Google Reader graduates out of labs

by Keith Dsouza | Translate | Print
Tuesday, 18th Sep 2007 | Share


Share Google Reader graduates out of labs on Twitter Share Google Reader graduates out of labs on Facebook Save Google Reader graduates out of labs To Delicious Favorites Stumble Google Reader graduates out of labs Share Google Reader graduates out of labs on Digg Get Instant Updates as RSS Feeds from Techie Buzz

It’s been a long time since Google has release Google Reader, since then it has turned out to be one of the most popular online (offline too with Google Gears) feed readers. They have rolled out many enhancements over the past few weeks including adding search options to search the feeds, released a new user interface, added support to email feed posts inline and much more.

Today the Google Reader team has officially announced that the Google Reader will be graduating out of labs and coming into the real world just like many other Labs Graduates such as Gmail, Google Notebook, Google Docs and Spreadsheets and much more products.

Google Reader also has some very good features such as trends which show you your reading habits. It also allows you to share what your reading with the world.

Here are some statistics about Google Reader compiled by the Google Operating System blog.

Google Reader has two kinds of feeds:
- feeds that have one subscriber (two thirds from the number of feeds, they’re updated every 3 hours)
- feeds that have more than one subscriber (these feeds are updated every hour)

Google Reader uses 10 TB for storing all the raw data

Google Reader crawls 8 million feeds

70% of the Google Reader traffic comes from Firefox (a lot of geeky users)

Google Reader is the only major feed reader that keeps the entire history for all the feeds

 

For more such interesting facts check out Google Reader Numbers.

Google today also announced the addition of a presentation tool for Google Docs and Spreadsheet I will be reviewing the product in detail shortly.



Share

No Responses so far | Share Your Opinions!

Leave a Comment

Note: We discourage users from using keywords in their names while posting comments, most of them get caught by spam, also it really would be more fruitful in knowing people who comment by their real name, rather than by using a name no one relates to. In future we reserve the right to delete comments from users using a name other than their own.

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>