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Google Still Ahead In Search Competition

ricst writes "Google is, as we all know, King of the Hill. But Yahoo, MSN and others have come a long ways towards catching up as this International Herald Tribune article describes. The gap between 'best' and 'next best' has narrowed substantially. The good thing is that we all benefit as these guys keep challenging each other."

5 of 266 comments (clear)

  1. Article also available from NY Times by phidipides · · Score: 4, Informative

    In case of slashdotting, the article is also available from the NY Times.

    It wasn't a very informative read -- quick summary is that Yahoo and MSN are catching up to Google (they don't give many specifics as to what "catching up" means) and each of these companies is making more money from searches than they have in the past. They allude briefly to Yahoo improving their search technology and Google losing focus somewhat due to management being preoccupied by their IPO.

  2. Re:MSN? What!?! by timealterer · · Score: 4, Informative

    The old ideas of crumb trails (navigation paths on top of pages) are coming back, not because users need them but because Google needs them to crawl your site well.

    No actually. Breadcrumb navigation is good for usability. Read about them from Jakob Nielsen, the usability guru himself, here and here. Breadcrumb navigation helps users get a mental picture of a website and where they are within it. It is particularly useful to users who come to a deep page from a search engine (be it MSN or Google) and need to orient themselves.

    --
    - Allen Pike
    Altering time, one time at a time.
  3. Google is no ordinary company... :) by Damana+Mathos · · Score: 4, Informative

    >A company normally goes public because it needs
    >the extra bit of investment, right?

    Yes, but Google isn't an ordinary company. Google is highly cashflow positive and didn't need to raise capital. I think the main reason it went public was so that there was a market for existing shareholders (like employees with options) to sell shares, and because they reached a size where they needed to disclose a lot of information anyway.

    >Do shares continue to affect how much money it
    >has once it's gone public?

    Typically not -- unless they want to raise more money, or want to issue shares to take over another company.

    >If investors don't care about ethics and google
    >ignores this, their stock will go down and they
    >won't be an attractive investment.

    Yes, but since the Google founders have effective control, they might not care. :)

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  4. Re:But... by sparkydevil · · Score: 5, Informative

    Coprorations do not exist to do evil or good. They exist to make money for their shareholders.

  5. to see the difference, use jux2.com by joe094287523459087 · · Score: 5, Informative

    www.jux2.com compares the result sets from google, yahoo, and ask jeeves and you can immediately see what's missing from each