...Larry Page (left) and Sergey Brin introduce the new T-Mobile G1 phone, the first cell phone running Google's mobile software. Google is opening the operating system to third-party developers, who it is counting on for creative advances. Mr. Brin also revealed...
...can buy Yahoo or maybe Google can help stop the deal from going through, but you can’t buy or regulate innovation. As Google, Microsoft and Yahoo founders Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, Jerry Yang and David Filo know in their hearts, that...
...mess of regulatory and privacy complexity. "Personal health records is an area that's just beginning," said Roni Zeiger, the Google Health product manager. "The fact that only few people are using those tools means we"--the computing and health care industries--"haven't...
...down from 30% year-over-year growth in last year's fourth quarter and 45% growth in the third quarter. The slowing had put Google's results under a microscope and contributed to the pessimism that prompted at least 16 analysts to reduce Google earnings estimates....
...mind, the big pullback in Google's stock creates a great buying opportunity for long-term investors that want to capitalize on Google's growth. Google will report its first-quarter results on April 17. Wall Street still expects the company to post a 42% increase...
...share of the U.S. search market followed by Yahoo at 21 percent and Microsoft at 8.5 percent, according to comScore Inc. Google has become so synonymous with Internet search that it may no longer matter how good Cuil or any other challenger is, said Gartner...
...this isn't going to trial on the fair use question, but the copyright forces have the law tilted mostly all their way, and Google is in business, not in the change the world category, at least not when it conflicts with business needs. And who knows what the...
...Monroe. Neither Yahoo nor Microsoft, he adds, “offers software or services that are significantly more compelling than Google.” AMR’s Yarmis disagrees. He believes Microsoft has some decent technology that enables them to monetize traffic, but the problem...
...sees their ads -- where they live, how much time they spend looking at the ad, which site they saw it on -- companies such as Google are buying companies with the most sophisticated tools to deliver ads to Internet users. The deal was approved without conditions...
...it difficult for Adwords advertisers to place their ads on their system. So it is either going to be the search or Adwords. Google will have to make a choice. If Google is able to purchase DoubleClick, then it will chuck Adwords and live off of DoubleClick...