Graywolf Fights the Dark Side

@graywolf, @sugarrae and @streko team
up to defeat the Evil Empire.
“its kinda like star wars … when the republic turned into the empire … (hint google isnt the jedi knights)”
– @graywolf

@graywolf, @sugarrae and @streko team
up to defeat the Evil Empire.
“its kinda like star wars … when the republic turned into the empire … (hint google isnt the jedi knights)”
– @graywolf
What if CNN Showed a 500 Error? Not all the time, just occassionally when you turn the channel to 43, or whatever channel it is in your cable system. Maybe it just did it when there was a big game on, the superbowl, the Obama Inaugeration. Maybe it was just a few users. It would still suck.
YouTube is trying to bring TV broadcasting to the masses with their new YouTube Live, and proved (at least to me) that they are not going to be the defacto winner
Maybe it was Akamai’s Fault. Who knows.
Presidential Communication Will Be Google-Branded.
President-elect Barack Obama has announced that he will be using YouTube to send out his fireside chats every week. The hype-driven media once again lost the plot and failed to realize that he is endorsing a specific brand and promoting it every week to the American people by featuring YouTube as his main provider. Every week, millions of americans and billions of non-americans will see the YouTube logo next to our president.
Will Google Launch a Flash Competitor? I say yes. Steve Gillmor seems to agree.
In an extremely insightful post on it here, Gillmor guesses that Google has just made the first step towards creating a Flash and Silverlight competitor (Gillmor focuses only on Silverlight seemingly because so many in the valley love to hate Microsoft).
Back a few months ago, I thought it was an absolutely brilliant move when Microsoft struck a deal to only allow folks to watch the olympics if they installed silverlight. Second, perhaps, to just making it part of the operating system, but we know where that gets you. Now Google is requiring Gmail users to install their own common runtime (Gillmor presumes) in order to use thier new video calling feature they launched in direct competition to sites like Skype, TokBox, and free video chat service SnapYap. They could have written this in Flash, but I’m sure their licensing fees to Adobe would be massive, and Google probably took less in capex to develop their own code, they have the distribution channel, plus they can deploy a much richer experience.
Google is slowly replacing Microsoft as the company people love to hate. While I may have a love-hate relationship with Google myself, sometimes it really irks me when mainstream media outlets do it. [editors note: we are not main stream, and with zero readership, hardly an outlet]
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Security/Webroot-Says-Hackers-Exploit-Google-Trends-With-Malware/
This article from eWeek (again, I use mainstream loosely) explains how hackers use Google Trends to figure out what is a timely news article people might search for, then monopolize on the search terms by writing fake blogs.
Is there any reason to mention Google in this article, other than making it worth reading? You could replace “google trends” with “reading the newspaper” and it’s just as plausible. The mere mention of Google is the only reason this article is interesting. Get a clue eWeek.
Oh wait… they have one. They write an article about Google, put GOOG in it and it comes up during a google finance search… remind me to….