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Google Toolbar

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Google Toolbar
Image:Toolbar sm.png
Developer(s) Google
Stable release 6.2.1815.1002 (Internet Explorer) 5.0.20090324 (Firefox) / June 30, 2009 (Internet Explorer) April 28, 2009 (Firefox)
Operating system Microsoft Windows
Mac OS X
Linux
Type Toolbar
License Proprietary freeware
Website toolbar.google.com

Google Toolbar is an Internet browser toolbar available for Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox. The development of this toolbar was led by Wesley Chan, who received Google Founders' Award for the work.

Contents

[edit] Features

Google Toolbar in Firefox

Google toolbar resides above the browser's tab bar and provides a search box to carry out web searches. Users can login into their GMail accounts and access their emails, saved bookmarks and web history. It has tools such as AutoLink, AutoFill, translation, spell checker common to all browsers, while pop-up blocker and word finder are restricted to Internet explorer.[1]





[edit] AutoLink controversy

Google toolbar was criticized when the AutoLink feature was added to the toolbar because this new feature directed users to pre-selected commercial websites such as Amazon.com and Google maps. For example, if it finds a book's ISBN number on a webpage, it provides a link to Amazon's product page for the particular book. Google said that the feature "adds useful links" and "none of the companies which received AutoLinks had paid for the service".[2][3]

[edit] Privacy

Several concerns were raised about privacy, however, the toolbar doesn't track personally identifiable surfing activities of the end user until advanced features such as PageRank are enabled by the user himself.[4]

[edit] Google Compute

Google Compute was a separately downloadable add-on for the Google Toolbar which allowed participation in a distributed computing project to help scientific research. It started on a limited basis in March 2002[5] and ended in October 2005.[6] [7]

Google Compute enabled a user's computer to help solve challenging scientific problems when the computer would otherwise be idle. When one enabled Google Compute, the computer downloaded a small piece of a large research problem and performed calculations on it that were then included with results from thousands of other computers. Google Compute was only available for the English language version of the Google Toolbar.[8]

The effort's first, and so far only, contribution was to Folding@home, a non-profit endeavor to model the process of protein folding in order to better understand and cure many different diseases. The Google Compute homepage recommends that users wishing to continue contributions to the project download the official Folding@home client.

[edit] Similar Toolbars

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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