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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    Google lures MySpace for social network platform

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, California
    Thu Nov 1, 2007 6:51pm EDT
    Students inside a campus watch the live broadcast of Lee Kai-fu, vice-president of Google Inc. and co-president of Google China, holding a talk at the University of Hong Kong September 14, 2006. Google Inc has signed on MySpace, the world's largest social network, to its platform for allowing outside developers to write programs for social Web sites. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, California (Reuters) - Google Inc has lured MySpace, the world's largest online social network, to its system courting independent software developers, raising its challenge to fast-growing Facebook.

    Technology

    Web search leader Google said on Thursday that MySpace will join its OpenSocial platform that allows developers to write programs across multiple social sites using one set of tools.

    The tools, which will become available early Friday on the Web, will eliminate the need for small start-ups or even one-person shops to customize their programs for each site.

    "OpenSocial is going to become the de facto standard (for developers) instantly out of the gates. It is going to have a reach of 200 million users, which is way bigger than anything else out there," Chris DeWolfe, chief executive and co-founder of MySpace, told reporters.

    Google unveiled the system earlier this week and said it has already lured some of the biggest developers aligned with Facebook, which opened its site to outside applications in May in a move that has helped boost its user base to more than 48 million people.

    Developers have created interactive programs that let users rank their friends, wage virtual food fights or compare and recommend music. Some of the applications are now used by millions of people and are already being sought out by advertisers.

    "The Web has moved to its next stage," said Google CEO Eric Schmidt. "We always knew that the Web would be significantly social. We also always knew that it would be standard, open, and extensive, which is what this combination and the other activities today are showing."

    Google and MySpace said they had been working together on the project for more than a year. News Corp-owned MySpace has some 110 million users worldwide and already relies on Google to provide search functions for its site.

    Google unveiled OpenSocial earlier this week and disclosed that social networks such as LinkedIn and Friendster joined the program as well as some of the biggest independent developers on Facebook, including Slide and iLike.

    Google lost out to rival Microsoft Corp last week, when the software maker took a minority stake in privately held Facebook and shored up its position as the site's advertising delivery partner.

    But that has not cooled investor enthusiasm for Google, based on the expectation it will succeed in extending its dominant technology for selling ads tied to search listings to many new platforms -- from mobile phones to television.

    Google shares surged to an all-time high of $713.72 on Nasdaq on Thursday, before closing at $703.21, down $3.79.

    Facebook, now valued at $15 billion with the Microsoft deal, is due to unveil an advertising platform at an event in New York next week.

    Google executives said the company had also reached out to Facebook, and hundreds of other sites, about joining its OpenSocial platform. Facebook representatives had no immediate comment.

    (Reporting by Amanda Beck; writing by Michele Gershberg in New York)



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