Google adds real-time stock, ride info

By Paul Festa, Special to ZDNet
05 April 2005 08:04 AM
Tags: search, google, time, real, quotes, stock, ride, vehicle
Google has added real-time stock prices to its line-up of free offerings, along with a ride service for locating taxis and shuttles.

Adding to its existing 20-minute-delayed stock quotes, Google last week started making real-time stock quotes available both through its Web site.

"As a Google user, it always bugged me to have to go to other Web sites to get stock quotes," Katie Stanton, a Google business product manager, wrote in the company's corporate blog. "Now we get a direct feed of market data, so all you have to do is type in a ticker symbol like INDU or SUNW and the search results will include the latest exchange and real-time ECN quote, intraday chart, volume and market cap."

ECNs, or Electronic Communication Networks, are private financial trading systems that together process about a quarter of the Nasdaq's volume, according to Yahoo. ECN quotes may differ slightly from official stock market quotes. Yahoo offers free ECN quotes but charges US$9.95 for streamed actual quotes.

Stanton wrote that because Google doesn't offer more than the real-time ECN quotes and other basic stock information, the site will continue to link to other financial sites, including Yahoo Finance and Motley Fool.

Google also announced in its blog the launch of a Google Labs project called Ride Finder. This service helps people determine what ride service to choose by displaying the location of various shuttle, limousine and taxi companies' vehicles.

"Google Ride Finder takes a new approach to helping users find a ride: showing you where the vehicles are," reads the service's information page. "We work closely with a variety of companies to get this information; then we present it in the form of a map of your area, complete with little balloons - colour-coded by company -- to represent each vehicle's up-to-date location. Based on this info, you then just call the provider you've chosen to reserve a ride."

Google said most of the ride information it displays is less than five minutes old. It launched a trial, or beta, of the service for vehicles in Baltimore, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, New York, Phoenix, St. Louis, San Jose, Milwaukee and Washington, D.C. Google said it plans to expand the service throughout the US and around the world.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal Sick of broken tender sites
    Some of the state governments desperately need to invest in more user-friendly tender sites so that looking for information on government tenders doesn't have to be a game of blind man's bluff.
  • Array Cyberwar: What is it good for?
    In this week's episode, Cyberwar. What is Australia's place in the world of digital warfare? What are the implications for the NBN?
  • Array Is wholesale-only backhaul just a pipedream?
    The potential acquisition of Pipe Networks by SP Telemedia has raised the question about whether vertically integrated backhaul providers will mean higher wholesale prices for ISP customers.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured