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blog.google

86 points by axg 9 years ago · 43 comments

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franze 9 years ago

Page Speed Insights for https://blog.google/topics/inside-google/introducing-the-key...

  Mobile: red 58/100 
  Desktop: red 64/100
see: https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/?url=...

There are two (and prop. more) different Googles:

The ones that care, and the ones that make marketing!

peterkshultz 9 years ago

For those who didn't know about the ".google" TLD:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/11/26/google_turns_on_goog...

dotBen 9 years ago

A key development here is the move away from Blogger to what looks like a custom CMS.

I wonder if we'll see Blogger deprecated or even shuttered in due course. Perhaps the only real indicator that Blogger was still in development was that Google was dog-fooding it for their own comms - and this just ended.

nhebb 9 years ago

And thus knocking SEO firms targeting the keyword "keyword" off the top of the results. Well played, Google, you humorous bastards.

kennymeyers 9 years ago

If anyone from Google is reading this, love the idea. I subscribed via the ancient RSS, but would love full articles in the RSS feed (not sure why it's just snippets).

johnsource3 9 years ago

I like the new central resource to keep up to date on marketing direct from Google I just wish Google would get a readability expert on their team. They are using a very thin font with the color of #333 on a #fafafa background and, as per usual, they love their whitespace making the page look silly on my widescreen desktop monitor. I still look forward to going to a single resource instead of the various blogs now.

  • awesomerobot 9 years ago

    #333 on #FAFAFA passes every contrast check in existence. I don't mind the thin font, but they render really poorly on some systems, so it's definitely a weird choice.

    Your widescreen monitor doesn't increase readable line-length, so it's kind of pointless unless they cram some sidebars into there — which just distracts from the main reading experience. Maybe they could have pulled out the images and made those larger with more screen real estate?

  • basch 9 years ago

    my comment elsewhere is better under you https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12610265

FuckOffNeemo 9 years ago

The TLD surprised me, I didn't know you could request one. The article I found that covers off on purchasing (leasing?) a TLD ironically used Google as an example. The article is from 2011.

"The process itself may be relatively straightforward. ICANN will make applications available (get the May 2011 draft of the Applicant Guidebook) from January 12, 2012 through April 12, 2012, giving companies time to develop a marketing plan and come up with justification to pay the $185,000 application fee and, if approved, the annual $25,000 fee. "

Source: http://adrianroselli.com/2011/06/make-your-own-tld-i-want-ba...

c3RlcGhlbnI_ 9 years ago

I'm impressed that they actually seem to have aggregated most of their blogs into this(except for a few like the google cloud blog that someone else here noted). I'm not used to google transitioning fully to a new service at launch. Usually the new and old versions of services are left to coexist as the new version works on reaching feature parity.

virtuallynathan 9 years ago

Oddly (or perhaps not), this does not include news from Google Cloud.

Mao_Zedang 9 years ago

I really loath gTLD, I understand because of domain squatting we need to increase the supply but this is just gross. A fairer system would have domains registration costs vary by length (shorter is more expensive)

  • rocky1138 9 years ago

    This appears unsubstantiated. Why, exactly, do you hate gTLD?

    • Mao_Zedang 9 years ago

      Because it grates against the implied purpose of the inclusiveness of the internet. Every company registering these new TLD's keep all the good ones for themselves or in googles case they just keep the whole thing. The means for the majority of internet users to access this kind of land rush just dont exist.

      • ocdtrekkie 9 years ago

        And Google's either kept or tried keeping like 20 gTLDs to themselves. Look for Charleston Road Registry, a Google shell corp, on this list: http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/applicants/agb/base-agreement-c...

        cal, dev, drive, play, and prod are all ones I think the open Internet would've liked a chance at.

        • jsmthrowaway 9 years ago

          I don't think shell corporation means what you think it does, given that a gTLD is a pretty significant asset.

      • ComodoHacker 9 years ago

        Here's a plan:

          1. Make up a word that doesn't exist yet (verify with Google).
          2. Start a company with that name.
          3. Grow it big enough.
          4. Claim your TLD.
          5. PROFIT!!!!!
        • Mao_Zedang 9 years ago

          I guess it just depends on who you think ICANN represents and who has the default implied ownership of domains, I would like to think they are a public asset, its like radio space do you think the gov should sell life time ownership of the transmission spectrum?

          • ComodoHacker 9 years ago

            RF spectrum is a limited physical resource, unlike a completely imaginary thing like domains namespace. But some regulation is needed, so you can't register "something.", then register "google.something." and start scam users.

            There is no such thing as "default implied ownership", you can propose anything to ICANN.

_Codemonkeyism 9 years ago

The Intercept.

The Macro.

The Keyword.

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