Google Formula For Adding New Products
gpmac writes "Google executives attempted to demystify the search company's product decisions during presentations with Wall Street analysts on Wednesday.
As Google Inc. has moved beyond Web search and into product areas as diverse as e-mail, photo-organizing software and mapping tools, one of the common questions for the company is how it decides where to devote resources.
Looks like they are being a little more serious about it than their pigeon story would indicate."
Here is the psuedo code:
if ( 1 ) {
create_new_product();
}
I'm Feeling Lucky
liqbase
During the Christmas party, Sergey and Larry were driving a large radio controlled SUV around the offices.
Nothing unusual there.
So a few weeks later this same SUV comes bumping around the corner, with the top ripped off and a remote controllable camera mounted on the chassis. One of the two (Sergey & Larry) was navigating it, while the other was operating the camera.
I expect this is all part of their new Search Engine Strategy.
we love google, yes we do. without google we wouldn't know about this while searching for a louis vuitton leopardskin defrobnicator...
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
That's probably exactly what they mean. I've got no problems with it though. And I think they should have credit for not only saying it, byt also meaning it.
I'm really glad that such companies do exist. I'm sick and tired with all comapnies that over-promise and under-deliver.
don't care how they deside. As long as they keep coming out with more usefull tools that will make my life easier, that's all I care about. Keep up the good work google!
I haven't lost my mind. It's backed up on disk somewhere.
It's Picassa.
http://www.google.com/downloads/
When will Google bring out the google auction site??! Ebay has nothing on them except brand recognition. I know google can pull off a better interface and faster server performance. The competition will help keep the costs low.
I'd love to key in "DVD player remote" or "car keys" and have it show me a map of where it is in my house.
[conspiracy]What they don't tell you is that 100% of their buisiness model is to make Google so knowledgeable about everything that when it does spontaneously become artificially intelligent it can take over the world in a couple hours. What better way to approach the top-down method to AI design than with a gigantic search engine? [/conspiracy]
Under promise and over deliver. How many companies work that way these days?
How many programmers in how many companies have to over work in order to try to achieve what was over-promised and consequently under-delivered by over rated marketing and executive dudes?
I'm not sure I totally subscribe to the idea of staying in beta for that long though... But you have to admit the idea of gmail invites is brilliant. Once gmail leaves the beta stage, its user base will be huge. Anyone has an idea of how big this user base is already?
i assume this means you get to take one day a week to brainstorm and work on whatever sounds cool.
when you have a collection of fairly bright and competent people and provide them with computational and other resources and give them some free time, you get some cool stuff.
An overrated .dot-com is once again ruling the roost. So let's see, given that it took, on average about, say, four and a half years for the other dot coms to collapse after their IPO, that puts google on course for bankruptcy in about 2007?
There are so many differences between Google and 99% of the dot coms that IPO'd, I'm not even sure where to start.
1. Google was already profitable before the IPO - they've been profitable since 2001, in fact.
2. Google did not give away control of their company to investors - public investors only hold 10% of the company, and the founders still fully control it.
3. Even if their share price collapses (it's most likely overvalued, but I'm not sure by how much), there's no reason the company has to collapse. A surprising number of "failed" dot-coms are still around and doing okay, even with tiny share prices. Google is in a much better situation than almost all of them were, in terms of long-term profitability and a sustainable business plan.
Actually I think "beta" partially means "we are figuring out the business model right now". Like email - it's not that they are holding back on a wide release of GMail to add more features. They are just tweaking the profit model, and recognize that as part of that process they may be forced to modify functionality substantially.
By keeping it in "beta" they can change the featureset or tweak to satisfy advertiser demand and have a cover-your-ass story just in case they change things ("sorry, that wasn't a finished product you were using, it was just a beta test").
Once they have a firm idea of how they are going to make money off of the product and have added advertising into the mix fully, it seems to come out of beta.