Page Can't Turn Back Clock At Google 205
rsmiller510 writes "As much as incoming CEO Larry Page would like Google to be as quick on its feet as a small company, when you're as big as Google, decision-making gets bogged down in the management structure, and it's hard to make the company something it's not."
Leave Page alone... (Score:2)
...he competed with, and beat the largest software company at its own game. He's doing pretty good in my opinion.
Re:Leave Page alone... (Score:4, Insightful)
Nope. Google's still playing catchup with Apple and it's barely entered the race with Microsoft.
Of course, it's beaten Altavista and Yahoo. In other news, Jesus has more followers than Hubbard.
I'd love to have Google's problems. (Score:2)
Nope. Google's still playing catchup with Apple and it's barely entered the race with Microsoft.
First off, Apple isn't a software company, it's main revenues are from hardware. The GP comment was in reference to Microsoft, and I do think Google has been successfully competing with Microsoft vis-a-vis anything Internet (and now, mobile). Microsoft has not been competed with on their own turf, but as Google and Apple grow the landscape away from Microsoft, it will be clear to everyone that what was once the entire consumer computing world (Windows) is now just a big continent, and the other areas are
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Apple is a software company. Most of their revenues may come from the sale of hardware, but that's because you have to buy their hardware to use their software. If Apples only ran commoditized PC software, (or commodotized smart phone software) the hardware sales would be a fraction of what they are.
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I'd still call them a hardware company. The primarily SELL hardware, even if they do write the software on it (as have many other traditionally categorized "hardware" companies like Cisco, Juniper, Sony Electronics/SCE, etc). Whereas a primarily "software" company like Google or Microsoft makes almost all of their revenue from selling software or services running on their software (though I'd call Google a "B2B services company" more than software, since they make most of their money selling services to o
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You understand their model and yet still have it completely backwards. Apple is a hardware company that uses software as a differentiator to get people to choose their hardware over the competition.
You are correct in that, were their software to run on third-party hardware, they would lose some amount of their hardware sales. At the same time, they would (possibly? probably?) grow their software sales. The fact that they don't do this helps to show how they place their hardware revenue over that of thei
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The issue is simple, Microsoft is moving like a tanker at sea, it takes a while for the boat to turn, it's just got the rudder turning recently ( Bing search engine ).
History tells us that they will over time, join the market and win it entirely or take only 1/2 or screw it up completely.
so the only way to really fight MS, is to have many small companies that are great in there respective fields merge, and take consistent bites out of MS at all levels.
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Nope. Google's still playing catchup with Apple..
That appears to be true. The iPhone had a problem switching to DST, but apparently Google only has problems turning *back* the clock. Android users will have to wait until October to get theirs.
Re:Leave Page alone... (Score:5, Informative)
Google
Revenue US$ 29.321 billion
Operating Income US$ 10.381 billion
Profit US$ 8.505 billion
Employees 24,400
Apple
Revenue US$ 65.23 billion
Operating Income US$ 18.39 billion
Profit US$ 14.01 billion
Employees 49,400
Financially they are playing catchup to Apple and M$
And in the all important Fortune 500 list, Apple is a Fortune 100 company, Google is a Fortune 200 company.
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And GM makes US$ 38 Billion in profit, so? As someone else said, although both Apple and Google are tech companies, they are mostly in different fields. Apple is mainly a hardware company and Google is a software one. They only place where they directly complete is in the mobile area, and there you cannot say that Google is playing catch up.
Re:Leave Page alone... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes and no (Score:2)
Apple was run into the ground during late 80's/early 90's by bad management until Steve came back. Everything Steve built up was destroyed, and Steve had to recreate it from the ground up. Steve took control in 1998, so it's arguable that Apple never had any lead at all when Google was founded.
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But if you want to make allowances for idiotic leadership, Google got run almost into the ground by Schmidt who was brought in because the VC's thought Page was too young. Imagine where Google would be today if they had let the innovators continue leading the company rather than some stupid suit.
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Exactly when did Google get to less than 1% market share, have no money in the bank, and was once considered to be the laughing stock of the tech industry? You may not like the direction Google went in, but you need to go back and review your definition of running into the ground.
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If you want it to stay dead, you'll have to nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
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I've heard quite a few religious people claim that without God, humanity would lead a life of debauchery, violence and sin.
I'm an atheïst and live a peaceful life; I wonder what those religious people would do without religion.
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I've heard quite a few religious people claim that without God, humanity would lead a life of debauchery, violence and sin. .
Kinda like we do now?
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Yes, and we live in a world that has gotten a lot of its mores from Christianity. And then say we don't need it or something similar for those mores.
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... because Jesus invented the Golden Rule?
There are things Western Civilization did get from Christianity, but it's clear to anyone paying enough attention to history that those things also could have been picked up from other places if there was no Christianity.
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Whatever happenned to "empathy"?
Most people are nice simply because they don't want to hurt others.
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but if you've ever talked to true atheists raised in a truly atheist environment, you would probably consider them somewhat sociopathic.
Secular humanism has no dependencies on religious culture; empathy and reasoning serves as foundations, and much more caring and considerate foundations than religion, as it is much less dependent on sometimes quite bigoted and inconsiderate dogma.
On the other hand, I've certainly noted common sociopathic tendencies among religious adherents...
Re:sociopathic athiests (Score:2)
So let me get this straight, if I don't believe that the obviously made-up and utilitarian "God" abstract concept has a physical instantiation of some kind in the universe, I'm probably sociopathic.
The one thing I'll agree with you on is that religion educates child-like, non-independent thinking people on the benefits of social reciprocity.
But you could just explain the benefits of social reciprocity with a bunch of other stories that don't involve weird-ass supernatural deities
intervening all over the pla
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A bunch. They get cash for every device that has their market on it. They don't give that way.
You're Right! Anything is Possible! (Score:2)
...when you've sold your immortal soul to Mephistopheles.
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Here's the biggest point: at best, that article is an op-ed. It's quite a bit light (read: completely) on facts.
If google was "slow moving" by now, we wouldn't have android continuing to move forward among other products google has produced (and continues to).
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Really, the largest software company's "game" was search engines, and Google displaced the giant from their perch?
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...he competed with, and beat the largest software company at its own game.
Either you're saying the "largest software company" is Yahoo/Altavista, or you're saying that search and web advertising is Microsoft's "own game".
Either way, DOES NOT COMPUTE.
slow news day filler? (Score:2)
zero impact opinion piece go!
But... but... (Score:2)
But... but... if you make a bunch of incitement statements without backing them up in any way whatsoever, your audience is guaranteed to grow!
I mean, it works for Rush Limbaugh! You're not being fair. Why shouldn't this Ron Miller guy get to do the same thing!
Grow up (Score:2)
Corporate Structure (Score:3)
If you want to do new things, then have the entrepreneurs start a new company. Google is in the position to buy them out when they come up with something good. Isn't this the corporate way? Google is too big to do everything in house. I seem to remember they acquired youtube and picasa. If Larry Page wants to work at a small company then he should quit and if you ask me he seems a bit sentimental.
Re:Corporate Structure (Score:5, Interesting)
You can do that internally
If he really wants to shake things up, create 'micro-startups' inside Google. Put it in a separate building, isolated area, whatever. Shoot any managers or bean-counters that approach the area
Worked for Apple
Re:Corporate Structure (Score:5, Funny)
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Not a bad idea, but if it is too isolated but without the ability to independently sell or market its products then you get another Xerox PARC situation where you re-invent the world and then nobody at corporate understands what you do or wants to sell something that will compete with the existing bread and butter business. Can also breed resentment with other parts of the organization that are trying to compete internally and externally but with all the corporate overhead that their micro start-up peers
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You can do that internally
If he really wants to shake things up, create 'micro-startups' inside Google. Put it in a separate building, isolated area, whatever. Shoot any managers or bean-counters that approach the area
Worked for Apple
You still can't get around the thing that makes it one company, rather than a bunch of companies: if your internal startup is crap, it won't die. You have to kill it, or wait for the whole firm to go down. This means management will, despite your best efforts at separation, meddle with which ones it likes and which ones it doesn't. You will get good ideas fighting with bad ones for resources. You have the same problem of "how do I pick a winner" and the same incentives for management ("if I let project x li
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All of the things you suggest could happen, but they mostly happen because of the sentiments that may be attached to an internal startup by its "venture capital". A regular start-up is funded by venture capital that is willing to wait for a return, but only to a point; they know when to cut their losses and move on. You suggest that an internal venture capitalist (especially one who is investing company money, not their own money) might not be willing to do the same.
That can be avoided if Google has or hi
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And require the managers of the micro-startups to mortgage their houses and families, threaten to bankrupt them if they don't succeed in two years, and make anyone working for them to be paid in unvested options instead of salary, just like real startups.
Get rid of much of the management structure (Score:2)
Set up an internal market using a fake currency which is converted into real money when paid to employees and external suppliers.
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Google Beenz. :-D
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Or even better, help them start a new company. If the angel funded startup makes good, make the full buyout by Google the exit strategy for second round investors.
Why did Google choose to become big? (Score:2)
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I wouldn't say that big companies are "inherently evil", but I would agree that they're not as good as small ones. Big companies lead to less competition, less innovation, Too Big To Fail Syndrome, and a host of other socially and economically detrimental things. If I ran the world, I'd put a cap on the size of any corporation, probably based on the dollar-amount of business they do. If a company exceeded that cap for any period of time, they'd have to break it up, by geography, product line, sales vs.
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No, that's your opinion.
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One could argue that if Google allowed the hole it currently fills to be filled by a more evil company, the world would be substantially damaged. As a trivial example, imagine the world if MS dominated search. That would be net-more-evil than Google being a big company.
Good luck ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Having worked for a company which went from fairly small and agile, to being publicly traded and fully "corporate" ... it's a one way trip.
Once the accountants and management layers are in place, it's too late. Then, it's mostly becoming more bureaucratic and management heavy and filling out TPS reports.
Sure, if you try hard you can give some room to you engineering staff to actually do their jobs ... however, I have seen entire development teams grind to a halt as someone from finance gets everybody bogged down in paperwork and reports to explain what it is that we do.
Of course, nobody in finance was capable of recognizing that the labor costs of the people they'd derailed far exceeded the middle-level idiot who insisted that everything be done in the first place.
While I admit that these people actually do useful things, sometimes they can stop a lot of people from building the products just so their spreadsheets are up to date.
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The essential problem is that once you create a management, accountancy, HR or other department, the people within it will find work to keep themselves employed whether there is an actual need for them to do it or not.
Hence TPS reports, meetings, paperwork, etc. The purpose of this flack is not to help the company, increase efficiency, or anything of the sort; its purpose is to keep management employed.
Google has a very simple way of dealing with any oncoming "management" crisis. Fire say, 50%, of all manag
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God yes! Most corporate jobs are about helping management do their busy work while you fight in vain to get some of the actual work for the product done. I'd say about 90% of what every major corporation does is unproductive BS to help justify some execs job. And I'd say about 90% of the projects I've worked on get thrown out before ever going to production because of management constantly side-tracking us with their brilliant "ideas," turning 3 month projects into 3 year projects.
Re:Good luck ... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's funny how that works. The bean counters manage to assign an actual cost to every bit of trivia and insist on tracking it and justifying every last penny. Except for accounting. They assume that accounting costs nothing and so it's all pure benefit. You'll never see a cost/benefit analysis of requiring quarter hourly time accounting for salaried workers.
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It's not just accountants.
Long ago, I worked on a project that had experienced some churn in project management. We got a new guy, and he wanted us to track our time in five minute increments.
I more of less told him that if that's what he wanted, 1-2 minutes out of every 5 minutes would be dedicated to tracking which bucket any
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Then you have shitty accountants.
I am student accountant (To be specific, an ACCA (UK) [wikipedia.org] student), and one of the major themes of *any* activity were are taught to perform is it's cost benefit analysis.
Taking the poster below's example, if the data gained from the five minute increment provides less benefit, and is actually hindering work, then you do NOT need that data, period.
An accountant, (or at least, a *Professional* accountant) ought to have enough common sense to know that much, it's practically part
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Wait, you didn't have a TPS code for filling out TPS sheets?
they should breakup up before the Feds make them (Score:4, Interesting)
If Google broke up into 10 smaller entities, it could increase shareholder value and spur more innovation. Plus with the Feds going after them, they could just say, "oh, that was the old company. we're a new company."
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Re:they should breakup up before the Feds make the (Score:4, Insightful)
I actually think that is a good idea. The problem is that Google doesn't have 10 profitable enterprises, it has one profit center and a number of initiatives that might become profitable some day, but which have almost no chance of standing on their own without the search engine's money and market share behind it at the moment.
So, the choice is either, take a risk with them and break off, or see if you can shepherd them to profitability and then spin them off. The former is probably going to be the path to the small, dynamic business he wants to be with again, but its an open question if he wants to accept the bad parts of that model (chaos, long hours, uncertainty, significant possibility of abject failure) along with the good.
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If Google broke up into 10 smaller entities, it could increase shareholder value and spur more innovation.
Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, HP, Dell and EMC first.
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Are the Feds really after them anyway? Other than in a recruiting sense?
"Oh, Really?" seems to work for most companies. I don't see why Google would need to use the "old company" excuse.
The search part of Google isn't that big (Score:5, Insightful)
Google is smaller than it looks. The core search engine team was about 90-100 people as of a few years ago.
97% of the revenue still comes from search ads. Google has a huge array of money-draining services, some of which are labor-intensive. They're not generating much revenue. Mostly, they're defensive measures to ward off Microsoft. GMail, Google Docs, the free hosting service, etc. exist to threaten Microsoft. It's not like offering spreadsheets on line is a viable business. Even the whole Android phone thing is mostly there to prevent Microsoft from monopolizing that space. (It's also a threat to Apple. Google pays Apple $100 million a year to stay on the iPhone. If it weren't for Android, Apple might provide their own closed iPhone search engine.)
Google spends an incredible amount of money on non-revenue defensive measures.
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It's not like offering spreadsheets on line is a viable business.
In 2011, I believe its much more viable than shipping perpetually outdated binaries around. We are in a service economy, not an industrial one.
Even the whole Android phone thing is mostly there to prevent Microsoft from monopolizing that space.
You mean the computing as a service industry? Lets be very clear here. Microsoft has 2 products in a service economy: Windows and Office. And those products are very threatened by lightweight OSes and networked applications. gmail works on phones, linux, OS X, Windows, netbooks. Windows and Office do not.
Also, the change here is the shift from the multi-hundre
Re:The search part of Google isn't that big (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody wants to "own" music anymore. Its a chore. People just want to listen to music.
I take exception to that. I want to own music. A good part of my collection is made up of rare LPs CDs and Tapes that I have converted to MP3s. They are not offered by any service out there. I am worried that plenty of what they do have, will go away because it to much bother for them to keep it online.
The only way I know of keeping all the music I like is owning it. Even if I was willing to rent it, the major labels are not willing to be land lords.
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I'm like you. I buy music I like. I listen to Pandora for the first half of each month to find new music, but I don't pay for Pandora One because, in the second half of each month, I like to listen to music I've already paid for.
And yet.... I don't think we're like 20 year old kids any more. (My apologies if you are still 20 - but given that your UID is pretty close to mine we're probably a similar age.) We remember when there were no cell phones, when most houses didn't have a computer, when portable m
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I want to own music. I have used Pandora a few times, mostly to find new similar music (since I usually listen to podcasts when I used to listen to the radio -- yes, even though I own a lot of music, I used to listen to the radio too).
If it were *with no commercials* and VERY VERY low cost, I could see using a streaming service in addition to owning music. (I see it like Tivo vs Netflix. I like to Tivo shows, since not everything is available via Netflix (esp current news).)
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97% of the revenue still comes from search ads.
Google seems to be going through the same pattern as a lot of other high tech juggernauts. They invent one or two hit products that turn them into a household name. Unfortunately for them (lucky for a competitive market) despite having mountains of cash corporate bureaucracy sets in and they never really get much else going.
<rant>
Slightly off topic but it seems like these giant high tech companies tend to be bad stock investments. Initially they seem good because they have explosive revenue growt
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Google has a huge array of money-draining services, some of which are labor-intensive. They're not generating much revenue.
Just like Microsoft.
Mostly, they're defensive measures to ward off Microsoft.
Uh...
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What does Chrome have to do with the fact Google pays to be the primary search in Firefox?
Just a self promoting blogger (Score:5, Insightful)
Looks like we have some joker promoting hits on his own blog with /.
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i'm having a difficult time getting past the 70's porn mustache.
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I was thinking Borat [neweurasia.net], myself.
I'll spare you the pictures in the mankini. ;-)
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I'm pretty sure Borat's mustache was intentionally 70's pornish.
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Best new word ever.
We can have shoe pornish. Pornish game hens. Crime and pornishment.
Sorry, I've not seen much porn from the 70s, so I can't speak to the mustache attributes -- though, I gather they weren't the only things to be out-of-control hairy back then. ;-)
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That may have something to do with this [slashdot.org].
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Do not want!
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What gave it away? The linked "rsmiller510" or the credit at the end that said
— Ron Miller is a freelance technology journalist, blogger, FierceContentManagement editor, and contributing editor at EContent magazine.
OK, he looks like Borat. The article may not have a whole lot, but it's not that bad, and it's disclosed that it's someone's opinion. Slashdot does far worse on a regular basis.
That's easy (Score:2)
Just maintain the company as small groups of 10-30 people whose customer is Google. Give them regulated autonomy. Give them intensive like monetizing what they produce (a vested interest) backed by contracts so that they willingly give Google their pipe dreams. So what you get is small businesses within Google without quite so much stress concerning financial matters or marketing or patents. It also means if someone thinks up the next killer app they will be proportionately rewarded unlike the guy from
When you can't turn the clock back .... (Score:4, Funny)
What? (Score:2)
And this is a summary of what, exactly?
Amazon Cloud music should scare Page (Score:2)
Big companies can do more but tend to do it at a slower pace. As long as Google keeps their winning percentage high (Apple rather than Microsoft), they'll do fine.
If Slashdot had featured this story yesterday, Gmail vs. Wave would be the textbook Google management case. Wave is genius technology with analogs to inbox, contacts, and message threads, yet Google never integrated it into Gmail so it never got a chance to gain traction. Was that Schmidt making the hard decision not to screw up a beloved Gmail f
Interviewing process a lot to be desired (Score:2)
A good friend of mine recently interviewed at Google for a technical position and was turned down; a first in his career and a nasty shock for the man. This is a guy who has done fundamental work in his field, which is admittedly not web-programming but an underlying discipline that Google is now trying to get into. He said that he was interviewed by a bunch of fairly young programmers, a couple of whom admitted that they had not even read his resume. One of them said `My job is to ask you about search', an
Skunkworks can be the answer (Score:2)
If you're finding it hard to move quickly then having a "skunkworks" group at a company can help, so long as you can afford to burn cash on failures from time to time. It is useful to have a group of people with a budget to develop new products or ideas without management interference.
More? Or Less? Which? (Score:2)
in one paragraph, to improve innovation:
and then, two paragraphs later:
Which is it that they want to do? Decrease the number of projects, or free the engineers to start new projects?
too big (Score:2)
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When is a company like Google big/diverse enough? (Score:2)
Incentive (Score:2)
1. Keep the incentives high.
2. Stay cool. The only way to do this is release cool products.
3. Smart startup strategy
a. Stop stomping on startups lest you want to suffer Microsoft-itis
b. But, don't buy too many startups. You end up with people just making the deal to get rich and look good.
c. Engage startups, help them, and get them on your side. If they truly align, then buy them. If they flop, their good engineers will flock your way.
4. Stay
Actually, they can turn back the clock (Score:3)
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Let's Hope That the Return of Page (Score:2)
Does as much for Google as Jerry Yang was able to do for Yahoo!
A Possibility (Score:4, Interesting)
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That organization is used by, believe it or not, Microsoft. The reason it's not necessarily ideal is because the sections you create don't have much incentive to work together. On the contrary, Microsoft groups are always bickering and fighting each other.
It could be done as long as you ensure your sections are far divided from each other-- the Xbox group would be a good example at Microsoft. They have virtually nothing to do with the rest of the company, and they're one of the healthiest, most innovative,
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Why don't they just start some semi-autonomous collectives?
Merge one back in if it comes up with anything decent.
I think their related worry must why like 70 percent (off top of my head)
of their new innovative product rollouts (as opposed to extensions to gmail
and improvements on search) seem to be failing in the market,
and how they can crack the Facebook nut.
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Let's hope they invent 'Google Time Machine'!
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Google succeeded because it was the best search. But Larry didn't know at the time of creating the algorithm that they had the best algorithm. They were guessing, like everyone else in the search industry (altavista, snap, ask, lycos, etc). It just so happens that their algorithm did a much better job.
Considering several other big players at the time based their algorithms solidly on "What the page claims to be about" in retrospective it's not that hard to understand why Google had the best algorithm. Hell, when I first read a description of Google's new "magic" algorithm (there were a lot of "oohs" and "aahs" about it back when Google was the new kid on the block) my initial reaction was "Huh, I thought that was how they all did it..." followed by disbelief at the idea that major search engines were bas