Gmail : Free Gig of Email

Google announced today a new service called Gmail that will offer a gigabyte of free email to it’s users.

The service is currently in it’s beta phase, but should be out soon.

Google plans to make money from the service by inserting advertisements into messages based in part on their content, effectively extending its AdWords program for presenting contextual ads in Web pages to e-mail.

More information on the service can be found here: Gmail.

Personally, I think this is an April Fool’s Day joke by Google even though there have been rumours about Google launching an email service for some time now.

Update:
It seems this is not an April Fool’s Day joke and that it’s really for real.
Google announced the service on April 1 to generate a lot of fuss, talk and speculation about it in order to inform as many people as possible.
Very smart guys those Google people.

Well with 1 GB of email space, I’ll sure be signing up when subscription is enabled. I think I might even stop using all my other webmail accounts too.
Who needs a few MBs when they can have 1 GB ?

April Fool’s Day ;)

Some of you guessed it, some fell for it, but in the end, the truth is my previous post was an April Fool’s Day joke.

In fact, I truly wish I could just pick myself up, leave and go live in Phi Phi Island, a place I fell in love with ever since I visited it.

Of course I wouldn’t go for the whole buddhist and name change part.
But living there would be a dream.

Anyway, the truth is I just can’t at the time being.
So it’ll remain an April Fool’s Day joke until I can.

Sorry for the people who believed the lie, and thanks for your support ๐Ÿ™‚

Full Stop ! New Beginning !

This morning I woke up a changed man.
I looked at my life and just realized that this is not what I want, it’s not what I’m here for, It’s not what I want to do, It’s not how I want to be.

And so I’m quitting everything, and I mean everything.
I’ve already started making arrangements for my new life.

I’m going to leave everything that’s in my life now behind me, change my name, my religion, my nationality, my everything.

I’m going to change my name into Sikotai, become a buddhist and go to Tibet for a year of meditation to find my inner self and reach peace with my surroundings.
After that I’ll be off to the small Phi Phi Island in Thailand, where I’ll open a little shop where I’ll make natural remedies and potions.

Every once in a while I’ll go to nearby Phuket for half a day to sell my potions to some dealers there and to visit the big buddhist temples.

Yep, that’s what I want to do.
And I’ve started my way to true enlightment.

PS: This should also be the last blog I’ll be posting here.

The Whole of Greece in One Smile

The Whole of Greece in One Smile

A photomontage by Kodak titled “The Whole of Greece in One Smile”, celebrating the citizens of Greece and the return of the Olympic Games to Athens, sets new Guinness World Record and wins the Gold Award in its category at the 3rd annual Effie Hellas 2004 Awards Ceremony.

The photomontage comprises 16,609 photos of the Greek community that cover a surface area of over 5,000 square feet. The montage, situated in the Athens Syntagma Square opposite the Parliament of Greece, was recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest photomontage ever created, breaking the previous record – also held by Kodak – of 12,012 photos displayed at an exhibition in St. Petersburg, Russia in May 2003.

More: PhotographyBlog.

[via Boing Boing]

Tunisian opinions on delay of Arab Summit

Tunis postponed the two-day Arab summit due to start Monday 29th saying some countries rejected its proposals for democratic reforms. The foreign minister said his country regarded those issues as “non-negotiable.”

Tunisia’s decision has been hailed by its intellectuals as “the right move,” saying it was aimed to force other countries to seriously consider popular calls for democratic reforms.

It is time the Arab League took radical steps to get the Arabs out of their “miserable situations” by introducing genuine reforms, said academician Mohammed bin Omar.

“The reforms should include political plurality, promotion of women’s rights and encouraging scientific research,” he said at a forum held a day after Tunisia postponed the summit.

“The Tunisian decision came at the right time,” Omar said, adding that it would help “shake the current status quo,” and “launch serious debate over the necessity of urgent reforms” in the Arab public opinion.

“Someone should have had the courage to do that a long time ago,” said Mustpha Madani, another university professor.

“But unfortunately the Arabs disappointed us. They seem to like things the way they are,” he added, saying time will “prove Tunisia was right.”

It is now for the Arab “masses” to hold their leaders accountable for rejecting the Tunisian proposals, he said.

Poet Abdul Salam Lasaileh said he was “not surprised” by the summit suspension. “If the last 50 years have taught us anything, it is that the Arabs will never agree on anything,” he added bitterly.

“Honestly, I will not lose any sleep over it. I was certain that one day the Arabs would expose their real selves to the world – a divided and spineless nation,” he added.

Tunis “succeeded twice,” said literature critic Sahbi bin Mansour. The first time when it succeeded in hosting the 22 delegations in the run up to the aborted summit, he added.

“And the second time when it put on the table a real plan that would take us all into the 21st century on equal footing with other nations of the world,” he said.

When the Arab leaders have “something worthwhile” to do, “they are welcome in Tunis anytime”, said Mansour.

“Let’s be frank,” said poet Jelaidi Ouieni, “I am glad the government didn’t want to be part of the usual charade that is called the Arab summit.”

[Source: Gulf News]

Iraq War Launched to Protect Israel – Bush Adviser

Inter Press Service (IPS) uncovered remarks by Philip Zelikow, who is now the executive director of the body set up to investigate the terrorist attacks on the United States in September 2001 — the 9/11 commission — in which he suggests a prime motive for the invasion of Iraq just over one year ago was to eliminate a threat to Israel, a staunch U.S. ally in the Middle East.

“Iraq under Saddam Hussein did not pose a threat to the United States but it did to Israel, which is one reason why Washington invaded the Arab country, according to a speech made by a member of a top-level White House intelligence group.” — Philip Zelikow, President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) 2001/2003 [ IPS ]

[via Je Blog, Bouillabaisse]

World Best 2004 : The Best of Star Academy

I just caught WorldBest on TF1, a competition for the best of the Star Academy winners from all over the world.

I didn’t catch it from the beginning so I can’t really judge who deserved to win or not, but from the people I saw (Argentina, Chile, Russia, France), Elodie from France was the best. She sang “S’il suffisait d’aimer” originally by Celine Dion.

Bruno from Star Academy Lebanon was one of the candidates too.

Lionel Richie was the guest of honor at the show. He sang “All Night Long” with 4 of the candidates, and then sang his new song “Just For You”, which I love.

In the end, Elodie (France) won, with a duo from Canada following in second place.

Bruno from Lebanon came in at second place from the end, with only a group from Germany with less points than him.

Iraqi-Born Woman Wins Pritzker Architecture Award

Iraqi-born architect Zaha Hadid won the Pritzker Architecture Prize for 2004, considered the profession’s highest honor. She is the first woman to receive it.

Movement, curvature, porosity, extreme horizontal elongation: these are some of the aesthetic properties that helped to establish Ms. Hadid, 53, as a major influence in her field well before she began to build.

Ms. Hadid was born in Baghdad in 1950. She studied mathematics in Beirut before moving to London to study architecture at the Architectural Association School. After graduating in 1977, she worked with Rem Koolhaas and Elia Zenghelis at the fledgling Office for Metropolitan Architecture, a practice that subsequently moved to Rotterdam under Mr. Koolhaas’s direction. She is now based in London and is a British citizen.

For more: click here.
(NY Times link. You can get login info from bugmenot.com)

[via Antipixel]

Google Makes It Personal

After releasing local search lately, Google yesterday rolled out test versions of tools for personalized searches.

1. Personalized Search: this lets users define a personal profile by selecting from several categories, including news, science, business/industries, and computers. A search through the selected category can then be fine-tuned by using an on-screen slider tool to, for instance, bring more pertinent results to the top of the list.

2. Web Alerts: Similar to the already-in-place news alerts that Google offers, Web Alerts lets users enter a search string, and will then send a daily or weekly e-mail with links to newly discovered pages.
Google’s alerts will also include findings from its news pages and Froogle shopping site.

Google also debuted other enhancements to its general search engine, news engine and shopping engine Froogle.

I think this part of a push by all search engines towards personalizing search more and more in an effort to provide users with more useful results that are personalized to their interests and location.