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NYT On Google's Role In Internet Advertising

prostoalex writes "John Markoff and G. Pascal Zachary from The New York Times take a look at Google, its already dominant position in the field of Web search and its increasing influence in the field of Internet advertising. Google is driving advertisers away from larger advertising venues, like AOL-TW et al., since (surprise!) people actually pay attention to relevant text links and are quite annoyed by pop-ups and similar "innovations". Some interesting data about Google: number of employees is about 800, number of buildings is 4, number of servers is 54K, for which there are about 100K microprocessors and 261K hard drives. This is claimed to be the largest computing system in the world, and that also raises barriers for anyone entering the field of Web search - most of companies out there can only imagine a Beowulf cluster of these, let alone build them so that the Web searches are delivered within a second."

3 of 276 comments (clear)

  1. The Link by spoonist · · Score: 5, Informative

    The REAL link to the article is this:

    In Searching the Web, Google Finds Riches
  2. Re:concentration of power worrisome? censorship? by More+Trouble · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is all the more vicious since the user is not warned that certain sites are censored.
    Nonsense. Search Google for "scientology+leaflet". Scroll to the bottom of the page. Note the warning. Note that the warning links to the list of removed links.

    Concentration of power is worrisome. But complaints should follow a problem, not a concern.

    :w
  3. Re:NYTimes registration. by Odin's+Raven · · Score: 5, Informative
    It was starting to piss me off, so I created:
    Login: sladotter
    Password: slashdot
    Feel free to use it.

    I think this comes up every time a NY Times article is linked. Okay, my turn to remind people: If you don't want to register with their site, don't bother creating bogus accounts. It's a nice thought, but it's really not necessary.

    Instead, just go to their archives section, where the articles are available without the need for an account. Just replace "www" with "archives" in the link. Example for this article:

    http://archives.nytimes.com/2003/04/13/technology/ 13GOOG.html
    --
    A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to swear that only the other one snores.