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구글 검색결과에서 원치 않는 정보가 캐쉬상태로 계속 남아있을 때 제거 요청하는 페이지
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Apple does get one thing right with the iPhone that the Kindle absolutely falls flat on — in that you can actually develop applications for an iPhone or an iPod. As I said before in a previous piece about why Amazon should NOT maintain it’s own proprietary Linux OS platform and use Google’s Android instead, a huge amount of computing potential on this device is being wasted. On discussing this with my colleague Larry Dignan today, he argued that Amazon sees the Kindle as a book, and nothing else. I differ with that analysis. Potentially, I see it as a game-changer computing device, if developers could have access to it and create applications that run on it. My ZDNet Open Source colleague Dana Blankenhorn agrees as does Mr. Community Incorporated Joe Brockmeier.
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Google's Latitude was not the first location-based service on the market by any means. Here at RWW, we've been fans of other mobile social networking applications like Loopt and Brightkite as well as location-aware Twitter clients like Twinkle among others. So of course when we ran across some other smaller location-based services, we had to take a look. Each of the services listed below are doing something innovative that goes beyond Google's current offering. We just wish more people knew about them.
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The blogosphere simply loves to slurp up social-networking traffic stats, and on Monday we got a nice tasty serving of them with some new numbers from Compete.com for the month of January. The results? Facebook is in the lead, with about 68 million unique visitors, well ahead of MySpace's 58 million. (The two are pegged at 1.1 billion and 810 million page views, respectively.)