Tag Archives: Google - Page 2

Chefs Who Spy? Tracking Google’s Hackers in China

Tongfei Kou's Website / 寇同飞的个人网站

Posted on The Wall Street Journal
Author: James T. Areddy

JINAN, China – From this city of six million, Shandong Lanxiang Vocational School quietly churns out 30,000 mechanics, barbers and welders each year. One of its triumphs was training chefs who cooked for Olympic athletes at the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing.

山东济南蓝翔高级技工学校的一间教学厨房

James Areddy/The Wall Street Journal

Google Inc. issued a surprise announcement this week, accusing Chinese hackers from Jinan of hijacking personal Gmail accounts of senior U.S. officials and others, by tricking them into disclosing their passwords. Among those targeted were White House employees, people familiar with the matter said. Read more »

13 Unusual Ways Made Google Competitive

Tongfei Kou's Website / 寇同飞的个人网站

To post this article from BusinessWeek here is not aiming at letting all the companies to become successful by following 13 unusual ways. Some of those methods may only fit Google (or perhaps other Tech companies) rather than all business activities. However, I personally believe that this article may bring some ideas for business leaders.

From BusinessInsider.com
Original Title: 13 Unusual Ways Sergey Brin And Larry Page Made Google The Company To Beat
Author: Alyson Shontell
Published on May 4, 2011

For more than a decade, Google has been the company to beat.

It’s consistently named one of the world’s best employers, it is the #1 company young professionals want to work for, and its name has become synonymous with search.

How did Sergey Brin and Larry Page create the tech titan? Not all of their strategies are straight forward. Read more »

You’ve still got mail

From “Financial Times” by Chris Nuttall in San Francisco

I rediscovered my old AOL e-mail account this week and was taken down e-memory lane as the famous “You’ve Got Mail!” message boomed from the PC speaker as I signed in. After years of neglect and only spam in my inbox, it was like a voice from beyond the grave – and with the same old US accent they never localised for the UK with a British voice proclaiming: “Post Is Here!”

I had logged in because I was taking the pulse of e-mail in general. Its obituary has been written repeatedly by the media over the past 10 years – strangled by spam in 2003, smothered by social networks in 2007 and razed by real-time communication such as Google Wave in 2009, before predictions of being finished off by Facebook Messages this year.

Spam is still a problem but more contained. Social networks give us peripheral vision of what our friends are up to but there is still a need for the e-mail equivalent of direct eye-contact. Wave, now cast adrift by Google, showed it was cool to see someone live-typing to you character by character, but it was never going to be the best way to organise your life. Facebook Messages looks promising for communicating with friends in new ways, but not for business use.

E-mail services have fought back by absorbing all these new features. From my Gmail inbox page, I can reply to e-mail, check voicemail, send texts and ins­tant messages, call phones and videoconference through a Google Chat widget, tweet, update my Facebook page and catch up on Google’s own social network, Buzz.

The inbox has become the Grand Central Station for knowledge workers, we were told at a Silicon Valley conference I attended recently, called Inbox Love. E-mail was very much alive, the speakers concluded, but its users were in a parlous state thanks to information overload – “You’ve Got Mail!” now invokes feelings of dread.

For me, the e-mail offerings of internet service providers and the e-mail clients that many companies still rely on are the dead men walking. Such desktop programs – including Eudora, Lotus Notes, Outlook and Thunderbird – seem outmoded now that we want to check our e-mail all the time from all manner of devices.

It is webmail services – led by Hotmail, Yahoo Mail and Gmail – that allow us quick access to e-mail, stored remotely in the internet “cloud”, from any computer’s browser as well as providing fast, richly featured versions for smartphones and tablets.

After moving over the years from AOL and Hotmail to Yahoo Mail and now Gmail, I keep things simple – settling on one service and inbox and setting it up to import mail from previous addresses automatically.

I abandoned my company’s Lotus Notes in 2008 by autoforwarding my FT.com e-mails to Gmail, quickly reducing an inbox with 10,000 messages to a few hundred by filtering and filing e-mails away under Gmail’s labels system. The fast search and un­limited storage meant I could confid­ently archive thousands of e-mails because I could find them again quickly.

Gmail is constantly being up­dated with features developed in Goog­le Labs, such as being able to undo sending an e-mail. Google says the service is growing rapidly and, certainly, its rivals have been prompted into more wholesale re­vamps – for instance, AOL has a Project Phoenix plan under way to improve its offering.

Hotmail has been transformed in the past year, with a much more attractive interface and deeper integration with other Microsoft products. Photos and Office documents can be uploaded to its SkyDrive “cloud” storage and linked to, shared and viewed in a pane in the inbox without cluttering it up with a big file attachment. Active Views e-mails, introduced in December, allows users to interact within an e-mail – for example, you can watch a video from Hulu or search for a hotel room within an e-mail from the travel service Orbitz.

Yahoo Mail released a beta version last October that it claims is twice as fast as the existing version. It has also opened its inbox for third parties to add services – for example, users can choose YouSendIt to send e-mails with attachments of up to 100Mb in size. I also like OtherInbox, a third-party service that automatically sorts low-priority e-mails into folders to reduce the size of your inbox.

OtherInbox also plugs into Gmail, which has a couple of other plug-ins that I especially like, including TaskForce, which converts and groups e-mails into tasks, and Rapportive, which is similar to Xobni in Outlook. Rapportive adds a panel to an e-mail to show a picture of the person who has e-mailed and includes some biographical details and the latest social networking activity, all helping to put a face and much more to a name.

Faces and people are what Facebook knows all about. Its Messages section became a more fully fledged e-mail service in November. The inbox is automatically confined to the people you know and communicate with. A list of names topped by the latest communication has no subject lines, just the top line of the message added. All interactions, from e-mails to texts and instant messaging, are included in one long thread with each person, and photos and videos can be attached.

It is a pleasant experience – viewing individual histories of pure conversations with just people you know.

That, if my spam-cluttered memory serves me right, is what we liked so much about e-mail before life became more complicated.

From “Financial Times” by Chris Nuttall in San Francisco

Google China lunches Teleport service as an April Fool’s Day joke

 


It’s April Fool’s Day today. Google of course wants to fool you as well. Google China today lunched Teleport Search Service as an April Fool’s Day joke. By this service you will be teleported to your most wanted destination at your most wanted time to percept everything you want.

To access the Teleport Search Service (only available in Chinese) go to:
http://www.google.com/landing/teleport/

Have a nice April Fool’s Day!

Businessweek: Google’s Search Gold Mine Could Tap Out

Posted on Viewpoint, Bloomberg Business Week

 

Unless Google’s search prowess takes a more “vertical” turn, the company’s “horizontal” search strategy is increasingly vulnerable to specialist search sites

 

By Jeffrey F. Rayport

It’s not often that Google waves the white flag, but last month the search advertising giant capitulated in its attempt to enter the real estate search market.

In 2009, Google entered the property category with a specialized search offering. In major markets—including United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan—it used Google Maps as a starting point to place ads for houses and apartments. This feature amazed some and worried others, especially given Google’s Street View feature, which enhanced listings by supplying eye-level images of posted properties. The move seemed promising at first blush, but Google turned out to have been late to the party. A number of specialized property websites had already developed powerful search tools to help property buyers.

People searching for places to live have complex purchase criteria and their search parameters quickly become quite specific. Google provided listings enhanced by mapping and images, but little more. Category specialists such asRealtor.com, Trulia, and Zillow in the U.S. and Rightmove in the U.K. made it possible to search real estate inventory, using algorithms to personalize and customize search that were superior to Google’s generic, if free, offering—including its location-aware services.

Such setbacks have hardly affected Google’s financial performance. Its 2010 financial results were stellar. Fourth-quarter results topped expectations, with $29.3 billion in revenue and a full-year profit of $8.5 billion—a 30 percent gain over the past year. The question is: How long will the good times last?

Google continues to generate the lion’s share of its sales—over 96 percent—in search. Yes, the company has shown glimmers of financial diversity in mobility (Android), video advertising (YouTube), and browser software (Chrome). Each platform could help reduce the company’s outsized dependence on search advertising. But search pays for everything Google does: Most of the company’s offerings are free, such as YouTube and Chrome, and few generate ad sales. Pretty much nothing Google does other than search, AdWords, and AdSense turns a profit. For now, Google looks well-defended. Microsoft’s Bing remains a distant second. Still, only 18 months ago Bing didn’t exist. In December, Google served 69.4 percent of U.S. search results while Bing served 24.4 percent.

IS “HORIZONTAL” SEARCH DATED?

The bigger question, then, is how long “horizontal” search—search that “sees” a vast swath of the Web’s 182 million sites—can remain an attractive business model.

Google’s humbling in the property sector indicates that the real threat is not from such Goliaths as Microsoft, but from a myriad of Davids—specialized search engines tailored to conduct “vertical” search tasks. Examples of these include restaurant reservations by OpenTable, job hunting at Simply Hired, and online travel with sites like Orbitz and Priceline. These sites are not promoted explicitly as “search engines,” but that’s what they are; they also happen to execute transactions. (Google tried transactional retail with Froogle, but the effort fizzled.)

Recently, Google has been making a further bid to control a vertical search category. In mid-2010, Google got serious about travel. Given that over half of travel sales are consummated online, Google wasted no time with DIY solutions. It went shopping and bid $700 million in cash to buy ITA Software, a Cambridge (Mass.)-based travel software company that was founded in 1996 by scientists at MIT to provide search services for airlines and other travel operators. If the acquisition goes through, Google’s first commerce-oriented vertical search initiative would represent a serious assault on Orbitz, Expedia, and Travelocity.

Google’s property and travel forays signal an important shift in strategy.

Vertical search wins share and earns dollars. Horizontal search protects share, but earns little. Don’t get me wrong: Hundreds of millions of Web users have an ongoing love affair with Google Search. Search Engine Land recently reported that nearly 90 percent of Web users were “satisfied” with their online search experiences. Dissatisfied users were scarce. User satisfaction, however, is not the issue. It’s the viability of the business model. When people use Google to find a news item; a viral video showing a cat stuck in a tree; or a dictionary definition of a word, horizontal search is magnificently effective. The problem is that this kind of search is a loss leader. Real value lies in attracting users who search with serious and focused purchase intent. That’s where the money is made.

CENTRALIZED RETAIL, VERTICAL SEARCH

For example, there was a time when e-commerce as a category was highly fragmented. By sorting through a super-abundance of choice, search creates value. Now, Amazon and others have steadily consolidated online commerce. The more consolidated online retail becomes, the less useful Google is to retail. On its site, Amazon provides powerful forms of verticalized search: a simple retail query delivers a focused and relevant array of product results, enhanced by user reviews, third-party content, and e-commerce functions. There’s a minimum of spam because Amazon provides a largely curated retail environment. In other words, why use Google when you can go straight to Amazon for a complete solution—both search and e-commerce?

Other search engines tailored to perform specialized search and transactions are building momentum. In corporate recruitment, there’s Monster. Shoe shoppers have Zappos and Shoebuy. Music and movie fans have Apple’s iTunes, while Netflix dominates movie rentals.

As online users grow more sophisticated, impatient, and demanding, horizontal search may prove steadily less compelling than vertical search—at least for the kinds of search advertisers will bid against and the kinds of queries that result in sales. If that’s the case, Google must find ways to verticalize big search categories fast—or bring commercial potential offerings such as Android and YouTube to scale in a big hurry.

 

Jeffrey F. Rayport is founder and chairman of Marketspace LLC, a digital strategy and customer experience practice, and an operating partner at private equity firm Castanea Partners. Rayport was previously a faculty member at Harvard Business School.

 

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