The Google Santa Tracker has already launched, and Bing is not far behind with their high tech NORAD radar tracker. Don't they know he's at Broadway Square Mall already?
Maybe you've Googled your own name, or a few hard-to-find Pokemon characters more often than you've looked up a celebrity online. That might be a good thing.
But if curiosity about Gary Busey or Vanna White's birthday gets the best of you and then next thing you know you're Googling, you're not alone. There's one name that comes up more than any other in Texas, and I bet you'll never guess what
It's a common word, but there is one tricky letter combination that trips us up regularly enough that we have to ask Google for help.
Oh, and what's with Oklahoma? Along with South Dakota and Wisconsin, they have trouble spelling the word "gray." They must have seen 50 Shades of Grey too many times.
We're constantly in search for answers to our questions and we often turn to Google for the answer! Whether the answer is right or not we'll go with it most of the time!
If you sit and think about what you Google the most, what is it? If you live in Texas, there are a few searches considered the most embarrassing in the state.
The Google street view camera was sent to map out an Australian highway and caught a rather interesting picture while traveling down Dukes Highway/National Highway A8!
It's not a bird, it's not a plane and it's definitely not Superman -- it's a UFO. What was that in the sky yesterday in Jacksonville? This image appeared on Google Maps when when someone Googled Jacksonville, Texas.
Google has announced that Tyler is now one of the cities being serviced by providing live real-time traffic conditions via Google Maps! Tyler joins the list of around 30 major U.S. cities that Google started servicing in 2007.
If you're an Android phone user you may be asking the question, "What happened to the Android Market?" Glad you asked, it's actually not gone - just renamed.
Several Google employees recently swapped their laptops for carving knives and spent the day whittling six enormous pumpkins with the letters of the search engine’s name.
The result? The Halloween Google Doodle, of course.
In an effort to highlight global censorship campaigns, Google’s biannual transparency report revealed a 70 percent increase in takedown requests by the US government and law enforcement agencies.