Google Australia launched today a new a new feature, enabling you to search content on the internet before it is created.
About gDay™ technology
The core technology that powers gDay™ is MATE™ (Machine Automated Temporal Extrapolation).
Using MATE’s™ machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques developed in Google’s Sydney offices, we can construct elements of the future.
Google spiders crawl publicly available web information and our index of historic, cached web content. Using a mashup of numerous factors such as recurrence plots, fuzzy measure analysis, online betting odds and the weather forecast from the iGoogle weather gadget, we can create a sophisticated model of what the internet will look like 24 hours from now.
We can use this technique to predict almost anything on the web – tomorrow’s share price movements, sports results or news events. Plus, using language regression analysis, Google can even predict the actual wording of blogs and newspaper columns, 24 hours before they’re written!
To rank these future pages in order of relevance, gDay™ uses a statistical extrapolation of a page’s future PageRank, called SageRank.
gDay™ and MATE™ were developed in Google’s Sydney R&D centre
More infos on Google page
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How do your corporate applications look like ?

Sources : Stuff That Happends via Fred Cavazza
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To take advantage of the potential of Google's Search engine, it's important to know some of its basic tricks
- Keywords: Quality of the responses depends on the quality of the words chosen. For example, "computer" does not give the same results as "PC".
- Typing words in lowercase give you every opportunity not to miss any important reference.
- Quotation marks (" ") make sure that the search engine takes into account all the words.
- Signs "+" and "-" add constraints to your search.
For example, you can search for documents on George Lucas who only speak of Star Wars (george lucas + star wars) or on the contrary who do not speak of the film (george lucas star wars)
- Wildcards: Google accepts the use of a wildcard (*) for the location of a missing word in a phrase.
- The tilde (~) allows Google to display not only a word but also its synonyms, in a broad sense, that is to say, beyond the true grammatical synonyms, related terms.
More searching options:
- "site: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx". Returned results will be only from the selected site.
- "author: xxxxx xxxxxx". Identifies latest articles published by the author in question.
- "insubject: xxxxx" Results show the articles on related requested subjet.
- "location: xxxxx" Displays information bearing to the specified eyes.
- "source: xxxxxx" Results extracted from any source.
- "allintitle: xxxxxx" Results show the articles where all searched keywords are available in the title
The search bar includes also a calculator. Type the calculation directly in your search bar and press enter to have the result displayed.
More about Google seach engine: Google Help
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