With more than active 20 Million Users, Google Plus is a great place where people are actively connecting and sharing fresh news and content. Google Plus Search Engine is just for you, It lets you search public content directly. If you are on Chrome you can get the extension so you can search in your tab without having to visit the site. The extension shows you results from Google+ profiles, posts, Buzz and blogs.
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Play Angry Birds in Your Favorite Browser and Unlock All Levels
// Gradly // blog, Games, google, How To Tags: Angry Birds, blog, Browser, Chrome, Chromium, Games, How To, HTML5, Rovio No Responses

Are you want to get the whole Angry Birds goodness with your favorite browser? Then we have just what you need and there is a quick hack to unlock all of the levels for extreme entertaining.
For Chromium-based browsers. Access the links here:
If you want to play Angry Birds in Firefox, Opera, or another browser? access the link directly:
If you want to unlock/relock all the levels:
Unlock the Levels:
javascript: var i = 0; while (i<=69) { localStorage.setItem(‘level_star_’+i,’3′); i++; } window.location.reload();
Lock the Levels:
javascript: var i = 0; while (i<=69) { localStorage.setItem(‘level_star_’+i,’-1′); i++; } window.location.reload();
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Chrome keynote Full Length Video Available Now
// Gradly // blog, Cloud, Featured, google, News Tags: blog, Chrome, Chrome Web Store, Chromebooks, Google, Google I/O, Keynote No Responses
Google has posted the full length video on YouTube for everyone who misses Google IO day 2 Chrome keynote. there were many exciting announcements this morning, including Chrome Web Store, Angry Birds in the browser, Chromebooks‘ and Chrome In-App Payments.
Watch the video below:
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Simple Questions for Google Regarding Chrome’s Dropping of H.264
// Gradly // blog, google, News, Rants & Raves Tags: blog, Chrome, Google, H.264 5 Responses
Regarding Google’s stated explanation for dropping H.264 support in Chrome:
Though H.264 plays an important role in video, as our goal is to enable open innovation, support for the codec will be removed and our resources directed towards completely open codec technologies.
These changes will occur in the next couple months but we are announcing them now to give content publishers and developers using HTML an opportunity to make any necessary changes to their sites.
1. In addition to supporting H.264, Chrome currently bundles an embedded version of Adobe’s closed source and proprietary Flash Player plugin. If H.264 support is being removed to “enable open innovationâ€, will Flash Player support be dropped as well? If not, why?
2. Android currently supports H.264. Will this support be removed from Android? If not, why not?
3. YouTube uses H.264 to encode video. Presumably, YouTube will be re-encoding its entire library using WebM. When this happens, will YouTube’s support for H.264 be dropped, to “enable open innovation� If not, why not?
4. Do you expect companies like Netflix, Amazon, Vimeo, Major League Baseball, and anyone else who currently streams H.264 to dual-encode all of their video using WebM? If not, how will Chrome users watch this content other than by resorting to Flash Player’s support for H.264 playback?
5. Who is happy about this?[via: daringfireball]



