Archive for the ‘Google’ Category

Google & Apple: What’s up doc?

Saturday, September 2nd, 2006

Eric Schmidt recently joined the Apple Board. I thought is really strange since a Bill Gates owns a substantial amount of Apple. Ran a couple of searches and stumbled across some dizzying info.

Al Gore is a senior advisor to Google and is an Apple director.
Intuit Chairman Bill Campbell is an Apple director and Google advisor.
Arthur Levinson (CEO Genentech) sits the boards of both companies.
Paul Otellini, CEO of Intel , which supplies Apple’s microprocessors, sits on Google’s board.

At WWDC 2006 Steve Jobs mentioned apples 13% marketshare in new notebook sales in the US. Macs now run Windows, is more stable bla blah blah…for a complete list on why Macs are better check www.apple.com/getamac/ads

If anything does ever culminate, (Apple hardware, ilife & Google cloud..and add Open Office 2.0 to that) it could redefine the way the world computes…which brings me to the question….what’s up doc? :)

Google Apps Vs MSFT Office Live

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-8043_7-6632496-1.html?tag=cnetfd.ld4
Microsoft and Google provide myriad popular tools for Web surfers and consumers. Lately, both tech mammoths are also gunning to serve small businesses online. Microsoft Office Live beta and Google Apps for Your Domain let you design company Web pages and collaborate with chosen colleagues.

Unfortunately if you’re a fan of Firefox or Macs, most Microsoft Office Live functions work only with Internet Explorer 5.5 and may require Windows 2000 or later versions. Google’s services, on the other hand, are compatible with Mozilla-based browsers and Internet Explorer, as well as with Macs and Linux machines.

Microsoft is giving away domain names for free, which otherwise cost around $10 from a third party. Via Office Live, you can park and keep www.yoursite.com for free, which is superior to using some lengthy URL embedded within Microsoft’s corporate domain. However, in return, Microsoft slaps the Office Live logo onto your Web pages.

Google, on the other hand, doesn’t provide personalized Web site registration and hosting, although you can reserve a clunky URL through Google Page Creator beta. Google doesn’t even suggest a registrar; it only links to Google search results for “domain registration.” Instead, you tailor Google Apps for Your Domain to work with a Web site that you’ve already reserved. Basically, this lets you display your company’s name and logo (rather than Google’s) within Google Calendar and Gmail. Thus, customers can e-mail you at, say, owner@yourbiz.com, while you open the messages within your customized Gmail interface.

Microsoft Office Live Basics is free, but there are expanded, paid services too. There’s no calendar or instant messaging within the free Office Live Basics, for example, while Google Apps for Your Domain connects to the beta Google Calendar and Google Talk. If you’re serious about managing a small-business site with Office Live, you can pay for a calendar as well as 19 other business applications. The paid Office Live Essentials and Collaboration are free to try while in beta testing.

Neither Microsoft nor Google wrap together a built-in online Word processor with their small-business packs, which is odd given Microsoft’s corner on the productivity tool market, as well as Google’s Web-based Writely and Spreadsheets. We also find it strange that Google Apps for Your domain makes no mention of Google Checkout, which lets you set up a shop on your Web site.

Office Live is available at http://officelive.microsoft.com. You can access Google Apps for Your Domain at https://www.google.com/a/.

Microsoft Office Live Basics beta Google Apps for Your Domain

Protected: Windows Live Search Vs. Google

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


The Rise of Social Networking

Saturday, July 29th, 2006

Social Networking is one of those many buzzwords you hear flying around the place. While Myspace dominates
discussions and headlines, the silent mover / dark horse is Google’s Orkut. Its not easy to spot Google’s
revenue model in Orkut, but this is as close as i can get to it. Search Quality!!! Google aims to provide more
relevant results on the basis of social networks, associations, interests and skew of geographic inputs.I’ve been using Orkut for over 4 years now, and must add that stickiness is high. While the scrapbook ensures
you login, the Recent Visitors tool ensures you keep adding folks in.

Appended below is a sneak peak of my Dashboard

Welcome, Gautham
Invite your friends and grow your network now!You are connected to 24,184,827 people through 75 friends.one fan You have 1 fans. scrap icon 90 scrapsYour profile views:
Since Feb ‘06: 714, Last week: 35, Yesterday: 8
Recent visitors:
srujana murali, Adnan Farooqui, Arunita Phukan, kanchan sharma, Nitin NayyarNext steps:
Have a great friend? Write a testimonial and let people know!Today’s fortune:
You never hesitate to tackle the most difficult problems

Papers written by Googlers

Tuesday, April 4th, 2006

Possbily the best thing you can do with your weekend! Definitely the best thing i can do with mine! :)

http://labs.google.com/papers.html

Eric Schmidt clears the air on Google!

Tuesday, March 21st, 2006

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1939258,00.asp