02 August 2011

Google Chrome ranks 3rd popular browser: Report


Google Chrome is now the world’s third most popular web browser with one in five users preferring it.

Google Chrome has also emerged as Britain’s second most popular web browser, edging Mozilla’s Firefox and nibbling at Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, the current leader.

Chrome accounted for 22 percent of the British web market, compared to 45 percent of users preferring Internet Explorer. Apple’s Safari stood at the fourth place with nine percent share.

But experts pointed out that Internet Explorer’s market share was falling despite the programme already pre—installed on almost every computer sold in Britain, The Telegraph reports.

Google said its surge in popularity could be explained by its speed of delivery results, its security and a new ad campaign.

Lars Bak, the Google engineer responsible for Chrome, based in the Danish countryside, said the company’s aim was speed. He said users should “never be happy” with the existing speed.

01 August 2011

Google has relesed new service called Page Speed Service


Google announced a new service Thursday that it hopes will make slow web pages as anachronistic as manual typewriters.

The web search giant unveiled a new option called Page Speed Service that accelerates webpage loading times by running them through a special application that rectifies bottlenecks and loads the pages to end users through Google’s global network of servers.

Google engineering manager Ram Ramani said in a blog post that in tests the service had increased load times by 25 to 60 per cent.

“To use the service, you need to sign up and point your site’s DNS entry to Google,” Ramani wrote.

“Page Speed Service fetches content from your servers, rewrites your pages by applying Web performance best practices, and serves them to end users via Google’s servers across the globe. Your users will continue to access your site just as they did before, only with faster load times.”

The service is currently available to a limited number of website operators at no cost. Google plans to roll out a fee—based service later this year, Ramani said.

Button celebrated his 200th F1 start by winning the Hungarian GP





McLaren's Jenson Button celebrated his 200th Formula One start by winning the Hungarian Grand Prix on Sunday after a thrilling race decided by tyre choices in slippery and wet conditions.

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel was second despite an error-strewn race to increase his championship lead over teammate Mark Webber to 85 points and move him closer to defending his title with eight races left after the mid-season break.
Ferrari's Fernando Alonso was third.

Briton Button sealed his second victory of the season after being wheel to wheel with Lewis Hamilton only for his teammate to drop back to fourth after a choosing the wrong tyres in the rain and then serving a drive through penalty following a spin.
“Guys, perfect going into the summer break. Let's come back and win them all,” Button, who took his first Grand Prix victory here in 2006 and also in the rain, told his team over the radio.
The Briton has now won 11 Grand Prix races in a career that started with Williams in 2000.
“Congratulations to Jenson, he was pushing me hard the whole race and the better man won today,” said Hamilton, who led before it all went wrong. “Of course we would have loved a one-two, I feel like I let the team down a little bit but we'll bounce back at the next race.”
Overtaking moves

With cars sliding around as drizzle and tyre strategies came and went, the less than capacity crowd at the ageing Hungaroring were treated to a string of overtaking moves at a twisty circuit where passing had been difficult in the past.

Vettel made a good start from pole but Hamilton, winner of the previous race in Germany last Sunday, kept on the World champion's tail having been second on the grid.
The slippery track contributed to Vettel running wide early on and the Briton saw his chance to speed past before his afternoon went sour.
Button, third in qualifying and winner of the rain-hit Canadian GP, then also overtook the German in partially wet conditions as McLaren again showed its race superiority over the previously dominant Red Bull.

“I was struggling a bit on the first stint. It was quite tricky,” said Vettel, who now has 234 points to Webber's 149, Hamilton's 146, Alonso's 145 and Button's 134.
Red Bull has 383 points to McLaren's 280 in the Constructors' standings.
Drizzle had been in the air throughout Sunday and there was significant spray in some areas of the track early on.

Mercedes' Nico Rosberg cut past the two Ferraris of Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso as well as Webber in the opening exchanges as drivers struggled to keep their cars from sliding.
Brazil's Massa, who suffered serious head injuries in an accident at the Hungaroring in 2009, then spun violently into the grass on lap eight and slipped down to ninth before fighting back up to sixth having started fourth on the grid.

Teammate Alonso soon got back past Rosberg, in his 100th F1race, to move up into fourth but the Spaniard slipped back again when passed by Webber on lap 15 only for the Australian to end up fifth as the weather constantly changed.
The results: 1. Jenson Button (McLaren) 1:46:42.337, 2. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull-Renault) +00:03.588, 3. Fernando Alonso (Ferrari) 00:19.819, 4. Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) 00:48.338, 5. Mark Webber (Red Bull-Renault) 00:49.742, 6. Felipe Massa (Ferrari) 01:23.176, 7. Paul di Resta (Force India-Mercedes) 1 lap, 8. Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso-Ferrari) 1 lap, 9. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes) 1 lap, 10. Jaime Alguersuari (Toro Rosso-Ferrari) 1 lap, 11. Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber-Ferrari) 1 lap, 12. Vitaly Petrov (Renault) 1 lap, 13. Rubens Barrichello (Williams-Cosworth) 2 laps, 14. Adrian Sutil (Force India-Mercedes) 2 laps, 15. Sergio Perez (Sauber-Ferrari) 2 laps, 16. Pastor Maldonado (Williams-Cosworth) 2 laps, 17. Timo Glock (Virgin-Cosworth) 4 laps, 18. Daniel Ricciardo (HRT-Cosworth) 4 laps, 19. Jerome d'Ambrosio (Virgin-Cosworth) 5 laps, Heidfeld (Renault) 47 laps, Jarno Trulli (Lotus-Renault) 53 laps.