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Friday, September 27, 2019

Happy 21st Birthday Google!

Google's founders were graduate students at Stanford when they founded the company.
GOOGLE

In Friday’s Google Doodle, Google celebrates its own 21st birthday. Google is old enough to drink, but what is a “google”, anyway? It’s a very, very large number:
10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
That’s a one, followed by a hundred zeroes, which is what you get if you multiply ten times ten and keep multiplying by ten until you’ve done it a hundred times. In scientific notation, the mathematical shorthand for dealing with staggeringly large numbers, a googol is written 10100. To give you a sense of how big a googol is, it’s about 20 orders of magnitude bigger than the number of subatomic particles in the universe, which is “only” 1080. It’s also about the lifespan of a supermassive black hole like the one at the center of our galaxy.
Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin borrowed the term for their company in 1998, to suggest the unfathomably large number of results their new search engine could provide. Page and Brin were obviously exaggerating a bit, and they also took a bit of poetic license with the spelling.
And if you’ve always Google’s name sounded like a nonsense word made up by a small child, that’s because it actually was: then-nine-year-old Milton Sirotta, whose mathematician uncle Edward Kasner asked him to pin a name on the enormous number for a book Kasner was working on: Mathematics and the Imagination, published in 1940. Kasner died in 1955, and his nephew Sirotta died in 1981, 17 years too early to see the word he’d invented become the name of a California startup that grew into the 17th largest company in the world (under the umbrella of Alphabet).
Kasner’s great-niece told the Baltimore Sun in 2004 that she wasn’t sure what her uncle would think about Google’s use of the word. “Obviously it's only brought attention to the name; it hasn't brought attention to his work, so I'm not quite certain what he'd think,” she said. “They're not using the concepts, but just capitalizing on the name.” She added that she had written to the company in 1998 to introduce herself and the family, but received no response.
Other words for include ten duotrigintillion, ten thousand sexdecillion, and ten sexdecilliard. So today, you can celebrate the fact that when you want information, you don’t have to “ten duotrigintillion” for it.
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Monday, September 16, 2019

Locked Mode Has Arrived for Google Forms

Here's how you do it!












Locked Mode has arrived for Google Forms.  This means that you can assign a Google Form as a quiz and it will not let students open up new tabs or applications during the quiz. As with all new technology, there will be issues, so I would not try this immediately with a real quiz.  For example, I'm not sure if students can open up a new window while in Locked Mode, so there are a few kinks to work out.

To enable Locked Mode:

Create a Google Form
Click Settings (the gear icon) on the top-right Select Quizzes Click the slider for "Make this a quiz"
Check the box for "Turn on locked mode"

Thanks to Mike Milillo for this contribution!

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Google’s YouTube to pay $170 million penalty for collecting data on kids


WASHINGTON, Sept 4 (Reuters) - Google, which is owned by Alphabet Inc, and its YouTube video service will pay $170 million to settle allegations that it broke federal law by collecting personal information about children, the Federal Trade Commission said on Wednesday.

YouTube had been accused of tracking viewers of children’s channels using cookies without parental consent and using those cookies to deliver millions of dollars in targeted advertisements to those viewers.

The settlement with the FTC and the New York attorney general’s office, which will receive $34 million, is the largest since a law banning collecting information about children under age 13 came into effect in 1998. The law was revised in 2013 to include “cookies,” used to track a person’s internet viewing habits.


by Diane Bartz Editing by Nick Zieminski 
PUBLISHED WED, SEP 4 2019  10:04 AM EDT