Posts tagged days

Gmail Gets Offline Attachments, Keyboard Shortcuts & 31 Days of Messages

gmailoffline150.jpgThe Gmail team has updated its Web app for Chrome with settings controls for its HTML5 offline main storage. Users can now set it to store 7, 14 or 31 days of past email offline. Email work done offline – on an airplane, for example – is synced next time you connect.

Today’s update also stores attachments for offline use, enables Gmail keyboard shortcuts offline, improves performance and fixes bugs. The Gmail offline app is available in the Chrome Web Store, and existing users will be updated automatically.

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gmailoffline.jpg

gmailofflinesettings.jpgOffline Gmail first became a standard feature in 2009, but it used Google’s in-house (but open-source) plug in technology called Google Gears.

In April 2010, Google shut down Gears, disabling offline storage for Google services as the company transitioned to HTML5, a more standard solution. That transition took until August 2011, when Google released the offline storage apps for Chrome.

Do you use any Google services offline?

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Quick SEO Results Show Impressive Site Jumps In 30 Days – PR Web (press release)


PR Web
Quick SEO Results Show Impressive Site Jumps In 30 Days
PR Web (press release)
After discovering a large part of the Google algorithm, Quick SEO Results hires new 20 in-house Link Builders to meet the strong demand for their SEO services. In just the first 30 days of its service, websites show impressive site jumps.
Training For Work As An SEO Specialist in 2012 # SEODigitalJournal.com (press release)

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[MSD] A Thousand Days’ Promise: Episode 18 – Soompi

[MSD] A Thousand Days' Promise: Episode 18
Soompi
Seo Yeon's Alzheimer's has signiciantly progressed as has Seo Yeon's pregnancy. Although she resents herself and her disease, Seo Yeon accepts the fact that she will soon no longer be apart of this world. She's busy making checklists, tying up loose

and more »

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12 Days of Christmas Internet Marketing Roundup

Everyone knows the Twelve Days of Christmas song. Many different products and brands have put their own spin on these twelve days of gifts throughout the years, but no gift is better than free advice. Internet marketers and Search and Social people have published helpful holiday lists on their own, but what about a “Twelve [...]

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6 Days to Save on SMX Social Media Marketing – Register Now!

SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their … – PR Web (press release)

SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their
PR Web (press release)
Known for a wide array of quality link building methods, SEO Peace launches no-risk, no-contract 60 days SEO trial with proven results guarantee for an amazingly affordable cost with 100% process transparency with everyday work status and plan
SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their DigitalJournal.com (press release)

all 3 news articles »

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SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their … – DigitalJournal.com (press release)

SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their
DigitalJournal.com (press release)
Realizing the need of risk-free, dependable, and exclusive high authority backlinks to harmonize the uncertain and frequently updating Panda phase, SEO Peace has introduced a no-contract 60 days Trial SEO campaign for only $1599.

View full post on SEO – Google News

SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their … – WebWire (press release)

SEO Peace Launches 60 Days Trial SEO To Help Businesses Visualize Their
WebWire (press release)
Known for a wide array of quality link building methods, SEO Peace launches no-risk, no-contract 60 days SEO trial with results guarantee and traffic generation for an amazingly affordable cost. Realizing the need of risk-free, dependable,

View full post on SEO – Google News

Big Question (Answered): “Do You Remember the Days of the Command-Line Terminal Emulator?”

big-question-150.pngI’m not quite old enough to remember some of what David wrote about today in his trip down memory lane, “I Remember IRMA: Reflections on Terminal Emulation Through the Ages”, but I do remember learning my first bit of a program on a boxy, toffee colored Tandy from Radio Shack. In those days your games ran on a cassette tape and you dropped your phone handset into the cradle of your modem to go online. It would be a decade before the famous AOL dial-up sound was an indicator of a fun night online.

Most of the staff is old enough to remember the days before a graphical interface, and most of you were on the internet in 1995, but how many of you remember the Command-Line Terminal Emulator?

We asked and culled your responses from Facebook, Google Plus and Twitter and we used Storify to present it all back to you. If you have additional responses, please leave them in the comments.

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Developers: Your Google Maps API Free Riding Days Are Over

Months after warning developers it would happen, the Google Developer team announced tonight that the era of unlimited Google Maps usage for free is officially over. Developers whose apps load more than 25,000 basic maps or 2500 stylized maps per day will have to cough up some cash.

An era has ended for the first API that really made mashups mainstream, most famously via housingmaps.com, a mashup of Craigslist rental search results and Google Maps. Unlimited access may no longer be available for free, but some observers say it’s a good move for the developer ecosystem. “For some developers this can clearly be an issue but overall it’s healthy for the ecosystem,” John Musser of API watch-dog site Programmable Web told us tonight. “Services need to be sustainable with business models that work for both sides.”

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Launched in June of 2005, the Google Maps API is the archetypal API, or Application Programming Interface. A number of other map APIs now allow data to be displayed on a map, though, and thousands of other APIs allow data to be read from or written to other websites and services.

The free vs commercial nature of Google APIs and the Maps API in particular have always been a little unclear.

“Given the value these APIs give and the cost of running them,” says independent Australian developer Daniel Treadwell in words echoed by many people, “I think charging for it isn’t a problem at all. The last thing anyone wants is for it to be retired like some others have been.”

valleyjoke.jpg

This Spring, there was a massacre of free Google APIs that got slated for shut down so the company could focus on other priorities. Weeks later, Google changed its mind about its Translate API in particular, announcing it would develop a paid version that developers dependent on it could rely on.

It’s extremely unlikely that the Maps API would ever disappear altogether, but even if it did there are already viable alternatives including Open Street Map and MapQuest.

So far, though, many developers appear satisfied with the way Google is handling this transition tonight. That’s good for the future of location-based application development and innovation. Google Maps is a living, breathing, changing, incredibly valuable resource. If you wrote an app that has got enough traction that you’re cranking on that API past a certain limit, paying something for it certainly seems fair.

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