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April 13, 2006

Google is Guge in China

If you grew up speaking English, when you look at Guge, you probably think it rhymes with huge, making it sound like googe. For a Chinese speaker, "Guge" sounds approximately like goo-geh. Try saying Google without the 'L' sound, and that's kinda what it sounds like. It's not that the Chinese don't have the 'L' sound, but while 'goo-geh-le' is definitely possible, it changes Google, a 2 syllable name into a 3 syllable one in Mandarin Chinese. I'm curious to see what the Chinese characters for 'guge' are. 'gege' is 'big brother' in Chinese, so I'm sure there will be a couple of puns generated from the guge/gege similarity.
    BEIJING (AFX) - Google said it has adopted the Chinese-language brand name 'GUGE' for its Chinese operations.

    At a conference in Beijing, company chief executive Eric Schmidt said the new name demonstrated Google's commitment to China.

In China, there's a movement against foreign words coming into the language. The word 'e-mail' is one of the worst offenders: properly, it should be: dyan yi feng syin, a 4 character word which is just too long, so everyone just uses the english word "e-mail".

"guge" with different tones can also mean "skeleton".

Firefox 1.5.0.2

Firefox 1.5.0.2 was released today, the first Universal Binary version of Firefox available for the intel Macintoshes. A rough comparison of the browsers:

Firefox: 3 threads, 31.15 MB of Real Memory, and 363.46 MB of Virtual Memory.
Safari: 6 threads, 15.5 MB of Real Memory, and 355.34 MB of Virtual Memory.
Camino: 4 threads, 21.69 MB of Real Memory 365.41 MB of Virtual Memory.

March 15, 2006

Stat Mongering

Since the beta test of Google Analytics is currently closed, I've been using mybloglog and the recently released Performancing to try and get a sense of my readership on the blog. The stats garnered so far seem to indicate that no one runs below 1024x768 res, and that sadly IE 6.0 outnumbers Firefox on a ratio of 2 to 1.