Result 1 - 8 of about 8
Academic Successes in Cluster Computing
Posted by Alfred Spector, VP of Research Access to massive computing resources is foundational to Research and Development. Fifteen awardees of the National Science Foundation )NSF( Cluster Exploratory Service )CLuE( program have been applying large scale computational resources donated by Google and IBM . Overall, 1,328 researchers have used the cluster to perform over 120 million computing tasks on the cluster and in the process, have published 49 scientific publications,
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Google Scribe: Now with automatic text for links and faster formatting options
Posted by Kartik Singh and Kuntal Loya, Google Scribe team Since Google Scribe's first release on Google Labs last year, we have been poring over your feedback and busy adding the top features you asked for. Today, we're excited to announce a new version of Google Scribe that brings more features to word processing. Besides formatting,
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
1 billion core-hours of computational capacity for researchers
Posted by Dan Belov, Principal Engineer and David Konerding, Software Engineer We're pleased to announce a new academic research grant program: Google Exacycle for Visiting Faculty . Through this program, we'll award up to 10 qualified researchers with at least 100 million core-hours each, for a total of 1 billion core-hours. The program is focused on large-scale, CPU-bound batch computations in research areas such as biomedicine, energy, finance, entertainment,
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Query Language Modeling for Voice Search
Posted by Ciprian Chelba, Research Scientist About three years ago we set a goal to enable speaking to the Google Search engine on smart-phones. On the language modeling side, the motivation was that we had access to large amounts of typed text data from our users. At the same time, that meant that the users also had a clear expectation for how they would interact with a speech-enabled version of the Google Search application.
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Congratulations to Ken Thompson
Posted by Bill Coughran, Senior Vice President of Engineering I'm happy to share that Ken Thompson has been chosen as the recipient of the prestigious Japan Prize . The Japan Prize is bestowed for achievements in science and technology that promote the peace and prosperity of mankind. Ken was awarded the prize along with Dennis Ritchie for their development of the UNIX operating system in 1969 while at Bell Labs.
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Suggesting a Better Remote Control
Posted by Ullas Gargi and Rich Gossweiler, Research Team It seems clear that the TV is a growing source of online audio-video content that you select by searching. Entering characters of a search string one by one using a traditional remote control and onscreen keyboard is extremely tiresome. People have been working on building better ways to search on the TV, ranging from small keyboards to voice input to interesting gestures you might make to let the TV know what you want.
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Google at the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing )EMNLP '10(
Posted by Slav Petrov, Research Scientist The Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing )EMNLP '10( was recently held at the MIT Stata Center in Massachusetts. Natural Language Processing is at the core of many of the things that we do here at Google. Googlers have therefore been traditionally part of this research community, participating as program committee members, paper authors and attendees. At this year's EMNLP conference Google Fellow,
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
Poetic Machine Translation
Posted by Dmitriy Genzel, Software Engineer Once upon a midnight dreary, long we pondered weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of translation lore. When our system does translation, lifeless prose is its creation; Making verse with inspiration no machine has done before. So we want to boldly go where no machine has gone before. Quoth now Google, "Nevermore!" Robert Frost once said, "Poetry is what gets lost in translation.
author: Research Admin
publisher: Google Research
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