Unless you haven't had an Internet connection for the last 24 hours, you're probably aware of Google+, Google's new social networking service. Although the service is currently invite-only, more invites than expected have been sent, causing Google to temporarily disable new invites. Thankfully, there's a smart way to still be able to send invites.
Users have discovered a loophole in Google+, Google's newest endeavor in the social networking space. This new loophole involving the network's "reshare" feature might lead some private posts to accidentally end in the public domain.
Reports coming out of China today suggest that search giant Baidu is working on its own mobile operating system based on none other than Google's Android.
If you’re a user of Facebook’s Android App, you probably know how limited it is when directly compared to the iPhone version, and even Facebook’s mobile website. While the gap hasn’t been bridged yet, Facebook has released version 1.6 of its Android client that brings it one step closer to that goal.
Google seems to be implementing Skype-like technologies into Chrome, if a recent build of Chromium is any indication. For starters, the inclusion of this technology will allow video and audio chats though Google Talk without the need for a proprietary plugin. But what could this mean for the rest of the industry?
Hulu has finally begun rolling its Hulu Plus service out to Android smartphones, but according to a blog post on the company's web site, you may still not be able to use it if you have the wrong handset.
We love Google. Specifically, we love Google search. That's not to say we don't love their Gmail. Or their Google Docs for that matter. It's just that, well, search is what makes the internet merry-go-round work. Before Google we had AltaVista and co, and we all remember how poor that was!
Google has updated Google Sync for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. Three new features have been announced. Google Sync is used to keep your iOS device’s Mail.app, Calendar.app and Contacts.app in sync with your Gmail, Google Calendar and Google Contacts (respectively).
If reports are to be believed, Google is working on yet another Android smartphone, successor to the current Nexus S. According to rumors, the new model will be one of the first LTE 4G AT&T smartphones and will include greatly enhanced hardware once it ships around Thanksgiving (that's late November for our non-US friends).
Google announced a set of new features at its big search event, Inside Search, which took place today. The main ones are voice search on desktop computers (not just smartphones) and enhancements to Instant Search and Image Search. Without further ado, let's get to to them!

