Microsoft and Time Warner Team Up Against Google 137
PlayfullyClever wrote to mention a Reuters report on an online advertising deal between Microsoft and Time Warner. The two companies are teaming up to take on Google's advertising network. From the article: "The [WSJ] said the two companies were now focusing on a deal that would combine their advertising-related assets, with little or no money changing hands. It said they expected to reach an agreement before the end of the year, but that it was still possible that Time Warner's America Online unit could strike a deal with competitor Google instead."
Google Must Be Quaking In Their Boots (Score:5, Funny)
TW/AOL:Losses in the billions.
Microsoft Entertainment/Internet Operations: Losses in the billions
Google have every right to be worried. With the losses these two titans amass, they could well suck up a lot of advertising revenue on the way to losing record billions.
hello, this is microsoft support, press 1 to refinance your mortgage, 2 for MSN help, 3 for pills that enhance your bedtime experience, 4 for office help, 5 to see if you are an instant winner of the tw/msn lottery, 6 for xbox help, 7 to register a microsoft product over the phone or stay on the line to hear nagamo mazoomba, former vice president of internal standards group, request your help in getting $43,675,00 out of a bank account in the caymans.
Bull Schitt (Score:2, Informative)
Hundred million of pure, net profit last year.
mod parent down - astrodomer (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bull Schitt (Score:3, Insightful)
Why did you chop off the first part? He/She was referring to the entertainment/internet ops. Last I heard, the MSN ISP was not pulling in the customers. Last I heard, XBox has been in the red since day one. Last I heard, XBox 360 has tons of bugs. Maybe MSN search is making some profit, but that doesn't negate what the GP stated. If you look at these two business units, they will most likely be in the red. Most of MS's business units are in
Re:Bull Schitt (Score:2, Informative)
Not to stray off-topic or belittle your point, but the Xbox 360 does not have tons of bugs. Most of the so-called bug "reports" are just rehashing what someone else said. Also, almost all of the issues I've heard are really the result of user error (e.g. not reading the manual). I don't know of any one verifiable bug with the Xbox 360. That doesn't mean that there aren't any, just that the statement "has tons of bugs" is wrong.
Re:Bull Schitt (Score:2)
Re:Bull Schitt (Score:2)
Because it's not the same division! (Score:2)
Re:Bull Schitt (Score:1)
This is pretty standard fare for Microsoft, and your reaction is pretty standard fare for the Google worshippers that live here. The only thing that has changed is names (and that the story isn't about how they pushed the competiton under with law suits)
Re:Google Must Be Quaking In Their Boots (Score:2)
> Microsoft Entertainment/Internet Operations: Losses in the billions
In other news, Anne Alyst (B.Com, MBA, CFA) of Foobar Fiduciary, has upgraded Steelcase [yahoo.com], Restoration Hardware [yahoo.com], Furniture Brands [yahoo.com], and La-Z-Boy [yahoo.com] to "Screaming Buy" based on the possibilities for expansion into new growth markets.
Ms. Ann Thrope, senior partner at Lotta Trimmings Hedge Fund, agrees that the fine folks at Foobar Fiduciary may be onto something. Not only does Ms. Thrope say that the mark
Re:Google Must Be Quaking In Their Boots (Score:1)
Re:Google Must Be Quaking In Their Boots (Score:1)
MSN Quick Fix (Score:5, Insightful)
But what happens if AOL users still go to Google despite the default search site is MSN?
MS still commands about 80% of the browser market, and its browser defaults searches to MSN, if this cannot help it, I doubt a deal with AOL could.
I believe a more substantial way is to be a good search provider, and users will be self-inviting.
I guess Time Warner stands to win whichever way the deal goes.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:2, Insightful)
Search no, advertising yes.
This wont help MS in the search wars at all but being able to double the audience of your target ads overnight ( MSN + AOL portal ) certainly doesn't harm the ad revenue bottom line.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:1, Insightful)
Don't believe me? Well, they ARE using AOL, aren't they?
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:5, Interesting)
They like its simplicity and the fact that it's pretty good about giving them something close to what they were looking for, even with some of the weirdest keyword queries I've seen.
Anecdotal, I know, but don't rule out Google's mindshare even among the technically incompetent.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:5, Insightful)
The people I know who use AOL, and this is a small number of people with dial up, they use AOL to search. They don't open up a second IE window to use google.
MS still commands about 80% of the browser market, and its browser defaults searches to MSN, if this cannot help it, I doubt a deal with AOL could.
Does MS still do this from IE? I thought there was a setting where the user can select what search engine to use, or to disable searching from the address bar. I never search from the address bar, so I don't know.
So the deal is that AOL would drop Google as its main Internet search provider and switch to Microsoft's MSN service
On the surface, this might look like a good deal for MS. But I remember how everyone thought MSNBC would become bigger than CNN. Correct me if I am wrong, but is MSNBC even #3? What happened with marrying the largest computer/tech comany with NBC?
MS is marrying with a dying company. How much longer will dial up be a market? How will AOL continue to stay alive, how much impact will their search website have?
MS should be looking forward. I see this as a short term deal, to get more of a market share in search engines. But that advantage will be gone in a few years. I think MS is trembling that google will dominate all searches, and MS will be about as popular as dogpile.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:1)
-If
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:1)
It used to be that once Yahoo had exhausted its own directory results, it would switch to Google. It was a good combination. Once they dropped Google, I dropped Yahoo and went direct to Google, simple as that. I imagine lots of others followed too.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:3, Insightful)
If AOL switches to MSN, >95% of the users will not care unless MSN can't give them what they need.
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:1)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:1)
Re:MSN Quick Fix (Score:2, Insightful)
Then again, as MS is well aware, half of any "prediction" is just going to be guesswork.
MSFT and AOL (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:1)
Right sure. Except all the other roads that lead elswhere, and unless you hadn't noticed theres a 5 lane motorway running straight up to Google HQ at the moment.
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:1)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:1)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:3, Interesting)
Though I must admit Sony has raised the bar so much it's hard to hate MS with a passion anymore. Compared to Sony, MS is pretty good.
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:5, Insightful)
Sony does innovate though, and by doing so, it pushes other companies to innovate as well. Compare this to Microsoft that drives the competition out of the market, and does nothing, until someone comes out with something innovative that can compete with them. (Firefox, Google, Linux)
Re:MSFT and AOL (Score:2)
They are both nearly 50% owners in the ContentGuard corporation, which owns the patent rights to virtually all XML rights expression languages. So, you think that XACML is "open" just because it's approved by OASIS. Think again.
Microsoft's implementation of XrML in Vista is a cornerstone of the upcoming product, and XrML is a key product of ContentGuard.
PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:1)
Re:PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:1)
I found the digg article they plaugerized... (Score:1)
Re:PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:2, Funny)
Re:PlayfullyClever = Troll (Score:1)
Their home page is cleverlyannoying.
What do I win?
qz
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Two weakened giants leaning on each other for support.
Sears+K-Mart (Score:1)
Even if that alliance holds (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Even if that alliance holds (Score:1)
Regardless of what I think about the company, there's no denying that Microsoft will be around for quite some time. I think Google's genius is that they've let the word "google" slip into usage as a verb, meaning "search." It doesn't even matter if you're using their engine or not. If you're using a search engine to find something on the internet, most people would say you're "googling" for it. There's no
assets are one thing... (Score:3, Interesting)
Advertising and AOL (Score:2)
Frankly, I avoid the MSN home page, MSN searches, etc. because I refuse to "feed the
Could be better (Score:3, Funny)
Doing business with Microsoft? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Doing business with Microsoft? (Score:1)
So much going on here... lets look at this closer. (Score:3, Insightful)
How much of googles searches does AOL account for? How will this affect Google Adsense? Less views = less money for those in the program?
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who has been critical of Time Warner's strategy, has also said that he would hold Time Warner board members personally responsible if they forged a deal for AOL that valued the Internet provider too cheaply.
How will Carl Icahn do this? Is this one very rich man trying to kill a deal?
Why would Time Warner want to screw AOL? Hmmm... what is going on behind the scenes? Or is this a sign that AOL is changing its strategy?
Or maybe Microsoft is scared of google, and is doing everything they can to prevent their search services from going the direction of excite.com.
Re:So much going on here... lets look at this clos (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So much going on here... lets look at this clos (Score:1)
Just a thought... but it is usually standard practice for a 'dying' company's CEO's or Board of Directors to 'try' a separate or new strategy to guide the company some other direction. Then they give themselves huge bonuses for the brainpower they expended, regardless of whether their 'new strategy' worked or not. When it doesn't work, they get fired, get a good separati
A Question (Score:3, Funny)
Re:A Question (Score:2, Funny)
Throwing their money down the drain... (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think anything will happen, other than a bunch of money being spent.
If they really wanted to compete, they would hire a bunch of really bright people, form a new company for them to work at, with a new independent management team, and money to spend. Let them go after Google using the best tools and technologies, and then give them an instant market by using whatever they come up with at Microsoft/AOL/TimeWarner.
You gotta give their enemies credit (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, since they're in the business of storing and processing information, Google could end up being a greater threat than Microsoft ever could in the wrong hands.
How Stupid is Slashdot? (Score:4, Informative)
In short, the editors are such fucking incompetant idiots that they willingly and knowingly entertain the submissions of admitted plagiarists. On the other hand, it's a really great way to make sure that Slashdot is never taken seriously anywhere by anyone. Seriously, Slashdot editors (Malda, etc) -- get your shit together. Half the joy of even bothering to show up and check Slashdot out each day now isn't for the articles or discussions, but to see what careless, stupid, sell-out, dimwitted shit you guys will do next.
Win Slashdot? (12/05/05) - PyWiz
Some of the slashbots have started to take notice that all of our posts are blatantly plagiarized. They wonder out loud in their replies why we would do such a thing? Well for all you curious slashbots that wonder why we felt the need to beat the world's most famous News for Trolls website, your answer is here [playfullyclever.com]
Slashdot: News for Trolls. Stuff That Doesn't Matter.
Okay, first of all for all of your slashbots that are out of the loop, we (known on Slashdot as PlayfullyClever) are blatant plagiarists. Almost (and by almost I mean more than 90%) all of our posts are reposts found using the Anti-Slash Database Tool, which allows the user to search for high-modded posts on a particular topic. Basically when a new article comes out on Slashdot we skim the summary for key words and plug them into the database tool. When we find a relevant-looking (I say relevant-looking because we don't actually read the summary so sometimes our posts are a little off base) post, we simply copy paste it and post to Slashdot. The funny part about this is that almost all of our posts get rated 5, just as they were originally. It is especially amusing when we get a high rating in spite of the fact that someone spots our plagiarism and points it out in a reply, as happened here.
Why would we do this? Well, there are several reasons. First of all, we do it for kicks. As I said earlier, it is rather amusing how little new information is actually added in Slashdot discussions. Simply towing the party line will get you a 5 rating, even if, as happens in many cases with our reposting, the post is slightly or completely offtopic.
The second major reason is promoting our site. We have a link in our signature and of course when we submit articles we get hits from people clicking on our name. We've gotten over 500 unique hits in the past 3 days the site has been up, and considering the quality of site we have, that's some quality advertising.
Some of you might be thinking that we're selfish and that we're destroying what once used to be a respected discussion forum. Well, you're wrong. First of all, with all the FPs, Penisbirds, and GNAA trolls, our reposting is hardly degrading anything of worth. Second of all, the moderation system is build to handle just our type of cleverness (namely, playful) by allowing readers to mod us down if they don't find our comment interesting. Obviously, even though it is plagiarized, our comments still hold the interest of a large number of moderators. Of course there is the slight moral problem of representing someone elses work as our own, but I mean come on, this is the 21st century, get over it.
In conclusion, all you slashbots who whine about PlayfullyClever being a "blatant plagiarist": you're right. Now STFU. kthx, py
Re:How Stupid is Slashdot? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How Stupid is Slashdot? (Score:1)
Re:How Stupid is Slashdot? (Score:5, Insightful)
But in the last six months, it has gone from "sometimes lazy slashdot editor behavior" where they post a dupe or let a big typo slip by to the point where you can rarely go a day without multiples of the following happening - and I'm just talking about in the front-page section. I'm not talking about the GNAA type of stuff in the responses.
+ Duplicate from the same week, day or hours before.
+ Duplicate from the same or previous years.
+ Trip...er..licate . . .
+ Intentional slashvertisement.
+ Unwitting (or uncaring) slashvertisement ala **BeatlesBeatles, etc. Or worse - press relases.
+ Unwitting (or uncaring) contribution to trolls (ala CleverlyFunny and others)
+ Crap I've already seen on Drudgeerport. If Drudgereport is reporting it, it's sort of . . . done with.
+ Wierd slashvertisement sort of buddy system gratis thing where a particular site seems to get EVERY article they write featured on Slashdot. It's almost like one of the editors' girlfriends ran TheEscapist or PennyArcade or JoelonSoftware or something and they felt compelled to post a blurb on Slashdot about every single article out of support.
And sure, people could "just leave", but a lot of us have been here for seven or eight years and really don't want to have to do that. But man . . . it's almost like the Slashdot editors don't even care about Slashdot anymore. I find a lot of faults with Zonk, but at least he seems to TRY. It even seems as if the rest of the Slashdot elders just always decide to go fishing or take long naps for weeks at a time and stick Zonk and ScuttleMonkey with all the actual work and don't follow up to make sure their quality is up to par (or maybe even teach them what to do in the first place.... not that the old Slashdot editors seem to have a clue anymore what that should be either). . . .
Re:The problem really boilks down to / / (Score:2, Informative)
And you don't have to be the world's greatest or most concerned editor. If you care about tech stuff and geek stuff, you'd at least be interested in weeding out the redundant stuff and advertising. And if they're understaffed, it's their own fault. They're not some little organization running out
You have to love Slashdot. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You have to love Slashdot. (Score:1)
And they wont win because.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Google is simple. There arent millions of distrations. You dont have to SEARCH for the search bar. you dont have to wait for the eyeblasters to load so that they can in turn obstruct your searching. GEEEZ people. it looks good the first time but after the 9999999th time you login just to do a simple search, and have to wait forever for the main page to connect to billions of addservers to serve you graphic adds, you end up back at google.
Re:And they wont win because.... (Score:2)
BINGO. The Google home page loads instantaneously, almost faster than
Re:And they wont win because.... (Score:2)
Probably because it is a page on you local filesystem. It is likely being loaded from cache, except possibly for the first time each day that you load it (and at that time of the morning, you probably haven't had enough caffine yet to notice if its a bit slower)
Re:And they wont win because.... (Score:2)
It's around 12KB including the graphics (similar to Google, which is around 10KB). There are no more distractions than Google.
Moreover, I find that MSN Search often gives better results (excluding the Image Search, which is quite frankly garbage).
Trust (Score:4, Interesting)
Trust.
Google appear to put the user first. Indeed, that's where they started, building a search engine to help people. Money came later (and haven't they done well?).
Microsoft and Time Warner started with wanting to make money. That comes - and, more to the point, feels as though it comes - way before the user.
And we don't trust them.
Google ads rely on advertisers (the person with the ad, and the person with the ad space) trusting them to put the right ads in the right place. Google does - and everyone makes money. Trust, trust trust - the foundation stone of trade.
But who would trust Microsoft and Time Warner to do that?
Re:Trust (Score:1)
No, no no.... (Score:2)
No, Microsoft is providing a user base, and Time Warner is providing the advertisements... kinda like I bring the baseball bat, you bring the ball. Together we'll kick the other team's ass. And when you consider the numbers that AOL/TW and MSN have in their respective user bases, the revenue they can generate there alone could pose a viable threat to Google. I'm not a fanboy of either MS or Google, just saying...
-everphilski-
Re:No, no no.... (Score:1)
Re:Trust (Score:3, Informative)
Dunno about about the search engine angle but as an advertiser I'd suggest that Google was successful because their Adwords program was
Good! (Score:5, Insightful)
Makes it even easier to avoid both of them!!
(Ya'll stand a little bit closer together now... I only got one shotgun shell left and I want to make it count.)
The first thing I thought when I saw was... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The first thing I thought when I saw was... (Score:1)
doomsday. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:doomsday. (Score:5, Informative)
If your numbers are from TFA, I can't see it because the link is giving me a Yahoo! error page, so I went to Google to find some info.
Are your numbers for unique visitors to any page owned by the companies in your list? Do those numbers even matter- aren't we talking about ads in search results?
Re:doomsday. (Score:1)
My point was that anyone can throw out numbers, you ass-munch.
Re:doomsday. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yahoo gets hits because they were giving away free email when AOL execs were still wondering why someone who has an ISP would need a free email account. Their search engine, while not as powerfull as Google's, does have its merits.... better geographical searches (nice for when i can't find any pizza menus to order from), and a higher likelyhood of search results I was looking for rather than 50,000 pages of exactly what i asked for.
MSN getting 110 (10 million less than AOL) is nothing short of abject failure. Its the default homepage on 90% of the computers IN THE WORLD.
In short, AOL's niche market (internet training wheels) is soon to be obsolete, and MSN.com can't get more hits than AOL.com even when its the default search page on most of the computers in the world.
My prediction-- Google will outlive the PC platform (im assuming that the world wide web will outlive the PC). MSN and AOL will not. Yahoo..... who knows.
Yahoo link to TFA is dead (Score:3, Informative)
trust? (Score:2, Insightful)
Neither should win (Score:1, Insightful)
1. Company 1 becomes a rising star.
2. Everyone loves company 1 because they have good products, service, blah
3. Company 1 beats out company 2, 3, 4, and 5 to become master of it's universe
4. Company 1 has no competition, so they have no motivation to innovate, pr
I've just made a deal... (Score:2, Funny)
Two thrown chairs..... (Score:2, Funny)
SOLID (Score:1, Funny)
Google... (Score:1)
*opens firefox, displaying google.ca - begins hugging the computer monitor*
poor ole google (Score:1)
Google is the secret weapon in the war against MS (Score:1)
Recently, I finally set up my http://www.google.com/ [google.com] homepage... Interesting service for those of you who haven't set it up yet... Frankly, my browser has pointed to a blank page for years... This is the first time I can think of since netscap
Re:Google is the secret weapon in the war against (Score:1)
Even if it doesn't, it doesn't get in my way and annoy me.
Re:Google is the secret weapon in the war against (Score:1)
Re:I knew this was comming (Score:1)
Right. And George Bush didn't win the election.
Re:..if MS wins the deal, it's the beginning of en (Score:1)