Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Oct 4, 2014

Love Yahoo, Love Google Chrome--Yummy Food on the Yahoo Homepage

Marissa Mayer
Marissa Mayer--has good recipes
Just tried the new Yahoo app for Google Chrome....Love it!

It gives me the Yahoo home page on a new tab.

Now, I love Google and use it on my Chromebook several times a day--every day--all day.

But, I also like the Yahoo Newspaper---read it every day for  current news and trending news, can easily see the weather.....it's pretty.

I like the set-up of the Yahoo Newspaper and it is easy to use.....but what is really beautiful are all of those recipes.

It seems like Marissa Mayer really hit the nail on the head with this little newspaper and the food page.

The foods pictured have useful recipes, easy and difficult, good nutrition and calorie info......it's fun to visualize.

Also, reading Google News everyday, too, and of course, G-mail is the bomb.

Tech girl and blogger.......love it.....the ronnie republic.

May 11, 2014

Google is Great at Blocking Spam

8 further pictures can be found here
8 further pictures can be found here (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
In Petaluma to see Leo Laporte in Action!
In Petaluma to see Leo Laporte in Action! (Photo credit: Stuck in Customs)
That's what Leo LaPorte says and it does seem to be very accurate, indeed!

So, on my blog, this blog you are reading now, the ronnie republic...........I keep getting all of these comments.

They are crazy comments that do not make any sense......as if the creator does not have a command of the English language.

Right, they are usually on the topics of Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity.

Seriously, I do not have clue about what is going on.

So I read this on Google and I just keep following their advice.........I keep marking these comments as spam.

Leo said Google is so good at filtering out--what is spam and what is a legitimate comment--and also this applies to e-mail, Leo added.

I always listen to Leo's radio show......the tech guy.......and it usually comes on Sat and Sun on various AM radio channels across the country.

Once in a while I listen to it on the internet........just google it and you can easily find it.

Yes, it's true.......I love Leo and Larry King and Snoop Dogg........It's just who I am.

So, what's the up-shot of this whole thing.........Google puts all of these crazy comments on spam........and they do not show up on my blog.

Bill O'Reilly
bill seems annoyed about something
Good job, Google, for filtering out this trash.......and thank you to Leo LaPorte......my Sunday man.

Do you have a tip for the ronnie republic radio round-up.

Please comment or send me and e...........love to include it in my blog.

Do you think Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity or Fox News is trying to hack this blog...........what do you think?

Thanks for your time reading the ronnie-re.....we need contributors.
ronnie.......he's always trying to look like Snoop

chloe.louise.langendorf.louis@gmail.com
Enhanced by Zemanta

Nov 5, 2013

Google Doodle Celebrates Designer Raymond Loewy...and Trains

copied from the Christian Science Monitor...


Raymond Loewy: How his designs defined the modern era

The Studebaker Avanti, Shell Oil logo, and Sears Coldspot refrigerator were all the creations of the iconic industrial designer, Raymond Loewy, whose work spanned 70 years and is honored today by a Google Doodle.

By Contributor / November 5, 2013
The "Father of Industrial Design", Raymond Loewy, designed countless iconic products and is honored today by Google.
Google
Enlarge


In the middle of the 20th century, consumer brands became the symbol of the good life, a nod to technological advancement and peace between years of conflict. Smart branding and products, such as the Shell Oil logo, Studebaker Avanti, and Coca Cola vending machines found a permanent home in consumer history.
Ads by Google
Which is faster? Here is something
I bet you didn't know. Check it out
And one man’s pen stood behind many of these iconic designs: the pragmatic, yet forward thinking industrial designer Raymond Loewy. Mr. Loewy’s timeless designs are immortalized today in a Google Doodle, paying homage to his partnership with Pennsylvania Railroad, and the 120th anniversary of his birth.
Loewy was born in Paris on November 5, 1893. He served in the French army in World War I and came toAmerica shortly after the war. He lived in New York City, designing windows for Macy’s and Saks Fifth Avenue, and providing fashion illustrations for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar magazines. His first big break in the industrial design world came when he designed the Sears Coldspot refrigerator in the '30s, which, with its aluminum shelves and round-edged design, quickly became the icebox du jour.
From there his 60-year career took off spawning hundreds of consumer designs that ended up in the daily lives of consumers across America. Whether it was creating brand logos that remain in place today, such as Exxon Mobil and Shell Oil, or consumer packaging that convinced millions of consumers to purchase products, such as the Lucky Strikes white package and Schick electric razor, his designs were known as simple and fashionable, but most importantly, customer-friendly.
"The main goal is not to complicate the already difficult life of the consumer," he once said.
His designs even accompanied Americans out of this world. From 1967 to 1973 he consulted for NASA’s Saturn-Apollo and Skylab projects, pioneering a porthole that looked toward Earth and designs that simulated gravity.
Though the aesthetic of his products brought him fame, his partnerships with certain companies rocketed his work to true icon status.
He was behind the Greyhound Scenicruiser, the Studebaker Champion and Avanti, and designed four Pennsylvania Railroad locomotives at the height of train travel, as referenced in Tuesday's Doodle. Loewy also worked with the federal government, designing the blue, white, and chrome livery on Air Force One and the United States Postal Service’s eagle logo.
This work earned him a place on the cover of Time Magazine in 1949. After an extensive career, Loewy retired in 1980 and died in 1986. But, as New York Times reporter Susan Heller wrote, his designs are nearly everywhere one looks.
"One can hardly open a beer or a soft drink, fix breakfast, board a plane, buy gas, mail a letter or shop for an appliance without encountering a Loewy creation," she wrote.

Aug 20, 2013

A Wikihow pour George Noory et le Coast to Coast AM auditeurs: Projection Astrale

A Wikihow pour George Noory
A Wikihow pour George Noory et le Coast to Coast AM auditeurs:

Le Wikihow très important, intéressant et utile de sont là tous les matins sur la page Google avec les nouvelles ....

Celui-ci est à droite de l'allée de George Noory et le Coast to Coast AM auditeurs:

"Comment faire pour effectuer une projection astrale"

voici le lien vers la page:

http://www.wikihow.com/Perform-Astral-Projection

http://www.wikihow.com/Perform-Astral-Projection

J'ai envoyé George un e-mail au sujet de cet article très informatif .....

J'espère qu'il aura l'occasion de le lire et le trouve pratique.

Good job Google et Wiki ....... Mon préféré actuel:

barres de flocons d'avoine au miel .....

et voici un lien vers cette page aussi:

http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Honey-Oat-Bars

http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Honey-Oat-Bars

elles sont faciles et délicieux pour le thé l'après-midi .....