Google People Search Digest #4
Google Maps now offers your friends Latitude, says Business-standard.com. Ever wondered where your long-lost friend is? Google will now offer you the answer. Google, which accounts for nearly 80 per cent of all online searches, launched a new service, Google Latitude, that lets cellphone users share their location with friends.Just because the Internet has broken down geographic barriers, don’t assume that Google doesn’t care about geography. Latitude that lets mobile phone users share their location with close contacts. Google hopes it will help people find each other while out and about and to keep track of loved ones.
Police to kids: Use care on networking sites, says Fairfieldcitizen-news.com. Just like the peer pressure to drink, smoke and do drugs, Fairfield’s Finest believe many children in town may feel the pressure to acquire a lot of online “friends,” and thus add people who aren’t exactly their friends or may be total strangers to appear popular.
Vzillion Building Virtual World for Search, informs Virtualworldsnews.com. Vzillion is building a virtual world to search the Web. The service, currently in private beta, will provide users with 3D spaces that they’ll use to access the larger world of the Internet and other applications, slowly developing a profile and social sphere that lets the world know what the user might like next.
Reflector now on Twitter, informs Norwalkreflector.com. That’s the question people throughout the country are answering on Twitter, a real-time short messaging service that works over multiple networks and devices. And now, we at the Norwalk Reflector are twittering, too. The Internet site twitter.com allows users to create an account at no cost and then connect with people everywhere.
where she live?