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new mediaNo one could easily predict how one day digital media could give conventional media a run for it’s money. It’s the same way how no one predicted how one GUI based operating system, simple to use and more useful than anything else would take over the computing world in 1995 (yes of course Windows 95). Digital media or what it could be broadly referred to as, new media, has done the same thing.

Newspapers and magazine houses were in fact so happy with Internet spreading all over that they couldn’t spare time to give it a thought about their future. They understood it could serve as a medium to extract more orders easily and to spread the word to a global audience. No one really understood it’s real potential until a short while ago.

Now things started turning ugly for the conventional media. People found another unbiased, rich and contextual form of news in the form of blogs. I’ve always mentioned that my own reading habits had been spoiled because of blogs (not that I’m complaining here!). Not only blogs but other advancements in the social media scene had started issuing warning messages to conventional media. It was enough to raise an SOS.
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Google Squared Could Turn Out Pretty Useful!

in Tech

google squared

Google had earlier unveiled during it’s Searchology briefing. Google Squared simply returns results in a neatly arranged tabular format. You can call it a spreadsheet format as well, Google likes to call it Squares. Users can share their search results on Google Squared with others by signing in. There’s also a neat option to save the search results from Squared to Google Spreadsheets. I’ll say Google Squared has an amazing potential here.

Why? For one, the data on the web today is highly unstructured. Two, it’s easier at times to get what you want from a neatly arranged search engine result that returns information exactly how you need it. Searching by keywords in the future is not going to solve all the search queries going by the sheer volume data floating across the web. Three, Google is picking up data structures from the web as facts and then arranging them in a sleek order.
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