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Google v. Microsoft

ph43thon writes "The New York Times business section has an article, The Coming Search Wars, about Google and Microsoft. It's fairly long and pretty interesting. Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application. Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy."

602 comments

  1. Lets hope that the result is progress by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Could do with some competition, Internet getting very dull

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    1. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Abit667 · · Score: 4, Funny

      The Internet is definatly getting dull since Goatse was shutdown.

    2. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Neurotoxic666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Google staff themselves have already shown much progress with little or no serious competition. Their search engine has nothing to do with the old yahoo and altavista that were returning 50% advertisement and 49% uninteresting results.

      And sincerely, I doubt Microsoft will come up with anything more efficient that Google.

      Progress? That's Google's job. Competition? Microsoft is no competition in this area. Google wins by having a well-thought search system that beats anything else.

      Yes, I am biased. Google is "da shit" =)

      --
      You are more than the sum of what you consume. Desire is not an occupation.
    3. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's unlikely to be significant progress. Centralized information retrieval has run its course. We haven't seen anything really new in a while. Improvements will come from distributed/peer-to-peer/grid IR.

    4. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      http://www.petitiononline.com/Goatse/petition.html

      Not that I am a fan of petitions or anything.

    5. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Alien54 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Google executives also say they believe that Microsoft is systematically pursuing Web sites downgraded by Google, which punishes companies for trying to manipulate their rankings. The company is striking partnerships with unhappy Google customers.

      I just got to wonder what this will do for the quality of results I see in the Microsoft product. What will it get, nothing but spammers as a result?

      I mean, think about...

      ;)

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    6. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So, without any evidence, you've proclaimed Google the winner for all eternity because you like them? I need some extra money -- which jersey of the SuperBowl teams do you prefer?

      If you don't like Microsoft, fine, but to call them "no competition" is brutally ridiculous. Microsoft is competition in any area they wish to persue, because although their actual product is not always the best in its class, their ability to sell it is above anyone else out there. Plus, in the "real world" outside Slashdot, the name alone will garner a ton of interest as they delve into the search biz.

      As much as everyone likes to abuse the term "monopoly" in regards to Microsoft, they never would have been in a position to abuse power if not for some pretty impressive corporate skills in several areas. If Google ignores that and thinks like you, it's at their own peril.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    7. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by JPriest · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft would have to do more than design an efficient search algorithm to beat Google. MSN is a portal, not a search engine. In order to make the portal a better search engine than Google, they would have to first stop being a portal.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    8. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by BeyondALL · · Score: 1

      Competition?
      Google is soon to become the worlds largest religion, there can be only one :)

      --
      "If you keep an open mind people will throw a lot of garbage in it."
    9. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by S.Lemmon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People seem to forget how Google became popular in the first place. It came out of nowhere to beat the likes of Altavista, Yahoo, and even Microsoft's built in search.

      Why? While everyone else was busy making visitors suffer through "portals" full of annoying crap, Google has a plain bare-bones interface that just did what you came for - search.

      I think that even more than it's accuracy was the reason it succeeded; and simple, clean interfaces that don't coat the user with cloying, butterfly-laden, happy, shiny GUI seems to be an anathema to Microsoft.

    10. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Jondor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But then again, what is it that they want to accomplice? If it is to become the best searchengine, they have a lot off work to do..
      But if the main point is to keep people inside their MSN network things are much easier. Just put a search field on every page and there you go. If the results are oke'ish, most people will be satisfied and MS can put their commercials and such. After all if the MS monopoly has proven anything it is that barely good enough is more than enough for a lot of people..

      --
      Nobody expects the spanish inquisition!
    11. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Frymaster · · Score: 4, Interesting
      So, without any evidence, you've proclaimed Google the winner for all eternity because you like them?

      i'm proclaiming google the winner because i am actively working against the microsoft search by participating in the boycott

      if you have a website and want to participate in the boycott it's darn simple.

      1. add the following lines to your robots.txt

        User-agent: MSNBOT
        Disallow: /

      2. go register yr site with the boycott page at http://www.idlewords.com/boycott.pl

      then, sit back in triumph that you have struck another blow to the jugular of the beast of redmond.

      no. really.

    12. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Have no fear!

    13. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      Ladies and gentlemen: the new definition of "misplaced ego".

      You've sure stuck "another blow" alright. Where will I get my fix of whiny tech-bloggers if your site isn't available on MSN?

      Oh, right, EVERYWHERE ELSE.

    14. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by KevMar · · Score: 1

      I would love to see a good alternative to google. not because I dont like google, but I like a second choice. or atleast a different view

      --
      Im a gamer, not a grammer major. This post is full of spelling and grammer mistakes.
    15. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Frymaster · · Score: 1
      er. it's meant to be "tounge in cheek". you must be aware of the concept of sarcasm since you use it so liberally yourself...

      sheesh.

    16. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by nsingapu · · Score: 5, Informative

      Idealogically, a boycot against MSN is a fnatastic idea, the problem is that from a marketing perspective (for commercial sites) its suicide.

      Each free click a site receives is invaluable, to the point that a whole industry is built upon manipulating search results (generally those of google, because thats where the vast majority of traffic comes from) in favor of bettering the positioning of their clients. Try googling for "seo","search enging optimization","search engine placement" and the like and you will notice the sheer number of results speak for themselves.

      Ironically enough, results provided via this industry often cost more and perform worse then google adwords (first because it takes some odd months for any results to show, and second because googles sorting algorithm change every month or two and maintaining good position takes constant manipulation), but the point is, that the top five results in any engine, be it google or msn, is money in the pocket. As such business entities will set idealology aside; disallowing msnbot is not a viable solution for any commercial entity.

    17. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      What if Microsoft make Google resolve to MSN Search in Internet Explorer? That would force all users of IE (who are generally fools anyway) to use Microsoft's shitty Google copycat. :-)

      Oh shit, better not give them ideas.

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    18. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      Cool, so all Microsoft have to do to get around the boycott is not to load robots.txt when they spider your site.

      Here's a better trick: return a list of all words in the scrabble dictionary if the user agent matches theirs. That will either make them ignore the page, or it will pollute their index. Either way they deserve what they get. :-)

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    19. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by damiam · · Score: 1
      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    20. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by BuckaBooBob · · Score: 1

      I Smell a IE Patch in the works... Wonder Why.. Hmmm..

      --
      Who needs WiFi when we can have Packet Over Sheep! http://datacomm.org/PoS-InternetDraft.txt
    21. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by x0n · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, one thing stands out fairly obviously: Netscape vs. Microsoft was a battle of "steadily getting worse" versus "steadily getting better" software respectively. Moz 0.9 was a dozen times better than v4.7, if you ask me. IE6 may now be bloatware, but netscape 4 was just plain terrible. Nothing worked, everything was hacked into a giant monolithic C program hacked together by undisciplined students.

      OTOH, Google is already a nice piece of kit and Microsoft have nothing comparable, as yet.

      - Oisin

      --

      PGP KeyId: 0x08D63965
    22. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by firewrought · · Score: 5, Funny
      if you have a website and want to participate in the boycott it's darn simple

      You forgot a step. Before doing this, you should take a look at your own website. If the content is crap that nobody wants to read, you should block google's spider instead fo MSN's. That way, MSN search results turn out to be useless and frustrating. :-)

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    23. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by mobby_6kl · · Score: 2, Informative

      Altavista didn't have any portal crap, all they had was an email service. Web and image search and then a few tabs for audio, news and such.

    24. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by NixLuver · · Score: 1
      "Last week, Microsoft released a test version of a special set of software buttons for its browser designed to direct users to its MSN search and related services."...

      Anyone reading this should almost certainly be thinking "Netscape"... Even if it's remotely executed, they can make the search engine appear to be part of the browser, and most users will never know the difference. I think the whole point will be to make the search process more transparent and less intrusive for users. All we can hope for is that users realize that they are being fed CRAP by MicroSloth. *sigh*.

    25. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Frymaster · · Score: 4, Insightful
      from a marketing perspective (for commercial sites) its suicide.

      i totally agree. i think the point of the boycott is to reduce the breadth of the msn search results - not eliminate all sites from the engine.

      breadth is important because it allows a search engine to say "x million sites indexed" - which to a lot of people is an indicator of a search engine's quality. additionally, breadth allows for better focusing of queries.

      so, if msn gets all the commercial sites but misses out on the blogs and hobby sites that don't require revenue... all the better for google.

    26. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Seeing as googlebombs seem to be in fashion at the moment I'd like to propose Microsoft and MSN.

    27. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fleener · · Score: 4, Insightful
      > I doubt Microsoft will come up with anything more efficient that Google.

      What does efficiency or quality of service got to do with anything? This is America. It's not about the better product. It's about who wins.

      Google has no leverage over an operating system that is a gateway to its service. There are a million and one tricks that could be employed to cripple Google usage. So what if Google wins a court battle six months or a year (or longer) down the road? In the meantime, Google would sink. And you'd be assuming a lot about Google winning in court, given what we've seen the "Justice" department doing under the current administration.

    28. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by S.Lemmon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Think not? Just take a look at their history. They stared very simple, sure, but each year the search gets smaller and smaller while the crap gets deeper and deeper. "Portal mode" peaks around 2000 and starts back down as they try to win back some of the Google converts.

    29. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You use Google lately? Because I have to go through at least one page of results before finding a useful one. It sucks, and I am getting sick of it.

      I tried to look up information on a certain dog breed, and nothing but links to portals, or places that sold them (or claimed to but didn't really).

      It's crap, now.

    30. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Microsoft can win by adding a line to everyone's hosts file redirecting people to Microsoft search when they type in google.com.

      Or pop up a page in IE that says "this webpage is incompatible with IE, you can use MSN Search instead" when you type google.com in the search bar.

      Of course, this is illegal, but we've all seen how effective the DOJ has been against this convicted monopolist.

    31. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by btakita · · Score: 1

      Even Google has much room for improvement.

      It will be interesting to see if Google can still innovate as the *Big* company in the search industry.

    32. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, without any evidence, you've proclaimed Google the winner for all eternity because you like them?

      You're confused, or have reading problems. That isn't what he said, so your argument is based on what I like to call "Made-Up Bullshit".

      There may be other popular terms for your techinque :-)

    33. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by malakai · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Lets beat-up on Japanese import cars because they function better and are cheaper than our domestic breed. Lets hold rallies where we use basball bats on Toyotas. Lets boycott them, tax them, tariff them, and do whatever it takes to make sure our incumbent manufactures have the upper hand.

      Yeah, that'll work. That'll get us what we want.

      Thank god you people are a minority. If MS wants to build a rival search engine, and hook it up to _THEIR_ operating system, good for them. If they both delivered the same quality of searches, and had the same ease of use, then the market will simply kill the one that is less efficent in meeting those metrics. This is how we evolve.

      You think Netscape died because of MS properietary hooks and IE/win9x/win2k pre-installed? Hell no, their code sucked. Their app sucked. IE came along early on and was orders of magnitude faster. I remember those early days, when the first IE browser came out, it simply 'felt' more professional. The Netscape client felt hackish and slow. Programming for both had it's in's and outs, but Netscape quirks were the most annoying. IE4 was a major milestone, NS4 was simply broke.

      Redmond _does_ innovate. research.microsoft.com is full of innovation. You can bitch that they 'stole' all their scientist from other research groups, or universities, but whats the point? If MS pays them more money and they enjoy the MS Research environment moreso than their previous environments, then MS is doing all of us a favor. They are encourging and supporting bright minds to make our life and our work easier.

      I'd like to see them really take a shot at searching. Both on the collection side, the analysis side, and the User Interface side. All aspects of the process can benefit from cuttin-edge technology floating around the MS Research centers.

      Who in their right mind other than a luddite would not want to see new innovation vieing for market share in something as essential as Search services? Are you saying your simply happy with the status quo of Google? Well good thing Sergey, Larry, and Craig didn't think that when they were getting donated machines and cash from Intel, DEC, SUN, NSF, NASA and DARPA to create their searching technology.

      We need innovation, and if you want it to come at it's optimum and most efficent pace, you must have competition driving it.

      Intellectual freedom cannot exist without political freedom; political freedom cannot exist without economic freedom; a free mind and a free market are corollaries.
      - Ayn Rand "For The New Intellectual," For The New Intellectual

    34. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by stor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      a. Go to http://search.msn.com
      b. Type in the keywork "linux"
      c. Click "Search"
      d. Examine the top 2 results:

      1. Buy Linux software at the Amazon.com software store.

      2. Find great deals on Linux software and accessories. Also find millions of other items in over 18,000 categories.

      It was even funnier a few months ago: one of the top search results was some "migrating from Linux to Windows" article.

      Microsoft's search engine will undoubtedly be geared towards selling their products and the products of businesses that have a strategic alliance with Microsoft. Doesn't sound like a comprtehensive tool to me.

      Cheers
      Stor

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
    35. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fireboy1919 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      For most sites, boycotting MSN now would be like telling a deaf blind person that they can't listen to your music or watch your movies.

      Google visits my site once or twice a week. Altavista and Inkomi both make regular monthly visits. MSN has paid someone them for that data, because while I have no record of their site's visit, I can find my site on theirs if I look really specifically.

      As for searches, I've had 43 visits thank to google for my piddly non-commercial homepage. Most of my visitors have actually come from Slashdot (unfortunately, my client is not altogether accurate knowing that everything ending in "slashdot.org" is actually the same site, so I don't have an accurate count).

      I believe this is a microcosm of how it is for most sites with respect to google and Microsoft: they do not have an effective search engine.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    36. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Don't forget about TubGirl

      Is she the new goatse?

    37. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      It's fun to poke around and see what some sites have in their robots.txt

      http://www.google.com/robots.txt
      http://www.alt avista.com/robots.txt

      Oddly, MSN and Yahoo! don't seem to have one. Google can sneak in and index MSN!
      =Smidge=

    38. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by chunkwhite86 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But then again, what is it that they want to accomplice? If it is to become the best searchengine, they have a lot off work to do.. But if the main point is to keep people inside their MSN network things are much easier. Just put a search field on every page and there you go. If the results are oke'ish, most people will be satisfied and MS can put their commercials and such. After all if the MS monopoly has proven anything it is that barely good enough is more than enough for a lot of people..

      Precisely. Microsoft doesn't have to be the best search engine to beat google - it just has to convince people that it's "good enough" and that it's easy to use.

      Think about it. People use IE not because it's a better browser, but because that's what comes up when they click on the "Browse the Web" desktop icon. They are too lazy, too uninformed, or simply lack the technical skills required to download and install netscape or mozilla. In other words, using any other browser besides IE has become a chore - you have to download it, install it, configure it, and learn how to use it.

      If Microsoft makes typing in "www.google.com" a chore, no one will use it and M$ will have won. All they have to do is use some strategy in placing their search links. Put a search link on every Microsoft web page. Put one on the taskbar in Windows. Put one on the start menu. Put one on the IE menu, and lastly, redirect all entires in the URL bar to MSN search if it isn't a valid URL.

      They don't have to be best, they have to be easiest and be "just good enough".

      --
      I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
    39. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by rspress · · Score: 1

      Yes, Microsoft rarely has the best product. Microsoft is competition in any area the purse not because they know how to sell but because of deep pockets.

      Since Microsoft will copy another companies product and then undersell that company either by making no profit on the product or by selling it at a loss does not mean they have the ability to sell above anyone else.

      Their tactic is to drive the competition out of business than fill that void. It has worked for them well in the past but with losers such as the Xbox and MSN bleeding money and the competition still very healthy MS is hardly above anyone else.

      Of course MS will make sure that their search engine will be the only one built in to IE and most people will use what is provided for them...a fact not lost on MS. If MS did get split up in the anti-trust suit we would see a different MS today...one that would have to compete on equal footing with its competitors...something Microsoft has never been good at.

    40. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by muleboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of the people I know who once used Netscape and now use IE changed because IE was default on their desktop. My personal experience is that for nontechnical users, the quality of the application doesn't matter that much, it's the ease of use, and especially ease of install. Otherwise, everyone would be switching over to Mozilla at this point, because it is clearly superior to IE. If you know the market share of AOL, and have ever used AOL, you will understand what I'm talking about.

      The problem with the pure-market philosophy, is that it requires good knowledge of products and services to work. That isn't realistic when the average person knows very little about the things they are buying and using.

    41. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Shaklee39 · · Score: 2, Funny

      _Great_ idea! First thing at work tomorrow I am going to disallow the microsoft crawler from our site. I am sure when I tell my boss about the news that I have now blocked the search engine giving us 70,000 page views per month. I can just see him giving me a raise for sticking it to the man! Thanks again!

    42. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Shaklee39 · · Score: 1

      IE6 is bloated? Ummm, please don't make blanket statements without any backup. If anything, people complain that it doesn't have all the extra crap that comes bundled with mozilla and opera such as popup stoppers, javascript debuggers, etc. But since you made the comment, it is your turn to reply.

    43. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOXL!!!! M$ IS GUNNA PAY THSI TIME!@#$@ I BET TEHY WOULD DO SOMETHING LIKE THAT BECAUSE THEY ARE SO EVEL!!!!

      Important Stuff: Please try to keep posts on topic. Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads. Read other people's messages before posting your own to avoid simply duplicating what has already been said. Use a clear subject that describes what your message is about. Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated. (You can read everything, even moderated posts, by adjusting your threshold on the User Preferences Page) Important Stuff: Please try to keep posts on topic. Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads. Read other people's messages before posting your own to avoid simply duplicating what has already been said. Use a clear subject that describes what your message is about. Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated. (You can read everything, even moderated posts, by adjusting your threshold on the User Preferences Page) Important Stuff: Please try to keep posts on topic. Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads. Read other people's messages before posting your own to avoid simply duplicating what has already been said. Use a clear subject that describes what your message is about. Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated. (You can read everything, even moderated posts, by adjusting your threshold on the User Preferences Page)

    44. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Actually, if someone can't find what they need on MSN, they'll switch. If enough sites participate, MSN Search WON'T WORK VERY WELL.

    45. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Woody77 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Put one on the IE menu, and lastly, redirect all entires in the URL bar to MSN search if it isn't a valid URL.

      already done. Actually, if you have the address bar enabled in the explorer windows (as I do, since I like being able to switch directories by typing in a new path instead of clicking with the mouse for a while), you discover that there's also an option to "search from the address bar" that needs to be shut off.

      Evil, evil, evil. I want 404s or 'not found' or 'invalid path', not MSN Search (or worse one of the 8 million XyzSearch websites that are out there squatting on misspelled domain names...)

    46. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Tell them to go here, instead of http://www.google.com: http://216.239.37.99 (use tinyurl to make it better if you want)

    47. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      Something that blatantly anti-competative would be too risky. Even if
      regulators didn't come down on them like a ton of bricks, there would
      still be a PR nightmare to deal with.

      No, Microsoft isn't that stupid.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    48. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by luigi22_ · · Score: 0

      How come when I search for the location of "Hot single geek chicks" there are no results found, huh? Not good enough for me.

      --
      On /., first you get the karma, then you get the power, then you get the women.
    49. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by RylandDotNet · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of when IE first came out and was the only browser to support the tag. The fun thing to do was to set your font to Wingdings, so anybody using IE couldn't read it, but people using Netscape could. Then Netscape adopted MS's (useful, at the time) proprietary tag. I don't know if this is a lesson for Google to keep in mind, but cheesy tricks like denying MSNBOT from spidering your page aren't going to stop Microsoft taking over the search business the way they took over browsing.

    50. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or they could be smart, deal with the fact that google uses Linux, and google on MSN. It would make customers happier, and still keep their MSN people on MSN.

      Not that I want that, its just that I think they need better strategists :-P

    51. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Who, outside of the Slashdot group, is going to follow a stupid boycott like this? Why would they? "I would prefer having less traffic in order to screw Microsoft"? Please. Outside of this place, Microsoft is just another company.

      Also, and you can call this a hunch, I doubt that Microsoft is going to lose sleep over the lack of "M$ droolz, Linux roolz" type sites that will participate. As a user of search engines, I certainly wouldn't mind.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    52. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Replying anonymously eh?

      Still on the testosterone replacement therapy then?

    53. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      One of the sites I'm in charge of gets about 4,500 people hits a day, about 2/3 of which come from the first ten hits on google for any number of search words. The content is dynamically generated, based on magic URI parsing such that /story/nnnn/ pulls item nnnn from a sparsely (50%) populated database that indexes on nnnn. Inktomi (one of MSN's search providers) decided to spider the entire nnnn number space every two days or so starting some months ago, guessing that all nnnn are associated with content, and have continued the practice to this day despite being asked to stop.

      Currently, the Inktomi search engine and users who indirectly arrive via that are given special pages which include the regular content below something that explains the above and which also asks Inktomi to stop its dictionary attack against the server. Last month, Inktomi search results for the entire domain were rolled-back to older versions (prior to the addition of the nastygram) after a short version of the nastygram was added to the <title> (which showed up directly on the search results pages), yet Inktomi still insists on fetching the entire numberspace of pages about twice a week.

      As the web site is revenue-neutral, we could just drop all connections from the Inktomi IP space and not be harmed, but that would be a disservice to readers who don't know better than to use ad-infested search results provided in one way or another by Inktomi.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    54. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by sangreal66 · · Score: 1

      Ok... So you prove that Microsoft's current search engine is fair and comprehensive, and then you use that fact to argue their next one won't be? Makes perfect sense!

    55. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      IE6: ~75MB
      Opera (includes popup blocker, relational database in e-mail client, tabbed browsing, better scaling, built-in CSS stylesheet changing, etc, etc.): 3.2MB
      Mozilla (not as good popup blocker, decent e-mail client, tabbed browsing (not as good)): ~15MB

      I'm thinking IE is bloated, considering it DOESN'T have those features, and Opera is 71.8MB smaller.

    56. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Shaklee39 · · Score: 1

      Ummmm, and where do you get your numbers from? IE is not available as a standalone download as an executable. When you download the ie6setup.exe file which is the FULL ie6 with outlook express for 2k/xp it is 11.6 MB. So please inform everyone where your numbers come from instead of spreading fud.

    57. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Shaklee39 · · Score: 1

      Ah now I see, you conveniently took the quote off the "anywhere from 11MB to 75MB" of microsoft.com and used the highest number. Thanks for your time, your arguments are weak.

    58. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fupeg · · Score: 1
      The problem with the pure-market philosophy, is that it requires good knowledge of products and services to work
      Actually this is completely false. Free markets do not require perfect knowledge or knowledge distribution. Capitalism is based on the "follow don't lead" philosophy. You don't need everything to know what's the optimal choice, just as long as somebody knows just enough and others can follow.

      There were several reasons why MSIE killed Netscape. The biggest was that it was free when Netscape was originally not. As soon as they forced Netscape into giving away Navigator, they killed Netscape's revenue and thus R&D money. Another reason was the integration of IE into Windows. Most of the dll's needed by MSIE are loaded at startup. The issue that Netscape used succesfully against MS in court was that MS pressured PC makers to not include Navigator, whereas MSIE was of course included and labeled as "The Internet."
    59. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by coyotedata · · Score: 1

      There is a much better way then Google-it just will take some work but the results will place Google in the Altavista Class

    60. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That still doesn't disprove that Opera is still in fact lighter than IE.

    61. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by esaloch · · Score: 1

      I was in awwe over how much free-market bullshit you could put in one post. Then you even put an Ayn Rand quote. A free market is not a driving force in innovation. A free market is a driving force in greed and oppression. That is why MS beat Netscape. They managed to force their greed over the NS technology and then oppress others from having NS as the default browser.

    62. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Eskarel · · Score: 1
      Actually that's pretty much exactly why google will be the winner, not necessarily for all time, but for the forseeable future.

      Google has already succeeded in the competition which really mattered back when there were lots of search engines. Now people go to google to get information, everyone knows what google is and everyone who has any idea how to search the web uses google, basically because there isn't really any viable alternative. Microsoft has to succeed in altering the minds of people, they have to make joe sixpack think "microsoft" when he wants to search the web when he already thinks "google".

      In order for microsoft to succeed they would have to compete against a product which has all of the advantages which they usually rely on(name recognition, ease of use, lack of serious competition). They aren't so good at that as they are against lesser known/used products. Nor is the search engine use market expanding(as was browsers). I agree that MS has very little shot here, MSN isn't that successful a portal or ISP to begin with and they've little chance of competing with something which has almost become a word.

    63. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by muleboy · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think the herd mentality can often lead to good choices. I wouldn't say optimal, look at Mozilla vs. IE. The problem is that companies are always throwing out as much disinformation as possible (aka advertising). As an example, a few years ago Google was a great source for product reviews; you could type in a product name and have 2 or 3 hits on the first page that would be good, factual reviews of products. Now you will see 70% junk because companies have figured out how to rig it.

      What I'm really looking forward to is a decent reputation-based opinions system that is open-standards. There has to be a new kind of moderation system to weed out the 99% of all things posted on the internet that are crap, like my post. Slashdot moderation system doesn't cut it. I hardly read Slashdot any more because most of the +5 posts are neither insightful, nor informative, although they are sometimes funny.

      I'm a libertarian at heart, so I understand where you're coming from. At the same time, I'm really disappointed with the free market's failure at developing an information-filtering system like I described that is worth anything. I imagine the solution will probably come from some government-funded grad student working for almost nothing.

    64. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft is no competition in this area. Google wins by having a well-thought search system that beats anything else.

      Do you remember all the third-party TCP/IP network software stacks that used to be available for Windows 3.11 and Win95? Some of them were very well thought out, came with tons of features (sockets call tracing for developers, packet sniffers for network engineers, optimized TCP/IP parameters for dialup users) and were far better ten years ago than what Microsoft's own stack offers today.

      Being better didn't help them survive. Microsoft eliminated all of them by simply treating them as viruses, overwriting their winsock.dlls on detection. It didn't matter that many customers wanted to purchase and use third-party TCP/IP software that was not Microsoft's. Microsoft wanted nothing between their browser and the Internet that they did not control.

      Applying this thinking to Google and Internet search engines, the only thing standing between Microsoft and their ability to insure that it is not possible to enter http://www.google.com/ as the startup home page in IE is the Department of Justice and the threat of antitrust lawsuits, and we've all seen what the Department of Justice does to Microsoft when Microsoft is convicted of being a monopoly and using its monopoly powers to unfair advantage.

    65. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "tabbed browsing (not as good)"

      HUH?

      Tip of the day: ctrl-click

    66. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, because the only reason why the download is often lower than 75MB is that the user may already have the DLLs on their computer from other installations. But that doesn't mean that IE doesn't need those DLLs.

      (puts some more wood on the flames).

    67. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bonhomme_de_neige · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You think Netscape died because of MS properietary hooks and IE/win9x/win2k pre-installed? Hell no, their code sucked. Their app sucked. IE came along early on and was orders of magnitude faster.

      You clearly never used IE 1.0. I did ... or tried to (at that point Netscape was up to about 1.4). Anyway, at the time my ISP required mandatory proxies to be used, and IE had no proxy support. But it did load faster. Notepad loads faster than Netscape too. Always has, always will. Unofortunately it doesn't let you browse the web, and neither did the first few versions of IE.

      The only argument I heard for IE at the time everyone was switching was "it loads instantly" ... but that was due to preloading during boot (by making it the system shell) rather than by any sort of superior code. They didn't care. For a long time it was a vastly inferior browser .. but it was there, and it did the job well enough (barely) that most people just stuck with it.

      As for your rant about the free market, the real market is far from free, and deliberately kept that way. Your (US) government used to think the same way you do back in the 20s, and that's what led to the first Wall Street crash and the Great Depression. If left unchecked the free market tends to converge to just a bunch of monopolies in many industries .. it's been proven many times over that monopolies are bad, and this is what we're seeing here. It's not the "free" market in action, it's MS further tending towards its monopolistic state by grinding out competition. I for one would rather they didn't get there, but that's just me.

      --
      "Why are you watching the washing machine?"
      "I love entertainment, as long as it's clean"
    68. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Actually, they said the average install was 25MB, still making it the largest of the three by far.

    69. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite the correct history. The domain altavista.com wasn't where AltaVista started; altavista.com belonged to an unaffiliated company not Digital. Instead, try the correct archive of Digital's Altavista at www.altavista.digital.com

    70. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Rallion · · Score: 4, Funny

      Still. Look at Google.

      Switching their title graphic constitutes a complete redesign.

    71. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by malakai · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I did use IE 1.0 and 2.0. And I enjoyed that they loaded faster. And yes, they did so because they shared so much in common with the windows shell (explorer.exe, specifically). In my mind, as a developer, it was a good use of code reuse.

      But, 1.0, and 2.0 were still basically rehashes and recompiles of Mosaic. When IE 3.0 came out which was built on new code, the competition truly gave use better technology. IE 4 was simply icing on the cake.

      As for your rant about the free market, the real market is far from free, and deliberately kept that way. Your (US) government used to think the same way you do back in the 20s, and that's what led to the first Wall Street crash and the Great Depression.


      That's simply not true. The monopolies of the early 1900s were government subsidized. They were not free-market based. The gov't, through land grants, created a false economy for Rail Road companies (as just one industry example). I've yet to see a truly free economy, mainly because liberals seem preprogrammed at birth to screw it up, and put their hand into the system.

      I don't think the US is a perfect model by any degree of a hands-off economy. Look at the steel tariffs we used when we were getting our asses handed to us in steel production (production was cheaper, _and_ the steel had to be shipped to the US, that's cheap).

      Monopolies are _bad_. But the only Monopolies I've seen recently are government supported(Original AT&T), or occurred due to collusion among disparate companies (Music CD Prices).

      Microsoft's very success in it's operating system line has laid the groundwork for it's position to eventually be overtaken. Their is such a value in having the 'Next Windows OS' replacement that venture funding will always roll the dice. The potential profit drives companies to constantly assail what some think as 'monopolistic' positions held by MS. If anything, Linux and the spread of it should show once and for all that Microsoft is _not_ a monopoly, and they do not exclusively control the operating system market.

      Have MS collude with AMD or Intel, and a hard drive manufacture, and then come to me and say you believe they are part of a monopoly. Come to me when you buy a PC and can't put any other operating system on it (and that is _not_ palladium, so don't go there).

      Until then, you simply feel you know better than everyone else that purchases MS software. You say Microsoft ground out their competition, but you hold it in such an ugly light because you fail to realize how much personel intrest you've put into anything not Microsoft. Microsoft can never fairly beat a competitor in your eyes. You will always rationalize that even a (in your eyes) superior product that fails to dislodge Microsoft fails not on the grounds it didn't fit the market, but instead on the grounds that MS somehow manipulated the market. Or you fall back on the position long held in the slashdot crowd, that the 'buyers' of the software are stupid, and simply don't know any better. And that is the key to why new software often fails to beat out MS software. MS doesnt think the business user is stupid. They simply think they are different, and market towards it. As long as they have that evolutionary trait, their products will continue to win out.

      What can you bring to the game? Can you beat the current evolutionary alpha-male? What is their weakness? What is yours....

      -malakai
    72. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Neurotoxic666 · · Score: 1

      Are you saying your simply happy with the status quo of Google?

      No. I say I'm happy that Google BROKE the status quo of other inferior search engines.

      I am not against progress, and I am not saying Google is perfect... But compare Google to what we've known before, and yes, it's "da shit", as I said myself earlier.

      Besides, the annooying tendency Microsoft has to do everything half-assed makes me believe we should not expect anything "great" from them. YES, YES, YES! I KNOW most people might end up using MS's "search engine". But that doesn't make it better. My point is that Google's algorithm brings me results I am looking for, while MS will bring most like me return me their sponsored results.

      And to those who said I was bashing MS, you just didn't get my point, or maybe I wasn't clear enough. The fact that MS dominates the market shows that alternatives are still missing something -- but that doesn't mean Microsoft is successful in everything it does.

      I would welcome any serious alternative to Google -- I am just saying that this idea from MS is entirely aimed at keeping their monopoly. Their search engine will not help me get any better results.

      Google is da shit (for now). Period =)

      --
      You are more than the sum of what you consume. Desire is not an occupation.
    73. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Louis+Guerin · · Score: 1

      Oh, Google definitely wouldn't sue about that ...

      L

    74. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by toddestan · · Score: 1

      The whole arguement is pointless, really. IE is tied into the OS, and really can't be seperated. A lot of the dlls and other various files are used by both IE and Windows itself - so if you are trying to add them all up, what do count and what do you ignore.

      IE is still bloated though. You have to go way back to make a comparsion, but compare a Windows 95 install with no IE to Windows 95 with IE 5.5 (or whatever the last release on 95 was). Windows 95 with IE installed is so much slower it's not even funny, especially on the computers that were new back in the Windows 95 days (generally classic Pentium's with 16-32MB of ram).

    75. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by KD5YPT · · Score: 1

      That and google can get very rich suing microsoft on anti-competitive ground. And no amount of lawyer on MS part can let them get away with. Plus the EU, and the DoJ both have an axe to grind with MS. With this, they got a lot of axes they can grind.

      --
      In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
    76. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by ejdmoo · · Score: 1

      You can actually change that setting to search at a number of different search engines, one of which is google, but because of mixed systems between the IE search and the autosearch and the system search, it's hard to find.

    77. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by KD5YPT · · Score: 1

      Two reason for that, one, people have been google bombing, and no matter how good a search algorithm is, some sick and obsessive (or just by accident) can push their results to the top by chance. Two, information on dog breed are mostly static and google tend to give higher rank for pages with frequent updates.

      --
      In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
    78. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by JoelClark · · Score: 2, Interesting

      People use IE not because it's a better browser, but because that's what comes up when they click on the "Browse the Web" desktop icon.

      Sry, but in the 4.0 days, IE beat the hell out of Netscape. Easily. Cry foul if you must, but do it knowing that IE bested Netscape technically, as well as with (perhaps unfair) convenience. I've been in the web-based application business for quite a while and only now is Mozilla looking to be worthy of competing. Of course, nothing beats Konqeror for integration and usefulness (KParts > all), but it's HTML rendering skills need some work. They'll get there. But that's another post...

      The search engine war, if there is to be one, will be interesting to view but the outcome may not please the anti-MS camp. Hmmmm. One thing I just thought of: on my Gnome box I'm looking at a Mozilla screen, specifically the "Search" button that I had to reconfigure to point to Google. Chore? Yes. Same thing that MS will do? Likely. But I guess what's good for one...

      jc

    79. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by The+Snowman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can actually change that setting to search at a number of different search engines, one of which is google, but because of mixed systems between the IE search and the autosearch and the system search, it's hard to find.

      That's not the point. The point is that "most users" won't know how or care about changing that option.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    80. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bonhomme_de_neige · · Score: 1
      That's simply not true. The monopolies of the early 1900s were government subsidized. They were not free-market based. The gov't, through land grants, created a false economy for Rail Road companies (as just one industry example). I've yet to see a truly free economy, mainly because liberals seem preprogrammed at birth to screw it up, and put their hand into the system.

      That's funny, what I remember from history classes is that after WWI and into the early twenties, the US government pursued what was called a "laissez-faire" strategy - based on Smith's theory that the markets would become efficient by themselves. However every major industry collapsed to monopolies on its own (this will always happen when marginal costs of production are low and initial setup costs are high, since newcomers must face a high setup cost to even get in the game while the established players can continue to churn out their products or provide services.. a good example of this is the airline industry, maybe not in the US but in many countries like Australia and Switzerland), and caused market saturation. You can't tell me there were no monopolies when the American word for "vaccuum cleaner" became "Hoover" and the word for "tissue" became "Kleenex". During that time Ford was about the only brand of car you could buy.

      The reason that every industry folded into a monopoly was because of the advent of mass production that ended up lowering the marginal production cost of _anything_ to ridiculously low (compared to what they had been before) levels, and they did everything they could to lower it even further (remember Henry Ford saying "You can have any colour, as long as it's black"). How were the automotive and household goods industries government subsidised?

      You don't see many monopolies now (excluding airlines) because after the first crash laws were put in place to prevent the monopolies from forming. Coincidentally, it was the lack of innovation caused by these monopolies (who had no incentive to innovate but only churned out more and more of the same) that cause the markets to saturate.

      Microsoft's very success in it's operating system line has laid the groundwork for it's position to eventually be overtaken. Their is such a value in having the 'Next Windows OS' replacement that venture funding will always roll the dice. The potential profit drives companies to constantly assail what some think as 'monopolistic' positions held by MS.

      Examples? What companies have tried to overtake MS by producing the "Next Windows Replacement"? AFAIK, Linux has been around longer than windows and was never touted as a replacement for it anyway - it aims at a completely different target market (only very recently has it started to shift its focus). Apple has also been around longer than Windows .. if anything Windows was originally a MacOS replacement. And they haven't won back a significant market share yet. What else, OS/2? Ok, we can have a laugh about OS/2 and move on.

      If anything, Linux and the spread of it should show once and for all that Microsoft is _not_ a monopoly, and they do not exclusively control the operating system market.

      They do not, but they tried. They failed, simply by virtue of the fact that their product failed to meet the demands of certain niche markets. They tried to control the browser market too, and succeeded. You might argue that IE has always been superior, but that's complete crap - with a lack of proxy support it barely qualifies as a browser at all. From IE2 onwards, they had managed to stifle Netscape's revenue stream by giving out their browser to everyone for free, thus precluding Netscape improving their browser in a meaningful way. They won, due to the fact that they had the deep pockets to continue to improve and support a product that wasn't making any money (since it was free), while Netscape or any other would-be competition did not. This is precisely why new software fails to beat out MS software - when an MS product starts losing ma

      --
      "Why are you watching the washing machine?"
      "I love entertainment, as long as it's clean"
    81. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by PIBM · · Score: 2, Funny

      Try googling "miserable result" (without quotes) and hit the "I'm feeling lucky" button :)

      that's what I find : http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html

    82. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by abigor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please name one thing produced by MS Research that has made it to market. Just one thing.

      That division of MS is just a buzzword, a cool term to throw around to make MS seem all serious and brainy. Oh, and "innovative". How I cringe when I see that word now.

      Let me guess: you are not a technical person.

      And Ayn Rand's "philosophy" has about as much credibility as L. Ron Hubbard's religion.

    83. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Wow. Everything I wanted to say only you did it better. Thanks for saving me some time.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    84. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Ahh yes, we all know how innovate our communists cousins the USSR and Cuba are right? Right??? Oh wait nevermind.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    85. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      "Monopolies are _bad_. But the only Monopolies I've seen recently are government supported(Original AT&T), or occurred due to collusion among disparate companies (Music CD Prices)."

      Don't forget the US Postal service. Oh you're my new best friend too :)

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    86. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      "What does efficiency or quality of service got to do with anything? This is America. It's not about the better product. It's about who wins."

      Whether you choose to believe it the company with the better product that is effectively communicated wins. Take a look at Wal-Mart, pdfs, Oracle databases, the Ford 'monopoly' that was ousted by GM, A&P grocers (another 'monopoly' that was ousted), etc.
      You can believe whatever liberals tell you but use a little common sense and objectivity please.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    87. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by jarryd · · Score: 1

      The return of Goatse

    88. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thankfully www.ratemygoatse.com is still up to serve all your goatse needs.

    89. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So, without any evidence, you've proclaimed Google the winner for all eternity because you like them?



      Isn't that most of the point?

    90. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by LafinJack · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sure. I bet you're going to tell me it's invisible, next.

      --
      we are building a religion
      a limited edition
      we are now accepting callers
      for these pendant key chains
    91. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by pb_boi · · Score: 1

      their ability to sell it is above anyone else out there. Too true - with money, anyone can do anything, effectively. Or buy it, in many cases. pb_boi

    92. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In order to make the [MSN] portal a better search engine than Google, they [MS] would have to first stop being a portal.

      I would say that in order to make a decent search engine they must first give up of using Windows on their servers.
    93. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hello?
      What do you think it will be?
      Sure it will be open and full of objektive information......
      Don't be a fool!

    94. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bfischer · · Score: 1

      Okay, but wtf is a "tounge" and what is it doing in your cheek?

    95. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They are encourging and supporting bright minds to make our life and our work easier."

      my favourite one : iLoo


    96. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are too lazy, too uninformed, or simply lack the technical skills required to download and install netscape or mozilla.

      What is this OR I see you use - surely you meant AND!!

    97. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Mandrake · · Score: 1

      Which is funny, because when I clicked on your homepage from here, it told me that I didn't have permission to read / Error 403

      --
      Geoff "Mandrake" Harrison
      Some Random UI Hacker
    98. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, Netscape's original business model was to give away the web client and sell the web server. Even though they decided to charge businesses for the web client, it was still basically given away to consumers. (I don't know anyone who paid to use NS at home, but plenty of people whose employers paid to use it.)

      MS charged for IE for a while (it came in a nice box, etc.), but nobody bought it because Netscape was effectively free. That led MS to give away IE, but to everyone, not just consumers. The loss of the corporate client market did some harm to Netscape, but its main source of income was always intended to be the web server. What really killed it was that better web servers were available for less, or for free (e.g. Apache).

    99. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it looks like the server is down.

      On the plus side, this has never happened before in the two years I've had the site.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    100. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      OK, so how do I, without installing an extension, get Mozilla to put any new windows in tabs automatically? Didn't think so.

    101. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is no competition in this area. Google wins by having a well-thought search system

      As long as Google requires any money to keep up their well-thought search system they are vulnerable.

      Microsoft has repeatedly demonstrated that they are willing to suffer temporary financial losses in emerging markets as long as it takes; the margins on Windows and Office provide them with endurance that Google can not match.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    102. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fleener · · Score: 1
      Oh yes, I forgot how much Betamax sucked and VHS rocked. Is that what all the experts said? Maybe that one was before your time.

      How about the Atari Lynx? It kicked the non-color non-stereo non-high-resolution non-left-hander-friendly non-non-non-non-non-non-non total piece of garbage Nintendo Gameboy up and down the street. Huh. Remember that one?

      Capitalism is not about the better product. It is about who is most effective at selling the product. My original point stands. When you control the operating system, you have a HUGE advantage because you control the gateway to your competitor's product. You have the power for your product to succeed and sink your competitor, perhaps more power than any previous company in history.

    103. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by netsharc · · Score: 1

      Ouch, after reading a thread about Goatse that was located just before your comment, I read your sentence as:

      Goatse staff themselves have already shown much progress with little or no serious competition.

      Hahahaha.

      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    104. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by ccp · · Score: 1

      But then again, what is it that they want to accomplice?

      I guess you mean accomplish

      Cheers,

    105. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by tommck · · Score: 1

      This is America

      Ummm... maybe it is where you are...

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    106. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fleener · · Score: 1

      We're talking about Google vs. Microsoft. Both American companies.

    107. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by tommck · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make a difference.

      We're talking about competition in the search engine market. That, like most of the Internet, has no geographical affiliation.

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    108. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fleener · · Score: 1

      Uhhhhh, yes geography does matter. Both companies are bound by United States law. The United States constitutes both companys' largest share of users in comparison to any other country or the EU. If one chose to exert its gateway access via its operating system, the other could sink or swim entirely based on what happens with its users in the United States.

    109. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by tommck · · Score: 1

      I think you are underestimating the amount of non-US internet users. If MSN is the dominant search engine in the rest of the world and Google wins the US, I bet they would both be very fat from their successes. Of course they're going to concentrate on the US, being US companies, but they're not JUST bound by US law... They're bound by all the laws in each jurisdiction in which they're peddling their wares. Ask Yahoo! whether they're bound by French law...

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    110. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by fleener · · Score: 1

      Ohhhhhhh, I misunderstood. Apparently Microsoft Windows is the dominant operating system only in the United States. I guess the rest of the world uses Linux and Macintosh. OK, you win the argument.

    111. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by tommck · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... NO. So, before, you're saying "This is America" and now you're talking about the whole world which was EXACTLY MY POINT!

      You said: "What does efficiency or quality of service got to do with anything? This is America. It's not about the better product. It's about who wins. "...

      That statement has nothing to do with America. But, feel free to swing your argumentative pendulum back to ignoring the rest of the world to try and refute that statement.

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    112. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Shaklee39 · · Score: 1

      No, but you also left out that the 3MB opera you refer to is without java, while the java version weighs in at 16MB. Guess what, they is bigger than IE with java. So what was your point again?

    113. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      No they don't. They can keep their portal and run pure a search engine on a seperate URL. The portal, of course, would include search boxes so that people using MSN can start their search there.

    114. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      [bunch of examples about products that were only slightly better than their competitors, or were not marketed well]
      It's not just about making a better product, it's about making a SIGNIFICANTLY better product that is MARKETED well. History is full of examples of failed products that were wonderfully useful but were not advertised well.

      Capitalism is not about the better product. It is about who is most effective at selling the product. My original point stands. When you control the operating system, you have a HUGE advantage because you control the gateway to your competitor's product. You have the power for your product to succeed and sink your competitor, perhaps more power than any previous company in history.
      Powerful companies have more money with which to invest in new products and their advertising. However for the most part their leverage ends there. Yet, due to the wonderful nature of capitalism, even the little guys have a chance by convincing others to invest in their product. Even a very powerful company, without the aid of legislation, is vulnerable to another company besting them with a better product and better marketing. However the 2 MUST go hand in hand or they WILL fail.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    115. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by x0n · · Score: 1

      I'll cede that point; you're right, the comment (bloatware) was only to allay the slashdot massvive. It is big for a reason: it is the default OS shell, not just a browser. It is used by the Help system, local file browsing, Ftp, and is also responsible for Mail/News (O.E. etc), it's a DAV client, it supports full interfacing with embedded com objects and associated com registered scripting languages, VML (vector markup language), and so on and so on.

      [snide remark]
      But, if they want to badge it like a separate entity to avoid litigation, they'll have to stand in line with rest of them.
      [/snide remark]

      - Oisin

      --

      PGP KeyId: 0x08D63965
    116. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by stor · · Score: 1

      My point was their first two results seemed to be advertisements for companies that had paid for their spots. I wouldn't call that fair and comprehensive.

      In fairness though yes it has improved. I just don't think it will move too far away from being another "Product", "Value-Add", "Potential Avenue for Revenue" or whatever.

      Cheers
      Stor

      p.s. Google has ads too, yes but they've been a bit clever about it: the ads don't tend to be mixed in with the search results but rather sit in their own little boxes on the RHS.

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
    117. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by whittrash · · Score: 1

      I wonder if Microsoft is going to buy 10,000 Linux servers in order to compete?

      I don't think they could run an effective search engine on Windows technology, thats for sure. Also, if I am not mistaken, Google has patented many of the search techniques they have developed, which will make life very difficult for M$ to develop similar search technology. Microsoft can't do it all and they shouldn't try, they already have one monopoly, they don't need two.

    118. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by whittrash · · Score: 1

      People seem to forget how Google became popular in the first place. It came out of nowhere to beat the likes of Altavista, Yahoo, and even Microsoft's built in search.

      Google has a very good interface. That is what makes it good at first, but on top of that is a search engine that is first rate. I used to have Yahoo, etc. back before Google as my home page, and have to sit and wait 2 minutes while it loaded every time I turned on my browser, it sucked. Now I load in .16 seconds. You can't put a price on that kind of convenience. Google has had such impressive performance that I don't even think about the search engines I used to use.

      These same people who are talking up Microsoft search capabilities which do not exist yet are the same people who are talking up their music trading potential which doesn't exist yet. They assume the dominance on the desktop immediately translates into complete dominance. Frankly, I don't see what they bring to the search engine market that gives them a huge advantage. M$ thought that they could own the game market with the XBox, and M$ has lost $billions on that and has yet to gain a dominant position after 2 years. I think Microsoft will fail or have a mediocre market share with this too. Microsoft's culture is all about monopoly, and they build their products to be both incompatible and difficult for outside companies to use in addition to having a technology base that is full of holes. In a world of choice, convenience and speed, Microsoft loses, especially when the competition doesn't crash (like Netscape did). They can't simply cut out Google through bundling the way they did Netscape unless M$ makes their search page the only home page option. It is never a good idea to underestimate M$ though, any company with no scruples, $40 billion in cash and a lust for power is a force to be reckoned with.

    119. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by whittrash · · Score: 1

      Your analysis fails on one point. I agree with the Netscape bit about the code being crap. But innovation is only one part of the picture. The example I give is the paperclip. There has been an immense amount of innovation in paperclipping technology, but the lowly paperclip remains the standard. Why you ask? Because it is extremely simple, easy to use and the user is not confounded with endless options which he does not want or need. The fact that it leaves a dimple in the paper is a triviality that borders on the irrelevant. Its cost is near nothing. What does this have to do with Google? Google is very much like a paperclip, it is used to hold the pages of the Internet together in simple and efficient ways that are basically free to anyone.

      On the site design side: Microsoft wants to sell a big fancy 'innovation' that will tie the user to their other products in order to maintain the M$ monopoly. I doubt users will want this, if the Google model holds true they will want simplicity and ease of use.

      On the technology side: My last Google search took .16 seconds. Innovation on top of that is very difficult. Unless M$ offers completely new ways of searching and screening the web, they will never have a meaningful performance edge.

      On the business side: I don't understand what M$ is offering that we don't already have in Google, and that Google will not do better. Google is a 3rd generation search engine that has risen to the top of a ruthlessly competitive business. It has effectively anhililated its competitors, and unless M$ acts soon, it will consolidate its position in a rapidly maturing industry.

      Basically, I don't think M$ is the competitor they think they are when it comes to search engines.

    120. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So, without any evidence, you've proclaimed Google the winner for all eternity because you like them?" You can't be serious? Microsoft has done nothing but twist the law to gain power in an increasingly corrupt legal system. They won the analytically similar browser war by integrating it in their operating system-- which is only popular because people are ignorant of alternatives like the SUPERIOR Mac or the Linux projects. While both companies, Microsoft and Google, are monopolies, Microsoft has taken advantage of its position and has taken the software industry for a dive into the biggest pit of stupidity imaginable. Google has, without pressure or competition, developed a successfully relevant and intuitive solution. Google is the reason I use the Internet AND I AM NOT ALONE. Microsoft will be nothing more than a headache for Google users and ignorant people using Windows in this sector off business. Microsoft is a bigger joke than Booble as a competitor; especially as people become more knowledgeable with computers. Am I bias? Do I have no evidence? Have you ever browsed the array of bonus aolutions Google provides? I have no respect for people who blindly watch every m$ move like a newborn duck. Google will triumph as it always has. No doubt in the minds of hundreds of millions of ever-faithful users.

    121. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      chunkwhite86 is exactly right. The Mozilla browser project is superior to IE. But m$ integrates everything in its comparitively poor operating system perpetuating the ignorance of computer users everywhere. All m$ will do is add a search bar to Longhorn that makes users think a search engine is part of Windows. To most people IE is the Internet, Media Player is the way to listen to their CDs, and MSN messenger is the way to talk to friends. Some even think Office is part of Windows because it is frequently preinstalled in new purchases. Sadly, m$ has never (and its search engine will be no exception) made the best product. Mac is superior to Windows. Mozilla is superior to IE. Winamp 5 is superior to Windows Media Player. Programs like Gaim and Miranda are designed better. The OOo project will eventually surpass the m$ office suite as well-- especially given the new direction m$ has taken. Skinned and dumber than ever? I look forward to the day where Google and the open-source industry entirely devours the Microsoft dynasty.

    122. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine if the big businesses stepped up against the evil giant. I would love to see eBay, Yahoo, Dell, and others just boycott the dumb, new competetor. Microsoft is a joke to everyone who has some exposure. Since American law appeals to the big businesses and allows monopolies, it would be a courageous and noble step for the big Internet businesses to shut it out. Afterall, do you know why Dell doesn't offer Linux? m$ made them choose. I'm sure a slew of businesses would love to axe Microsoft in the face.

    123. Re:Lets hope that the result is progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my comment is that google kicked my site off the web and now we are stuck paying adwords for stupid clicks - thanks for nothing google... if the results were so good, why is the company so into the adwords side of their business?

  2. Try using Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To look for dupes.

  3. The real test of a search engine by override11 · · Score: 5, Funny

    .... is how fast you can get to good porn. And so far Google has everything beat hands down. Cmon, http://images.google.com, turn off mature filter, search for 'teen boobs' or something like that and BAM, you are all set! Lets see MS beat that!

    --
    No I didnt spell check this post...
    1. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think altavista's video search has google beat on this front.

    2. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bless you! You made my afternoon!

    3. Re:The real test of a search engine by JudgeFurious · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ok, just to be fair I tested this and Google returned exactly one bad picture of a pair of boobs and it didn't even come from a porn site (yeah, I turned off the mature filter).

      To add insult to injury it didn't even show the whole thing AND they were Britney Spears boobs (possibly).

      Google, get back to work and fix this ASAP. I'm sure Microsoft is already making a special effort to focus on the "teen boobs" market and planning on showing additional hits for users of Internet Explorer.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    4. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Google corrects you if you misspell "bukkake." I don't believe I've used another search engine since then.

    5. Re:The real test of a search engine by sewagemaster · · Score: 2, Funny

      And so far Google has everything beat hands down

      everything except the thing you need to beat with your hands...

    6. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft will win that through marketing. "Where do you want to come today?"

    7. Re:The real test of a search engine by JudgeFurious · · Score: 4, Funny

      Ah, I take that back. I forgot to save my preferences and so the removal of filters didn't take. The teen boob content was acceptable.

      Apologies to Google and their great porn finding tools.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    8. Re:The real test of a search engine by kevcol · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not only that, but search just plain ol' google with these terms:

      "index of /" directory modified
      ..and whatever term you want to add to that mix.

      You can find lotsa unprotected directories with lotsa FREE, umm.. stuff.

    9. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you search from any of the localized sites you won't get any results.

    10. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. Like the free source code to a bunch of Jakarta projects. Of course, given how piss poor the navigation of the Jakarta site is, it's actually useful...

    11. Re:The real test of a search engine by interiot · · Score: 1
      Actually, the best way I've found for googling porn is to look on the TGPs for a website you like, and then just search for site:blahblah.com (eg. with no actual search term so it returns ALL public TGP pages from that site). No matter how esoteric your tastes are, it's a good way to find a ton of pictures that fits them (since apparently porn websites that are more specialized tend to make more money).

      Some sites have a surprising amount of porn publicly available for advertising purposes. Not all, but some do. And you wouldn't otherwise be able to find all of it without writing your own meta-TGP engine. Thank goodness for google!

    12. Re:The real test of a search engine by ruiner13 · · Score: 2, Funny
      ".... is how fast you can get to good porn. And so far Google has everything beat hands down."

      Perhaps you meant hand over fist? ;)

      --

      today is spelling optional day.

    13. Re:The real test of a search engine by ejdmoo · · Score: 1

      That's a suprisingly good way to find free fonts, assuming you know the file name.

    14. Re:The real test of a search engine by dattaway · · Score: 2, Informative

      Even better: if you do that in images search, you can also set your preferences to the size of images to be displayed under "advanced." Set to wallpaper sized. You are guaranteed to get results from the latest digital cameras.

      Put the following line in the images search and sit back:

      "index of /" boobies filetype:jpg

    15. Re:The real test of a search engine by Larry+David · · Score: 1

      Did you notice they only go up to 'Large' on Google Images now? Used to have 'wallpaper sized' as you say, but it doesn't seem to be there now (for me).

    16. Re:The real test of a search engine by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      Have you tried the Google competition: Booble.com ?

      As previously seen on /. ...

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    17. Re:The real test of a search engine by sewagemaster · · Score: 3, Funny

      yeah, I turned off the mature filter. ...and now you complain you got pair of mature boobs instead of teen boobs!

    18. Re:The real test of a search engine by aanand · · Score: 1

      Lots of fun. On a related note...

    19. Re:The real test of a search engine by Trejkaz · · Score: 2, Funny

      Maybe you would get better results from Booble.

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    20. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you notice they only go up to 'Large' on Google Images now?

      Would that be D then?

    21. Re:The real test of a search engine by lafiel · · Score: 1

      This is the funniest thing I've read in a long time. Thanks!

    22. Re:The real test of a search engine by Sepper · · Score: 1
      --
      I live in Soviet Canuckistan you insensitive clod!
    23. Re:The real test of a search engine by igny · · Score: 1
      ...is how fast you can get to good porn.
      You should give Booble a try.
      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    24. Re:The real test of a search engine by zobier · · Score: 1

      Try adding "(Using password: NO)" to that

      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    25. Re:The real test of a search engine by zobier · · Score: 1

      It'd be interesting if they had an anti-mature filter that subtracted the normal results from the unfiltered ones.

      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    26. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh, search google for '"index of /" directory modified porn', hit I'm Feeling Lucky, get "Bandwidth Limit Exceeded" back. how many people just tried this? someone at www.brain-damaged.com is gonna be awfully confused.

    27. Re:The real test of a search engine by Jim+Hall · · Score: 1

      Ah, I take that back. I forgot to save my preferences and so the removal of filters didn't take. The teen boob content was acceptable.

      (suddenly, the google site is slashdotted by thousands, nay millions, of queries for the same image set: "teen boob". google admins wonder what the hell just happened.)

    28. Re:The real test of a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or perhaps... ...Google has everything beat handily.

    29. Re:The real test of a search engine by AppleJuice · · Score: 1
      It's more likely lost in the noise:

      "Hmm. A one and a half percent uptick in 'teen boobs' searches this weekend."

      --

    30. Re:The real test of a search engine by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      It is official, you are my hero of the week. I never even thought to search for unprotected "content" this way before.

      Thank you very much. I wish I had some mod points.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  4. Its about defaults by jrumney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sure, anyone can type google.com into their browser, but for the 90% of the population who don't understand how the web works, pressing the Search button on their browser is the only option. The fact that Microsoft's search is getting better doesn't change anything though, as search.msn.com is already the IE default, and those people will be using that.

    1. Re:Its about defaults by the.jedi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The fact that Microsoft's search is getting better doesn't change anything though, as search.msn.com is already the IE default

      I think it does matter. Right now people get fed up with the crappy results from msn and they're friends tell them "oh why don't you google it?" Tada! Another convert. If MSN can catch up with Google in terms of good search results then people will then quit looking for alternatives to the search button and Google will die. Once goole dies of course Microsoft has no reason to innovate and will let development die just as they've done with IE, outlook express and others. It's kinda sad really.

      --
      ThunderBird. Nuff said.
    2. Re:Its about defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Exactly. I'm sure Microsoft will find a clever way of funneling people to their search site using IE, on any 404 error for example.

      I think Google and Mozilla should team up before it's too late. Mozilla should have Google.com as the default homepage (I certainly do that anyway) and Google should put in a small link recomending that people use Mozilla.

      - Henrik
      TheOpenCD.org

    3. Re:Its about defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People use MSN.com (the default) to find Google. This should say something.

    4. Re:Its about defaults by Davak · · Score: 1

      What is getting even worse is that Microsoft is using the web for many of its new "features."

      For example, on tech-recipes I point out how Microsoft sends information to a web service to provide translation in Word 2003.

      All users see is "translate" in the context menu when they right click. They don't know where it is going... nor do most of them care.

      Microsoft will use this subtle integration to direct users where they want them to go.

      Users like us may see the trouble with this practice; however, the normal mom and pop user doesn't notice nor care... they think that it is neat to be able to get translation now in Word 2003.

      I have little doubt that google will win this battle. They have data... and microsoft just has software. However, Microsoft will use its reign of the desktop to fight the battle as hard as possible.

      Davak

    5. Re:Its about defaults by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      MSN search is set as the default, but most people come into occasional contact with a geek or watch the news.

      Somehow my mother, who is rather tech inept, found google.

    6. Re:Its about defaults by jrumney · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're right. But all that's changed is their search engine has got better to the point where some users might not consider finding google to be worth the hassle. The attempt to drive everyone there is nothing new.

    7. Re:Its about defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there is IMO a significant technical difference between Google search toolbar and Netscape browser. It is simple to download and install that search toolbar in terms of time and efforts. I do not think that Google could not make it TRIVIAL to install and have advertisement with that on msn.com which Microsoft could not refuse due-to its monopoly position.

      If a person has no clue about alternative search engines, the same person would click on the ads especially given good so far Google mantra. And then the Search button will be replaced.

    8. Re:Its about defaults by Mr+Pippin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you're on the right track. The issue is more likely to be that IE will integrate a search function much like Apple's Safari, but instead of linking to Google, it will link to their own site.

      Then they just have to count on the laziness of the 90% of users to make them the default over Google.

      Your follow on argument would be that they will still use google, since google has the results they want.

      Again, Microsoft only has to emulate Google until they have the majority search engine. At that point, they can modify their search engine to return whatever they want.

      It's just another version of "embrace, extend, extinguish".

    9. Re:Its about defaults by EvilGrin666 · · Score: 1

      Thats simply not true. Even though it might not be the IE default a lot of people know about it. Its that word of mouth advertising biting MS in the ass again.

    10. Re:Its about defaults by edbarrett · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly certain that the eMachines W2040 I'm working on (I would link to the eMachines info page on it, but I'm not going to dig for it) had Google set as the default search engine.

    11. Re:Its about defaults by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      Sure, anyone can type google.com into their browser, but for the 90% of the population who don't understand how the web works, pressing the Search button on their browser is the only option. The fact that Microsoft's search is getting better doesn't change anything though, as search.msn.com is already the IE default, and those people will be using that.
      If 90% of people just use the default then 90% of searches would be via msn now. But that's not the case. And of course enough people are aware of it for the term to be used as a verb.
    12. Re:Its about defaults by MisterFancypants · · Score: 1
      Sure, anyone can type google.com into their browser, but for the 90% of the population who don't understand how the web works, pressing the Search button on their browser is the only option. The fact that Microsoft's search is getting better doesn't change anything though, as search.msn.com is already the IE default, and those people will be using that.

      While defaults are powerful, Google is still in an infinitely stronger position than Netscape was because:

      A) They've managed to get their name used as a verb. It isn't uncommon for me to hear someone say (or for me to tell someone else) to "google" something. That is really important, marketing-wise (though in the long run it may actually hinder Google's trademark status).

      B) There is no download-time, unlike with a browser. You just type www.google.com and go, or better yet just use the google toolbar, which is actually fairly widely deployed, primarily because it has a decent popup blocker for IE.

      All things being equal, the default may win out, but that is assuming Microsoft's search results are just as good or better than google's. If not, most of the online-world already knows where to go to find the good results if Microsoft's fail them.

      This will be an interesting one to watch, unlike the Netscape-slaughter.

    13. Re:Its about defaults by PReDiToR · · Score: 1

      Mozilla FireBird [http://mozilla.org/products/firebird] has a search box on the toolbar by default, and it is installed with only Google.com.

      There are other search engines available for installation through the website, including all your favourites.

      --

      Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
    14. Re:Its about defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, wake up. Mozilla won't add anything to google with it's puny, puny market share. Most nerds who download mozilla to use instead of IE will be using google ANYWAY. Meanwhile, the other 95%+ of the population will happily use IE.

      Face it. For _most_ people (although perhaps not people like me and you), IE is "good enough". There's no reason to download a big app, install it, relearn it, and switch.

    15. Re:Its about defaults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. I'm sure Microsoft will find a clever way of funneling people to their search site using IE, on any 404 error for example.

      they already do, if you type the wrong address in the address bar, you'll come to the msn search suggesting sites with similar addresses... that is, if you haven't disabled the "search from address bar" setting

    16. Re:Its about defaults by yog · · Score: 1

      Don't forget another important detail: Google is a profitable company, unlike Netscape, which basically burned through its investor capital while giving away its flagship product and losing web server sales to Microsoft IIS.

      Also, Google is about to go public and turn into probably a $30 billion company. That will give them a massive war chest to fend off Microsoft with new products, more aggressive ad prices, etc.

      Of course, Microsoft has the biggest war chest of all, so I wouldn't bet on Google winning in the long run, but they have a better chance to stay in the ring and keep their independence than Netscape did.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
    17. Re:Its about defaults by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      90% of the population who don't understand how the web works, pressing the Search button on their browser is the only option
      Then it's up to Google to convine "90%" of the population of their existence and superiority. If they don't they will die, regardless of a superior market. MS are not invincible and despite claims of 'monopoly' have a host of failed products.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    18. Re:Its about defaults by Arngautr · · Score: 1

      What if, as a 'default', M$ were to ship w/ their OS a HOSTS file containing the line 127.0.0.1 google.com this would stop google cold for a few years while M$ fights in court to maintain this line, which will of course be integrated so completely into their OS that Bill Gates himself can't figure out how to remove it in front of some large audience somewhere. Well I doubt anyone will read this as deep as it is but there's my two shares of ?google's future ipo stock? Well we'll see what happens, hopefully M$ while put forth the research and produce a quality product, hey it could happen!

  5. MSN search against google by j_sp_r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    O'course MS can force users to use msn search this time just they did with IE. BTW, they already doing this. When you make a typo in a url (or the site is just slow to respond) you go to MSN search (with standard settings). Jou Beginner just thinks you search the internet only with MSN search and keeps using it. And if MS is really lame they block google in IE or render it incorrectly (only the goverment in the way for that)

    1. Re:MSN search against google by KeithSogge · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The day I want to find something on Google's website by going to microsoft.com and typing in
      Searchtextfoo :site google.com
      is the day Microsoft won.

      I'm sure all of us who've ever had to search Microsoft's site have found that Google does a better job than Microsoft on their own site.

  6. But.... by TypoNAM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google doesn't require me to run Windows and use IE to use their search engine. :)

    --
    This space is not for rent.
    1. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TunnelBroker's router broke and currently it has yet to be fixed properly apparently since I've already had to reset up myself a tunnel link account and I was once again deactived due to their router not working so it believes my side has been dead too long. If this does not become resolved with in Hurricane Electric's IPv6 division soon then I will seek an alternative IPv6 tunnel provider. It's a good thing I never paid for it huh? :)

    2. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MSN doesn't either, so whats your point? ...dingleface

    3. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His point, I believe, is that MSN is the default Search facility tied to IE search button.

    4. Re:But.... by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 1

      I call bollocks on you!

      MSN search works lovely with Mozilla 1.5. In fact, the results it comes up with are quite good to; no more anti-linux pages first and even less common search terms yield useful results.

    5. Re:But.... by Orig · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely correct. However you didn't get a +5 Insightful.

    6. Re:But.... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      So what? That somehow prevents me from typing "http://search.msn.com" into the address bar of my browser?

    7. Re:But.... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How can you be so blind to the tactics of MS? They have been doing things one way since the beginning. If MSN search surpasses google, MS will revert to the old ways. A search of "Linux" on MSN search will, once again, return propoganda about MS Windows being better then Linux, how to switch from Linux and how MS Windows is cheaper, etc. I also see them using IE only "features" in the search page if MSN search became the #1 search engine and claim it is for a "better end user experience". Only a few months ago, a search for Linux would return crap from microsoft.com about how to switch from Linux as one of the top results. I seriously doubt that someone just searching on the term "Linux" wanted results about switching from Linux. So obviously, the people over at MSN search made a serach for "Linux" return those results. They will do it again if given the chance. MS will not only do this against Linux, but against any product that may cause them some competition. MS is all about extending their monopoly.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    8. Re:But.... by Tim+Doran · · Score: 1

      Check it now - a search for "linux" on the MSN site turns up exactly zero negative-sounding references, either in the search results or in the sponsored links. In fact, the results look similar to those on Yahoo.

      I'm certainly not a Microsoft apologist, but them's the facts.

    9. Re:But.... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      Sure. However, not very long ago (a few months?), that was not the case. And, knowing MS's track record, I would bet that they would return to that behaviour if they were to become the dominant search engine.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  7. It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by corebreech · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Microsoft leveraged Windows to popularize IE. They'll try to do the same with MSN, leveraging it to promote their search engine. So there is that similiarity. And Netscape was free, and so is Google, and so that contest should go to whomever has the deepest pockets, but...

    Google is different than Netscape in that it is very high quality, something Microsoft isn't likely to match (I am continually amazed at how badly the search engine at microsoft.com sucks) and also because Google actually has a business model, i.e., they have customers, e.g., people willing to pay them money to do stuff.

    The way I see it, it's Google's to lose. They can still mess up in execution. They're expanding into other areas very quickly... perhaps too quickly. And they wield a tremendous amount of power in that search engine, so much so that I doubt that the feds haven't already requested "special access" to the query logs, and maybe one day, the power to alter result listings. (Yeah, you'd be laughing if I told you that the feds made Adobe put anti-counterfeiting code in Photoshop too I bet.)

    1. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by jrumney · · Score: 1
      Microsoft leveraged Windows to popularize IE. They'll try to do the same with MSN, leveraging it to promote their search engine.

      The difference being that people actually use Windows, but if you're talking about MSN the network provider (rather than the IM client) it doesn't have anywhere near a monopoly.

    2. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that Netscape wasn't High Quality?

    3. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Davak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Google has indexed the internet. That data is ultimately more powerful than having software installed on the majority of desktops.

      Google has already flexed this muscle with their text ads. By being able to rapidly spider a page, google can provide very directed and specific ads. These ads are successful because they are so focused to their assoicated page.

      Without radically changing the way we view the web... Microsoft can not touch that aspect of google... yet.

      Davak

    4. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by fermion · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The quality issue is moot as well. IE was a piece of crap. Netscape was not so nearly a piece of crap. However, IE was everywhere. People designed for IE. Designed tools designed for IE. A lot of people had only used IE and thought that browsers were supposed to work that way. Therefore things appeared to work better on IE even though objectively IE was barely functional.

      The battle is exactly the same. Google currently does not return the high quality results as it once did. To use google in IE requires some effort. Many people have only used MS, and do not know that there are other ways to do things. MS search is enable automatically. In fact, last time I checked it was very difficult not to have everything go through MS search.

      Google will lose if MS is allowed to leverage it's platform. It would probably take very little to significantly impair the google tool bar in IE. MS can make it's search engine the only one that will work with the IE search button. MS can force all user connections, even fully qualified URLs, to pass through MS search engine.

      Google can only win if MS follows the spirit on the settlement with the US goverment. If MS follows on the letter of the law, google could be in serious trouble by the end of the year.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by RobertFisher · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I like the way you give both possible angles into the competition.

      However, there is one ace card in Microsoft's back pocket which you left out : Microsoft's Theory Group. MS supports a very high-powered discrete math and computer science group, comparable to that of a top-notch university. It's not just deep pockets here : it's a long-term commitment to building up a substantial research group pursuing fundamental research on problems closely allied to various technical issues. Noteably, this includes web searches, which is really just a problem in graph theory.

      One needs to be extremely cautious in comparing the relative maturity of two technologies. The IE/NS analogy shows that MS can rapidly catch up to an existing technology, since they can afford to outspend and outlast any competitor. The only survival strategy is to evolve more rapidly than MS can follow; NS failed in that game by version 4, and it has only been relatively recently that other browsers (noteable Mozilla and Safari) have posed serious competition to the now-stagnant IE. Based on the existing high-powered theory already within MS, I am willing to bet that not only will MS have caught up to Google within 1-2 years, but they very well may also proceed to blow right past them.

      Bob

      --
      Science, like Nature, must also be tamed, with a view turned towards its preservation.
    6. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "(Yeah, you'd be laughing if I told you that the feds made Adobe put anti-counterfeiting code in Photoshop too I bet.)"

      The "Feds" had nothing to do with it. Adobe put it in themselves.

    7. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least google does not show a pic of a "very nice femail" and then say Think she se*y? Click here to see people in your area.

      I like google mainly because they have ads that don't take very long to download. I will even click on them. But if it take more then 10 seconds to download that fancy ad then forget it.

      Say bye bye ad.doubleclick.com :)

    8. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by AvengerXP · · Score: 1

      Yes he is and he'd be right, Netscape is a slow bulky piece of crap. And it still is, go download it and check it out. It needs a tray icon to load fast. It's dead really.

      --
      Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
    9. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by glinden · · Score: 1
      • Google is different than Netscape in that it is very high quality, something Microsoft isn't likely to match
      I'm not sure Microsoft has to match Google in quality. If it's just "good enough", people will use it since it's the default in IE.

      Google's remarkable market share despite MSN Search being the default in IE shows how poor MSN Search is. But, if it just gets to the point where it is good enough for 99% of searches, your casual computer users probably won't bother to type in "google.com" anymore.
    10. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by snarkh · · Score: 4, Informative
      Noteably, this includes web searches, which is really just a problem in graph theory.

      Not at all. The graph theory is important, of course, but web searches involve the following:

      1. You have to find the right metric in which to measure the success of your search. The metric is determined by what people want to find. The graph theory is a way to formalize whatever intuition you might have about it.

      2. You have to be able to find the results and to deliver them quickly. That's a complex implementation problem.

      Graph theorey is no more than a small part of what's involved.

    11. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes Microsoft has some top-notch experts at their disposal, but there is clearly a huge disconnect between that expertise and the product that hits the shelves. One could speculate that the only reason Microsoft hires those experts is so that they aren't working for the competition.

    12. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      Personally I don't think much of Microsoft's ability to innovate. They tend to borrow ideas instead of creating them (their fight with Google being a case in point). However, never underestimate Microsoft's ability to copy someone else's idea and then pour money into making a copy of the technology that can be integrated into Windows.

      Microsoft has the advantage in that they control the software that most of the world actually uses to get things done. Integrating MSN searches into Internet Explorer is only the tip of the iceberg. They will soon integrate their search technology into MS Office (and other Microsoft software) as well.

      Microsoft's Theory Group had very little to do with Internet Explorer's domination of Netscape. Heck, they didn't even write IE, they purchased it (yes, they did make substantial improvements, but the Theory Group certainly didn't make the improvements). IE's ascendance can be blamed on Microsoft's tremendous distribution and marketing powers, not their technical acumen.

      In short, I agree with you that Google is in trouble in the long run, but not because of Microsoft's egghead scientists. Google is in trouble in the long run because Microsoft controls the desktop, and because they are more than willing to pour the resources into MSN that will make it competitive. MSN doesn't have to be better than Google in the long run, it just has to be "good enough" and built into all of Microsoft's desktop software.

    13. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by kasperd · · Score: 1

      Google has indexed the internet. That data is ultimately more powerful

      Presumably Microsoft have the resources to do that as well. Of course it is not as trivial as it may sound. Google has another advantage as well. I have seen robots.txt files allowing only Google to crawl the site and forbiding everybody else access. What are Microsoft going to do about those? Violate the directions and crawl sites without permissions? Even if they might be able to crawl sites without people noticing that some requests originate from a crawler, what will people say when they see Microsofts search site showing up as referer? Maybe it is time to boycot Microsoft's crawler and install robots.txt files explicitly forbiding them access. Considering Microsoft's methods I wouldn't feel bad about doing so myself.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    14. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by corebreech · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For a second I had a shiver as I was reading your message, but I think I'm OK now...

      Yes, webmasters can prevent Microsoft from crawling their sites, but, hehe, what about web sites running IIS? Would Microsoft be so low as to "embellish" the robots.txt file hosted on IIS sites so as to include a line forbidding the GoogleBot?

      Man, let's all get down on our knees and kiss the ground the Apache developers walk on, huh?

    15. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a load of shit.

    16. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And then they will stagnate the instant google is killed.

      See: IE.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    17. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your epidermis is showing.

    18. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by kasperd · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Would Microsoft be so low as to "embellish" the robots.txt file hosted on IIS sites so as to include a line forbidding the GoogleBot?

      I think we would have another antitrust case if Microsoft did so. Sure it would take years in court, but I think Google might decide to ignore the robots.txt file if they really believe it was illegal and a threat to Google. People picking side and creating robots.txt file probably isn't illegal, at least we are not facing an antitrust case there. Well, since Microsofts crawler haven't really found anything of interest on my site, and Google have already crawled most of it, I don't think there is yet any point in trying to give Google and advantage. They already have the advantage they need. Anyway how would things turn out if people starting placing this robots.txt on various webservers:
      User-agent: *
      Disallow: /default.ida

      User-agent: msnbot
      Disallow: /
      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    19. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by pgr0ss · · Score: 1

      Not to mention indexing the entire web. That's a complex implementation problem as well.

    20. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Dr_Marvin_Monroe · · Score: 1

      now it's time to cut off Microsoft's "oxygen supply"...

      With increased competition over their cash cows, i.e. Windows OS's, office suite, SQL databases and other mature applications, MS is loosing the option of simply outspending/loosing money for years at a time. How many countries and large corps will be looking for HEAVY discounts in their licensing?....With the results in Israel, Asia and and India, I'm thinking ALL will start to demand lower prices. This could change their bottom line and prevent this type of domination of the market through what is effectivly "dumping."

      With MS's expansion into the gaming area (still loosing money and X-box prices dropping), network portal (MSN loosing or close to it), embedded devices (they'll do anything to sell more), they may simply be spread too thin.

      Furthermore, EVERYONE is suspicious of MS now... Everyone in the industry has seen their methods, and new areas to dominate are hard to find. Cable TV and the RIAA, the people who INVENTED the idea of charging for entertainment, are not simply going to let Bill Gates come in and eat their lunch. No way would Rupert Murdock, Ted Turner, and the other cable operators allow their pie to get taken away. Same for the music industry, they will not allow MS to be the ONLY provider, because it limits their ability to make money.

      MS cable boxes are doomed to face lifelong competition that the cable operators will demand, and Windows Media will not be the only format for music or movies. They simply have no chance of creating another monopoly anywhere...everyone's on to them.

      Google, on the other hand, is expanding, but in related areas. They have a successful product which requires NO download. They have competition, but they are tops in their field. Google doesn't seem to have any ambitions to dominate the world, they look like they just want to do their job well.

      I think this is another MS head-fake to try to freeze the competition and get them to make a mistake. I'm sure they'd like to turn the entire internet into an extension of their OS, but that's not going to happen without HUGE investment and years of building back people's trust. I simply don't think that this is going to happen, nobody is going to allow another MS monopoly to grow, at least not where they can see it.

      In short, I just don't see MS-Search taking over the internet. As stated above, it's Google's to loose.

    21. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Bert690 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but Lucent and AT&T labs had just as powerful groups of theoreticians, almost all of whom have by now been laid off. These sorts spend their lives avoiding doing anything that might actually be considered practical (with a few rare exceptions). Besides, building a search engine is more a complex engineering problem than anything else. You're better off hiring people with strong database or text analytics backgrounds than the theoretical types. That is, if you expect anything to actually get done :-)

    22. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by KingJoshi · · Score: 1
      Noteably, this includes web searches, which is really just a problem in graph theory.

      Well, there is also proper information extraction and information retreival. For some searches is question and and answering. If someone isn't sure what exactly they're looking for or browsing, you always have user interface and relevance feedback issues. Not to mention the engineering of the infrastructure, indexing all data and more. And you have to deal with people trying to manipulate their data through shortcuts instead of actually wanting to earn it. So there is a whole lot more than just graph theory.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    23. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its "lose" and "losing"... loser.

    24. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by shanen · · Score: 1
      Google has indexed the internet. That data is ultimately more powerful than having software installed on the majority of desktops.

      Aye, there's the rub. Google has only indexed it, but they have no ownership over the information. Anything which is publicly accessible can be indexed. Any search strategy or ranking system can be copied, at least copied roughly enough to satisfy most users.

      Actually, the best example I know of functional-level copying involves the Windows interface, which is actually a very crude but usable copy of the Mac interface. Sorry that I can't recall the URL for the Mac design notes, but there is an excellent explanation of how and why it works, and how Microsoft maneuvered around the places where things like patents interfered with their copying.

      Google does have an excellent collection of old usenet information, but they don't really own that, either. If Microsoft really wants the old stuff, they could probably find another seller, work out a deal with Google, steal it with a lot of tedious robotic searches, or possibly even strong-arm Google for a copy. However, Microsoft could equally well blow off the old stuff and wait until Google goes bankrupt, and then buy the archives during the liquidation. After all, that's how Google got the usenet archives from ye olde Deja-News.

      And in the last resort, Microsoft has already demonstrated their willingness to cheat beyond the edges. For example, if users try to favor Google with robot.txt restrictions (as suggested elsewhere in this discussion), Microsoft could just have their crawlers ignore that polite convention. Microsoft could even get down and dirty. For example, they could release a "security patch" that "accidentally" breaks the Google toolbar in a massively unpleasant way. Whatever it takes to "win", we already know Microsoft will do it, and without penalty.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    25. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Netscape really wasn't free. It was supposed to be shareware, and was supposed to make money for Netscape. Granted, the Netscape company planned to 'hook' people in with proprietary extensions to HTML and use the pervasive browser to sell server technology, and so they were rather lax about collecting the money.

      Netscape wasn't 'free' until Microsoft showed up and was free. It also was closed source.

      --
      ---
    26. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      The slick thing would be for competing search engines to 'crawl' google itself.

      --
      ---
    27. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Schwarzchild · · Score: 1
      "However, there is one ace card in Microsoft's back pocket which you left out : Microsoft's Theory Group. MS supports a very high-powered discrete math and computer science group, comparable to that of a top-notch university. It's not just deep pockets here : it's a long-term commitment to building up a substantial research group pursuing fundamental research on problems closely allied to various technical issues. Noteably, this includes web searches, which is really just a problem in graph theory."

      The only problem with your theory is that Microsoft's Developers do not respect the Research side.

      --

      "sweet dreams are made of this..."

    28. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by wombatmobile · · Score: 1

      MS supports a very high-powered discrete math and computer science group, comparable to that of a top-notch university

      Oh? So...?

      Britney Spears has very high-powered feminine geometry but that doesn't mean she can do anything.

    29. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by kasperd · · Score: 1

      The slick thing would be for competing search engines to 'crawl' google itself.

      Everything that would be interesting to crawl is listed in http://google.com/robots.txt. And there are good technical reasons why google have done that. It is not to make life difficult for competitors. The robots.txt on Google lists only what such a file is supposed to list, it is generally a help to any search engine comming across the site, including Googlebot. But the robots.txt does forbid others to freeload on Google's data. That said robots.txt is only advisory in the sence, that respecting it have to be implemented on the client side. It wouldn't be difficult to actually crawl the net by downloading pages from Google's cache.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    30. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by bl1st3r · · Score: 1

      http://pages.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/~saul/hci_topics/pap ers/apple.html

      I'm pretty sure that's the webpage you were talking about. Google wins again!

      Good link though. I had never read that before. A little offtopic, but their design method is brilliant. Have two groups simultaneously creating their own versions of the same idea in a sterile environment, and then sharing the best ideas from both at a later date to create the ultimate product.

      --
      hrrm.
    31. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by hankwang · · Score: 1
      >Would Microsoft be so low as to "embellish" the robots.txt file hosted on IIS sites so as to include a line forbidding the GoogleBot?

      Though Joe Average might accept the default settings for the search button, webmasters will certainly get very pissed if their webserver prevents them from showing up in the #1 or (shiver) #2 search engine Google... Even Microsoft wouldn't risk loosing the IIS market.

    32. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they can, but when are they going to? I went from NS 4.0 to Opera to Mozilla, and never was IE good enough to even make me consider it for serieous browsing.

    33. Re:It's like Netscape v. Microsoft in that... by slashbrent · · Score: 1

      Which, of course, begs the question: WTF is wrong with these geeks???

      I was completely amazed to see my fellow Linux/ACM geeks RUN to the Micro$oft recruiting booth during recruiting events on our campus and apply for a job. What is wrong with you people?

      Here's a thought:
      If all of us Mensa members and the better geeks refused to work for faggoty BillG, there would be no problem with MS. - are you all that hungry for a cool business card to impress chics with, or are you that greedy??

      Not me. I'll continue to work for half of what those MS sellout fucktards make so that my conscience is clear at night. I'm not making the world a worse place and ruining CS activites the world over - you can be "proud" of that...

      ..Brent

      --

      Moderators need an additional choice: "Karma Whore" for people who cut-and-paste articles as their comments!
  8. Whatever. by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application. Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy."

    Since when do you have to d/l special software to use MSN search? The only challenge here is building the engine. Getting people to switch is not a problem for Microsoft's marketing department.

    --
    Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    1. Re:Whatever. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, Google doesn't even have TV ads....but guess who does

    2. Re:Whatever. by joostje · · Score: 1
      Since when do you have to d/l special software to use MSN search?

      I believe at some point, MSN barred users of other browsers than IE. So, in order to use MSN, I would have had to install IE and a whole different OS to run it.

      But anyway, as far as I'm aware, Mozilla users aren't barred from MSN anymore, so I could switch now without installing anything.

    3. Re:Whatever. by nixman99 · · Score: 1

      Since when do you have to d/l special software to use MSN search? The only challenge here is building the engine. Getting people to switch is not a problem for Microsoft's marketing department.

      The post was referring to having to d/l Netscape in the IE vs NS war, and showing how the MSN vs Google war is different.

    4. Re:Whatever. by orpx · · Score: 1

      its obvious in that you dont need special software to use msn search engine, but what you probably do need is javascript, vbscript, and probably in the future some nifty SMILEY FACE APP THAT MAKES YOUR SEARCHES SO MUCH MORE ENJOYABLE! aka, a hole for you to stick your dick in. Heck, I'm already sold!

      I'm sure microsoft will have no problem, their marketing is great. their marketing is great. their marketing is great. HEY ITS GREAT! Google, well, they're bad, they favor bad things. they're just bad! :) :) :). Yes, its idiotic to compare netscape vs iexplorer. but in a sense you can compare, because micro$oft will most likely use tactics coinciding with what was done to shut netscape out of the market. Marketing is great! Marketing is Great! MaRKETING FLEM FAIT! FLAA FLEE FLAF FLOO FLO FLIS FLUCK FLEM.

  9. No, it could be very easy. by thesolo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    Well, if it's anything like Microsoft's previous attempts at dominating a market, it may prove atrociously easy for them. As another article on The Economist (linked here just a day or two ago) stated, Microsoft can easily leverage their Windows marketshare to take over the Search market.

    As the article said, all they really have to do is offer a new service as a free add-on to Windows, then simply build that service into the next version of Windows, citing it's popularity and need to be a core part of the OS. They did it with IE, and they can certainly do it with searching as well. Tie their engine to their OS, and why would the masses go out to the web to search anymore? They could just do it from the desktop.

    1. Re:No, it could be very easy. by acheyer · · Score: 3, Interesting


      The killer moment will be when they make the search experience for files on your desktop much better. I use Google today as my homepage, but the day when I get into the habit of searching for my files using Windows (today, it's not worth the trouble), it's trivial to extend that interface to search the web as well. Unfortunately, I think google does not have a strong, defensible position.

    2. Re:No, it could be very easy. by thesolo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here is the article I mentioned in my parent post, along with the matching Slashdot article.

    3. Re:No, it could be very easy. by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 3, Informative

      all they really have to do is offer a new service as a free add-on to Windows, then simply build that service into the next version of Windows

      They have effectively already done this. The search function in IE defaults to msn search, and if you mistype a url it sends you to their search engine as well. Because of this the popularity of msn search is massively overstated as a lot of the hits are due to typos.

    4. Re:No, it could be very easy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does not have to stop there...

      They could also have windows display bad results for google.

      ie random substitution for any search request going to google.

    5. Re:No, it could be very easy. by dickiedoodles · · Score: 2, Informative

      Tie their engine to their OS, and why would the masses go out to the web to search anymore? They could just do it from the desktop.

      google deskbar already does this

      --
      In Soviet Russia Slashdot cliches use you
    6. Re:No, it could be very easy. by SEE · · Score: 1

      Well, if it's anything like Microsoft's previous attempts at dominating a market, it may prove atrociously easy for them.

      Ah, yes, like how everybody uses Ultimate TV instead of TiVo, the X-Box instead of the PS2, MSN instead of AOL, Windows CE instead of PalmOS, IIS instead of Apache . . .

    7. Re:No, it could be very easy. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      IE defaults to msn search, and if you mistype a url it sends you to their search engine as well. Because of this the popularity of msn search is massively overstated as a lot of the hits are due to typos.

      And BTW, that function is not only an annoyance when typing URLs, but its also an incredible waste of time, since it takes you to a search for something you mistyped in the first place, and therefore the chances that the results it gives you will be interresting are basically nill.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    8. Re:No, it could be very easy. by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      The best way for MS to really do well at searching by leveraging would be something along these lines:

      Include a "search agent" with Windows, IIS, whatever - the agent runs locally and does the job of indexing everything on offer on the local network. The agents then work via a P2P style system to communicate. A search request can then be sent to the nearest agent, which can propograte it through the agent network to farm back the results.

      This would be a very effective way for doing very powerful searches - but only works if you can somehow get your agent distributed and running on a huge number of systems. Of course, that's not so hard for MS.

      Then again, seeing as most of the serious web serving is done on non MS platforms (be it Sun, BSD, or Linux) I doubt they'd have quite as much coverage as they would need.

      Still, an interesting idea.

      Jedidiah

    9. Re:No, it could be very easy. by ph43thon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the Economist article seems to suggest that a toolbar plugin will herald the end of Google. To strengthen their argument.. they suggest that Google's success is partially due to their very own Google Toolbar. Yet, there is absolutely no evidence stated to support this. Google survives by word of mouth and the willingness of users to type "google.com" and press [enter]. Again, IE won simply becuase it was there and it was just good enough. No one wanted to wait at least 20 minutes (on dialup) for Netscape to download.. especially when netscape wasn't really that good.

      Unless microsoft blocks google, they can't leverage their monopoly in the search war if it ever gets going. IMO, a toolbar isn't going to cut it. As for Microsoft's previous attempts, see Xbox, Ultimate TV and MSN. AOL has 35 million users.. MSN has somewhere over 9 million. MSN has been kicking for over seven years. So.. give me a break.. they glutted the browser market with a functional browser.. they glutted the market with Media Player. That doesn't mean they know how to leverage their monopoly. It is far from obvious that microsoft has the slightest idea how to handle Google.

      p

    10. Re:No, it could be very easy. by ph43thon · · Score: 1


      This article gives the numbers on MSN. Hey, I like Microsoft just fine.. but I don't think they know how to beat Google.


      p

    11. Re:No, it could be very easy. by ph43thon · · Score: 1


      I missed your comment.. I should defer to you from now on instead of regurgitating only half of what you write. I think the real telling point is with MSN v AOL. Their MSN software goes out on every computer... (I assume.. or it did) yet AOL has four times as many customers after seven years of fighting it.

      I guess it's just become really cool to be anti-anti-microsoft. All the kids are doing it. It's the new punk rock.

      p

  10. Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Microsoft always missed the clue-train, for multimedia, for the Internet, etc.

    They are of the school of thought that throwing money at a problem is the best way to solve it.

    Microsoft is UNABLE to understand open-source, interoperabilit, standards and all what makes Science go. All Microsoft is about money-grubbing, market domineering and the bottom-line.

    Microsoft will never understand what Google is about.

    1. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All Microsoft is about money-grubbing, market domineering and the bottom-line."
      Microsoft is no different than any smart company in a capitalist economy, and I see no problem with that.

    2. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      google is also about making money. just because they use linux and don't screw their customers as much doesn't mean they would still be there if they weren't getting paid.

    3. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the funny thing is...Microsoft is successful, how many people use Linux? Microsoft's strategy works, whatever it might be.

      so shut up.

    4. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Micrtosoft is handed artificial monopoly rights on a plate in the form of copyright and patent. Lots of smart companies in other markets don't have that. A truly free market capitalist system with REAL COMPETITION wouldn't have copyrights or patents.

    5. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      Looks like Microsoft is taking over the moderation department, so I repost what has been "moderated" as flamebait:

      Microsoft always missed the clue-train, for multimedia, for the Internet, etc.

      They are of the school of thought that throwing money at a problem is the best way to solve it.

      Microsoft is UNABLE to understand open-source, interoperabilit, standards and all what makes Science go. All Microsoft is about money-grubbing, market domineering and the bottom-line.

      Microsoft will never understand what Google is about.

    6. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 2
      And speaking of lacking a clue.

      How in the deep blue hell do you know what Microsoft understands? If you're basing anything upon the fact that they don't embrace open-source, etc., since when are 'agreement with' and 'understanding of' synonymous with each other? Microsoft probably understands those things just fine, thinks they're stupid, and goes in other directions.

      So, this is basically you stating that, because they don't agree with the same things as you, they've "missed the clue-train". Let's see, they are worth tens of billions of dollars, are a household name and basically have a licence to print another X billion dollars. Meanwhile, you're posting to Slashdot. Who's missing what train?

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    7. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      owned!!!!

    8. Re:Has Microsoft ever had a clue??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good analysis, but you have forgotten the end-user. Has the end-user ever had a clue? Granted, users like yourself and I use Google because it is decisively more clever, but others use it because it's purdy and easy to use. If m$ integrates it with their OS or IE, many will use it.

      I guess the best comforting thought is: Microsoft integrates all of their works together to control each market. At the core of this mess is Windows which nearly all use. This means Microsoft will fall all together. When Microsoft loses the OS game-- they lose it all.

  11. it will be easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    All MS has to do is hard code in the next IE fixpacks a simple check to see if the URL is Google and do all kinds of bad things to the request, claim it was a "bug" but then not get around to fixing it for a couple of years.

    1. Re:it will be easy by Davak · · Score: 1

      Ah... this would be true accept that alternative browsers do exist.

      I would be willing to bet that more people feel strongly about using google than they feel strongly about using IE.

      Even my elderly uncle who can't use the web without AOL knows how to get to google for his searches. If IE blocked google, he would be calling me over to install an alternative browser ASAP.

      Unfortunately now, he just calls me over to uninstall the latest trojan/virus/worm that he finds a way to install on a routine basis. :)

      Davak

  12. Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by Larry+David · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application.

    This rather sarcastic remark somewhat misses the point. Not everyone is running Mozilla or a non-Microsoft OS. MS leapfrogged Netscape primarily because IE was 'good enough' (IE4 versus Netscape 4 was pretty even), it was quicker to load (thanks to MS integrating it into the OS), and because MS made it the default for everything.

    Microsoft only has to make their new search 'good enough', and integrate it with Internet Explorer (or even as toolbars in other apps, like the Office suite), and Joe Public will use it just to make life simple.

    1. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      IE4 versus Netscape 4 was pretty even

      Not to me. I fought to use Netscape 4 for years and finally got sick of the constant crashes and switched to the dark side. I've tried a number of Mozilla releases and haven't found the same speed and stability I get from IE. I admit I haven't tried in the last year, it's just such a pain to switch browser only to switch back.

      IE isn't just good enough. I don't even think about it when I'm running it. Oh, I do use proximatron for ad blocking.

    2. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by Ironica · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not to me. I fought to use Netscape 4 for years and finally got sick of the constant crashes and switched to the dark side. I've tried a number of Mozilla releases and haven't found the same speed and stability I get from IE. I admit I haven't tried in the last year, it's just such a pain to switch browser only to switch back.

      Yeah, I used Netscape 4.77 up until Mozilla got to 1.0, actually. And the crashes were annoying.

      But when IE 4 crashed (and I used to use it a lot too) it took my entire DESKTOP with it. And so, even if Netscape crashed more often (as I recall, they were even) I could keep going with other programs.

      Feature-wise, they were similar, except for ActiveX (which most folks don't use because it's so platform-specific, not to mention insecure). IE5 beats Netscape 4, sure, but that's not the comparison that was being made.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    3. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mozilla Firebird

      Mozilla has improved, but even better if you don't require the email, authoring, etc. features of moz is Firebird. Light, fast, stable, and cool feautures like tabbed browsing.

    4. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by SEE · · Score: 1

      How long has MSN Search been the default integrated with IE? Five years now? Seven? Google didn't even exist when it was integrated, and yet still managed to take over from out of nowhere.

    5. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by ph43thon · · Score: 1

      I knew I should have left that statement out since I didnt' have space to defend it. But, I'll do that here. I give you this.. I microsoft won the "browser war" because no one needed to download and install their browser, and IE was good enough to keep people from seeking out Netscape.

      I think you misrepresent the effect enduser laziness had on Netscape's demise. IMO, the enduser was too lazy to download and install Netscape (who wants to wait 20minutes on dialup when a browser is already available.) That barrier does not exist with google. My assertion is that typing "google.com" and pressing isn't enough of a deterrent.. especially when Microsoft's search isn't near 'good enough.' Also, their browser became better than Netscape since webpages were coded for IE instead of Netscape. (regardless of HTML specs) Data can't be made to conform to Microsoft's search engine while at the same time breaking Google's search. In this instance, Microsoft must be smarter. They can't just rely on brand awareness or whatever one wishes to call it.

      My sarcastic remark is appropriate in that people tend to trivialize the work Microsoft must do to unseat Google. Microsoft has a better shot than it did (does) with Xbox or TV on demand.. but only a little better. Microsoft can win when it comes to software programs.. things that you have to install OR things that they can enforce compatibility issues with.. but, I assert, they rarely win when it comes to services or other sorts of products.

      p

    6. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by CTachyon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I used Netscape 4.77 up until Mozilla got to 1.0, actually. And the crashes were annoying.

      You waited that long? I switched when Mozilla hit Milestone 18, way back in late '00. Netscape 4 was just awful, despite being faster on my old 300MHz system at the time.

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    7. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

      Perhaps an anti-trust office (either US or EU) will be quick to force MS to make any search features work with any search engine one wants.

    8. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by Tony · · Score: 1

      Perhaps an anti-trust office (either US or EU) will be quick to force MS to make any search features work with any search engine one wants.

      This is a good idea. But, nobody will use it. At least, only a few people will use it. Most people will just use the default, which will certainly be Microsoft's.

      And like the man says, Whoever controls knowledge controls society. Or something like that.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    9. Re:Similiaries to Netscape vs MS not unfounded by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

      Probably true, but keep in mind how many users rely on a friend or relative more tech-oriented then they are to configure their computers. They won't put up with something outlandish like installing Linux or netscape, but selecting a different option in some obscure dialog just because my nerdy anti-Microsoft cousin says so--why not?

  13. Netscape vs Microsoft by RoadkillBunny · · Score: 0, Insightful

    When it was Netscape vs Microsoft, M$ could create it's properiaty standards and make bugs in Windows that could crash it and make it look like Netscape's fault. This is using their popularity to the advantage. But with google, they can't use the popularity. All they can do that I can think of is to make IE not allow the user to go to google.com and show some kind of 404 Error. Help me out here, but wouldn't be this kind of illegal?

    --
    Cheers,
    RoadkillBunny
  14. Trust by jole · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What really matters in search engines are trust, relevance, speed and features. In other categories competition might be strong, but it is hard to see that Microsoft-branded search engine could easily be as trusted as google in near future.

    My prediction is that Google will win hands down.

    --
    Vaadin - the best open source framework for building web applications in Java - no plug
  15. Barriers to entry by DOsinga · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Google sits in an excellent spot, but there are not many barriers to entry in the search engine arena; who uses altavista, excite or lycos anymore? As long as people start surfing from windows, I would not bet against Microsoft. Maybe an aliance between Nokia and Google could make a dent into Bills armour.

  16. Similarities by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The main reason it's similar is that MS sees a potential serious competitor within a market it wants to own. MS wants to ringfence the desktop and datacentre market (well, it's got to gain the datacentre market first, but it was on the way to doing that before Linux became popular).

    It's the argument that searching is about to become really important to them as a business sales technique - the new filesystem is a database, the integration of a web search engine makes your PC behave like a cache of the 'net. Etc. Owning the 'search' territory will help their marketing significantly, so they'll be serious about trying to get it.

    I wouldn't write them off either - just because we all use google now doesn't mean we won't switch at the drop of a hat if something "better" (better can be 'easier to use' rather than 'more appropriate results') comes along. Altavista, anyone ?

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  17. matching toolbars by qBeaks · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I use the google toolbar. Last week I got an email from msnbeta to try out the msn toolbar toolbar.msn.com. HEY MSN toolbar and google toolbar look and do the same thing!.

    Sorry but I'll stick with google's toolbar.

    I think the internet needs google to remain independent from Microsoft, yahoo, Sun, etc...

    1. Re:matching toolbars by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      As long as you disable the spyware features in the google toolbar it's okay. In fact it's better than okay, in that it adds popup protection to IE. The Google Toolbar actually helps IE compete with Mozilla in some regards.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:matching toolbars by Jarlsberg · · Score: 1
      I use the google toolbar. Last week I got an email from msnbeta to try out the msn toolbar toolbar.msn.com. HEY MSN toolbar and google toolbar look and do the same thing!.

      Sorry but I'll stick with google's toolbar.

      I think the internet needs google to remain independent from Microsoft, yahoo, Sun, etc...

      You know, many have told me to check out Open Office, but I've always declined. You want to know why? HEY OPEN OFFICE, Microsoft Office looks and does the same thing!

      Sorry, I'll stick with Microsoft Office.

      It's not like choice is good or anything...

      ;)

  18. Google v. Microsoft.. by Metallic+Matty · · Score: 4, Funny

    In this corner, weighing in at 110lbs a small, geeky nerd who has cornered the entire computer industry with its crippling monopoly software.

    And in the other, weighing in at a thousand terabytes, a small, simple, yet incredibly efficient search engine, who has become a household name for internet searches.

    I know who I'd place my money on.

    (PS: I am aware of the fact that my numbers are inaccurate.)

    1. Re:Google v. Microsoft.. by ttys00 · · Score: 1

      The geeky nerd has 40 billion dollars in the bank. I'm betting on him.

      Google has an IPO approaching. Can we say "hostile takeover"?

    2. Re:Google v. Microsoft.. by rosie_bhjp · · Score: 1

      I thought Google was only going to IPO 33% of the company. Hostile takeover requires 51% of the company.

      --
      A radio maverick jumps to internet only. The Future of Rock n Roll
    3. Re:Google v. Microsoft.. by ttys00 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft could still buy the entire 33%. They can afford it. This would not only get them a nice chunk of Google's profits, but would probably make them the largest shareholder and privy to a significant amount of control over Google.

  19. No Switching Cost by mrm677 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The fight is very easy for Microsoft. All they have to do is make a better search engine. There is no cost nor effort for me to switch search engines.

    1. Re:No Switching Cost by Hanji · · Score: 2, Interesting

      All they have to do is make a better search engine.
      And that's "very easy"?????

      Google isn't perfect by any means, and sure, you could do better, but it's damn good, and besting it sure as hell wouldn't be "very easy."

      --
      A Minesweeper clone that doesn't suck
    2. Re:No Switching Cost by Narcissus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the easiest way to tell when Microsoft might be close is the day that the MSDN search feature provided by Microsoft is more accurate than using Google with site:msdn.microsoft.com .

      If Microsoft can't make a search engine that works on a known set of like data to produce better results than a search engine that uses a "generic" search function, then they have problems.

    3. Re:No Switching Cost by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Google isn't perfect by any means, and sure, you could do better, but it's damn good

      Could they possibly filter out the sales sites that spam the engine and place those sites under a different tab?

      When I'm looking for something I don't have to wade through 3 Google results pages. Maybe something like, "Does page contain credit card input fields"? and assign a weight to it.

    4. Re:No Switching Cost by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      There might not be any cost to you, however I would argue that there is a cost to many. For me it would be to compromise my values and use a product from a monopoly I do not want to support. I for one make an effort to never support MS. I believe in Capitalism, and feel that a monopoly is devastating to a system based on capitalism. It would cost me very much to have to switch to MSN search.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    5. Re:No Switching Cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely, the user often knows whether they're looking for marketing hype vs useful information, whether they are wanting to buy anything or not.

      Another really obvious improvement would be supporting wildcards. I hate having to search for 'test OR tested OR testing OR tests'.
      On 2nd thoughts, I could probably set up a macro for that ;)

    6. Re:No Switching Cost by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      It's an absolute nightmare trying to use Google to search for certain forms of info because of the pushy way sales sites game it.

      If you know, say, the model name of an older Laptop computer and you're interested in finding out what it's internal specs are, you'll choke to death on bid pages for batteries before you find a page that says what processor it contains.

      This isn't a google-unique problem, but it is a major problem with any web search.

      --
      ---
    7. Re:No Switching Cost by mrm677 · · Score: 1

      There might not be any cost to you, however I would argue that there is a cost to many. For me it would be to compromise my values and use a product from a monopoly I do not want to support. I for one make an effort to never support MS. I believe in Capitalism, and feel that a monopoly is devastating to a system based on capitalism. It would cost me very much to have to switch to MSN search.

      Yeah, its terrible to support an American company that provides the federal government with billions in tax revenue.

      Use Linux? Thats great and good for you for saving money and using something that is better for you. But I can't understand how so many people, particularly teeny boppers and twenty-somethings, really hate Microsoft and feel it violates their values!!.

      With very high switching costs, a monopoly is pretty much guaranteed and is a topic in many business strategy classes. If this breaks your values, then I think you are lacking something in life :)

    8. Re:No Switching Cost by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      But I can't understand how so many people, particularly teeny boppers and twenty-somethings, really hate Microsoft and feel it violates their values!
      Are you suggesting that I may be a "teeny booper" or a twenty-something? If so you are wrong.
      If this breaks your values, then I think you are lacking something in life :)
      Oh, please enlighten me on what values I may lack because I do not agree with a monopoly? I am sorry, but I do not care for corportate greed or the greed for money of most "businessmen". You may feel that money is what is important to you in life, and I feel sorry for you and what you lack. I have much more valuable things in my life then money.
      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  20. Power of defaults by shiningsun · · Score: 1

    Microsoft can have the "search" button on their browser go to their own search engine by default. Or point you to their search engine when you mistype a URL. The average user may not care enough specifically go to Google even if they know it. Most people knew and used Netscape when IE came out, and with the help of being the default browser in Windows, IE started winning the browser war even before Netscape's software quality went down.

  21. Search is moving.... by telstar · · Score: 1

    It won't be relegated to just the browser .... it'll be integrated into the desktop and available from the taskbar. Google has released their deskband search tool, and Microsoft is sure to do the same. Early screens from Longhorn show the functionality.

    1. Re:Search is moving.... by blkros · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd heard something about that for the next release of windows. So file searching and internet searching will be simple, don't even need to open a browser.

      --
      Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
  22. Never overestimate the users by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application

    True. However, it is a fact (I think) that for a long time, Netscape was one of the busiest sites on the internet thanks to the number of users who had that as their homepage.

    The reason they had that as their homepage was that they didn't even consider that they could change it, let alone look into how to do it.

    MS will get a lot of inital acceptance simply by making IE default to their own search site.

  23. what if...? by flaczki · · Score: 2, Interesting

    what if microsoft will claim ovnership of IP of the search engine and will sue google for 3 B dollars?

  24. Google's advantage by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft will undoubtedly make their own search engine the default when the browser loads, or will integrate it with their msn.com portal page, but even if they do this, they still have typically created pages that are slow to load and so full of stuff as to make them difficult to use. Google has always had a clean interface and massively quick load times. This helps.

    Google is a household word. It's also becoming accepted as a slang verb (to google for something), and has a reputation of delivering good results. Teachers like it, and their students are encouraged to use it. Professionals like it because it's quick. This also helps.

    If Microsoft attempts to sabotage or hijack connections to google to redirect to MSN search via Internet Explorer, Google can cry foul to the courts (because Microsoft was ruled a monopoly) and get that removed, or possibly even get Microsoft barred from putting their own search engine in by default. This could prove interesting.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Google's advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Students encouraged to use it? At my highschool, google is blocked and labeled as "porn", while all other search engines are not!

    2. Re:Google's advantage by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Microsoft will undoubtedly make their own search engine the default when the browser loads, or will integrate it with their msn.com portal page, but even if they do this, they still have typically created pages that are slow to load and so full of stuff as to make them difficult to use. Google has always had a clean interface and massively quick load times. This helps.

      But, if every Windows computer comes with IE pre-installed, with a toolbar that has a "search" box that can only point to MSN search, Google's clean interface and fast loading page isn't nearly as big an advantage.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    3. Re:Google's advantage by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 2
      they still have typically created pages that are slow to load and so full of stuff as to make them difficult to use

      When Microsoft makes the big push toward search engine dominance, I'll bet you a thousand bucks this problem vanishes. MSN is cluttered because the search is an "added feature," not the entire show. Yet.

      Microsoft is also a household name and will get the same positive critiques from the same people as you mentioned if the search is just "better," either in results, usability or availability. Don't forget where you are; in the world outside the biases of Slashdot, people use what works the best or is the most easily available (probably the latter), so Google's "good guy" image won't be worth a hill o' beans, nor will its glowing reviews the week before.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    4. Re:Google's advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      only whats easiest to access, people don't give a shit about what works best

  25. Users are Lazy by dduardo · · Score: 1

    "I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application." Even if this is the case, when you open Internet Explorer for the first time, Microsoft asks you if you want use msn.com as your homepage. Most users will just click yes. This gives Microsoft an edge. If you want to use google, the user actually has to do work and type "www.google.com" in the address bar. This is just like Netscape versus IE. It all has to do with the convience of just being there. I know everyone in my family except me uses the msn for this reason. Even when I tell them that google is better, they just ignore me, because it is just easier to use msn.

    1. Re:Users are Lazy by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well, still, shitloads of people prefer google.
      of ordinary people, joe schmoes.

      heck, they might be clueless as hell and they may run ie as the browser and their computer may be full of spyware but a lot of them still use google as their homepage and know how to set it as well(and go through the effort as well!), it's just that good.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  26. Microsoft will try old technique, but will it work by Ghoser777 · · Score: 1

    It's pretty easy to see what they can do - embed a microsoft search function into the toolbar sort of like how Safari does it with Google right now. Then, they can "accidentally" make Google's website not render correctly in future releases of IE. I think this time they're going to find that people are going to get really pissed off and instead of switching to Microsoft's service they're going to find a web browser that does work with Google correctly.

    Here's hoping,
    Matt Fahrenbacher

    --
    James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
  27. Google link to NYT article by EvilGrin666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ironically, heres a link using google news search to the article so you can avoid the NYT signup.

    The Coming Search War

  28. Very similar to NS vs MS by SilentJ_PDX · · Score: 2, Informative

    Microsoft gets to preload the OS with their preference (a browser that defaults to the MS search engine). There may not be a 20MB download that stands in the way of Joe User choosing a different search engine, but given the choice between a search box in the browser and having to type in "www.google.com", I think most users will choose the former.

    I'm not saying the users can't make another choice, I'm just saying they won't bother.

    1. Re:Very similar to NS vs MS by EvilGrin666 · · Score: 1

      Most already have, ever since about IE4 the homepage defaults to MSN upon installation (unless IE has been branded). Even so, most users I come across use google for searching.

    2. Re:Very similar to NS vs MS by Angus+Prune · · Score: 1

      Microsoft already has IE default to MSN and people still bother to google.

      Technology is just that, technology. Google is very good at the moment, but could be easily suppased. (By easily i mean a couple of years and allot of money).
      The big advantage that google has is that it has become a word. It has become part of the language people use day to day. People google and like to google. They tell their friends that they google.

      Hoover became synomous with vacum cleaner and every vacum cleaner was known as a hoover. Google has achieved a similar thing. Even if MSN becomes good people may well use "to google" to describe it. This won't stop microsoft but it will be the real challenge.

  29. Search microsoft.com by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft.com has the worst search software I've seen it's fooking terrible. They should get their own $h!t together first.

    No offence but slashdot is 2nd.

  30. I beg your pardon? by WernerStormcrow · · Score: 1
    Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application.
    Gee... and I thought I actually needed my OS and browser to use this Google search application. I wonder, though, where Michael crams his network cable in.
  31. Anyone but microsoft... by D-Cypell · · Score: 1

    As the next generation of search technologies hit the market it is very possible that google will find itself playing catch up (particually when the share holders are calling the shots).

    I am not religious about my search technologies. I do primarily use google but this isnt because I have loyalty to google, it is because google seem to provide the most relevant responses to my queries at present.

    I would have nothing against a Microsoft search tech if it was unbias and relevant but I have a sneaking suspicion that we would begin to see that priority in search results would be given to information that was supported directly by microsoft.

    They will clearly use any headway in search technology to put their products above everyone elses.

    Personally, I would tend to lean towards search engines that are backed by companies that dont have their fingers in as many pies as microsoft. Will the general internet populas agree?

  32. MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by fire-eyes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I definately won't be using a biased search engine. I might go as far as to say censored:

    Number of results for the search "linux"

    at http://www.google.com/ : "about 12,500,000."

    at http://search.msn.com/ : "about 429"

    That's way more than a little difference. That's a ratio of about 431034:1.

    I'm bored so let's try the same thing with "microsoft":

    google: "about 9,470,000"

    msn: "about 3856"

    This time it's a ratio of about 24559:1 . Draw your own conclusions. At the very least I think msn is just a shitty search.

    And yes I'm biased! I LOVE IT!

    --
    -- Note: If you don't agree with me, don't bother replying. I won't read it.
    1. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by gatkinso · · Score: 1


      My results:

      Results 1-15 of about 14189782 containing "linux"

      Results 1-15 of about 20457949 containing "Microsoft"

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    2. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      msn [Results 1-15 of about 14133147 containing "linux"]
      google [Results 1 - 10 of about 89,300,000]

      Here's the slashdot story on MSN's sponsored links deal.

    3. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, My is a pretty good search engine. But it's easily slashdotted.

    4. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      The other person who replied to the original message got the same results I did on MSN search -- about 14 million results for "linux" and about 20 million results for "microsoft". How on earth did this get modded up? Oh that's right, he's bashing Microsoft, so he's "insightful" or "interesting".

    5. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so clever! I NEVER would have thought about trying that sort of search!

      (Score:-1, Loser)

    6. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No worries. Logged out and modded his ass 'Redundant'.

      Some of us mods prefer the weed to the crack.

    7. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by moosesocks · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, but MSN only shows 32 results for SCO.
      Google shows 3.8 million. (if the site stays down, how long until they're delisted?)

      Searching google for MSN yields 44.8 million.
      Searching google for google yields 41.7 million (this page among them)

      Searching msn for msn yields 3,389
      Searching msn for google yields 102, which, ironically, is listed as an "MSN Top Pick"

      Fair? Maybe. Maybe not. It just seems that MSN's crawler hasn't mapped nearly as much of the web as Google's has, but has managed to map most stuff pertaining to itself (which it should).

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    8. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Searching for "goatse":
      MSN: 16,060
      Google: 56,200

      So I know where I'll be 'shopping', campers.

    9. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

      Yes, isn't this strange?
      A search for "Gentoo Linux" on search.msn.com returned "about 135285 containing "Gentoo Linux""

      (Yeah, ok, of course google returned 643,000)

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
    10. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by bluewee · · Score: 1
      http://www.google.com/search?q=microsoft&hl=en&lr= &ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&start=9000&sa=N

      but you cannot look at the results past 1k...

      --
      [blue] - The Ministry of Information approved this message...
    11. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by rabidcow · · Score: 1

      That's not the way to calculate ratios that show bias. That just shows that search.msn.com gives you far fewer results.

      What you want to compare is this:
      (for the sake of laziness, using your data)

      @ google:
      "linux" 12,500,000
      "microsoft" 9,470,000
      ratio: about 33:25

      @ msn:
      "linux" 429
      "microsoft" 3856
      ratio: about 9:80

    12. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by craigtay · · Score: 1

      I only look at the first two pages or three pages for what I want, so if they returned 30 really excellent results I would happy with that. Quality over quantity. Just because Google gives me 10 billion billion results doesn't mean much.

    13. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Dascen · · Score: 1

      at http://www.google.com/ : "about 12,500,000."
      at http://search.msn.com/ : "about 429"


      not to mention the first two search results returned from msn are amazon and ebay.... coincidence?

      --
      -blar
    14. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Shaklee39 · · Score: 1

      Wow, great job at fudging the numbers! Now here are the real results for the mods that actually attempt the same search:

      Results 1-15 of about 8460136 containing "google"

    15. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by arch_helmet · · Score: 1

      What is also interesting is the quality of results, and just how relatively *commercial* they are.

      One (probably biased) example - search for 'jakarta struts' on each site.

      Google: first hit is jakarta.apache.org/struts/, the official site and (I'm ranting) a source of good, _free_ documentation on Struts.

      MSN: jakarta.apache.org doesn't feature in the first 15 results (I didn't look further). In fact, every one of the 15 results is a commercial site, mostly concerned with books about Struts.

      Which one of these is more useful (and dare I say it, honest)? Which one has a commercial bias?

      Food for thought.

      ~ Tim

    16. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      Opps - those would be, my results using MSN Search....

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    17. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I usually don't go more than a few pages into the results either. But if one system is aware of 29,000 times (comparing the 12,500,000 and 429 numbers from above) as many sites, then the odds of it finding the site I'm looking for go way up. Especially when you start throwing in additional search words. Kind of like searching for the best gas price in town by driving around the block.

    18. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sco.com is not down, they just removed the A record for www.

      http://sco.com/ works just fine.

    19. Re:MSN, Just a Poor Search Engine? by mordejai · · Score: 0

      On the other hand, a search for "microsoft sucks" returns 519,000 results on Google, and 160,630 on MSN.
      Just a little more balanced =)

  33. What I think will be interesting is... by gordgekko · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The reaction of people like those found on Slashdot if Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google. Will people ignore that in favor of simple Microsoft bashing, or will they use it and acknowledge its superiority?

    Assuming, of course, that Microsoft builds a better search engine, of course.

    --
    You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
    1. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Ironica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The reaction of people like those found on Slashdot if Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google. Will people ignore that in favor of simple Microsoft bashing, or will they use it and acknowledge its superiority?

      There's a certain element of trust that goes into something like this. MSN's new search technology could spit back more relevant and comprehensive results, but there would still be suspicion that MS was (a) using the search info in ways we wouldn't approve of, and (b) shaping the results to suit their priorities.

      Since the search engine code will be proprietary, there's no way to prove otherwise, and many people will still be more inclined to use a company that they consider "safer."

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    2. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by LordK2002 · · Score: 1
      The reaction of people like those found on Slashdot if Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google
      And that is one hell of an "if".

      Since when have Microsoft ever made a product that was "demonstrably better" than its competitors (with the possible borderline exception of Netscape)?

      Most evidence suggests they use market forces and existing dominance to popularise their products, not technical excellence.

      K

    3. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by fallacy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I for one would definately love to see Microsoft build a decent search engine. One without bias, without specific software requirements, without...(you get the idea).
      The only way that Google is going to continue to improve on an already outstanding engine is through competition - even from Microsoft! Additionally, a good, well-built product range, fair Microsoft company would be nicer to have than the current (read: "so far has been") incarnation. Yes! There, I've said it - I want Microsoft to succeed: but only as a respected IT company delivering uncompromised less buggy (let's not get too carried away here) software/products without man-handling of smaller companies, aggressive take-overs, lies/FUD and what not.

      However, there are times when you feel a particular company has crossed that psychological "screw-you" line far too often and so you don't hold your breath for much longer than a BogoMip when hearing about their "Next Big Thing TM".
      Mind you, if Microsoft does make it decent, my bet is that /.ters may actually use it, if it's good enough. I would like to think that we're a breed of people that have better moral values than to stoop to simply not using a product because Mr Gates et al have had their sticky paws over it. We won't bash Microsoft regardless of the quality of the product - we have SCO for that now ;-)

      "Assuming, of course, that Microsoft builds a better search engine, of course."
      As someone once said to me: "Rule Number One: Never Assume.

    4. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 1

      Since the search engine code will be proprietary,

      As opposed to Google's code, located right on Sourceforge for all to see?

      Yes, there's a level of (dis)trust MS might have to overcome, but Google isn't invincible.

    5. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shall we asume a spherical cow aswell?

    6. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The reaction of people like those found on Slashdot if Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google. Will people ignore that in favor of simple Microsoft bashing, or will they use it and acknowledge its superiority?

      Neither, we'll be too busy dodging flying-pig crap...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    7. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      Excel... and um..

      That's it.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    8. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Quattro was better then excel for a long time. In fact quattro invented tabbed sheets and property pages.

      Too bad MS crushed them too.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    9. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by fermion · · Score: 1
      I think you are assuming a single search engine will work for all people. To paraphrase another response, conservatives tend to think there is exactly one good solution for every problem and they have it.

      The MS search engine will be good and will fill a need. It may well be better in many ways than google. However, history tells us that MS will not be happy creating a good product, but will want to marginalize google into extinction. This will not be a good thing.

      I would welcome anyone who creates a quality search engine. I worry that google controls what is known on the net. However, history also tells us that MS tends to exert a much more draconian control over information.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    10. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by natrius · · Score: 1

      I would like to think that we're a breed of people that have better moral values than to stoop to simply not using a product because Mr Gates et al have had their sticky paws over it.

      You must be new here.

    11. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 1

      Well, what I think is interesting is the fact that Microsoft hasn't yet gotten into soft drinks. Several other companies are making big bucks selling sugar water... seems like an easy business model to copy, requires zero imagination, and a perfect fit for Microsoft's MO.

    12. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      if Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google
      I gather they are having a devil of a time finding qualified Ph.D.s to work on the project - they all work for Google.
    13. Re:What I think will be interesting is... by Ironica · · Score: 1

      As opposed to Google's code, located right on Sourceforge for all to see?

      Yes, there's a level of (dis)trust MS might have to overcome, but Google isn't invincible.


      I didn't actually ever say or mean to imply that Google is Open Source... after all, if they were, MS wouldn't bother with creating their own code, would they?

      However, the fact that we *don't* know what either code is doing means that we will be more inclined to trust the company that has the least to gain and most to lose by deceiving us... i.e. the one that we already trust more (Google).

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  34. Wow by andih8u · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Aside from this all being hashed over yesterday, people will generally use whichever search engine is better. Yahoo once had market dominance until Google proved to be a far better search engine. Microsoft will achieve dominance if they provide beter search results than Google. There's not many ways to sneakily force people to use your search engine, aside from defaulting the search button to your own search engine, which MS does already anyway.

    --


    slashdot, news for crazed liberal socialist zealots
  35. How long... by Audiovore · · Score: 1

    will it take for a company to rear its head with a patent on searching?

    --
    Without music, life would be a mistake. --- Nietzsche
  36. Long shot for MS by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has had years to take the search market. The pos MSN start page that IE defaults to is one of the first default settings in IE to get changed by new users. What really cracks me up is two of the internet's biggest success stories are also two of the ugliest websites: google and ebay! I hope MS's marketing department designs the page... it will continue to be too pretty to succeed.

    --
    -- $G
  37. Heh by Moth7 · · Score: 1
    This reminds me of a 2DTV episode:
    *Bill finds his son reading a pr0n mag*
    Bill: "Son, I'm so ashamed!"
    Son: "I'm sorry Dad."
    Bill: "You should have been using my new program, Microsoft Porn for Windows!"
    *Opens up the application*
    Bill: "Wow, nice hooters ^_^!"
  38. Analogy by iantri · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Others have suggested that Google will fall like Netscape (the browser) did.

    I'm not so sure.

    Yes, Microsoft did use their desktop OS monopoly to get IE onto everyone's computer, but they did it at just the right time -- Netscape had gone way downhill, and people wanted a browser that worked half decently.

    Even if they integrate MSN Search, people will still use Google because it is lightyears better -- Google is even a verb now because of it.

  39. Microsoft has already won. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In Longhorn, they will just include their search engine as part of the OS itself, no need to ever type in www.google.com. Its all over.

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
    1. Re:Microsoft has already won. by macmaniac · · Score: 1

      Blech.
      Micro$uck's current search engine is comparable IMHO to ye old HotBot and the GO network...
      Google has been well established and generates significantly more useful results in most cases in all genres (yes, including pr0n as indicated earlier) than anything Microshaft can ever come up with.
      Microsoft != innovator.

    2. Re:Microsoft has already won. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

      thats not the point. IE does not compare to mozilla or even netscape.

      --
      People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  40. MS is patient by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    Same remarks could have been said in the context of MS Word against Wordperfect or IE against Netscape, Excel against Lotus, etc. MS always by attrition and patient and they monoply position to wait it out. Also, MS is in a good position to dominate because the own the distribution channel.

    1. Re:MS is patient by xlurker · · Score: 1
      all the examples you supply only work because the
      effort of switching was high.

      think of the time spent installing a new large
      software package, not to mention the time needed to
      switch formats and learn the usage.

      these difficulties simply don't apply to when it
      comes to switching search engine preference.

      this also nicely explains how Google even became
      search engine leader so fast:
      there were no hurdles for the users

      --
      ______________________________________________
      sigamajig...
    2. Re:MS is patient by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hard line returns are t3h suck, d00d.

    3. Re:MS is patient by sasha328 · · Score: 1

      I've got a couple of comments to make regarding this analogy. I can't compare Word with Wordperfect. I prefer Wordperfect, especially in it's early incarnations and it's scripting language. Pity Corel didn't do enough for this program. Anyway I digress. I don't know much about Lotus, but I always thought that Excel is the only good program in the office suite. As for netscape and IE, there was a time when Netscape was better than IE (pre version 4). Since then the gap has gone in IE's favour.Don't get me wrong, but competition does come with quality. I am typing this in Netscape 7.1. I like it. It's fast, and it's got tabs. IE on my machine is fast but doesn't have tabs. My point is, Microsoft won some of their battles on being good enough in a market where they own the distribution channel.
      Now in this case, if their product (the serch engine) is good enough, they might win over google because they own the desktop (ie the default browser) market. At the moment, it's sriously not good enough. 1700 entries for Australia on MSN and 52million on google. someone's got a better index.

  41. this could become a huge failure for MS... by xlurker · · Score: 3, Troll
    since competing with Google would mean
    being able to administer thousands of machines
    remotely.

    No, not just simply administering thousands
    remotely, but also being able to administer
    them incredibly well and easy.

    since I don't see that happening, I look forward
    to seeing this MS-project crash and burn...
    (this is great for future google stock)

    --
    ______________________________________________
    sigamajig...
    1. Re:this could become a huge failure for MS... by Mia'cova · · Score: 1

      Hotmail works. I don't want to get into any uptime wars but for the masses, it's good enough. These days if a microsoft service doesn't work, they blame themselves or their computers and just try it again later. And sadly, microsoft probably should be directing all their warnings at the users...

    2. Re:this could become a huge failure for MS... by xlurker · · Score: 1
      Hotmail works. I don't want to get into any
      uptime wars but for the masses, it's good enough.

      yeah, you're right about that.

      but...
      what made and makes Google King of the Hill is still

      • quality and
      • speed.
      MS simply doesn't have what it takes to do both simultaneously.

      It can supply search-result quality similar to
      that of Google (if it wanted to), but what it'll
      be lacking then is speed, since this would
      necessitate thousands of nodes.
      ...but that just will never happen.

      It can supply speed similar to Google
      (by reducing the size of the database and the
      level of cleverness in the search-code),
      but what'll be lacking then is quality.
      ...similar to where it is now.

      I also dare to doubt it could achieve Googles
      level of cleverness since this is more then
      mere "programming"...

      There's a difference between being a good or
      even excellent programmer, and being able to
      write "hardcore CS code" e.g. for efficiently finding
      acceptable "solutions" for the travelling
      salesman problem or doing fast computational
      fluid dynamics on huge clusters...

      --
      ______________________________________________
      sigamajig...
    3. Re:this could become a huge failure for MS... by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      On the other hand I've gotten an error from google exactly once.

      Ever.

      It went away when I refreshed the page.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    4. Re:this could become a huge failure for MS... by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Thanks
      for
      putting
      your
      own
      newlines
      in--
      i t
      helps
      a
      lot
      in
      readability.

  42. Google should sue. by Lux · · Score: 1, Interesting


    The problem with the antitrust cases against MS so far have been that they've taken place after the illegal activity. I feel pretty strongly that Google should sue for a preliminary injunction against MS promoting any new search engine via any media embedded in the client (desktop icons, homepage, et cetera.) Such a judgement might come along in time for it to be useful, and it would leave them on much more even footing.

    It might be hard to get though because such a judgement would necessarily drive a wedge between MS's network services (MSN, messenger, passport, hotmail, et cetera) and their OS/application software. For example, it might mean that if MS wanted to embed their new search engine in MSN, they couldn't use it as IE's default homepage anymore. They'd have to pick between using MSN to promote the search engine and using IE to promote MSN.

    I think that would be a Good Thing, but a judge could see it as a strong argument against such an injunction.

    1. Re:Google should sue. by Ironica · · Score: 1

      It might be hard to get though because such a judgement would necessarily drive a wedge between MS's network services (MSN, messenger, passport, hotmail, et cetera) and their OS/application software. For example, it might mean that if MS wanted to embed their new search engine in MSN, they couldn't use it as IE's default homepage anymore. They'd have to pick between using MSN to promote the search engine and using IE to promote MSN.

      I think that would be a Good Thing, but a judge could see it as a strong argument against such an injunction.


      Or, an argument in favor of such an injunction...

      With so many choices about which monopoly to leverage in which market, limiting MS to just *one* isn't such a burden on them, really, is it?

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  43. google news by CoJoNEs · · Score: 3, Informative

    for those of you who don't want to subscribe to the times just click on Google News

  44. uh oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Be warned that this feature also turns up the illegal/nasty kind of porn also - even with generic porn searches. The authorities consider viewing these illegal images the same as downloading them.

  45. The .NET Angle by Mia'cova · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you think about how internet "applications" are becoming embedded into programs and other web services, there's a whole new area Microsoft could be fighting for ground on.

    The free Google API isn't really as good as it could be. It works but I suspect if Microsoft incorporated their search engine into Visual Studio, or even just through the existing lists of available .net services, they'd have a solid start there. Microsoft does excel at documentation and ease of use for programmers. They know there if something isn't ready, their audience will know and avoid.

    Google doesn't use windows servers. That would certainly limit their ability to compete in the .net arena. I'm not sure what the current status is of the open .net compilers but Windows has the head start.

    1. Re:The .NET Angle by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      Microsoft does excel at documentation and ease of use for programmers.

      For a perfect example see the MFC.

      Google doesn't use windows servers. That would certainly limit their ability to compete in the .net arena. I'm not sure what the current status is of the open .net compilers but Windows has the head start.

      Windows has the only start, which is a good reason it won't be used. Not that I see any microsoft actually making use of .net as anything except an authentication method.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
  46. It's not about just the internet by PickyH3D · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It is in terms of things like the Google Toolbar.

    It's just a matter of time before the MSN toolbar is included by default with IE.

    That is how it similar to the Netscape wars. Search is going clientside and they want it specialized for YOUR needs. That's where the competition comes in.

  47. Google Hasn't Won Anything Yet by tealover · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Searching is still an evolving science. With all the google-bombing going on that manipulates search results, there remains a lot of work to be done. The key essence of searching is to either

    a) retrieve the most relevant information

    or

    b) retrieve the most popular information

    But the key is the user must never be confused as to which heuristic was used to return his/her results. This isn't happening right now.

    Google is a star at the moment but so was Altavista and so were a couple other search engines. It is not inconceivable that Google can be displaced.

    --
    -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
  48. Competition is good by Head · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Google is still a great search engine but a little competition can only be good for us, the users.

    1. Re:Competition is good by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 1

      Yes, competition is good, but Microsoft is not about competition. Microsoft kill of competitors using their status as the world largest supplier of operating systems. They use their monopoly status to make sure that other companies can't compete. Since they pretty much killed of Netscape they haven't improved Internet Explorer or even fixed serious bug like defect CSS support.

  49. Money by kaden · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What Microsoft has going for it is money. Google has lots of good ideas, but running that many searches is very expensive in bandwidth and hardware. Google might just have a hard time ever making a profit. Microsoft has a hard time not making a profit. Google can't just slap 'new version!' on a flagship product, and have people line up at the malls all over America to spend $400 on it.
    So I'm thinking the superior product could lose out to the more profitable one. Wouldn't be the first time it happened.

    1. Re:Money by qtp · · Score: 1

      Google might just have a hard time ever making a profit.

      Google seems to be doing quite well.

      While microsofts tendancy to "go after the money" in all aspects of thier business might have an advantage for some sectors, I doubt that that preference translates into profit in the search business. Google's profits come from other sectors of thier business than thier search engine, although it is thier search engione that draws eyes for thier advertising business, improves the technology for thier appliance business, and provides the demographics for thier advertising placement (whether in response to a search, or for placement on a advert reseller's site).

      I'm not sure that Microsoft will be capable of resisting the temptation to sell search result placement. AFAICT, it is resisting that temptation that has allowed Google to succeed to an extent that its predecessors have not.

      --
      Read, L
  50. A Search Application by leoaugust · · Score: 2, Informative
    I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application.

    I think the application comes into picture via the Google Toolbar and also the need to somehow organize all the Google Services & Tools. & Google has also gotten into one-click Blogging via Blogger.

    In addition there are tools that visually organize the Google Search results, SearchDay - Visualizing the Web with Google - 8 January 2003

    When you start having a book called Google Hacks , you know that there are a lot of HPI's (like API's but for H-Hacking), you know that there is a better way to offer access to these hacks via well organized tools. That is the form and function of the application.

    Of course there are other applications like Copernic ( a longer listing here Search Tools), but I think the current applications have miniscule following. What will come from Microsoft or Google will flood the market.

    --
    To see a world in a grain of sand, and then to step back and see the beach where the sand lies ...
  51. Not Again... by Ryosen · · Score: 1

    >>Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy."

    Until the next emergency hotfix modifies your DNS to have google.com to resolve to search.msn.com. Sure, you can edit your hosts file, but how many users even know what a hosts file is?

    Of course, this will all be done for your convenience and safety, mind you. All part of MS' new focus on protecting you from spam and malicious ne'er-do-wells. After all, you never really know who's on the other side of that web site you're surfing to. Better to leave the driving to us.

    Yeah, yeah, I know. It would never happen. Then again, no one would ever make a web browser an "integral" part of an operating system, either.

    --

    Ryosen
    One man's "Troll, +1" is another man's "Insightful, +1".
    1. Re:Not Again... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Until the next emergency hotfix modifies your DNS to have google.com to resolve to search.msn.com. Sure, you can edit your hosts file, but how many users even know what a hosts file is?

      To be honest, good luck to Microsoft if they manage to do this because that's just making use of the stupidity of "Joe Average" who believes all the marketing hype Microsoft, AOL, etc. tell him anyway.

      Much as I believe Microsoft's security track record to be poor, if it wasn't for stupid "Joe Average" opening each and every email attachment he receives, the Internet wouldn't grind to a halt every two weeks for the rest of us (Linux/Windows/Mac/etc.) users that actually get off our backsides and learn about how computers & software work.

      "Joe Average" deserves all he gets as long as it doesn't affect those of us with some intelligence.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  52. No Special Software? by ravendeath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But the fact is, that people are downloading the special software: the google bar is one of googles most successful products, and this must be making Microsoft go crazy, considering their MSN sites have been unleashing pop-up ads on their unsuspecting users for years now. Netscape lost to Microsoft because they (arguably) had what turned out to be an inferior product. Microsoft will lose to google for the exact same reason.

  53. All Microsoft is about money-grubbing ... by Tim+Ward · · Score: 1

    Some of you slashweenies are so out of touch with the real world it's not true, and one wonders how you manage to drive the system well enough to eat.

    In many jurisdictions it is the legal duty of a board of directors to maximise shareholder value - that's what a company is, that's what it does, and if it did anything different the shareholders would sue.

    So, criticising a company for trying to make money is completely stupid.

    1. Re:All Microsoft is about money-grubbing ... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      You fucking yankees have your head so far up your arses, it's pathetic. Your only and sole preoccupation is the fucking bottom-line, no matter what is the ethical cost.

      And your terminal dumbassness prevents you from seeing that the majority of the planet does not give a flying fuck about your fuckingly repulsive business methods, and are ready to die flying aircraft into buildings.

  54. Incremental Googling by kindofblue · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I use google most of the time. But I find that the innovations are coming from elsewhere. Frankly, Google is innovating with baby steps. Spellcheck is a nice feature, but it's not revolutionary or unique. Google labs is bunch of undergraduate level bullshit stuff. It's not the stuff of supposed army-of-PhDs breakthroughs.

    I like Google because it is fast, real fast and uncluttered, but the results are not better that Teoma or AllTheWeb. The link analysis that was unique to Google, 6 years ago, was the real quantum leap forward. But now everybody else has caught up. It appears to me that the differentiation is fast, bug-free quality of service and a clean UI.

    Short of another breakthrough from Google, I think Microsoft could still clobber Google. Google has got no stickiness.

    1. Re:Incremental Googling by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Go to google and type "acres in 2000 square feet" and then come back and tell me how they don't innovate.

      Google not only looks up information for you but also gives you definitions, conversions, maps and directions. Of course there are also linux, freebsd, mac, govt and MS specific searches, image searches, catalog searches and search of newsgroups. I doubt very much MS will let you make linux specific searches.

      Learn to use google and you too will find it indesposible.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    2. Re:Incremental Googling by RenaissanceGeek · · Score: 1

      Google has got no stickiness

      I think that you'll find that that is what most people find to be Google's best feature. It doesn't contaminate everything that it touches with a clinging, contaminating residue of itself.

      Unlike most products from a certain Redmond based corporation. (especially the "free" ones.)

      --
      What is the difference between a small revolutionary change and a large evolutionary change?
    3. Re:Incremental Googling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting. I typed in 'dates that Malcontent has been on', and it returned an error.

    4. Re:Incremental Googling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I typed in "enjoys getting buttfucked by Bill gates" and got you. Go figure.

    5. Re:Incremental Googling by JKConsult · · Score: 1

      Oh? And what, exactly, other site lets you do a search for images? Because that MSN image search tool is really a competito...oh, wait. (Note to pedants: Yes, this is but one example. But the statement that there is no innovation from Google is fucking patently ridiculous.)

  55. Keyboard defaults? by brucmack · · Score: 1

    Anybody who presses the 'Search' button on a logitech keyboard should get google by default, so in some cases it can be helpful.

    Of course, MS keyboards would do the opposite :P

  56. Takeover tactics? by maliabu · · Score: 1

    is it common for big companies to 'announce' their intention to enter an market, and scare existing competitions enough to eventually surrender to a (cheaper) buy-out?

  57. Key to search engine success by Gadzinka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I always thought that the key to Google's success was: honesty, objectivity, staying uninvolved. And of course accuracy.

    The will to stay away from (at first glance) very lucrative ``search result position'' market, and clear distinction between search result and sponsored (unintrusive) links also helped Google entrench in its position.

    Now take any word from the above paragraphs and try to put it in one sentence with Microsoft.

    If you don't know what I mean, go to search.msn.com and type linux.

    (What's noteworthy is that (in contrary to results from couple of months ago) it no longer returns any ``get rid of linux, install windows'' links to MSDN)

    In short, MS would have to do something very unmicrosoftish -- actually give users good value for their money, and behave in a very honest, civilized way.

    Where's the money in that? ;)

    Robert

    --
    Bastard Operator From 193.219.28.162
    1. Re:Key to search engine success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Personally, I'm finding Google less and less useful as commercial interests find out how to "spam". It used to be that if you were looking for information for a particular piece of hardware, you could type the model number (and possibly the manufacturer) and get back real results. I've found that now the first 50 results are a bunch of bogus sales portals that merely refer me to some other site that sells the product. I have to really try to get technical information vs. some insanely inflated price.

  58. Non issue for me by PotatoHead · · Score: 1, Interesting

    because I am simply not going to use Microsoft search. --ever.

    At work, I do have to use their products, but everywhere else it is Open Software. I see a growing number of users downloading little widgets that make search a bit quicker, so there is some room for Microsoft to play. It is not hard to just ask for Google though, so I can't see these affecting the audience as much as, say shipping a free browser.

    Google has a very high mindshare right now. Most computer users, who know anything about what they are doing, know what Google is. Since a fair number of those users are actually running Microsoft stuff, intergration will grab some of them, but it will only stick if the quality rises above what it is now. (Something I seriously doubt will happen in the near term.) Factor in word of mouth combined with slow upgrade cycles and Microsoft does not have an easy task set in front of them.

    Microsoft can grab the noobs and clueless users who won't know or can't know the differences early on. Longer term, this is a problem because Google needs to continue to attract new users. I suppose the lack of new bodies will cause Google some longer term grief, but quality matters here, so I imagine they will still get their share. It is not that tough to try out different search services, unlike browsers.

    Given these things, I just can't see Microsoft taking over Internet search. If they spend enough, they will get an audience, then what? Ads? Subscriptions? Intergration? They are going to have to work hard to provide a lot of value in order to profit. The simple, quality message coming from Google is going to be hard to beat.

    I'll bet they are going to try and claim to have search be part of the 'Microsoft Office System' brand they are pimping right now. They have already done it with Placeware, why not search? This has a chance with the business crowd and might steal revenue from the Google Ad Words program. Maybe this is the area they are looking hard at. Making money from ads delivered to noobs and the casual/clueless is not going to make anyone rich, but getting the attention of businesses trying to run targeted marketing efforts online would. Microsoft might actually have a chance at this.

    In the end, still a non-issue. Still am not going to use their search, even if it happens to be a bit better. Will spend a lot of time letting others know why also.

  59. But they'll obviously need ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to code the search feature into the OS kernel (for perhaps, say, security reasons under DRM) and then it can play off the OS monopoly.

  60. Clippy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Welcome to Internet Explorer v. Longhorn. What would you like to do?

    * Search the web for the content you want to find. You can enter the name of the site or a partial url here. (recommended)

    * Search the web for music, movies, or on demand video/audio content.

    * Search the web for products and/or services to buy.

    * Enter the exact URL of the site you want (advanced)

    1. Re:Clippy! by daviddennis · · Score: 1

      You almost got it, and I got a nice laugh at your fluent MicroSpeak.

      Might I add one refinement? The last option is not just listead as "advanced", it is under the "Advanced" tab and is not visible on the main screen of the product.

      People will never find it.

      D

  61. Stop with that tired, false statistic. by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, when you search for "linux", it says there are 429 results. But as you flip through the pages of results, the total changes to 408, 407, 369, etc. At the 18th page or so, the listed total shoots up to 14190051. It's crappy estimation, yes, but the search isn't biased the way it appears.

    1. Re:Stop with that tired, false statistic. by marauder404 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, it's not the estimation that's incorrect. The first page tells you which sites (as a collection of pages) might be relevant to your query. Later pages will give you individual pages instead after you've decided you're not looking for a topic-based search but rather a particular page. The MSN search style allows you to pick subject area sites based on your query whereas Google gives you page after page of results. I think the former is better for generic searches (since the average query length is still under two words, many people are searching for just one word) whereas the latter is better for specific information. I prefer Teoma's method (among others) of refining search results by subject area rather than weeding through whole sites and, even worse, whole pages, when the query is really loose. That being said, I use Google 99% of the time.

    2. Re:Stop with that tired, false statistic. by fire-eyes · · Score: 1

      Works for me, then what I said about it being just a shitty search engine applies.

      --
      -- Note: If you don't agree with me, don't bother replying. I won't read it.
  62. Same as before... by christophe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    MSN search is included in Internet Explorer for years, but Google was always used by people able to change the homepage. Why ? Loads quickly (not so important in broadband times), very easy (almost nothing on screen on the first page - this is important!), good results (better than MSN that does not give my homepage when I type my name, only pages that link to it?!?). Why should it change?

    MSN must fight a competitor which:
    - has a good reputation
    - is well established
    - can't be blocked at the user's computer (can't change the rendering of such a simple page without breaking millions of other sites; Google would adapt quickly; can't firewall its URL on all Windows computers without a PR disaster and problems with a court),
    - does not want to be bought,
    - does not interact directly with Windows or Office, hence can't be blocked by playing with incompatible standards,
    - could probably strike back if attacked with patents.

    This is typical from MS: they want to stay alone on the market. MS does not understand the notion of a free market with different players (do not forget Yahoo and many others).

    --
    Christophe (Don't hesitate to point out my spelling and grammar mistakes, I want to learn - Thanks).
    1. Re:Same as before... by hetta · · Score: 1

      good results (better than MSN that does not give my homepage when I type my name, only pages that link to it?!?).

      Heh - I hadn't even noticed. Not that I use MSN all that often, and never for any "real" searches.

      So I'm the top hit for "Henriette" on google, not even on the first page on MSN; ditto for "Henriette's herbal".

      MSN: that's lousy.

  63. You're all missing the point. by adun · · Score: 2, Interesting

    First and foremost, Google is a RESEARCH COMPANY. They've hired a cadre of engineers, mathematicians, and I've even been told psychologists. Their own stated goal is nothing less than the complete mastery of the world's information.

    Conversely, Microsoft is interested in branding itself into the public consciousness, and collecting a tidy profit.

    To these ends, Microsoft will continue to buy out assets that it feels it can mold into a blunt weapon. Google comes off as a sort of diabolical genius, sneaking behind the scenes, signing unholy licensing pacts, and so forth.

    I know it's highly unfashionable to speak ill of Google, but you're a fan of tinfoil hats, I would think you had more to fear from Google than Microsoft.

  64. Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because we all knew you were not only going to evaluate all twelve million links, but read every page, and still have time left in your coffeebreak to read the NYT and solve the crossword.

    A result in the millions is utterly useless. No one will use the lower ranked results. I would imagine it's pretty rare, even extremely rare, for anyone to look through the first thousand. Given that this is as uncommon as I suspect. 1000 is almost exactly equal to any arbitrarily large number.

    Bias is fine, especially when it's based in something practical. But yours is based on a goofy metric you'll NEVER take advantage of beyond trolling slashdot.

    1. Re:Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no... you see, he doesn't read the nyt because their free registration policy kills children in afghanistan.

  65. searching war by graincloud · · Score: 1

    MS wants to corner the search market so that it can sell higher search result rates to companies that pay them; alter the ebb and flow of results to cater to its money schemes. Expect MS to bundle a search engine, a blog interface and means to have your "ms_myspace," the MS version of a Friendster.

  66. Microsoft will just bloat the search! by City+Jim+3000 · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is the King Midas of bloatware - they will create the best friggin' search engine in the universe, then they will add .NET passport logon, searching of RTF news messages by font size & color and finally Microsoft products will always come in first place whatever you search for. "Buy Microsoft porn sex latina Simulator 2006 NOW!".

    I think Google will "win" because it's clean and fast and turns out predictable results.

  67. Re:First Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod up. +1, informative.

  68. Re:Its about defaults.. Change IE to use google by ripaway · · Score: 1

    You need to download reshacker aka. resource hacker and hack shdoclc.dll. Look for the string "ieautosearch", and you'll find the url that IE uses to do searchs from the address bar. In my version of the dll, its at string table 76, entry 1211.

  69. Don't count out Yahoo by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    They own Inktomi (Microsof's search engine on MSN). They own FAST (aka AllTheWeb). They own AltaVista (translate a document lately?). They own Overture (biggest paid results provider).

    Yahoo also brings to bear a lot of traffic to any solution it picks on its own site, so watch Inktomi's star to rise again as it takes the 20% of traffic YAhoo was seding to Google.

    1. Re:Don't count out Yahoo by dema · · Score: 1

      ...(translate a document lately?)

      Yes

    2. Re:Don't count out Yahoo by FattMattP · · Score: 1
      They own AltaVista (translate a document lately?).
      Yep. Using google.
      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    3. Re:Don't count out Yahoo by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      When was the last time you heard, "Yahoo for it", "AltaVista for it" or "AllTheWeb for it"?

      Google has entered cultures everywhere (hell, even lame-brained journalists are referring to it on a regular basis) and that will be tough to supplant.

  70. Wanted: virus to change MSN to Google. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    unfortunately MS will win here as others have mentioned because unless a court forces them to alter the default from MSN whenever joe public clicks Search it ends up on MSN.


    only a virus that alters the Windows settings from MSN to Google as in the Google toolbar can change this.


    why the heck dont virii creators actually do this and be more helpful to us huh ?.
    It also needs to drop off a payload to change it back.

  71. Monkey porn by eddy · · Score: 4, Funny

    By adding "porn" I found this. Now what?

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
    1. Re:Monkey porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GAH, PUT A WARNING ON THAT LINK! /me shudders

      Lameness filter encountered. Post aborted!
      Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.

    2. Re:Monkey porn by Tantrum420 · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the old Beavis & Butthead episode where they were watching Green Day's Video, "Longview".

      Beavis, "Look at the monkey!"

    3. Re:Monkey porn by kevcol · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd say his monkey was spanking him.

    4. Re:Monkey porn by miyako · · Score: 1

      In soviet China...monkey spanks you

      --
      Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
    5. Re:Monkey porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "In this brave new world, you won't spank the monkey. The monkey will spank YOU!"
      -Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back

    6. Re:Monkey porn by anticypher · · Score: 1

      I think you have just found /.'s replacement for goatse.

      Another thing I'm going to have to be careful of from now on. I'm off to wash my eyeballs.

      the AC

      --
      Hemos is like...sci-fi fans;he thinks technology is cool, but he hasn't bothered to understand the science it's based on
    7. Re:Monkey porn by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but I asked google about "great tits", and mostly I got a lot of sites about little birds. Hardly any with pictures of women with great tits. ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    8. Re:Monkey porn by roystgnr · · Score: 5, Funny

      GAH, PUT A WARNING ON THAT LINK!

      He titled his post "Monkey porn". What exactly were you expecting to see when you clicked on it?

    9. Re:Monkey porn by vivek7006 · · Score: 1

      I found this while searching for monkey porn.

    10. Re:Monkey porn by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      GAH, PUT A WARNING ON THAT LINK!

      There is a post called "Monkey Porn" that contains a link. What the fuck did you expect to find? Justin Timberlake themes for KDE?

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  72. Re:Its about defaults.. Change IE to use google by jrumney · · Score: 1
    You need to download reshacker aka. resource hacker and hack shdoclc.dll.

    Is this what you tell your grandmother when you see her using MSN search?

  73. Microsoft just needs to bet on user inaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The average user goes to Google because MSN Search sucks big time. If the default search engine for IE yielded better results, average users would not look anywhere else.

    Of course, Microsoft still has to come up with a good search algorithm and structure (I don't think they can use 10,000 Windows boxes in a cluster in a manageable way) and will have to resist flooding the search results with meaningless advertising. That will be their real battle. As much as I hate to admit it, they don't really have to be as good as Google, because they can leverage IE and Windows.

  74. They are alike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Internet Explorer has a search button on the toolbar. In Longhorn, presumably there will be a search bar, to the effect of where you type URLs in now. Google will be scrod, since everyone will use that instead of typing in www.google.com.

  75. search.msn.com is better. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    MSN: litigious bastards
    Google: litigious bastards

    I definitely prefer MSN's results.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  76. It's really KPCB vs Microsoft. by ron_ivi · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I think the author is close, but doesn't have the big picture. It's never been _just_ Netscape vs Microsoft, or Google vs Microsoft, or Macromedia vs. Microsoft or Sun vs Microsoft, or AOL vs Microsoft.

    A bigger picture you can have is when you look at the investors behind each of Google, AOL, Sun, Netscape, Macromedia, and many more. Kliener Perkins Caufield & Byers is one of the leading Venture Capital firms out here, and they're behind every one of those companies! And they're not shy about talking about the "collective strength and experience" that they encourage among their portfolio.

    I think it's really the cultural difference that makes Silicon Valley strong. Companies like Microsoft grow by becoming having zillions of divisions that do some of everything. In the bay area, perhaps no single piece can compete with microsoft as a hole, but the combined plays of all these slighlty related companies really becomes significant. In Microsoft, each of those functions is a division that is shelterd by the parent organization. In Silicon Valley, each is a separate company that has to survive on its own merits. If one fails, and the market segment it focused on is still important, another may be funded to take its place.

  77. They're now a brand... by T-Kir · · Score: 1

    ...and being synonymous with an net search, Google also becoming a dictionary word (i.e. googling, etc). It's like Napster, despite the lack of anything happening for years since it got closed down it still has it's name in the public consciousness.

    On the other hand Microsoft's main brand (being Windows) relates to 'occasional' crashing, i.e. mud sticks, but in the case of Google they're the goose that makes the golden eggs... (they could almost be a monopoly themselves?)... everyone will still think of Google first when it comes to searchs, even if competitors do develop better search technology.

    --
    Are you local? There's nothing for you here!
  78. Mozilla (Firebird)? by pandrijeczko · · Score: 2, Insightful
    FACT: Mozilla (Firebird) runs on Windows/Linux/etc.

    FACT: Mozilla (Firebird) is being developed a lot faster than IE and now supercedes IE in all but the website compatibility issue.

    FACT: Mozilla (Firebird) allows me to use the URL bar for search words and I can choose my preferred search engine.

    FACT: IE is Microsoft's product and as far as I'm concerned, they can now do what they like with it.

    FACT: For the forseeable future, I can still choose my preferred search engine.

    So what's the problem?

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    1. Re:Mozilla (Firebird)? by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      FACT: Mozilla (Firebird) has switched to a development model that can continue (albeit at a reduced pace) even when the AOL funding stops and Microsoft has finished "cutting off their air supply".

      FACT: Google is still depending on ad revenue to pay for the thousands of servers and fat bandwidth pipes with which they spider and serve the (still rapidly) growing internet.

      PROBLEM: If Microsoft can cut off Google's ad revenue (say, by providing their own search engine that is preinstalled for their users and good enough to prevent most users from switching), then it won't matter if you can choose Google as your preferred search engine in Mozilla, because although Mozilla will still be around, google.com might not be.

    2. Re:Mozilla (Firebird)? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FACT: no one besides dirty faggot hippies use linux.

      FACT: While firebird is being developed faster, IE is still better and will always be because of the speed.

      FACT: IE lets you use the URL bar for search words on any search engine, research a little instead of talking you little fuck.

    3. Re:Mozilla (Firebird)? by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      FACT: Mozilla (Firebird) has switched to a development model that can continue (albeit at a reduced pace) even when the AOL funding stops and Microsoft has finished "cutting off their air supply".

      So I read that to mean the Mozilla still keeps developing despite anything MS may or may not want to do. Surely that's a good thing?

      FACT: Google is still depending on ad revenue to pay for the thousands of servers and fat bandwidth pipes with which they spider and serve the (still rapidly) growing internet.

      Yes, but this isn't like the IE vs Netscape fight because Google is already entrenched as a search engine whereas Microsoft would be starting from afresh - during the browser wars, it was all about features and the fact that IE was embedded into Windows.
      Besides, if MS come up with a search engine that's better than Google and is free for all to use, I don't see a problem with it. I don't personally like MS one bit but I'm not going to not use an MS product purely because it bears the Microsoft logo. If they start charging for it and/or lock out the Linux users then that's different...

      PROBLEM: If Microsoft can cut off Google's ad revenue (say, by providing their own search engine that is preinstalled for their users and good enough to prevent most users from switching), then it won't matter if you can choose Google as your preferred search engine in Mozilla, because although Mozilla will still be around, google.com might not be.

      If Google dies through Microsoft pressure then there will be be a free replacement that MS won't be able to touch. The Open Directory Project has a long way to go but it's a foundation stone that'll probably get a lot more attention if Google disappears.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    4. Re:Mozilla (Firebird)? by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      So I read that to mean the Mozilla still keeps developing despite anything MS may or may not want to do. Surely that's a good thing?

      Yes, and yes. I mentioned it to contrast to Google's differing case.

      Yes, but this isn't like the IE vs Netscape fight because Google is already entrenched as a search engine

      When Microsoft started the Internet Explorer bundling Netscape was already entrenched with around 80% market share. It didn't help them much, because Microsoft gets to choose the default installed software and settings on more than 90% of new computers.

      Besides, if MS come up with a search engine that's better than Google and is free for all to use, I don't see a problem with it.

      That depends on whether your definition of "better" and the rest of the world's definition coincide, doesn't it? Especially if you're using Mozilla I wouldn't jump to this conclusion; to the rest of the world a big component of "better" is "preconfigured when I bought my PC and I didn't have to change it".

      If Google dies through Microsoft pressure then there will be be a free replacement that MS won't be able to touch.

      Maybe. But it won't be able to work like google; like I said, web spiders that regularly hit 3 billion pages aren't cheap to run.

      The Open Directory Project has a long way to go but it's a foundation stone that'll probably get a lot more attention if Google disappears.

      It's also an orange, in a conversation about apples. It lists 6 million hand-sorted pages that are searchable by title or category, not three billion pages with full text search. I tried repeating a web search of mine from last night, for example, and even after stripping it down to one work ("Jacobian") I got zero results from the Open Directory instead of thousands from Google.

  79. It won't be by soft_guy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    All Microsoft has to do is issue a "security patch" that re-directs Google HTTP requests to MSN Search.

    As long as W is in the WhiteHouse and Ashcroft is attorney general, they don't have to worry about anti-trust.

    Then, they can just say that Google is a terrorist org and if you use Linux or Mac to get to it, then you are terrorist too.

    --
    Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
  80. Has anyone ever stopped to think... by RomSteady · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...that Microsoft's goal isn't to control searching the Internet but to control searching the Intranet?

    Think about it. Microsoft's bread and butter is servers and workstations. Whenever Microsoft releases something to make it easier to get information from the servers to the workstations, it ends up making them money.

    By allowing centralized "search servers" to extract data from the WinFS metadata store, a single add-on product for the Windows Server System can alow a user at his desk using Windows "Longhorn" to do a search and not only find out where the data is that he needs, but who has it, who created it, who has been working on it, etc.

    If you think of the quantity of data in the WinFS metadata store on any individual resource as the "PageRank," you might see where Microsoft is REALLY going with this.

    As for Internet search, it's just a bonus. Basically, if they get the Internet search working first, they can test and tune their algorithms using the Internet's userbase as a large testbed and possibly a small profit center.

    --
    RomSteady - I came, I saw, I tested. GamerTag: RomSteady / http://www.romsteady.net
    1. Re:Has anyone ever stopped to think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn! That was actually an insightful comment.

      Nice one!

  81. A Criminal Monopoly Makes *Anything* Possible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is an old story for Microsoft. Google.com will be a shadow of its current self in 12 months. When you have an illegal momopoly, anything is possible.

    If Goole tries to make a deal with Microsoft, it will only speed their demise. Look at OS2, LanMan, Sybase SQL Server, Stacker, and Mosaic. All killed after doing a 'deal' with Microsoft.

    Only Linux has a chance to beat Microsoft because it is not dependant on a commercial company.

    1. Re:A Criminal Monopoly Makes *Anything* Possible by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      So you're saying we need an open source search engine? Maybe we could achieve it if it were P2P...

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
  82. The difference. by mcc · · Score: 1

    Netscape v. Microsoft would have turned out very differently if it weren't for Netscape literally self-destructing. Netscape did a better job of tearing itself apart than MS did. All MS did was hasten the process along by cutting the legs out from under Netscape's revenue model.

    This won't work with google. Google's already on a very minimal advertising-based revenue model and they don't seem to be set to be making any huge mistakes. They've been having trouble of late but those troubles aren't due to internal mistakes, they're due to people purposefully trying to cheat at pagerank. If MS becomes even the slightest bit popular, people will be cheating at MS-Search as well so that won't happen.

    Remember, ATM MS-Search is just vaporware. And google seems to have the sense that they will be ready for whatever MS throws at them.

  83. Why does MS *need* to get into searching? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    Why do they need to rip off and own everything that succeeds?

    Why cant there be other big players in the market aside from MS without them trying to push them out / take them over.

    And how can you Microphiles even say that MS isnt sqwashing competitiveness.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
    1. Re:Why does MS *need* to get into searching? by qtp · · Score: 1

      Why do they need to rip off and own everything that succeeds?

      Insatiable ego with an underlying inferiority complex shared among the executives and the hangers-on at Microsoft?

      Why cant there be other big players in the market aside from MS without them trying to push them out / take them over.

      Those other players are attracting recognition and are therefore percieved as a threat to the insatiable ego and will possibly expose the underlying self-doubt of both those who run the company and those who derive thier sense of self worth from being allied to a powerful player.

      And how can you Microphiles even say that MS isnt sqwashing competitiveness.

      To admit this would be to admit that there is an actual challenge to Microsoft's percieved superiority and might even expose an actual weakness, which of course cannot be permitted lest the isatiable ego that has successfully feuled the company becpome somehow dammaged.

      Cult-like businesses become powerful through leveraging the loyalties of their members and employees by creating a shared sense of identity in which the participants draw thier sense of "empowerment" from the perception that the organisation possesses an authority that is universal. Any threat to that perception, whether it be another authoritative organisation (such as Google), or an organisation that seems to have no need for them (such as the Free Software movement) must be eliminated in order to continue the illusion. (see Frank L. Baum's "The Wizzard of Oz" for a rather thorough illustration of this phenomenon.)

      --
      Read, L
    2. Re:Why does MS *need* to get into searching? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Bravo. Brilliant analysis.

      I for one find little difference between MS employees worship of their company and Bill Gates and the islamic jihadist movements. They all seem to fixate on a rigid idelogy and a charismatic leader whose pictures are ubiquitous.

      Bill Gates is the Osama Bin Laden of MS employees.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    3. Re:Why does MS *need* to get into searching? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do they need to rip off and own everything that succeeds?

      Why cant there be other big players in the market aside from MS without them trying to push them out / take them over.

      Their stock is valued as that of a growth company. If growth stagnates, their stock value will tank.
    4. Re:Why does MS *need* to get into searching? by mawi · · Score: 0

      exactly. that this question even arises seems a Bad Thing. hello?! look outside at the society we live in, and not just into the screen. if we are to change anything we need to be aware of how things work - some understanding of how the economy works - ie that simple statement made above should be in every slashdotters knowledgebase! why does ms need to get into business foo? why does company bar need to get into business foo? growth. the demand of our stockmarkets. consumption. the requirement of our model of economy. opportunity. easy ways of growing. (in simple terms, feel free to write a piece on it but I hardly think it necessary, there are loads of writings on our economy everywhere) PS sure, you could argue that oh, there are other things that company so-so can do. thats besider the point; most long term growth (ie strategic positioning comes into play) is the goal here. you could argue many things, yet the basic premise holds true, that is the basic drive/motivation/reason.

  84. Netscape vs. Google analogies. by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

    Netscape used to have 90% of the browser market share until IE starting coming around. How did they lose this market share? One argument is that people simply used the default browser IE. While this is true it does not absolve Netscape of their failures as a business.

    Netscape simply didn't make a browser with a SIGNIFICANT competetive advantage. I am sure if Netscape had a browser on par with the calibre of Firebird/Opera they would have trumped MS. But they didn't. They screamed monopoly, and all that belly aching accomplished nothing. This, combing with a lack of advertising and poor product development, killed them.

    Google is in a good position since they clearly have a better product. Providing they can transmit this competetive advantage to their target markets they will be just fine. That's right Google, you may actually have to ADVERTISE.

    MS's strength hasn't been in monopoly but never overestimating the intelligence of their target market.
    In any case any competetition is good competetion. If MS truly does make a better search engine I will be the first to use it.

    --

    Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  85. I use Linux and Google. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck MS. I don't like having to pay another $50 for every different task I want to perform, no matter how insignificant.

    Linux is fantastic. The GNU organization is fantastic. This is the time to live.

    As far as my daily life, it's post MS. Once I learn how to do something in Linux it's 100 times more efficient.

  86. Applications barrier by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

    This is just what MS was so afraif of when netscape came out and became popular. A browser and a webserver practically removes the only real advantage MS has over other, the vast numbers of applications made for Windows. The real reason they fought the browser and java war was that a new application delivery system who was platform agnostic would take away MS biggest selling point.

    I cant really imagine how MS could win against google. Its a web page and not very well suited to be a normal local application. In this war they cant really use their desktop to deliver their product, people will still use google or some other search engine.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  87. What's with 'Project Ocean'? by mtpruitt · · Score: 1

    Is there any information about Project Ocean out there? It was mentioned in the article as a secret Gutenburg knockoff in cahoots with Stanford, but I can't find any details on it.

  88. Pretty good fight is going to go on by TyrranzzX · · Score: 1

    Google has a lot of backing because they've always found a way to make money and keep people's trust. MS isn't going to win this the way they won netscape. They've got 3 options

    1: Buy it out, inwhich case everyone'll know and stop using it if the search results begin to get biased and reports start flooding in that they're not being honest about their results.

    2: Smush it out, inwhich case they'll use some immoral and probably illegal method of defeating google such as incorperating things into the eula's in their new patches like "you agree not to use google.com" and enforcing it with software, or simply hire some black ops and destroy the building itself or completly screw their search engine up. They've also got patent portfolios they can use to play with google, or they can win the SCO lawsuite, really piss off some nerds, and then sue google for IP fraud and run them into bankruptsy.

    3: Play it out. They can build something that can compete with and beat google, and if they at any point faulter and become dishonest, we'll still have google around to do searching on.

    This isn't the same battle as IE Vs Netscape. We're talking about something on the internet for one, and for two it's a completly different tech. Frankly I think MS is dillusional if they think they'll be able to smush out google like they did to Netscape. Few people actually ran out and baught winxp when it first came out, fewer still are going to run out in droves and buy whatever they're releasing next especially with all the talk of lockdown.

  89. Not only superior technology by unoengborg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The claims that it was superior search technology that made google a succes. I think this was only one factor. To me the graphical design was very important. The google pages are not full of ads, in the beginning there were no ads at all. And now they are tasteful and dont compete for my attention when I look at my search results. The clean design gave an impression of integrety and a belief that search results was unbiased by economical interests.I think it will be hard for Microsoft to match.

    So if Microsoft was to beat google, how would they do it? They could use local tools on the OS that collects user information, e.g. scanning office documents and downloaded e-mail to get a user profile that could be fed into the search engine to get better quality of search results. However, such things could backfire seriously if users felt that their personal privacy was at stake.

    --
    God is REAL! Unless explicitly declared INTEGER
  90. Reading without registration (using google) by Marco+Krohn · · Score: 2, Informative

    1. copy link location (here: "http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/ and so on...")
    2. google search for the URL: search for "http:// and so on"
    3. ignore that you got no search results and click on the link below "If the URL is valid, try visiting that web page by clicking on the following link: " (and yes, it is the same link!)
    4. enjoy reading :-)

  91. I agree, case study by MacFury · · Score: 1
    My father "webmaster" of www.engineeredfireprotection.com can't distinguish between the address bar and the yahoo search text field...

    He would hate MSN just because it's microsoft, but he'd be pretty much powerless to change it, not knowing how.

    PS. If anyone wants to drop him a line to tell him the site looks good but needs better organization...I would greatly appreciate it...he won't listen to his son. ;-)

  92. Re: What's the prob. -Mozilla (Firebird)? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are two problems:

    1. You have broadband to download Mozilla, people who have dial-up will never be able to get it. If you don't have an ISP at all, IE comes installed out of the box.

    2. You know how, where, and why to use Mozilla. Manny users can only install virii that comes attached to email on their systems.

    Don't be a fool! Monopoly is an almost unbeatable advantage.

  93. *sigh* it's exactly like netscape vs microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the microsoft web browser is used to access something like 90 % of the webpages out there. All microsoft has to do is make their search portal the default webpage for explorer and then make it a pain in the arse to change it to something else (maybe have a "bug" that resets to the default every couple days or something) voila. instant Netscape repeat

  94. Trust is irrelevant to most users by chrestomanci · · Score: 1
    What really matters in search engines are trust, relevance, speed and features. In other categories competition might be strong, but it is hard to see that Microsoft-branded search engine could easily be as trusted as google in near future.

    Let us not forget that the battle is for Mr Average internet user, not for cluefull slashdot readers

    Most internet users have no reason to miss-trust microsoft, and it will not occur to them that Microsoft will do anything other than provide the best search engine they can. They will not attribute to malice, what could be attributed to incompetence. We know that Microsoft will skew the search results away from their competitors, and in favor of the paid for listings, but most people will not think of that.

    Mr Average will chose a search engine based on

    1. Features
    2. Speed
    3. Relevance.
  95. ./:ed by azatht · · Score: 1
    Now NY-Times is ./:ed,
    anyway, I don't want to register, no way, can someone post it here?
    " Authorization Server Error

    We're sorry, but we are temporarily experiencing an authorization server error. Our systems administrators have been notified and are working to fix the problem.

    Please click here to continue logging in.
    We regret the inconvenience.
    "
    --
    ------- In the end there are no begining
  96. Not MS, but your friendly IT staff by madeye+the+younger · · Score: 1

    The IT staff at your company just might have something to say about which OS and browser you use. I believe business users still count for a big hunk of the browser/search population.

  97. Microsoft wins by combining features by wilhelm9 · · Score: 2

    Several earlier posts here claims that Microsoft will simply win by putting MSN Search on the taskbar. That may be so but they have an even more powerful card up their sleeve. I think that if they would combine personal search, company search and global search into this MSN Search toolbar, Google is as fried as a toast in a toaster. This way, Microsoft would not only leverage Windows to compete with Google, but also users and company private MS Office or MS Outlook content, which most users have plenty of. If Google is ever going to win, they must start provide similar tools at once.

  98. Google is Google's Worst Enemy by Epistax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only way Google will lose is if they do it to themselves. Now that they are supposed to be making an increasing amount of money every quarter (ie, impossible money) they will be pressured to do everything possible to gain money. Watch weird subscription services appear at first. Once no one buys into them expect more aggressive advertising. This will be their undoing.

    I don't see why people have problems with self-suffecient companies. That is, make enough money to continue doing what you're doing and enough research to continue in the future. They are being measured too much by gains rather than gross. If Google stays at say, 70% of web searches for ten years, that would be amazing. Far more amazing than going up to 99% then failing.

    1. Re:Google is Google's Worst Enemy by vidarh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "People" (read: investors) have a problem with what you call self-sufficient companies because they don't make any money out of that. Googles investors didn't exactly get into the game in order to set up a company to do search well - they put up the money to get a high return on their investment. When you take investments from people, they will naturally expect to make money back.

    2. Re:Google is Google's Worst Enemy by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Yes yes-- that is how investing works. So thus the question, why invest where there is little to no potential?

  99. Wouldn't adverts be selected based on search terms by AnEmbodiedMind · · Score: 1
    Wouldn't adverts be selected based on search terms rather then on web-page content?

    If so, googles spider data doesn't really help them out much.

  100. Re:Address Search URL, IE 5.5 registry entry. by MO-411 · · Score: 1
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer

    Item "SearchURL"

    I changed mine to read:
    http://www.google.com/search?q=

    This way it will fall to google, a far superior search tool, when entering into the address bar.

    One of these day's I'll understand how to add it to the search button... one day...

  101. Re: What's the prob. -Mozilla (Firebird)? by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
    1. You have broadband to download Mozilla, people who have dial-up will never be able to get it.

    In my experience, Joe Average seems to have no problem filling up his PC with gigs worth of spyware and pr0n over a dial-up connection so 13MB of Mozilla won't make much difference.

    If you don't have an ISP at all, IE comes installed out of the box.

    If you don't have an ISP, you don't have an Internet connection so you can't do an Internet search. (Did you really mean "ISP"?)

    2. You know how, where, and why to use Mozilla. Manny users can only install virii that comes attached to email on their systems.

    Ignorance is no excuse. "Joe Average" seems to have little problem investing lots of money and time into learning to drive a car. It costs less to buy a few decent computer books and/or attend a PC course.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  102. Who cares, Google is clean and simple. by refactored · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Have a look at the Google home page and look at www.msn.com

    One is clean, simple.

    The other is packed, messy, covered in ad's, and preformatted for 800x600.

    1. Re:Who cares, Google is clean and simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's amazing that msn still loads reasonably fast with all that stuff compared to the other web portals.

  103. Speaking of progress, article text, here: by kramer2718 · · Score: 1

    The Coming Search Wars By JOHN MARKOFF Published: February 1, 2004 PALO ALTO, Calif. AT the World Economic Forum in Switzerland last week, Microsoft, the software heavyweight, and Google, the scrappy Internet search company, eyed each other like wary prizefighters entering the ring. Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft, stated his admiration for the "high level of I.Q." of Google's designers. "We took an approach that I now realize was wrong,'' he said of his company's earlier decision to ignore the search market. But, he added pointedly, "we will catch them.'' The four top Google executives attending the forum, at the ski resort of Davos, were no less obsessed with Mr. Gates's every move. "We had many opportunities to see Bill and Microsoft here in Davos," Eric E. Schmidt, Google's chief executive, wrote in an e-mail message to a colleague that was distributed to employees through an internal company mailing list. Microsoft is intently poring over Google's portfolio of patents, hunting for potential vulnerabilities, Mr. Schmidt contended. And because Google is running its business using Linux - the free open source software that has become the biggest challenger of Windows - Microsoft is concerned that it may be at a competitive disadvantage. "Based on their visceral reactions to any discussions about 'open source,' '' Mr. Schmidt wrote in his e-mail message, "they are obsessed with open source as a business model.'' Get ready for Microsoft vs. Silicon Valley, Round 2. The last time around, in the mid-1990's, Netscape Communications, another brash, high-tech start-up from the Bay Area, commercialized the Web browser, touching off the dot-com gold rush. The company told anyone who would listen that its newfangled software program would reduce Microsoft's flagship Windows operating system to a "slightly buggy set of device drivers.'' As it turned out, Microsoft - based in the Seattle suburb of Redmond, far from Silicon Valley, the heart of the nation's technology industry - was listening. Mr. Gates, belatedly waking up to the threat that the Internet posed to his business, aimed Microsoft's firepower at Netscape and flattened his rival, which was later acquired by America Online and is now a shadow of its former self in an obscure corner of Time Warner. As a consequence, however, he brought a federal antitrust lawsuit down upon his company, raising the specter of a Microsoft breakup. In the end, Microsoft escaped with little more than a requirement that it operate under a relatively mild court-ordered consent decree. Today, nearly everyone in Silicon Valley, from venture capitalists and chip engineers to real estate agents and restaurateurs, has begun to ask: Will Google become the next Netscape? Mr. Gates, who for more than a decade has promised - but not yet delivered - "information at your fingertips" for his customers, has decided that the Internet search business is both a serious threat and a valuable opportunity. The co-founder and now the chief software architect of his company, Mr. Gates readily acknowledges these days that Microsoft "blew it" in the market for Internet search. Despite his early grand vision, he displayed little inclination to deploy software that would improve the ability of computer users to find information - until he saw the dollars in the business. THAT opportunity fell to two Stanford computer science graduate students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, who disregarded the industry's common wisdom that search technology would become an inexpensive, marginal commodity. While the Internet's dominant companies fought one another over Web portals, the promise of e-commerce and access to providers like America Online, Google developed a speedy search engine that soon became almost a universal first step onto the Internet. It displaced earlier search engines because the technology invented by Mr. Brin and Mr. Page did a measurably better job in returning results that satisfied Web surfers' requests. As a result, Google now has an immense number of users, with 200 million searches on a

    1. Re:Speaking of progress, article text, here: by kramer2718 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Coming Search Wars
      By JOHN MARKOFF

      Published: February 1, 2004

      PALO ALTO, Calif.

      AT the World Economic Forum in Switzerland last week, Microsoft, the software heavyweight, and Google, the scrappy Internet search company, eyed each other like wary prizefighters entering the ring.

      Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft, stated his admiration for the "high level of I.Q." of Google's designers. "We took an approach that I now realize was wrong,'' he said of his company's earlier decision to ignore the search market. But, he added pointedly, "we will catch them.''

      The four top Google executives attending the forum, at the ski resort of Davos, were no less obsessed with Mr. Gates's every move. "We had many opportunities to see Bill and Microsoft here in Davos," Eric E. Schmidt, Google's chief executive, wrote in an e-mail message to a colleague that was distributed to employees through an internal company mailing list.

      Microsoft is intently poring over Google's portfolio of patents, hunting for potential vulnerabilities, Mr. Schmidt contended. And because Google is running its business using Linux - the free open source software that has become the biggest challenger of Windows - Microsoft is concerned that it may be at a competitive disadvantage. "Based on their visceral reactions to any discussions about 'open source,' '' Mr. Schmidt wrote in his e-mail message, "they are obsessed with open source as a business model.''

      Get ready for Microsoft vs. Silicon Valley, Round 2.

      The last time around, in the mid-1990's, Netscape Communications, another brash, high-tech start-up from the Bay Area, commercialized the Web browser, touching off the dot-com gold rush. The company told anyone who would listen that its newfangled software program would reduce Microsoft's flagship Windows operating system to a "slightly buggy set of device drivers.''

      As it turned out, Microsoft - based in the Seattle suburb of Redmond, far from Silicon Valley, the heart of the nation's technology industry - was listening.

      Mr. Gates, belatedly waking up to the threat that the Internet posed to his business, aimed Microsoft's firepower at Netscape and flattened his rival, which was later acquired by America Online and is now a shadow of its former self in an obscure corner of Time Warner.

      As a consequence, however, he brought a federal antitrust lawsuit down upon his company, raising the specter of a Microsoft breakup. In the end, Microsoft escaped with little more than a requirement that it operate under a relatively mild court-ordered consent decree.

      Today, nearly everyone in Silicon Valley, from venture capitalists and chip engineers to real estate agents and restaurateurs, has begun to ask: Will Google become the next Netscape?

      Mr. Gates, who for more than a decade has promised - but not yet delivered - "information at your fingertips" for his customers, has decided that the Internet search business is both a serious threat and a valuable opportunity.

      The co-founder and now the chief software architect of his company, Mr. Gates readily acknowledges these days that Microsoft "blew it" in the market for Internet search. Despite his early grand vision, he displayed little inclination to deploy software that would improve the ability of computer users to find information - until he saw the dollars in the business.

      THAT opportunity fell to two Stanford computer science graduate students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, who disregarded the industry's common wisdom that search technology would become an inexpensive, marginal commodity.

      While the Internet's dominant companies fought one another over Web portals, the promise of e-commerce and access to providers like America Online, Google developed a speedy search engine that soon became almost a universal first step onto the Internet. It displaced earlier search engines because the technology invented by Mr. Brin and Mr. Page did a measurably better job in returning results that satis

  104. My Prediction by nathanh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Windows 2006 will have "integrated" Internet search functionality. This will be pervasive throughout the help system, the file explorer, the Internet explorer, etc. However it will always use Microsoft's search engine.

    2 years later, the FTC will notice and declare this is a violation of the 1994 Consent Decree. They will pass it on to the DOJ who will fuck around for 5 years and do absolutely goddamn nothing.

    Microsoft will argue that they can't use any other search engine because of some inane reason. This will be despite massive amounts of evidence brought forth by search engine experts, and a patch floating around the Internet to use Google instead of Microsoft's search engine.

    Bill Gates will go on a brainwashing campaign to convince the American Public (god bless their little hearts) that this is all about innovation! That Microsoft should be allowed to innovate in a patriotic demonstration of truth, liberty, and the American way. Millions of Microsoft cheerleaders will rally around Microsoft, saying that Google sucks and the Microsoft's search engine is clearly superior and that it's entirely unfair for the government to be outlawing innovation!

    In 2013 Microsoft will be found guilty of violating the 1994 Consent Decree. As punishment they will be told not to do it again. Which they'll promise to do. Just like they promised the last two times.

    By then it will be too late. Google will be dead.

    Forgive my cynicism... but I've seen this all before!

    1. Re:My Prediction by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      2007: Millions of people who were perfectly happy with Google are now incredible pissed off with inferior search results and switch to alternate browsers. Microsoft loses more goodwill as they once again see that all the claims of 'monopoly' were erroneous and merely excuses from shitty competetitors.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  105. I use Gigablast by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    And when it doesn't find what I'm looking for, I use one of the links to other search engines at the bottom of the results page.

    Trying to diminish my dependance on google; they've been getting worse for a while and I've discovered pretty decent alternatives (AlltheWeb, Teoma, Gigablast, etc) -- not as good all the time, but most of the time.

  106. google not as good as it used to be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is it just me or does anyone else notice that the quality of google searches is getting worse?

    when i try to find info on particular topics i get a lot of comercial sites. acctually it is the same 4-5 sites.

    i've been using hotbot more and more. you still get some comercial sites as the first few hits, but with hotbot i ACCTUALLY FIND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR.

    Also I think images.av.com is better than images.google.com

    1. Re:google not as good as it used to be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're mad, coward. google images gets more results and no paid advertisements.

      wait. never mind.

      just tried the 'teen boobs' search, and av rules!

  107. Search integration by heretic · · Score: 1

    Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application.

    I think the article is addressing the scope for greater integration into the OS of search functionality. Such as, making search functionality directly avaiable from Word or any other productivity app instead of having to switch to a browser and having the results returned in a format properly formatted for that app (such as Excel). Of course, it will be tied directly to MSN Search.

  108. Missing something in the analysis by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    People are forgetting that "Google" is already widely known - it's not just with the /. crowd. I've heard the term "Googled" while watching C.S.I. and Letterman, for Pete's sake!

    They've already got the mindshare - it's not at all like Netscape vs. Microsoft.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  109. Toolbars and Deskbars by pipingguy · · Score: 1




    See DQSD. Google (in beta?), Hotbot and others are now offering this feature. It's open source.

  110. Rock your world by GerbilSocks · · Score: 1

    Booble will rock your world, beeotch... wait, I mean Google will rock your world, bitch!

  111. GOOGLE SUCKS!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ignore the subject, google is good but not as good as it used to be. companies know how to 'google bomb'. the secrets out, i have not seen google adapt.

    i am turning to other search engines more and more. google is no longer my one and only.

    my google searches seem to turn up only comercial sites. no real info

    my searches with other engines show comercial stuff, but i FIND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR. can't say that with google.

    example: try finding info to do with mobile phones on google. try to find MIDI files. you get sent to comercial sites. usally the same 5 comcercial sits. that just sucks. 25 hits, 90% pointing to the same 5 sites? LAME! (the stats are my estimates)

  112. Why Now? by thogard · · Score: 1

    Is Microsoft tring to head off the Google IPO at the pass? It appears to me that MS might be worried that some heavy institutional investors my decided to drop some of the MSFT in favor of Google stock and if that happens on one day, it could cut billions off the market cap of MS which could then cause a number of smaller investors to drop their shares too.

  113. The good, easy fight... by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

    "Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy."

    What's Microsoft's net worth again? Oh, that's right.... ^_^

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
  114. No way! Seriously?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sign me up!

  115. Mod Parent Up by MisterFancypants · · Score: 1
    I was just about to post the same. Also, don't forget how many people use Microsoft Money over Quicken.

    The truth of the matter is Microsoft falls on its face as often as it succeeds when it is branching into new markets -- even ones related to desktop computing. The whole 'evil monopolistic power abuser' thing seems more like a convenient excuse for the shortcomings of Netscape and Linux as a desktop computer than a real phenomenon to me. Microsoft are certainly no angels when it comes to business practices, but that's no reason for people to let misperceptions about the real cause of market success or failure to cloud their judgements.

  116. Progress toward what? by Winkhorst · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Do you really think Microsoft is above hijacking their own browser and sending you to McGoogle.com when you try to go to Google?

    --
    "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    1. Re:Progress toward what? by JPriest · · Score: 1

      MSN is already the default search engine. If they hijack it much more than that they will be breaking the law.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
  117. Google as a business competitor by Infonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This isn't just about technology, folks.

    Microsoft has a monopoly to leverage, to be sure. But their history shows that in general Microsoft doesn't make many business mistakes. They instead wait for their competition (like Netscape - a company that practically handed the lead to Microsoft on a silver platter) to shoot themselves in the foot. Every time they've faced a competitor that's in truly top form, Microsoft hasn't won.

    Intuit has held off against repeated attacks from Microsoft.

    The PlayStation hasn't been demolished by the XBox.

    Microsoft hasn't even bothered trying to take on Adobe.

    Oracle is not being destroyed by Microsoft.

    In all of these cases, aggressive, competent companies have held off attacks from Microsoft by minimizing their mistakes and playing against Microsoft's weaknesses.

    Google is not just about smart technology. This is a company that figured out how to make money with search. Remember back in the late 90s, when all of the kingpins of search decided that portals were the way to go? They were all wrong. Google, the late entrant, actually had it right and stuck to their core competency.

    Microsoft faces a tough competitor in Google - one that's not likely to make the same kind of mistakes its predecessors did.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Google as a business competitor by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Microsoft faces a tough competitor in Google - one that's not likely to make the same kind of mistakes its predecessors did."

      Ahh someone who gets it. Most of the competetion that have come and gone were ousted because Microsoft legitimately had a better product for their end users (read: not nerds). People liked the simplicty and the GUIs, and could care less about security holes. It happened to Netscape.

      Google is going to be just fine. As long as they don't make the infamous 'monopoly' excuse and stick to making a good search engine they will are going to succeed. Monopoly has nothing to do with market share and everything to do with the number of alternatives. And Google is one tough alternative.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    2. Re:Google as a business competitor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Microsoft has a monopoly to leverage, to be sure. But their history shows that in general Microsoft doesn't make many business mistakes. They instead wait for their competition (like Netscape - a company that practically handed the lead to Microsoft on a silver platter) to shoot themselves in the foot. Every time they've faced a competitor that's in truly top form, Microsoft hasn't won.

      I believe you've missed the point with Microsoft. They do make mistakes. Lots of them. Early versions of Windows sucked. Pre-4 versions of MSIE sucked. MS-Bob. MSN. Pre-Windows versions of MS-Word. Windows on Alpha, MIPS. Xbox1 sucks as you mentioned, but I'll betya that X-Box 3 or 4 will be great, if MS has enough money to prop up its XBox business until then.

      The difference between Microsoft and most other companies (Sony and Oracle are probably big enough to defend themselves) is that Microsoft has the size and monopoly power to make mistakes again and again. YET keep recovering from them. This was a luxury that Netscape didn't have. Microsoft, simply by breathing down Netscape's neck, forced Netscape to move faster than was sensible. To take risks because there were no other choice. Netscape should have reimplemented Netscape 4 from scratch, but they couldn't afford a three year gap between releases.

      If Microsoft doesn't lose its monopoly status, Google will be dead. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but one day, Google will make a big mistake or lotsa little mistakes and Microsoft will be there to take advantage of the situation. In the meantime, Microsoft can continue to make mistakes, their search technology cross-subsided by their operating system and office suite profits.

    3. Re:Google as a business competitor by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      Intuit?

      The same Intuit that agreed to be bought by Microsoft in 1995 for 1.5 Billion dollars until the deal was called off by the justice department as being "anticompetitive"?

      THAT Intuit?

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
  118. MS vs NS != MS vs Google by agwis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MS pulled some damn dirty tricks out of their repertoire to win over users from Netscape because they couldn't win them over on quality...like some posters have suggested.

    -MS couldn't compete with Netscape so they completely gave their browser away, free to use both personally and commercially. At the time, Netscape allowed free personal usage but required commercial usage to be licensed. (Free is always good, but in this case MS did it with the sole intent to squash competition. They had the revenue from their OS and a big bank account of course, while Netscape was a newcomer with only 1 product that was generating revenue from commercial licenses.)

    -MS threatened the likes of Compaq (and others) by yanking their Windows license if they bundled Netscape into computers they were selling. Obviously, IE shipped with Windows but vendors weren't allowed to include Netscape. (Good way to stifle competition IMHO).

    -MS integrated IE into the OS so it would load quicker and appear faster than Netscape.

    -MS delayed API's to Netscape repeatedly.

    Those were the big factors in sinking Netscape but none of them apply to Google. I know many people that can barely get around on a computer but if they want to search for something they use Google. It's so widely used that no one even blinks anymore if you tell them to "just google for it".

    I think it's too late for MS to try and outpace Google. To compare MS vs Google to MS vs Netscape is unfair to say the least. Google doesn't need to be installed on the OS, it's free to use, and is so well known that it's name is a universally accepted word analogous to search.

    -Pat

    1. Re:MS vs NS != MS vs Google by zygote · · Score: 1

      All of your points -- good ones at that -- just go to illustrate what M$ will do to beat Google: resort to dirty tricks.

      What is M$'s secret weapon? IE installed on all those machines. Suppose it might be possible that the news Service Pack will make it next to impossible to search anywhere but MSSearch.com? Could they jigger IE to internally redirect any entry of Google to MSSearch.com before it hits the network?

      Sure, and there will be tons of bellyaching and the Justice Department might decide to chase them on it, but by the time that happens Google could see it's hits go down the drain.

      I wouldn't put it past Sir. Gates.

      --
      the future is here, it is just not evenly distributed - w. gibson
    2. Re:MS vs NS != MS vs Google by ComputarMastar · · Score: 1

      There are a bunch of dirty tricks Microsoft could use against google:

      - They could modify IE to redirect google connection attempts to their own search engine.

      - They could modify their TCP/IP stack to return their search engine's IP for any google DNS lookups.

      - They could modify IE to make google pages load slower.

      - They could modify their TCP/IP stack to load google pages slower.

      - They could modify their TCP/IP stack to drop random packets for google connections.

      - Stuff I'm not imaginative enough to think of.

      Sure, some of these are really blatant and would probably get another anti-trust case going, but, if Microsoft wants the search engine market bad enough, they might just try them. By the time a case against them finished, google would be irrelevant or nonexistant and history has shown Microsoft that the "penalties" aren't so bad.

    3. Re:MS vs NS != MS vs Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you say IE couldn't compete with NS? NS sucked. Yes, they created it and yes, they were visionaries, and so on, but NS absolutely sucked. And they could have improved it if they managed themselves better.

      Giving away IE for free should not be considered a dirty trick. Would the web be as pervasive nowadays if browsers were not free? As in completely free, all the time, even to corporations?

      Including IE in the OS just Plain Makes Sense. You can browse files, control panel settings, etc. Why not browse the internet as well? Netscape did effectively make their program "part of the OS" by leaving the process image alive to hasten restarts. But that disguise didn't work because NS was slow as a wet week. Including a search engine in the OS Plain Makes Sense as well (not that I'd use it; Google toolbar works great for me).

      The other tricks you mention are indeed dirty. So MS played some dirty corporate tricks, which I agree should be punished. But on technical grounds, their hands are clean.

      Gavin

    4. Re:MS vs NS != MS vs Google by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Netscape because they couldn't win them over on quality...like some posters have suggested.
      How was IE better? I HATED Netscape, ugly slow app, really stupid.

      MS couldn't compete with Netscape so they completely gave their browser away
      Because nothing shows the true villainy of greed when people GIVE away stuff. Please. Everyone thought they were gonna jack up the price when Netscape died. They didn't, and never will.

      Netscape would have been fine if they just released a SIGNIFICANTLY superior browser (ala Opera or Mozilla). It didn't need to be bundled if people wanted to use it. But nobody did, because it sucked. Thus Netscape died, and good riddance.

      You watch this little war. If MSN starts winning it's because they advertised better, have a better product, or Google does something stupid. No exceptions.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  119. Re:Many miss your point by MO-411 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The idea behind the web is publishing, The idea behind publishing is to have readers. Boycotting a search engine is, well, stupid, when one looks at the simple fact that one wants to have their published content read.

    Often times people miss the concept that is so bloody oblivious and yet they still manage to continue on...
    :-)

  120. Don't discount MS too soon ... by qoquaq · · Score: 1
    Hey, Google is great but you still need to go out to a program and interface with it. Now enters MS with WinFS/Longhorn. It can make searches using their engine transparent (right click ... Find). It will be a part of the operating environment (I imagine a bit better than previous clunky attempts like Sherlock for Mac OS)

    That is what may be at stake people. Now for a few dollars more your result can come up in the search first (invisible to the user with respect to search engine).

    It sounds like a great way to get advert dollars. Companies will switch ....they need to pump as much into their advertising dollar and get the most for their buck. Think about it 95% of the desktops already! Do the math! They are getting hit all over for Office and Corporate productivity software.

    Match that up with DRM. Now those pesky open source software binaries will have trouble getting on MS desktops (keeping in mind most people will not be as savy as Slashdotters). A pristine Windows environment once again. It may slow down GNU/Linux on the desktop.

    It isn't just MS paranoia or is it?

    --

    "They say travel broadens the mind, so I went over the falls in a barrel." -Thomas Dolby

  121. STOP THIS FAUL LANGUAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a hate-speech you utter. It is bad. Americans are nice. And I come from Holland DUH.

    It serves no purpose whatsowever to lash out like that.

  122. Re:Google Innovates Much Faster by DA-MAN · · Score: 0

    How can Microsoft expect to keep up?

    Especially since they run FreeBSD.


    Actually Google runs on Linux. This is totally wrong place to put a FreeBSD is dying post...

    Next time someone posts something about Yahoo! or... well, no one but Yahoo! really uses FreeBSD anymore...

    --
    Can I get an eye poke?
    Dog House Forum
  123. Commercialization of search engines sucks. by Space_Soldier · · Score: 0

    And I'm posting this again: Everything is commercial now, I hate search engines. If you search for technical details about a product, 99% of the sites point to a shopping site. You have to search -shop -shopping -buy -sale -. In this case, if you want to do research on that story, you get one link to BBC. It is annoying as hell. A search engine should be made where every site in the database is verified and none of them are shopping sites, or sites that have paid to be the first link in the search result. The Internet was designed for information to be shared and easily accessible, but now it is very hard to find the information you want because everybody is trying to sell you something. It is annoying! The more a search engine becomes popular (e.g.: Google [which is now a verb]) the worst it is going to get because the company behind it cares more about the paper with the presidents than good search results. Some of us, programmers, which read Slashdot need to create a search engine where information sites and shopping sites are separated. I'm sure funding can be found out there since many more people/companies are frustrated about where search engines go.

  124. You are right: Google is going downhill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Usually 50% to 75% of the first page you see is made up of 'composed' web links (links which 'just happen' to have 'exactly' the word-combination you typed in, in the url), or straight-forward commercial links. That sucks.

    As soon as a better search engine comes along - EVEN IF IT IS MICROSOFT'S - I will use that one.

    Take that, MS-bashers.

  125. neither does MSN.com by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

    Fedora+Mozilla works just fine. Well...as fine as the MSN search engine is, anyway.

    MSN does appear to bring up more retail type links first.

    Search on "recumbent" (as in recumbent bicycles). Not a really common search, but not 'weird'.
    Google shows more informational links, whereas MSN brings up eBay, DealTime, Sears, Amazon, etc. among the first set of links, along with a few informational ones.

  126. os level search by qqqqarl · · Score: 1

    I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application.

    yes, well, just wait until microsoft incorporates web seaching into their operating system. imagine if you could merely alt-click on any word to get an msn-search. etc, etc, etc.

    BUT, you say, msn-searches are inferior.

    gosh, we've never seen microsoft crush superior technology before, have we?

  127. AGREE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hear hear.

  128. Wow, he's done a finance course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wheeeeeeeeeaaaawww!

  129. only way I can see things getting ugly.... by ShadowRage · · Score: 1

    is if the next release of IE or the next XP patch blocks access to google, or it redirects to msn search, then I think people would be incredibly pissed off at microsoft.

  130. To a dumb user, it is bundled software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Making the analogy to netscape isn't completely flawed. MSN is the default homepage for a lot of people getting a PC fresh out of the box. They launch "the internet" and to them, the internet starts at MSN.

  131. Key items about the coming search wars by securitas · · Score: 2, Informative


    There are some key items in the article summarized in my (rejected) post. They give a good indication of where the market is headed. They also highlight and give clues about some of the competitive challenges that Microsoft will face while trying to take Google's market share.

    2004-02-01 00:12:36
    The Coming Search Wars: Microsoft vs. Google (articles,internet)

    The New York Times' John Markoff reports on the coming Internet search engine wars between Microsoft and Google. Markoff draws parallels between Google and another mid-1990s upstart company: Netscape. The feature also provides some historical context on how Google filled a niche that the giants ignored while pursuing Web portals. A few story items stand out. (1) When Microsoft Research demonstrated its new search technology that will take on Google, former Digital Equipment Internet search pioneer 'Mike Burrows ... who later helped design Microsoft's experimental search engine, quietly defected' to Google. (2) Further, 'Google has been quietly developing what industry experts consider to be the world's largest computing facility' with over 100,000 computers in at least a dozen data centers around the world. (3) Finally, 'Microsoft is concerned that it may be at a competitive disadvantage' due to Google's use of Linux and open source technologies, according to an internal e-mail from Google CEO Eric Schmidt who describes Microsoft as 'obsessed with open source as a business model.' Not bad for a company that had negligible revenue in 2001 and now has $1 billion in annual sales and a $350 million profit.

  132. Re:The .NET Angle - non issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this really becomes an issue
    AND
    if open source .net engines arent good enough for such a simple thing than a search component,
    THEN
    Google can still just install a small number of MS-Servers that recieve the .net requests, translate them into C (C++, Java, whatever they want) and transfer them to their Linux cluster that executes the requests. Than the MS-Servers will just translate the response.

    But I seriously doubt that open .net wont be suffisent for a simple search component.

  133. There is still room for progress by t0ny · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Actaully, Ive pretty recently been starting to see limits to google. Now, dont get me wrong, its still a big improvement over the old crap like yahoo or webcrawler (for a really old-school example), but as more and more content appears, it gets harder and harder to get relevant results.

    searches could do better at exclusions, as well as sticking to one language (even telling it English-only on advanced searches doesnt always help). Also, it seems like simple, yet specific, things which should yield many results dont produce results.

    There is much room for improvement, but both Google and Microsoft have pretty smart people working for them. Competition is the best way to get those guys to work even harder, by trying to outdo each other.

    One of the nice things about MS is that any improvements they come up with will eventually find their way into other products, like SQL (or even a future version of Windows). Anything Google learns only benefits Google.

    --

    Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

    1. Re:There is still room for progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As an example of a place where google has room for improvment, some sleazy online pharmacies have been distressingly effective at keeping themselves at the top of google searches for information about prescription drugs. For example, try typing "prozac suicide" into google and see what comes up.

  134. MS is afraid about Google IPO by PiotrK · · Score: 1

    Google will loose millions of IPO money, just because Microsoft, SCO, and some greedy sects, etc. tell that they are going to compete/sue Google.

  135. No software? How about "Google Toolbar?" by gfecyk · · Score: 1

    Sure it isn't needed, but it sure seems everyone has a toolbar they want us to install. Google included.

    --
    Use Evolution instead of Outlook? Bewa
  136. Google will lose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think they know what they're getting into. Microsoft has an army of 30,000 programmers coding away as we speak. And they all work overtime.

    Plus, MS can hire people away from google to figure out exactly how google does what it does. Patent Schmatent. it'll be too late by the lawsuit has born out, or remember Netscape if you disagree.

    The creators will become billionaires at the IPO, then they'll walk away after the mandatory 6 months, and the greatest search engine the world has known will fade into obscurity at the hands of the greatest software company ever known.

  137. Probably more important outside America. by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

    I suspect that as anti-Microsoft sentiment rises outside America (which is inevitable as anti-American sentiment rises) the fact that linux web browsers might start setting google as the default search engine could be really significant for Google.

  138. how MS will make an easier, better, faster google by lkcl · · Score: 1
    they'll register thousands of logins on http://www.google.com/apis , then use SOAP and .net from hundreds of IP addresses to make their own search engine proxy google's _own_ search engine.

    then their marketing team will go into overdrive saying that they do a better than google, faster and easier, too.

    ... and the development team will actually have a _reliable_ product up and running in next-to-no-time.

    the best bit is that the ineffectiveness of the US anti-trust laws won't need to be brought into play, because if google were to be put out of business by the above "scam", microsoft's own "search" engine would also coincidentally fail.

  139. Preemt MicroSoft at integrating? by Slowleggs · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft only has to make their new search 'good enough', and integrate it with Internet Explorer (or even as toolbars in other apps, like the Office suite), and Joe Public will use it just to make life simple."

    Then why don't "we" beat them to it? Let Mozilla, Konqueror, Firebird, OpenOffice etc. have a Google search bar (as default on install, so that less experienced users don't have to look for add-ons)?

    1. Re:Preemt MicroSoft at integrating? by mawi · · Score: 0

      firebird already has google a searchbar.

  140. You've missed the critical point by EdMack · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Microsofts next launch is absolutely focused on "search". The entire filesystem metaphor in Longhorn revolves around data and association. The 'Stuff like this' (?) demo is a bit like Dashboard, it brings up relevant info from all your personal data, and the internet.

    When users are trying to find something like 'funny billy goatse photo' their hard drive and Microsoft's search engine will be used together. Unknowingly, MSN search will be a part of everyday life.

    Microsofts next monopoly abuse is pretty clear already, their technology demos show it too. They will integrate and before you can say 'Anti-trust investigation' the world at large will be using MSN search for _everything_ - information is power too.

    Keep close tabs on Microsoft's actions, unfortunately when they are punished by EU/USA its too late.

    --
    puts ("Python r0cks\n");
    1. Re:You've missed the critical point by Jarlsberg · · Score: 1, Interesting
      First you say:
      Microsofts next launch is absolutely focused on "search". The entire filesystem metaphor in Longhorn revolves around data and association. The 'Stuff like this' (?) demo is a bit like Dashboard, it brings up relevant info from all your personal data, and the internet. When users are trying to find something like 'funny billy goatse photo' their hard drive and Microsoft's search engine will be used together. Unknowingly, MSN search will be a part of everyday life.
      So far, great for Windows users.

      But then you say:

      Microsofts next monopoly abuse is pretty clear already, their technology demos show it too. They will integrate and before you can say 'Anti-trust investigation' the world at large will be using MSN search for _everything_ - information is power too.

      So - Improving file search in Windows and integrating web search is a bad thing? Making Windows better is a bad thing? You'd have to be a *nix zealot to seriously mean such a thing.

      Microsoft will not stop Google or any other search engine in their next iteration of Windows/IE. Microsoft is going to make it a whole lot easier to use MSN Search, but hey, it's their OS. Personally, I applaud the effort. Maybe Google et all will improve because of Microsofts efforts.

    2. Re:You've missed the critical point by EdMack · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you got my perspective wrong:

      Improving windows - great for us

      The system behind the improvements - not going to make anti-trust investigators happy

      --
      puts ("Python r0cks\n");
  141. Use as a verb is important by Perdo · · Score: 1

    When you "google" something, you search for it or find it.

    "I googled knoppix, and found a good ISO link"

    When you "Microsoft" something, you destroy it, take it over, hoard it or crash it.

    "CowboyNeal is microsofting all the cheetos"

    Microsoft is definitly on the wrong side of this popularity battle.

    Newspeak is working for the good guys... Double plus good.

    --

    If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

  142. Innovation? Re:Incremental Googling by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
    Yeah, but where is the innovation in Microsoft? Where?

    Even if Microsoft had it, and whilst certainly true innovation is often a killing business idea, intangibles such as trustworthiness, accuracy, transparency, friendliness, low cost and good quality generally are good reasons to come back to a supplier. I don't think Microsoft usually scores high on any of these- their strengths ultimately relate only to concepts like 'lock-in'.

    That works only as long as the lock-in lasts- Linux and other businesses and governments appear to be attacking this reasonably strongly.

    But 'google' is the BBC of the internet search engines; high quality, high trust, high transparency. Like the BBC, it's not that google always does the right thing, but when they do the wrong thing, you can often see why they did what they did, and empathise. Nobody really empathises with Microsoft.

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  143. It Will If... by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    It will if IE suddenly stops playing well with Google.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  144. That's because you're stupid by melted · · Score: 1

    You can do EVERYTHING in windows remotely using scripting, WMI and ADSI and command line (that "net" command - it can do a lot more than you think it can). Just because you don't know this doesn't mean the technologies aren't there.

  145. Depends on what the battle is by noewun · · Score: 1
    In contests which pit marketing muscle and questionable trade practices against each other, MS usually wins. In contest which pit technology against technology, MS usually loses.

    What kind of battle this is will determine who wins.

    --
    I am a believer of momentum and curves.
  146. This is why Google must IPO by utahjazz · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's last resort is hiring all of their competitor's smartest people. That's what they did to Novell.

    So, if Google IPO's, that will buy Google a couple/few years while their employee's options vest, depending on the schedule. They can and will grant more options of course, but the fact is, Google is (supposedly) worth about $12 billion, and MS has $50 billion in cash alone. They could easily gather up all the smart folk at Google and effectively buy much of what makes Google Google for a tiny fraction of Google's worth.

  147. Somehow everyone assumes that MS techology will be by melted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...worse than Google's. Now imagine that technology is not worse, and they have a ridiculously large server farm sitting on a ridiculously fat pipe that indexes the internet twice as fast as google using better algorithms. "Can't happen", you say? "Why?" I'll ask. Maybe not in the first version, but I have no doubt MS can beat the crap out of Google with technology alone. Heck, I know at least two other search engines that aren't worse than Google, and they don't even have Google's resources, whereas MS has 10x the resources, monetary, IP and other.

  148. Google *is* a portal. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 5, Insightful
    MSN is a portal, not a search engine.

    And Google is not? Froogle, Google News, Google Images, Google Translation... Google is a portal just as much as MSN, you seem to be ignoring this simply because Google has "cleaner lines" on their web site.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  149. and... by z00ky · · Score: 1

    in other news... booble.com installed a bedroom cam in the Gates' Master Bedroom. Neilson's Netratings Shoot Up instantly as SuperBowl Ratings take a dump. No word yet on how many of booble's hits are generated by Teenager Mike Rowe, who settled with MS for an Xbox to give up his domain name "MikeRoweSoft.com".

    --

    ----
    djzooky.com
    I Like Cheese.
  150. Not enough of a pessimist by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Funny

    "I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application."

    That may be true now, but will the page still render in upcoming versions of IE?

  151. Progress has already begun. by anakin357 · · Score: 1

    http://toolbar.msn.com/

    Need I say more?

    --
    http://www.fsckin.com/
  152. The fight will be about the same by rdean400 · · Score: 1

    Integrate the application into the operating system => no need to fire up IE to http://www.google.com to do searches.

    Fair or not, Microsoft's plans for search go beyond what Google can deliver as a remote internet application. Microsoft wants to treat search as a single domain application (e.g., searching local or remote resources are done through the same application). This is EXACTLY the same play they ran against Netscape.

    Google may be falling for it. I've read several articles recently that indicate Google's head may be starting to weigh too much for its shoulders.

  153. Reflexive Lemmings by erick99 · · Score: 1
    If Microsoft is successful in this endeavor it will be primarily because users let them. Most people do not want to think about how to use their hardware or software. Like a lemmings drawn to the sea, folks just sort of glaze over and use their computers as mindlessly as possible. And, maybe it has to be that way to ensure some degree of cohesiveness across applications and even the Internet. I don't know what people use I.E. Explorer and rant about popups when Mozilla is a great browser and suppresses popups. Same for mail clients such as Thunderbird. But, that requires having some fun with your computer and that just isn't the way it's done in the mainstream. I suspect I am preaching to the choir here on Slashdot. Oh well.... /

    Happy Trails,

    Erick

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
  154. Simple! by CTib · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Simple strategy for MS:
    1) kill all browsers on the most popular computing platform. Result, IE sole available browser (oh, wait, they already did this).
    2) make IE automatically point google.* URL requests to msn-search.

    QED.

    Darn, I just spelled out the obvious. Now the evil doesn't even have the excuse of stupidity :-( I hope the above never happens.

    1. Re:Simple! by dann0 · · Score: 1

      Simple strategy for MS:
      1) kill all browsers on the most popular computing platform. Result, IE sole available browser (oh, wait, they already did this).
      2) make IE automatically point google.* URL requests to msn-search.

      I don't think this would happen. Google would have a very good case for an inappropriate use of a trademark. Microsoft, surely wouldn't fall for one of their own tricks?

      --
      "The big question in our lives is how to be at the same time a hedonist and in a hurry" - Alain Ducasse (?)
  155. Just wait for longhorn... by slaad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application. Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    This is just like Netscape vs. IE. Just wait until longhorn comes out. MS's search engine will be integrated into windows (where it will undoubtedly function as not only a search engine but it will handle all memory access as well, so it can't be removed). It will have the entire web cached and right there waiting for you. It will then use your spare bandwidth to update itself continuously. Who will want to go all the way to google.com to do a search when the entire web is available right on your own computer? Google is doomed for sure.

    --


    ~Warning!~ The above is encrypted using rot676!
  156. Peer-to-Peer Searching by Roger_Wilco · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I like Google fine, but if we want to retain freedom to use our computers to do what we like, we need a system for searching that doesn't rely on a single source. The algorithms are for the most part public; someone needs to make a peer-to-peer search engine.

    I don't have the expertise; do you?

    1. Re:Peer-to-Peer Searching by evilviper · · Score: 1
      someone needs to make a peer-to-peer search engine.

      Uh huh... "Peer-to-peer" has a lot of uses, but it's not a be-all-end-all, and a search-engine is the last thing it could potentially be used for. When a node gives you a false result, you just delete the file, and download the right one. What do you do when a node is corrupting other peer's databases and making some web-site the #1 through 100,000 search result? It's easy to spot for a human, but simple programs are easily fooled into believing the info they are recieving is legit.

      I also wonder about your priorities. If I was to list the serious problems facing the internet, "too few search engines" would be at the absolute BOTTOM of my list.

      The effort needed to knock Yahoo.com off the web was significant... Yahoo has since put more safeguards in place to prevent being DDoSed, and I'm sure Google is in the same boat. Even if Google is somehow (magically?) knocked of-line for a long period of time, I have no problem switching to Yahoo, or lycos, or altavista, or hotbot, or any of the many, many others available.

      Personally, I wouldn't care much if, somehow, absolutely every search-engine was knocked-off the web. Writing a WWW spider would be easy enough, and once I've fed it with slashdot.org, it'll go on forever, indexing the most popular sites of interest. My own personal spider wouldn't produce results as in-depth and exact as Google, but it'll be more than good enough to get around on the web, and find what I want. Remember, this is the absolute worst-case senario... This is doomsday, where every site that even resembles a search engine is offline, and all their redundant servers, and backups are gone as well. It's not all that bleak now is it?

      Besides, who needs the WWW when you've got Gnutella, and the endless content available on it?
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  157. I have just one problem with the MS will win theor by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I have just one problem with the MS will win theory. It seems to rely on the idea that MS can sell anything it wants even if it is an inferior product. Well lets take a look at that shall we?

    Game consoles? Nope. Microsoft Phone? Nope. Interactive TV? Nope. MSN? Nope.

    MS is not exactly scoring a 100% with the products it releases. The OS and office suit do well. So do their PDA's although this is because everyone else is really screwing up.

    Lets not forget that netscape lost because it couldn't keep up. Linux users will remember being lumbered with Netscape 4.2. Windows users just switched to IE.

    So does google loose? Maybe if they screw up but I don't think the bundling thing is going to help MS all that much. MSN is bundled and has so far totally failed to take over the market or turn a profit.

    Of course one tiny little detail is that MS doesn't need to make a profit. I cleans out its consumers so much on the OS and office suit it can afford to have several money drains going on at once. MS can afford to screw up countless times. I doubt google has that luxury.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  158. The baseball bat is not a bad idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ayn Rand was a crack smoker.
    Now how much did Japan intervene this year to keep the Yen cheap?

  159. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    software"

    That will probably be step one:

    1) Break Google on Longhorn.

    2) Default to msn search when Google breaks.

    3) Profit.

  160. Politically Biased Google by Rick+and+Roll · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    When you type the Nazi spelling of the word, Sauwastika, google says "Did you mean Swastika" (the traditional symbol that has been used by many cultures since about 200 A.D.). Politically biased if you axe me.

  161. closed vs open source by neuroinf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Google an advocate of open source? I don't think so. Can't see any google source anywhere... The approach here is that at a certain point the sale value of code approaches zero. OS code sale price? Zero. Search code price? Non-zero. If MS can add value they will survive, if not then they won't.

  162. Google == good, but room for other goodness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with your observations that MS doesn't always win (eg, Sony, Adobe, Oracle, etc.) And yes, MS faces a tough competitor with Google for sure.

    But you're viewing the "search industry" as too black & white, as if there's only -one- "right" formula. In my opinion, it's still too early to be close-minded about the possibile ways to make money while offering search services. Don't get me wrong; I'm not necessarily saying MS will gain ground. But your claim that "all the kingpins of search decided that portals were the way to go ... they were all wrong. ... Google actually had it right" is just too closed minded for me this early in the game. It's also plain wrong. Yahoo does just fine as a search engine and portal, thank you very much. I know more people with Yahoo as their home page than Google (myself included). Perhaps Google is a marginally better search engine (I'm not even sure of that; more results != better), but Yahoo let's me search AND let me see news, weather, and browse topics without having to even click once.

    Also, if winning the portal/services/search war means getting programmers on-side, then MS has a great track record and clearly knows how to woo programmers into developing apps tied to MS. Witness how many programmers fall into line with MS and code using inferior but EASY and seductive tech like DirectX, VB, Access, ASP, etc. Google's search API is a good thing, I think. But if MS offers some wacky new .NET graphic visualization control that ties into their search services, well, people will use it. You'll see apps with it. And advertisers will start paying MS to index their sites to ensure they show up in the fancy-ass new .NET apps. Maybe. But I think it's entirely possible.

    I don't think proprietary apps are where searches -should- take place. But I could see it happening. And if it does, MS will be there while Google scratches its head.

  163. WARNING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have no idea what the parent link is to. *sigh*

    You people make me want to NEVER click links. I even scrutinize cnn.com's links!!!

  164. Unit conversions no big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is an obscure feature. Only my ubergeek friends know about it. While -everyone- I know has heard of Google, almost nobody I know would turn to it if they were wondering how many acres were in 2000 square feet. The innovation is technically there, but I doubt they're winning many new homepages over that particular one. And I'm certain it's not putting more money into their pocket.

    And if you believe everyone will eventually find out about the unit conversion features (etc.) that Google has, well, parsing and recognizing such strings and acting on them is a -lot- easier than catching up on search technology. There's no barrier to entry that Google as set up.

    By the way, Google as a search engine is really starting to suck. I use Teoma mostly. Some of my coworkers swear by AllTheWeb. Google is fine, for now, but I don't see them making themself unbeatable by any stretch of the imagination.

    1. Re:Unit conversions no big deal by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "' That is an obscure feature. Only my ubergeek friends know about it. "

      Google does not advertise. Their popularity has come from word of mouth. This feature like all others will spread through word of mouth too. So far it's worked well for them.

      "well, parsing and recognizing such strings and acting on them is a -lot- easier than catching up on search technology. There's no barrier to entry that Google as set up."

      True enough. MS has never innovated. They always steal other peoples ideas and technology. No doubt they will steal that one too.

      "By the way, Google as a search engine is really starting to suck. I use Teoma mostly"

      Good for you. For me nothing even comes close. I love searching for something and then hitting the groups tab and seeing what the newsgroups say too.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

  165. Google Results lack of transparency by sparkydevil · · Score: 1

    We have been working for years to get to the top position in our main keyword on Google, but cannot do so, even though we are the most popular site -- by far -- on our keyword and should be in the top five. Google continues to give higher rank to sites that are MUCH less popular than us.

    If MS can make a search engine that tracks actual visitor usage of sites and publish it OPENLY (such as Alexa.com does, but on a larger scale) instead of the CLOSED SOURCE Google PR algorithm then I will gladly sign up.

    I am sure many other Webmasters agree.

    1. Re:Google Results lack of transparency by jred · · Score: 1

      I feel your pain. I'm a netadmin at a small shop, and have recently had the "online advertising" stuff added to my plate. It's proving to be a near full-time job optimizing for search engines (we already pay for overture and adwords). I'm hoping that once I learn wtf is going on it gets easier.

      There's a *lot* of sites & lists that deal with just that subjects. Most of them say the same things. Unfortunately, most of them seem to think that it takes some big juju to do anything on Google.

      I spent all day in a "seminar" that was supposed to tell you how to get to the top on Google. Ended up being mainly a sales pitch for their e-commerce hosting. When they got to the Google part, they pretty much said to use Adwords. Still, the results that are at the top are not necessarily better or even relevant for the search term. So there's obviously *some* way to do it.

      You're "working for years" comment doesn't give me much hope, though.

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
  166. Cleaner lines by jhantin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    mean quicker loading pages, less time spent hunting around for that obscure link in the corner of the page buried under a floating Flash ad, and a non-sellout image.

    --
    ...when you're writing a game...tweak the difficulty of "Easy" to something [your mother] can cope with. -- onion2k
  167. If its like Win XP's search then I dont want it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Microsoft search technology is so good, then why does the search facility in windows XP suck so much?
    Often its quicker to browse for the what you were after than to negotiate the mess of hidden options and animations squashed into a small frame and then wait while it searches all the places you already looked before resorting to use the search.
    Even m$ creates a better engine, I will still use a search engine that I can figure out how to tell it what I want!!

  168. Semantics mean nothing by lysium · · Score: 2, Informative
    And most average computer users care nothing for the distinction between "portal" and "search engine." If the MSN search page comes up first, by default, then most people will use it without question. Google's superiority only matters to the knowledgable and discriminating.

    From my own personal survey, 500+ users have proven me right, with only a half-dozen bothering to use Google. That does not bode well for the future.

    ========

    --
    Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
  169. Netscape lost to Standards not Quality by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1

    Netscape wasn't inferior to Internet Explorer at the time they were battling. I believe what really did Netscape in was Microsoft getting their DOM included as part of the W3C standard.

    Suddenly <layers> were not just the netscape way of doing things, they were officially non-standard. Netscape had to scrap parts of their core rendering engine to comply with DOM. If you were going to write a web page, you used to have to write a different version for each browser if it was anything other then a basic page. Fed up designers go with standards - and MS made sure their browser became that standard.

    Now Mozilla is up and running, kicking ass once again. Finally after years of IE5/6 (no noticable change?) we have some real innovation happening in browsers again.

    Google shouldn't have any problems with standards. Browsers are the universal client. They can be extended to talk to just about any server or service.

    MS will have to come up with better search technology or use monopoly to force MSN on people - oh yeah, they already do that.

    1. Re:Netscape lost to Standards not Quality by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Netscape was deeply inferior, especially to the maymen who know nothing of standards. It was slow to boot up, had an ugly interface and a poor mail client.
      Even if they did have a better client, it was only marginally better. I'm sure if people actually liked Netscape siginificantly more they would have continued to use it. But Netscape was stupid, they screamed monopoly, and their browser failed. Good riddance.
      Use monopoly to force MSN on people? What the hell are you talking about. So long as there are alternatives a monopoly can't exist. All they can do is use market share, which is infinitely different from monopoly.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    2. Re:Netscape lost to Standards not Quality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All browsers are slow to boot up, but IE is the worst. They only hide it by writing "Starting windows XP" on the screen when the browser loads.

      Do you know any browser with a better mail client? IE doesn't have one at all.

      People liked Netscape, they tried to keep using it, but it got harder and harder. It was not IE or Netscape, it was IE or (IE and Netscape), because IE was integrated with windows making it impossible to not load it. Loading both browsers uses twice as much RAM as just one, and unless you got a hell of a lot of RAM, that's just going to make the system slower and windows becomes unstable.

  170. If it cant fit on a floppy, i dont want it either. by zaunuz · · Score: 1

    I very much doubt that MS' search engine can outdo google. My experience with MS is that they use as many effects as possible to make it look good, without caring for those with low bandwidth.

    Google = Small, simple, powerfull, and does not require 353495mbit connection to use.

    MS = Big, colorful, allways shows MS' own sites as the most irelevant, lots of disco/teletubbies effects, HTML code and images > 1024Mb. Atleast this is what i assume it would be like, after watching MS' other projects.

    --
    this is probably the most boring sig in the world
  171. MSN has no chance by schmiddy · · Score: 1

    Some people have mentioned the possibility of MSN search overpowering google mainly due to Microsoft's sheer muscle in the desktop market.

    Ain't gonna happen. You know why? Despite what a lot of you have said about Microsoft having a lot of money and time to throw at the problem of being better than google, they show no interest at all in improving their search results. Worse, they appear to deliberately skew their search results. Try searching for "Apache" on both google and search.msn.com. One gives an "Oil and natural gas development Company" as the first result, another gives the software foundation. Guess which engine does which? And guess which site more people search for.

    Yeah. If Microsoft really wanted to, they could probably challenge Google. Looks like they'd rather control what hits get back to the clueless lusers though. "MSN Search -- More Useful Everyday" , my ass.

    --
    http://cltracker.net -- powerful craigslist multi-city search
  172. Um, actually, YES. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    """
    You think Netscape died because of MS properietary hooks and IE/win9x/win2k pre-installed?
    """

    Uh, well, actually, YES. That's *exactly* what happened, as any impartial review of web browser market share statistics alongside MS OS releases shows.

    Try again next time.

  173. Google needs to show more progress... by Westech · · Score: 1

    People are starting to get way to good at optimizing their sites for Google. The search results I get from Google are getting worse and worse. This isn't because Google is getting worse, it's because they staying the same. They are a victim of their own success and have too many people trying to cheat the system to make a buck from Google traffic. I'm starting to see more and more "Google Spam" in my search results. It's pretty annoying to search for "foo," and then have to wade through several pages of "We have the best foo and the best prices on bar! Come check out our bar and see all of our great foo, laptops, pda's, foo, bar, goats, creamcheese and foo!" Google is still (in my opinion) the best search engine on the web, but they are slipping. They need to improve their algorithm to filter out all the crap. The most used search engine a year from now will be the one that gives users the most accurate and useful results, whether it's owned by Google, Microsoft, SCO, goatse.cx, or anyone else.

  174. Re:I have just one problem with the MS will win th by evilviper · · Score: 1
    Game consoles? Nope.

    Hmm... I don't know where you are, but here in the US, the XBox is quite successful. It didn't beat out the PS2, but then again, Internet Explorer 1 wasn't too successful either. Doesn't mean Microsoft doesn't have the opportunity to take the title in the future. They've firmly planted themselves as a serious contender.

    MSN? Nope.

    Again, I don't know where you get your numbers from... MSN is the #2 dial-up ISP in the US, and that's at $3/month more than the much superior Earthlink.

    MS can afford to screw up countless times. I doubt google has that luxury.

    Umm, do you know just how much money Google has? It may not be so massive when compared to Microsoft, but damn!
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  175. How will we search microsoft.com now? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    lets face it...if google wants to survive they need to play just as dirty as MS! For starts, they should stop providing results for microsoft.com...after all, it's quicker and easier to use google to search MS' own website!!!! until MS fixes that basic "misuse" of google, google will always win in mindshare!!!

  176. Stimpy ... You Idiot! by erioshi · · Score: 2, Insightful


    MS has already won; every copy of I.E. 5.5 and 6.0 use Microsoft's search by default. Even finding were to reset your search preferences is a challenge.


    As proof of how effective this tactic is, I'd like to offer that a number of my co-workers (knowledge workers, but not particularly computer literate) Just assume that the IE search returns the best set of results for thier needs. Several of them never even try other search engines any more.

  177. Well there's MSN toolbar now by misterarizona · · Score: 1

    and it looks like a combination of Google Toolbar and Yahoo Companion. The usual search items but you can also go to 'my msn' etc. geez, I was wondering when M$ would tackle that one...

  178. Easier still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    Suuuuuure they will! This is even easier! All you have to do is integrate MSN search with desktop apps. Its already done in IE, and I must confess...it's what I use when I need a quick-and-dirty search and that's the browser I'm using. Most people will take the path of least resistance when it comes to computing. All Microsoft has to do is redirect that path to MSN.

  179. I'm not sure about this by CatOne · · Score: 1

    I mean, go to the machine of your average "joe user" and look at the system tray. There are usually 10-15 icons in there -- windows media player (9, not 7), real player, quicktime, and a whole ton of other things. It's disgustingly crowded, but they have found a way to download lots of crap that makes the system take 4 minutes to boot up and fill their entire 128 MB of RAM.

    So people do go download a bunch of crap that clogs up their systems, so I'd expect they may well have the Google toolbar already installed.

  180. Re:Somehow everyone assumes that MS techology will by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

    Yup. Make no mistake. There is no 'monopoly' here. If Google dies it will be because MS had a better product, better advertising, or Google made a mistake.

    --

    Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  181. Re:I have just one problem with the MS will win th by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

    Finally, someone who gets it. Microsoft beats their competeitors not through some illusory 'monopoly', but by either releasing a better product, better marketing, or their competetitor's make a mistake.
    This is why Oracle, pdfs, Apache, ICQ, AIM, etc. still exist. These are good companies with good products. And they all have a significant competetive advantages.
    Make no mistake, if Google dies it will not be because of monopoly. As soon as you stop believing this lie and analyzing the market with an unbiased eye you will realize this.

    --

    Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  182. Similarities to Netscape IE by yason · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is one similarity to the NS vs. IE battle. Back in those days, you'd have to go download Netscape whereas IE was quite soon not only free to download but force-fed along with Windows. That lead to people who didn't even understand the concept of a browser application, as IE \equal WWW for them -- which put NS to a quite unfair position.

    With search engines, people still have to go to google.com. Getting a googlebar installed requires finding, downloading and installing it. When Microsoft adds a large "SEARCH INTERNET" button on the Windows desktop (in their next service pack or Windows Next), people don't even need to fire up IE to click the "SEARCH" button on its toolbar, not to mention go to a URL in order to make a web search. (I'm not familiar with the current Windows desktop, they might already have something like this.)

    Many people will still find Google. Also, the 10KB Google frontpage is much less to download than the 10MB Netscape binary. However, there is an alarmingly high number of people who might once again lose the concept of a web-based search engine and go for "Internet Search" instead. Then again, it'll be hard for Google search engine and MSN search engine to compete, as people won't, by default, see or know of either.

  183. Google Calculator by chendo · · Score: 2, Informative

    I believe Google Calculator is one of the more useful obscured features of Google.

    You can enter anything maths (like 2(5 * 30) ^ 2 or whatever), conversions (20 feet to in, etc), has constants predefined (pi, e, speed of light, mach, etc), and even does binary, hexidecimal, octal, and roman numerals (convert 1354 to binary, convert 0b11001 to roman), and more.

    Has to be one of the most useful tools ever :)

    --
    Founder of Mirror Moon - Tsukihime Game Trans
  184. Searching Microsoft site by fastkid323 · · Score: 1

    Base on my experience, searching on www.microsoft.com is best done on Google... ;)

  185. Search Wars - Attack of the Queries (n/t) by Bros · · Score: 1

    (n/t)

  186. What Google needs is moderation by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

    Lots of posts in this thread seem to be focusing on Google's diminishing value with the sheer size of results, and link farms etc, serving only to reduce its effectiveness, thus leaving room for other players to seize a niche and perhaps the whole search engine game in the future.

    I think the best way to make Google better is to introduce a peer moderation system, much like we have here, only centered around the search results pages you get. That way, the link farms will be modded into oblivion while good search results begin to filter upwards with "positive" karma, so to speak.

    If you implemented such a system you would have to prevent the same link farm/commercial players from distorting results, but again this could be done much like slashdot by modding the moderators. After all, millions of people use Google every day, and the ratio of those people to the commercial players is heavily weighted in the people's favour.

    Google, in the spirit of copyleft, I am giving you this idea for free, to use as you see fit.

    1. Re:What Google needs is moderation by Arlet · · Score: 1

      How would you defend against somebody releasing a worm that infects thousands of machines on the net, in order to create a army of "moderation zombies" that can be used on certain pages ?

    2. Re:What Google needs is moderation by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

      Same way as Slashdot does - by having only logged in users be able to moderate, and then only if they've built up a Google trust metric - karma, if you will. No bot should be able to vote a page up.

    3. Re:What Google needs is moderation by Arlet · · Score: 1

      However, if a user has built up Google karma, and Google recognises this user by a cookie, then the bot could simply locate the user's cookie, and use it to fake its credentials. Even a password wouldn't be safe if the bot uses a keyboard logger.

  187. Musings and Mod Parent Up by smithwis · · Score: 1

    It's unfortunate that such a well thought out post isn't modded up.

    I'm divided on the cause. Is it that slashdotters, who tend to be fiscaly conservative, don't like to read well developed arguments that flow agaist their beleief system? Probably not.

    I think my parents post was probably just a little too off topic and a little too old.

    1. Re:Musings and Mod Parent Up by Pope · · Score: 1
      Is it that slashdotters... don't like to read well developed arguments that flow agaist their belief system?

      Look at how many arguments revolve around whether or not the Imperial measurement system is "intuitive" or the numerous ill-conceived defenses claiming "virii" is an actual word.

      I find a lot of geeks get incredibly defensive when proven wrong, and will hold onto their wrong views despite much evidence to the contrary. So much for the supposed higher reasoning ability of geeks! {/OT}

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  188. Google vs. Microsoft and Netscape vs. Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Oddly, the writer or somebody out there, seems to think that Google v. Microsoft is analogous to Netscape v. Microsoft. I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application"

    Actually I think the analogy is closer than you think. Microsoft have now cloned Googles toolbar.
    My guess is that Microsoft will try to defeat google by using the new toolbar, which they propably will include in the next IE by default. Eliminating most peoples need to go to some website to search. And since it's there by default, why download the Google toolbar?

  189. Microsoft is setting the precedent by berchca · · Score: 1

    Let's hope Google responds by getting into the Office business. Love to see them do a makeover on Open Office with their own brand name!

  190. Microsoft can't index their own sites well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It would be valid that competition in this area would be a great thing for the consumer. However Microsoft are not going to make a competition that will benefit the end user. As a developer at least a few times a week I need to look up an article about some code method or api call on the internet to give me a reference. Now microsoft almost always has the article that I want. So you would think it best to go to MSDN and have a search on their own site which is indexing their own pages and gives you lots of great advanced options to filter on specific programming languages and areas of Microsoft's web sites.

    NO. Instead after spending quiet some time setting all the options you want and searching your results return a fair bit of marketing, usually a pile of stuff from the japanese site and some totally unrelated links about why you should upgrade to the latest system / software.

    What do I do now. Go to google, and almost everytime find the relevant microsoft page within the first 20 results on google.

    Google indexes Microsoft's pages better than Microsoft does so how can one even begin to believe that Microsoft can index anyone elses site.

    Oh and how many of you out there have you homepage set as www.google.com I know I do it on every computer I have as it means the load time is quick and I'm at the web page I use by far the most often.

  191. Google Offensive by earthstar · · Score: 1

    Why should google get defensive? i think Google should get offensive and release The Google Internet Browser, that competes head on with IE. (may be its possible! who knows?)

  192. What *I* think will be interesting is... by nikster · · Score: 1

    When will people learn to think ahead more than 5 minutes?

    M$ wants to own everything, dominate all markets, and have you pay a monthly fee to use a computer. If they could, they would stop all innovation right now and concentrate on money-making and monopolizing. That is a fact.

    Once you realize this, technical matters become irrelevant. Not using M$ is not some grand ideological battle, it's simple self-defense.

    Assume M$ gives you a better search engine. But then, when you use it, there will be no search engines in 5 years. So how, exactly, is that a better search engine?

    It's a sucker deal.

  193. Microsoft has the same advantage it always does by icanoop · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has the same advantage it had over netscape, and it's a big one. They can integrate their searches into their desktop software. As much as I hate Microsoft (and that's a lot), I'm pretty sure that all they have to do is cleverly integrate their web searches with Office and the Windows desktop and they will win this battle too.

    They are in a very good position to do this with their .Net C# system. Hell, a little MSN search field built into the windows taskbar would probably win over the majority of Windows/google users.

  194. Well by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    I wasn't aware that you needed to download special software to run this Google search application. Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy.

    You might need to download special software to undo Microsoft's fuxory. All they'd have to do is change the default configuration of Windows to redirect any attempt to use a competing search engine. Windows XP's next service pack could sent all requests to google.com to search.msn.com, it would be very easy for them to do and hard for most mundanes to undo.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  195. Longhorn and Web Services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Longhorn will use lots of Web Services, so expect the search to be done that way.

    IF the message structure is released, Google might be able to fit right in. Just like in Mozilla where you can select the Address Bar search.

    Course most people probly won't change the default...

  196. That would be interesting by twitter · · Score: 1
    Microsoft actually crafts a search engine that is demonstrably better than Google.

    They can't, that's why they tried to by it. It's just like everything else Microsoft. They wait for a "market" to mature and buy their way into it. The results are never first rate because they never have the same concerns that creators have. They only care about money, performance is not the goal.

    Had they bought Google, it would go the way of Hotmail, full of adverts, slow and used for Microsoft's strange world domination plans.

    Having failed to buy Google, they will go down the road of trying to destroy Google. This is generally how Microsoft competes. The case of DrDOS is the best documented, but the Windows world is littered with aps M$ broke. There are two ways to break Google. The first is to set up websites and engage in Google bombing. The second is to incorrectly render or time out on Google searches. I expect Microsoft to do both.

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    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:That would be interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      For example, in this recent post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own.

      More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, twitter wants to be RMS, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean, really. You think?

      FUD, FUD, FUD, FUD, offtopic FUD, and more FUD. This guy is like the Monty Python SPAM skit, but with FUD and more FUD instead of canned meat. Amazed

  197. Of course they will by oniony · · Score: 1
    Microsoft rules the desktop. The majority of users run Windows in one flavour or another. Later versions can also update themselves regularly to deploy new features.

    MS can easily make their search services more attractive by making it the most accessible and fastest service: something they can do by placing it in a very accessible area in Internet Explorer and by running software on the desktop machines that caches searches locally. If it were to also download results that it thinks you may try next (based upon studying other users) it would react blindigly fast when compared to Google.


    Whether they can actually pull it off is another matter. It could easily become another Hotmail fiasco.

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  198. Looks like the bomb has gone off ... by Louis+Guerin · · Score: 1

    As at 2004/02/02 22:59 KST, both return the same page...

    L

  199. Search string with huge number of hits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You get a whole lot of diverse pages by entering the search string "welcome to adobe golive".

  200. If AltaVista is a portal, so is Google by CGameProgrammer · · Score: 1

    Looking at the archived AltaVista (the ones from 2000-2003 mainly) all I see are stuff that Google also has. The only exception is Google spreads them out onto several pages, whereas AltaVista put them all on the main page. Search, direction, news, etc., it's all there on both sites.

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    ~CGameProgrammer( );
    1. Re:If AltaVista is a portal, so is Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, do you even know what a portal is? Who cares what Google offers as long as they don't shove it in your face with a heapin' helpin' of spam.

  201. What versions of IE where YOU using? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    Man I remember IE 3.0 quite fondly. NOT!

    At the time I was trying to do digital certificate-based security and IE simply sucked for handling certs. Export? Whuzzat?

    IE *ONLY* succeeded becuase they were able to throw over $1 billion at trying to get it right and run the competitor off the field. Please point me to the "technologically superior" piece of software that led MS to write a letter to Compaq (at that time the #1 OEM PC seller) informing them that their Windows license was going to be cancelled unless they stopped hiding the IE icon and promoting Netscape.

    No, IE has become a decent piece of software that I use only when I absolutely have to. (Mainly to test that my pages do display under IE or use something that requires ActiveX.)

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    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  202. No la ultima vez que mire. by Tei · · Score: 0

    No friend, this is not usa but Zaragoza, a cool spanish city. Maybe not all world is usa. And, of course NOT ALL AMERICA is usa.

    Anyways Usa people is cool by default :D

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    -Woof woof woof!

  203. Microsoft has a long way to go by CowboyRobot · · Score: 1

    Just from my own experience, looking at the referrers in the log files of the 4 sites I operate, Google delivers right around 4.5 times the traffic to my sites that MSN does. In fact Google gives a little more than all the other search engines put together. This is anecdotal (x4, though, and the logs generally agree in this regard) but it seems like MSN, AOL, Yahoo, and the rest of them have a ways to go before they're used as commonly as Google.

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    every stain tells a story
  204. that's because you're stupid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Somehow, I don't think Microsoft will find this fight to be as easy."

    Ignorance at it's worst. Microsoft didn't get where they are by doing things half assed. Their technology is better than everybody else's because they pour bilions into making it that way. Google, as clever as they are and as much as I'm cheering them, doesn't stand a chance. MS employs more mathematicians than google has employees period. Quite simply, it's a matter of time.

    And if they can't beat them? Well hell, they got a couple billion dollars sitting around to buy them. Resistance is futile.

  205. Re:Google Innovates Much Faster by DA-MAN · · Score: 0

    I fail to see where in my post I stated that FreeBSD isn't secure...

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