went to the home page of Google or Yahoo and entered a few words into a search engine, what they were really doing, he realized, was announcing their intentions.
    They typed in “Alaskan cruise” because they were thinking about taking one or “baby names” because they were planning on needing one. If somebody were to add up all this information, it would produce a pretty good notion of where the world was headed, of what was about to get hot and what was going out of style.

    Mr. Battelle, a founder of Wired magazine and the Industry Standard, wasn’t the first person to figure this out. But he did find a way to describe the digital crystal ball better than anyone else had. He called it “the database of intentions.”

    The collective history of Web searches, he wrote on his blog in late 2003, was “a place holder for the intentions of humankind — a massive database of desires, needs, wants, and likes that can be discovered, subpoenaed, archived, tracked, and exploited to all sorts of ends.”

    “Such a beast has never before existed in the history of culture, but is almost guaranteed to grow exponentially from this day forward,” he wrote. It was a nice idea, but for most of us it was just an abstraction. The search companies did offer glimpses into the data with bare-bones (and sanitized) rankings of the most popular search terms, and Yahoo sold more detailed information to advertisers who wanted to do a better job of selling their products online. But there was no way for most people to dig into the data themselves.

    A few weeks ago, Google took a big step toward changing this — toward making the database of intentions visible to the world — by creating a product called Google Trends. It allows you to check the relative popularity of any search term, to look at how it has changed over the last couple years and to see the cities where the term is most popular. And it’s totally addictive.

    YOU can see, for example, that the volume of Google searches would have done an excellent job predicting this year’s “American Idol,” with Taylor Hicks (the champion) being searched more often than Katharine McPhee (second place), who in turn was searched more often than Elliot Yamin (third place). Then you can compare Hillary Clinton and Al Gore and discover that she was more popular than he for almost all of the last two years, until he surged past her in April and stayed there.

    Thanks to Google Trends, the mayor of Elmhurst, Ill., a Chicago suburb, has had to explain why his city devotes more of its Web searches to “sex” than any other in the United States (because it doesn’t have strip clubs or pornography shops, he gamely told The Chicago Sun-Times). On Mr. Battelle’s blog, somebody claiming to own an apparel store posted a message saying that it was stocking less Von Dutch clothing and more Ed Hardy because of recent search trends.(A disclosure: The New York Times Company owns a stake in Mr. Battelle’s latest Internet company, Federated Media Publishing.)

    It’s the connection to marketing that turns the database of intentions from a curiosity into a real economic phenomenon. For now, Google Trends is still a blunt tool. It shows only graphs, not actual numbers, and its data is always about a month out of date. The company will never fully pull back the curtain, I’m sure, because the data is a valuable competitive tool that helps Google decide which online ads should appear at the top of your computer screen, among other things. .

    But Google does plan to keep adding to Trends, and other companies will probably come up with their own versions as well. Already, more than a million analyses are being done some days on Google Trends, said Marissa Mayer, the vice president for search at Google.

    When these tools get good enough, you can see how the business of marketing may start to change. As soon as a company begins an advertising campaign, it will be able to get feedback from an enormous online focus group and then tweak its message accordingly.

    I’ve found Pepsi’s recent Super Bowl commercials — the ones centered around P. Diddy — to be nearly devoid of wit, but that just shows you how good my marketing instincts are. As it turns out, the only recent times that Pepsi has been a more popular search term in this country than Coke have been right after a Super Bowl. This year’s well-reviewed Burger King paean to Busby Berkeley, on the other hand, barely moved the needle inside the database of intentions.

    Hal R. Varian, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, who advises Google, predicts that online metrics like this one have put Madison Avenue on the verge of a quantitative revolution, similar to the one Wall Street went through in the 1970’s when it began parsing market data much more finely. “People have hunches, people have prejudices, people have ideas,” said Mr. Varian, who also writes for this newspaper about once a month. “Once you have data, you can test them out and make informed decisions going forward.”

    There are certainly limitations to this kind of analysis. It’s most telling for products that are bought, or at least researched, online, a category that does not include Coke, Pepsi or Whoppers. And even with clothing or cars, interest doesn’t always translate into sales. But there is no such thing as a perfect yardstick in marketing, and the database of intentions clearly offers something new.

    In the 19th century, a government engineer whose work became the seed of I.B.M. designed a punched-card machine that allowed for a mechanically run Census, which eventually told companies who their customers were. The 20th century brought public opinion polls that showed what those customers were thinking. This century’s great technology can give companies, and anyone else, a window into what people are actually doing, in real time or even ahead of time.

    You might find that a little creepy, but I bet that you’ll also check it out sometime.

    sincere thanks to David Leonhardt

    Blog at WordPress.com.