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Bing To Become Default iPhone Search?

snydeq writes "BusinessWeek reports ongoing talks between Apple and Microsoft to make Bing the default search engine for the iPhone. The discussions reflect an accelerating rivalry between Apple and Google, one that some believe will be the most important rivalry in tech in the years to come. 'Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy,' says one person familiar with Apple's thinking. 'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.'"

463 comments

  1. Big Battle by sopssa · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Even more than just Apple vs Google fight, this is serious battle between Microsoft and Google. MS has actually made their search engine better than Google (the different categories and combining them together shows this, and it's greatly improved over Live search).

    Immediately when Bing was released Google tried to answer back with its sidebar options. But it never really got where Bing is. And now Bing keeps gaining marketshare faster than ever before. It is actually a good product, and actually something MS has left alone from their other marketing efforts (for example, they use flash instead of silverlight, because flash is installed on so many machines, and do not try to promote silverlight on cost of their search engine).

    I hate microsofts business practices as much as the next guy on slashdot, but Bing is something they're actually done really good. Yesterdays news about Bing deleting user data in 6 months just shows that bitter battle with Google is getting even better and better. Bing keeps gaining market share every month, faster and faster. Google pulls out from China market. Google CEO says privacy doesn't matter. This is something to watch while drinking cola and making some popcorns - two giants fighting to death.

    This shows competition is good. It surely leads to innovations.

    1. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had moderator points, I would mod you up.

    2. Re:Big Battle by kregg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the thought of using bing makes me cringe

    3. Re:Big Battle by Totenglocke · · Score: 1, Insightful

      MS has actually made their search engine better than Google

      ........really? You're the first person I've seen who likes Bing. Anytime I've used it, instead of actual useful links that I get with Google, I mainly get stupid ads for MS products instead.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    4. Re:Big Battle by KOTMATPOCKUH · · Score: 0, Troll

      Are you on MS payroll?

    5. Re:Big Battle by contrapunctus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I know what you mean.
      I hate this one person who works for subway (just a nasty personality). The thought of her preparing my food makes me ill.
      I once went in and saw that she was working and walked right out.
      That's how I feel about bing. (she would be microsoft)

    6. Re:Big Battle by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      MS has actually made their search engine better than Google (the different categories and combining them together shows this, and it's greatly improved over Live search).

      Citation needed. Live search was crap, being better than crap doesn't make something great. And I've compared the search results, 80% of the time I prefer Google's results (there was this site that compared Bing/Google/Yahoo and had you pick your favorite and then told you what it was, don't know the URL at the time)

      And now Bing keeps gaining marketshare faster than ever before.

      And I would imagine that most of that growth is caused by people using the default IE search option which uses Bing.

      It is actually a good product,

      Again, Citation needed. Is there really anything that Bing does better than Google for the general user?

      and actually something MS has left alone from their other marketing efforts (for example, they use flash instead of silverlight, because flash is installed on so many machines, and do not try to promote silverlight on cost of their search engine).

      Isn't that how -all- Microsoft's products start? First as nice, good projects with open standards, etc. Then they release that one program that breaks the standard and suddenly that becomes the new standard and then close it off to non-MS products.

      Google pulls out from China market.

      Um, not exactly sure what you meant by this statement, but assuming its anti-Google, I don't really see your point. Basically Google said that they are sick of being the pawns of the Chinese government which is a -good thing-, I really don't think Microsoft would have the guts to say that.

      This shows competition is good. It surely leads to innovations.

      Competition is good, but corrupt competition is not. Both Microsoft and Google use software patents to discourage competition, both don't care about privacy, and both are willing to be tossed along and won't fight for their user's rights.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    7. Re:Big Battle by adf92343414 · · Score: 1

      The only thing cool about Bing is that its name could be a recursive algorithm for Bing Is Not Google. Sure, that's not where the name comes from, but it could have, in some alternate universe.

      Sent from my Google Chrome browser running on *cough*Vista*cough*.

    8. Re:Big Battle by PizzaAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1, Funny

      But how do you feel about delicious pizza with some mountain dew?

    9. Re:Big Battle by anglophobe_0 · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding me? Bing is disgustingly ugly to look at. Google's minimalist design is what keeps me there. The only reason Bing has anything cool to speak of is because it grabs results from wolfram alpha. Besides that, do you really see Google's withdrawal from the Chinese market as a bad thing? If I were trying to run a business in a place where the government is subversive toward US companies (not too far off from California, incidentally), I'd probably leave based on principle as well. Still, I do agree that the poster is dead wrong in casting this as apple v. google. It really is bing v. google; unfortunately, I'm afraid apple is tying themselves to a sinking ship if they go through with this. Wasn't it reported somewhere that bing users are three times as likely as google users to click a paid ad? Says something about why bing's marketshare has grown: it sucks in people who believe ads about bing. That's my theory, anyway.

    10. Re:Big Battle by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

      Flash vs Silverlight: don't worry, as soon as they feel the have enough traction, they'll do just that. I wouldn't know about the rest of you comment, I've yet to try Bing. It's good news if it's both a good and an ethical Search engine.

      The one thing that puzzles me: why doesn't Apple go their own way ? On the purely Search part, they have the money, and probably the know-how, to do it. On the linked advertising part, they may pull that off too. Or buy into either of both businesses.

      If I were them I would consider buying Yahoo for the search business, and to break into the non-Mac, non-iPhone market. If they're going up against Google, they probably need to match them in the end, which means search, ads, youtube, social site... All of which are fairly open to another large entrant, especially given how pathetic the attempts by MS and old media in those spaces have been ?

      --
      The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
    11. Re:Big Battle by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I don't like Bing that much, but it'll be no surprise to me if Bing provides better search results than Google.

      This is because lots of SEO spammers are targeting Google. If Bing and Google use different algorithms and they start having similar marketshare that might make it harder for the spammers. Anything that results in less spam in my results is good for me.

      --
    12. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had no idea that Microsoft manufactured Heroes of Might and Magic bondage plushies. Thanks for the lead!

    13. Re:Big Battle by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      I choose to use Bing with both Chrome and Safari because GIS reminds me that it was designed in the 1990s, whereas Bing's image search has a more functional UI. I also prefer Bing's video search, which naturally extends the idea of the content preview which made Google good in text searches back in the day.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    14. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't really used Bing yet, so I don't know how it compares to Google for everyday searching. However, the other day I tried searching for my home address using both Bing Maps and Google Maps. The location Bing pointed me to was 20 miles away in a completely different town, while the location Google gave me was off by about 1 block. I decided to avoid using Bing Maps in the future.

    15. Re:Big Battle by locketine · · Score: 1

      The only flash powered thing I can find on bing is the video player which is a really bad industry practice that needs to stop. They should have used html5 embedded video or silverlight. I would be really surprised if a silverlight player weren't better than any flash player out there due to flash being awerful at utilizing hardware acceleration. They probably made that decision simply because they didn't have to make the player from scratch and wanted excessive content control.

      I do like your point about bing making google better but I don't think bing is going to achieve too big of a marketshare if say....IE asked people to choose a default search provider and listed both google and bing. If MS gets apple on board for choosing bing as default search engine then google could get frozen out of a huge chunk of the market without actually making a superior product but rather making a bearable alternative. I don't think I would have switched if MSN search had been comparable to google.

      --
      Think globally but act within local variable scope.
    16. Re:Big Battle by iVtec · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A 3% marketshare for Bing is hardly anything to get excited about. Bing is seriously terrible compared to Google. Try any other language than english and you're fucked.

      Also, Microsoft is terrible at privacy compared to Google. You may be too young to remember Google fighting off a subpoena to hand over user information, while Yahoo and Microsoft caved:

      http://news.zdnet.co.uk/security/0,1000000189,39248192,00.htm
      http://www.eff.org/press/archives/2006/01/19

      Also, where was microsoft when Google was making a stand in China? Yup, nowhere...

      Lastly, you mention that microsoft is deleting user data within 6 months as if it's a policy used today. If you read their own announcement, what they're saying is that they'll remove IP addresses from queries after 6 months and remaining cross-session IDs after 18 months. But they plan to implement this policy a year to a year and a half from now!

      http://microsoftontheissues.com/cs/blogs/mscorp/archive/2010/01/19/microsoft-advances-search-privacy-with-bing.aspx

    17. Re:Big Battle by oztiks · · Score: 1

      Google maybe a good search tool but they are not a serious IT brand the Chinese Hacker incident is perfect example of this and why Google cloud services cant be a replacement over Office just yet (maybe one day but not today).

      Security, Google dunces out on, Marketing, Google suffers, creating apps that work for business Google still has a long way to go. Sorry if I'm being a bit one eyed on my last point, i purchased Google Docs the other day and was less than impressed.

      For me, unless Google employs Darth Vader as CEO and takes on board all these factors then Apple and MS will eat Google for breakfast and it goes without saying that it wont massively affect Google anyway (they wont go broke if this doesn't go through, just lost a stack of money).

      Now Apple and MS survive on their iPhone sales and OS sales, if Google is showing that they are trying to take that away from them the battle will get thick. My money is on the fact that Google tries it, gets a bit of head way but inevitably fails, forgets all about it, goes back to buying more unprofitable companies and slapping their adwords into them and the world keeps spinning.

      Apple and Microsoft will align in order to make this happen, time passes, other things happen and then Microsoft stabs Apple in the back (Microsoft is good at attacking at moments of weakness) and Apple will partner with Yahoo (or another brand, until they make their own one) and we can all go back to hating Microsoft again.

    18. Re:Big Battle by Vicegrip · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how pulling out of China counts as a boost to competition. Unless you think that Microsoft is rubbing its hands with glee at the opportunity replace Google there and kiss the censors asses in the hope to win market-share over Google. I search extensively all day long for my work and Google is my preference by far. Your reasoning that bing is better than Google is subjective and makes you sound very biased.

      --
      Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
    19. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      I know what you mean.
      I hate this one person who works for subway (just a nasty personality). The thought of her preparing my food makes me ill.
      I once went in and saw that she was working and walked right out.
      That's how I feel about bing. (she would be microsoft)

      But it may so happen that she is really good at work (in case of Bing) despite having nasty personality (she would be microsoft).

    20. Re:Big Battle by Mystery00 · · Score: 1

      Bing even has a BETA mark, there's no stopping M$ now!

      --
      "we've got trenchcoats and bad attitudes" - John Constantine, HellBlazer
    21. Re:Big Battle by seandiggity · · Score: 1

      MS has actually made their search engine better than Google (the different categories and combining them together shows this, and it's greatly improved over Live search).

      Seriously? I'm not sure how that's even a coherent argument. Regardless, you haven't been paying attention to any of the pay schemes, the funny inaccurate results, the problems with indexing (even when web developers have a sitemap for spiders to look at, they may have to ask in a forum so an MS employee can manually add the pages), the slowness of msnbot sometimes and the aggressiveness of msnbot other times (i.e. DoS attacks that bring down servers), the general disregard for robots.txt, and on and on. I'd provide citations but there are ample examples on the web...just use your search engine of choice ;) Or maybe use Google; it's just a hunch, but I bet Bing is less likely to turn up bad press for Bing...

      --
      Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
    22. Re:Big Battle by DerPflanz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the thought of using bing makes me cringe

      What happened to judging products on their merits? Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe? And on a related note, what should Microsoft do to regain your respect?

      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      --
      -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
    23. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "And I would imagine that most of that growth is caused by people using the default IE search option which uses Bing."

      What are you talking about? That only makes sense if IE's marketshare were growing. Since it's shrinking, then you'd expect Bing marketshare to shrink if the search box were that impoortant.

      "Citation needed"

      Do you understand what citations are for? "Citation needed" is a nonsense reply to "it is actually a good product".

      "Isn't that how -all- Microsoft's products start? First as nice, good projects with open standards, etc. Then they release that one program that breaks the standard and suddenly that becomes the new standard and then close it off to non-MS products."

      See, HERE is where "citation needed" fits. And by "citation needed", I need a cite for all of their products doing this, not a reference to an IBM executive's misquote.

      "Um, not exactly sure what you meant by this statement, but assuming its anti-Google, I don't really see your point."

      What would it being pro-, anti-, or neutral to Google have to do with your seeing his point?

      "Basically Google said that they are sick of being the pawns of the Chinese government which is a -good thing-, "

      Debatable, but anyway I don't see YOUR point, since the GP wasn't necessarily talking about the geopolitical ethics of the thing.

      "Competition is good, but corrupt competition is not. "

      Question: is corrupt competition better or worse, in your opinion, than corrupt hegemony (which is the main alternative presented by the GP here)?

    24. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod up!

      parent obvious copy pasta is obvious

    25. Re:Big Battle by __aajfby9338 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      Yes. I hate everything about their software products. I will not use them unless I have no viable alternative, and I will go out of my way to use not-quite-viable alternatives instead if I have to.

      And on a related note, what should Microsoft do to regain your respect?

      Nothing. My respect is not available to them.

      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      He may no longer be a thief, but I still won't trust him. There are plenty of other people who have not already demonstrated their untrustworthiness, so I can get by without that former thief just fine.

    26. Re:Big Battle by siloko · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But we don't make our decisions based purely on quality - for instance I buy fair trade coffee knowing full well it doesn't taste as good as Lavazza. So I guess people will continue to use Goggle because Microsoft have been raping the landscape for so long . . .

    27. Re:Big Battle by siloko · · Score: 1, Troll

      Maybe I continue to use Google because I am wearing goggles . . .

    28. Re:Big Battle by sigma_epsilon · · Score: 1

      I really don't think it makes sense to say that Bing is better than Google. It seems to be a decent engine, but they haven't published their algorithms and thus we really have no idea what's going on behind the scenes. Google, on the other hand, has refined PageRank for a while and I can say with certainty that the math behind it is pretty clever and makes a lot of both intuitive and mathematical sense. Also, Google didn't buy off everyone and his brother for 10% market share. Honestly, if Apple seriously goes down this path it would probably be the worst choice they've made about the iPhone since slaving it to AT&T's botched network, but it might just be like letting the music labels get variable pricing for songs on iTunes. We got DRM removed and some cheaper songs, Apple looked good for ditiching DRM, and -surprise surprise- no one bought the 1.29 songs. Could be an easy way to get the phone further subsidized, and then have 99.9% of the userbase go through an extra step during setup to reconfigure the search engine when they buy their new, cheaper phone.

    29. Re:Big Battle by node+3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      The thief will have always done the thieving, regardless of what he does later in life. In order for the thief to regain trust, he'll have to admit to that. Has Microsoft done that?

      Microsoft hasn't "shown remorse and changed their ways". And this is all assuming one accepts the premise that corporations deserve forgiveness or a second chance in the same way a human does. I'm not convinced they do. Not so readily or so easily, at least.

    30. Re:Big Battle by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      And now Bing keeps gaining marketshare faster than ever before [slashdot.org].

      You're talking about the US market alone.

      According to Hitslink, Bing even dropped a chunk of market share back in November, and didn't regain it in December. It hasn't seen as much popularity internationally, perhaps because it's lacking international features, such as online shopping. The Swedish Bing for example just use a third-party site for that, not anything integrated to it in their "decision engine". It's just a simple search engine here.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    31. Re:Big Battle by Nikker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just because Microsoft might actually get off their collective asses for once in their lives doesn't get them a cookie in my book. You are talking about a multi billion dollar corporation that has done nothing but hinder an entire industry. There will always be competition where large sums of money are involved and Microsoft while being an extremely 'innovative' and cunning business wise they have coasted happily when it has become the path of least resistance product wise. The entanglement of these three massive companies so directly will evolve some amazing solutions across the board but thanking Microsoft for getting up for Google after they were pissing on their lawn doesn't get them any more from me then before. Microsoft is like a world heavy weight boxing champion that won't get off their chair to dance in the ring, sure they win but they put on a really shitty event. Now Google comes along and they finally have to get off the chair to connect a punch and we all become enthralled but we are supposed to thank a boxer for boxing? I don't think so.

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    32. Re:Big Battle by dredwerker · · Score: 1, Troll

      But we don't make our decisions based purely on quality - for instance I buy fair trade coffee knowing full well it doesn't taste as good as Lavazza. So I guess people will continue to use Goggle because Microsoft have been raping the landscape for so long . . .

      I make my decisions on quality - fairtrade coffee is horrible(massive generalisation poss)- I keep trying it but now I have the nice stuff - hmmmm yummy proper coffee and check out coffeegeek for proper coffee

      --
      On a long enough timeline. The survival rate for everyone drops to zero. Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club, 1996
    33. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what Apple will get out of the deal?

      a right-click button on their mouse?

      *ducks*

      (and my captcha was "ducked" - thanks slashdot :) )

    34. Re:Big Battle by pydev · · Score: 1

      MS has actually made their search engine better than Google (the different categories and combining them together shows this, and it's greatly improved over Live search).

      MS may look better on paper (they always do--bullet lists are their forte). But I tried setting their search engine as the default and gave up after a few weeks: it just doesn't deliver the results. For many of the things I was searching for, the best hits were among the top three with Google, and they were nowhere to be found with Bing.

      Even if MS were technically better, what does it matter? Microsoft's major products (Windows, Office) didn't win in the market through being technically better (which they were not when they still had serious competitors), they won through tying, bundling, and branding. Time for a taste of their own medicine.

    35. Re:Big Battle by pydev · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What happened to judging products on their merits? Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      Every single product I have ever bought from Microsoft has sucked to some degree (some more than others), so, yes, I do cringe.

      I gave Bing a serious try since I don't like all my data going to Google. And? Same thing as with other Microsoft products: it sounds good in theory, it has lots of features, but it doesn't do its primary function very well.

      See, people hate Microsoft not because of business strategy, they hate Microsoft because they don't like their products and Microsoft is using business strategy to force them to use those products anyway.

      I dislike Microsoft a lot less since their monopoly has started crumbling and I don't have to use them anymore.

    36. Re:Big Battle by pydev · · Score: 0, Troll

      It's more like...

      There's this single restaurant in town, and its employees treat me like shit because they know they are the single restaurant. Eventually, I just gave up eating out and started cooking at home.

      Now they are opening a cafe. I don't think I'm going to give them my money; I keep going to the cafe that I know and like and where people have always treated me nicely.

    37. Re:Big Battle by pydev · · Score: 4, Funny

      But it may so happen that she is really good at work (in case of Bing) despite having nasty personality (she would be microsoft).

      The analogy is false; it's not about one employee at a business, it's about a business and a monopoly.

      In the restaurant analogy, we're talking about a restaurant (Microsoft) that has a monopoly in your town, there's no other. Most of the employees are nasty to you and their food is generally bad. Now they have one desert on the menu that's good, the apple cobbler (search engine). WIth that, they are actually trying to drive the nice, new cafe around the corner (Google) out of business as well. Does it make sense to leave your nice neighborhood cafe and start going to this restaurant for your deserts? I don't think so. You know what's going to happen: after they've driven the cafe out of business, they are going to revert to their old ways, and even their apple cobbler is going to go bad.

      (Of course, I don't think Bing is actually very good.)

    38. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This smells more like a typical Apple tactic, leak info about talks with MS with no intention of closing a deal.
      Then go public saying MS didn't accept, they 'hate us', don't meet our standards, blah blah, and then jump into bed with the 3rd unnamed party launching a new search engine building on that publicity...

    39. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 3% marketshare for Bing is hardly anything to get excited about.

      Using marketshare to make a point? Wanna try that with Linux on the desktop?

      Bing is seriously terrible compared to Google

      I find the opposite holds true for me.

      Also, Microsoft is terrible at privacy compared to Google. You may be too young to remember Google fighting off a subpoena to hand over user information, while Yahoo and Microsoft caved:

      http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/02/response-to-doj-motion.html

      "The privacy of Google users matters, and Google has promised to disclose information to the Government only as required by law." .. so much for "fighting" it.

      Also, where was microsoft when Google was making a stand in China? Yup, nowhere...

      What has that got to do with providing good internet search results? Do you drive Ford because their CEO agrees with your political views? A real dimwit you are..

      To me it shows Google is incompetent and can't even keep their network safe. I would be weary of a company that can get hacked so easily and holds my personal data.

    40. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your reasoning that bing is better than Google is subjective and makes you sound very biased.

      So, when you say Google is your 'preference by far', you're not saying its better than bing?

      Oh.. I see, when someone doesn't agree with you, they must be biased.

    41. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get more spam and shady sites in Google results and less spam on Bing. Therefore, I decided to use Bing. It was a simple choice for me.

    42. Re:Big Battle by EzInKy · · Score: 4, Informative


      What happened to judging products on their merits?

      It is quite common to judge products based on the manufacturer's reputation.


      Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      Absolutely, and their EULAs are even worse today.


      And on a related note, what should Microsoft do to regain your respect?

      Honestly it would take quite a lot, but acknowledging that using software has no greater relationship to copying than using a book does would be a good start.


      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      Once a whore always a whore is probably the better analogy, particularly considering who Microsoft is in bed with. They make it well known that they continue play for sure.

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    43. Re:Big Battle by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean. The worst thing is the word itself. There is a whole world of difference between "I Googled Hillary Clinton last night" and "I Binged Hillary Clinton last night". .... Cringe

    44. Re:Big Battle by Skythe · · Score: 1

      Umm the reason Bing has been gaining marketshare is that since it's release, absolutely any possible setting or search asset under Microsoft's control has been defaulted to Bing. Example: ninemsn.com.au (aus MSN site.. which just timed out), all the search bars in I.E., etc. Since i took that first look at bing i've basically given up and not specifically attempted to navigate to it since, and even so i've still stumbled across it 10 or so times.

      Bing is not gaining market share because it's any "better" than Google, or because people like it more. It's gaining market share because of the same reason IE gained so much market share: because it's the default option.

    45. Re:Big Battle by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      What happened to judging products on their merits? Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      Yes, Yes, Yes
      Its like saying that you should allow the KKK to adopt a highway because they do a reasonable job of clearing the litter - sometimes the nature of organisation outways the merrits of the product.

    46. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      He may no longer be a thief, but I still won't trust him. There are plenty of other people who have not already demonstrated their untrustworthiness, so I can get by without that former thief just fine.

      And yet, when pirates claim they only download to try the product so they can buy it later and get their friends to buy it too, we're expected to believe him and defend his 'right to download' to the death.

    47. Re:Big Battle by lintux · · Score: 1

      About two months ago I used Blind Search for a week to see how Bing's actually doing. There were two classes of results that I found:

      A) Two columns show fairly similar results (Bing and Google) and the third shows somewhat worse ones (Yahoo).
      B) One column with good results (Google), the others totally wrong or at least significantly worse.

      Although I just tried a query from the second category again and they now all show the best result first (instead of somewhere on the second page). I guess it's time for another week of Blind Search for me.

    48. Re:Big Battle by wgoodman · · Score: 1, Insightful

      more of, there's been this one restaurant in town for a long time, but all they serve is shit. eventually, a few places open up that serve food instead. everyone flocks to those places and stops going to the place that only serves shit. eventually, the place that only served shit starts to also sell apple pie. and they start paying people to eat the apple pie. some of the people who had been eating apple pie at the non shit serving restaurants start eating the pie at the place that is paying them to eat it. the place that still serves mainly shit declairs that they are the best restaurant in town because people are flocking back to them.

      (obligatory)
      ???

      profit.

    49. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were them I would consider buying Yahoo for the search business, and to break into the non-Mac, non-iPhone market.

      Umm... http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/291840/Yahoo-Microsoft-Deal-Finally-Done

    50. Re:Big Battle by BasilBrush · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What happened to judging products on their merits? Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      I'm not the original poster, but for me, yes. It absolutely does matter what relationship I have with the company I buy products from. And I won't buy anything from Microsoft.

      And on a related note, what should Microsoft do to regain your respect?

      25 years into their dirty habits, they are beyond redemption. Hopefully they'll take a gradual fade into oblivion.

    51. Re:Big Battle by rtfa-troll · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If I had moderator points, I would mod you up.

      You and so many people that forget how Microsoft got here. Any other search engine as garbage as MSN would have been forgotten by now. Microsoft has driven their search engines through many generations each of which was terrible. If there was real competition in the IT market, other search companies than MS would be able to compete with Google.

      The thing to remember is that Bing is great at everything except actually delivering search results. In your search results you want something you can trust and understand, but as we've discussed before. Even today, when Microsoft has tried to hide these problems, when you search for "Why is Microsoft Windows so expensive?" you'll find that on Microsoft's results the page "Why are Macs so expensive?" is high in the top ten whilst doing the same search on Google manages to find plenty more on topic material.

      Microsoft amnesia is astounding. Take the last example; Microsoft has biased results, they get caught; they change their results to hide the bias better. Within days we have postings all over the internet denying they were ever biased.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    52. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignoring most of the rest (which I (dis)agree with on varying levels)...

      The last point with Google and MS in China and all that has recently sprung up there, is a questionable point. The fact that it was brought up here at all has been making me scratch my head. However, has MS released anything about any time they've been hacked on the level that Google did here? Really, the fact that Google pushed that information out is a fact that makes me somewhat happy to have Google have my info, as opposed to a company that denies their browser needs a security patch quicker than their planned date for releasing patches. Of course, that opens up a whole debate on whether or not they do need to release such a patch earlier, but Google is giving the view of a company that at least has some transparency and honesty. MS has never given me anything close to that. Hence, I will not sign up for an account on any MS site including Bing. And since Google's got several tools I use otherwise, and their search is at least acceptable, hell if I'm not going to use them over a company I never have trusted in recent times.

    53. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      add to it, the punishment factor. a thief gets caught and gets punished. and he has his name blacklisted for sometime in the police gazette and possible future misbehavior. microsoft recently pulled off one of the most disgusting malpractices ever known - by scuttling ODF - corruption, vote rigging, bribing across the board, lying - you name it, and they have shown, they havent changed one bit. they mean business and they mean it by any ways possible.

      so ignore/ pardon microsoft at your own cost!!!!

    54. Re:Big Battle by FreeUser · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He may no longer be a thief, but I still won't trust him. There are plenty of other people who have not already demonstrated their untrustworthiness, so I can get by without that former thief just fine.

      Exactly right. As a middle-eastern friend of mine once said: "If someone steals from you, forgive them. But tie up your camel." Or put in more familiar terms: "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." Microsoft has fooled everyone at least once. Let them do it to you again, and you have only yourself to blame.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    55. Re:Big Battle by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1, Interesting

      What should Microsoft do to regain your respect?

      Make good the things they have stolen. Show contrition and remorse.

      Give back the Browser market to Mozilla by cancelling all future development of IE and giving a 2 year end of life notice (Netscape is no more; still they should pay compensation to the shareholders).

      Give back the operating system market; announce that Windows will be GPLed, compensate the owners of DRDos OS2. Pay back money to all consumers who would have bought

      Cancel all future development of the .doc/.docx "standard"; agree to only stick to registered features of ODF. Compensate the shareholders of Wordperfect.

      Donate 50% future profits to a charity to pay for victims of computer viruses. Donate a further 25% of future profits to pay for the education of children who were denied access to OLPC laptops by their actions. Remaining 25% left for victims I haven't thought of right now.

      I'm sure there's quite a bit more, but that's a beginning.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    56. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I use this ocasionaly to check up bing performance an dit hasn't made me switch yet. (far from it actually)

      http://www.bing-vs-google.com/

    57. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > What happened to judging products on their merits?
      It's always been a bad idea. IE for mac was a good product. In the beginning. Then came the extend and extinguish part.
      MS suing for FAT related idiotic patents PROVES they didn't change. End of discussion for me.

    58. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is pretty much how I regard Sony. I have no Sony products in my house and occasionally I have to search for an alternative.

    59. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bing looks strange and smells funny. It's some kind of foreign apple cobbler to me. I'll stick to my meat and potatoes Google search thanks.

    60. Re:Big Battle by DJRumpy · · Score: 5, Informative
    61. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Sweet Maria's http://www.sweetmarias.com/ to roast your own.

    62. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... done really good.

      done really well

      Moron.

    63. Re:Big Battle by Stooshie · · Score: 1

      That reminds me, I must go and Bing "Bong"

      --
      America, Home of the Brave. ... .and the Squaw.
    64. Re:Big Battle by deepershade · · Score: 1

      Is it me or does anyone else suspect that MS/Apple/Or some coffee company is now modding /. posts?

    65. Re:Big Battle by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      As much as i want to see competition in the search market i simply don't trust MS at all and that keeps me using Google... I would much rather see competition in the general desktop market than in search.
      Past history has suggested that although they're playing nice right now, using flash etc... If they were to become dominant in this market, you would soon see silverlight and modifications to the search site forcing people to use IE etc...

      --
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    66. Re:Big Battle by dredwerker · · Score: 1

      I can't believe I was modded troll - I genuinely love coffeegeek which isnt a commercial site and I dont like fairtrade. How is that trolling? I like coffee and I dont like fairtrade coffee.
      I make decisions based on quality. How can you not - I know I will buy something rubbish because it is made by x company or person - derr.

      --
      On a long enough timeline. The survival rate for everyone drops to zero. Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club, 1996
    67. Re:Big Battle by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes...
      Microsoft have done a huge amount of damage to their customers and the industry as a whole...

      They have stifled innovation for years (for an example see IE6 - allowed to totally stagnate once it had a dominant marketshare, only updated again once its share was threatened several years later).
      They have locked thousands of individuals and businesses into their products, removing those peoples freedom to choose the best product for the job. Even worse is that the lockin extends to those who aren't their customers, it's common to send proprietary microsoft format files around and people are expected to open them.

      In many markets we are unable to judge products in their merits precisely because of microsoft. A competing product may be cheaper (or free), do everything you need better, but lacks compatibility with some proprietary microsoft technology therefore ruling it out.

      To regain any level of respect, they need to undo all of the underhanded anti-consumer actions they have taken, and start competing purely based on the merits of their products in all the markets they operate in.

      As it stands, although they may be trying to compete on merit right now, history has shown that once they gain sufficient market share they revert to their usual underhanded practices of locking people in and allowing the product to stagnate and/or using one product to forcibly push another. Don't forget all the "embrace, extend, extinguish" stuff from a few years back...

      To give an example, the vast majority of MS products are tied to windows (forcibly pushing)..
      By contrast, google simply promote their products, if you use their sites from some non-chrome browsers you will see advertisements for chrome, but the sites will not refuse to work in other browsers and aren't tied to chrome-os etc... This is promotion as opposed to forcibly pushing.

      So that's what MS can do, give us the ability to judge all their products on merit and we will be more likely to judge them all that way.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    68. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

    69. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try following the pattern of "ring" to form the past tense of "bing".

    70. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A man works for an animal rescue centre, and at weekends helps feed homeless people.

      Every night he goes home and beats his wife before abusing his children.

      Is he a good person, or a bad person?

    71. Re:Big Battle by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm sorry, this is an unacceptable Slashdot analogy.

      The use (driving) of a car does not make this a car analogy. Please try again.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    72. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, seriously. This is why I still come to Slashdot, to read disillusion posts like yours.

    73. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Great explanation. A great example with Bing specifically: you can't add your business listing to Bing unless you use Internet Explorer (according to the bing website). It will actually give you a message saying it won't work and doesn't go any further. But you know what? I changed the User Agent String in Safari using the developer tools and it worked just fine... That's strange, why wouldn't microsoft give me a warning that it might not be compatible and let me struggle with my inferior browser? Oh yes, because they want to maintain control over the browser market.

    74. Re:Big Battle by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      MS has actually made their search engine better than Google

      In what way, and when did it happen? I tried it when they first launched and was extremely unimpressed.

      I hate microsofts business practices as much as the next guy on slashdot, but Bing is something they're actually done really good.

      Possible, I guess -- Excel is IMO the best spreadsheet, but I'm unimpressed with anything else they've offered. As far as business practices, I've come to the conclusion that almost all corporations are run by cheats, liars, thieves, and sociopaths. They may have started it, but they're far from alone.

      And now Bing keeps gaining marketshare faster than ever before.
      Bing keeps gaining market share every month, faster and faster.

      Why should I care about any company's market share? I don't own MS stock, nor do I work for them, and that's the only two reasons to care. How much MS stock do you own?

    75. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, has MS released anything about any time they've been hacked on the level that Google did here?

      Yeah.. I'm sure it will be featured on Slashdot the moment it happens.

      Really, the fact that Google pushed that information out is a fact that makes me somewhat happy to have Google have my info, as opposed to a company that denies their browser needs a security patch quicker than their planned date for releasing patches.

      You are happy that a company that holds personal details about you got hacked and tells everybody? I don't see where MS has denied it was a bug or that they wont patch it.

      I wonder what happens when bugs are found in Firefox 1.0 or Safari 1.0? Any luck getting those patched for free? Heck with opensource OSs like Linux you are forced to upgrade your software as and when the distro demands it of you. Is it great that I have the source? I paid MS $100 (replace with exact cost) for windows xp and they gave me 13 years of free updates and patches. How do I hire open source developers for $100 and get them to work for me for 13 years?

      In any case the planned schedule for patches has been forced on them by the industry. You have tried to spin it as-if MS wants to delay patches. A for effort.

      Of course, that opens up a whole debate on whether or not they do need to release such a patch earlier

      The open source way of fixing this is check in the patch and call it good and have a circle jerk about how fast you can patch it. However most sane people know the amount of tests MS runs before pushing patches out. For e.g. , this patch - They have to test it on 2000, XP, Vista, Win7. Once they do that on the RTM version, they need to also test every service pack that they have released for each of those operating systems on both 32 and 64 bit platforms. And once those tests pass, they need to run more tests to check for regressions.

      It must be so much fun being an open source developer. Check in 3 lines of code for the fix and leave the actual testing work to upstream and take all the "credit" for the fast response.

    76. Re:Big Battle by jgagnon · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is examples like this that drive so many people's distrust of Microsoft. That and Google seems to be able to find more relevant results on Microsoft's own servers than Microsoft can (searching MSDN, for instance, or Microsoft downloads). It boggles my mind.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    77. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, the "nice new cafe around the corner (google)" is a panera's bread company... oh and panera also hides cameras in it's food? wtf?

      Sorry, but I don't think there is a good food analogy for google.

      People act like they are some sort of underdog, fighting the good fight, and all that. Open your brain for five minutes. They are not.

      Google is a megacorporation that makes it's money by tracking everything you do and selling ads based on this information to advertisers.

      Microsoft is a megacorporation that wants to have a disproportionate market share for it's OS and software.

      Microsoft wants to force me to use their product by aggressively eliminating competition.

      Google wants to force me to use their product by obfuscating it's actual purpose.

      Google's "everything for free" model is built on the idea that they can underbid ANYONE with a free service and pay for it by simply taking what they need from you as part of that service.
      In the end, I prefer Microsoft's bullying to Google's manipulative approach.

      Google's tactics are much more manipulative and dangerous as they not only eliminate competition just like microsoft- they do so without people noticing. Does anyone use mapquest anymore? How many sites run google analytics and adsense as opposed to other ad services?

      I'm sure the response will be "well don't blame google for making a good product" and "they have a huge market with their search engine, it's natural that they will use that to sell ads!".

      These are true, it's good business sense, but it's the exact same thing microsoft does when it layers different services under it's OS. Windows was great for business before, now they are stuck with it.

      Google is great now, and very soon lots of people are going to be "stuck" with them when they start to be just like Microsoft.

      The double standard makes me sick.

      At least I know where Microsoft stands, and last time I checked they don't need in depth information on me to keep their business model going.

    78. Re:Big Battle by xigxag · · Score: 1

      I'm still not buying it. I think it's just a kind of naturally reified Googlebomb/Bingbomb. At this point, all you have to do is start typing "Why is" into EITHER search engine and that entire question will appear as an autocomplete, so clearly, you're not getting unadulterated results in either case.

      Yet, if I enter "Why is Microsoft Windows so awesome?" as my question, the second result, ON BING, leads to a page explaining why Linux is better than Windows. Google actually gives more favorable results toward Windows.

      In any event, part of the issue is that we have become trained to think of the way that Google ranks things as the standard, and anything divergent from that ideal as skewed and purposefully deviant.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    79. Re:Big Battle by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      The trouble is, how do you know the "reformed" thief is sincere? My elderly dad says "one 'oh shit' wipes out a whole lot of 'attaboys'".

      Once bitten, twice shy.

    80. Re:Big Battle by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Not sure why you were modded down - I completely agree also. Whilst it's true that Apple and Google are now competing in the phone market, here they are both minor players - the more important ones to watch in this battleground are Nokia, and a load of other companies like Samsung, Motorola, LG. To claim that this is "most important rivalry" is taking the RDF to absurdly new heights.

      The area where Apple lead is mp3 players, where Google are not in competition. And in the market of search engines, Google are in competition with Microsoft, not Apple.

      The default search engine battle has ranged on many devices - yet the sad thing is that this probably only made Appledot because of the Iphone mention, and we haven't had our Iphone story for today.

    81. Re:Big Battle by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      When you put in a specific quoted phrase into a search engine, you expect it to actually find hits with that result. In this case, searching for "Why is windows so expensive" or "why is microsoft windows so expensive" returns a first result of "Why are Mac's So Expensive?"

      If you click on the first link returned by Bing, no where in the linked article does it even have a matching phrase for your actual query.

    82. Re:Big Battle by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Google CEO says privacy doesn't matter

      In fairness, he didn't really say that privacy didn't matter. When his quote is taken in context, I think it's pretty clear that he's just pointing out that you can't rely on search engines to guarantee your privacy:

      If you really need that kind of privacy, the reality is that search engines - including Google - do retain this information for some time and it's important, for example, that we are all subject in the United States to the Patriot Act and it is possible that all that information could be made available to the authorities.

      What seemed to draw attention was that during the same interview, he said, "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place." Ultimately I don't think that such a statement is very threatening or judgmental. He's suggesting that if *you* are ashamed of your actions, the perhaps you should stop acting that way. Now it may be outside the scope of his duties as Google CEO to be providing that kind of advice, but then again, it is in the context of pointing out how the Internet isn't a very secure place and your privacy isn't guaranteed. What's more, it's not terrible advice.

    83. Re:Big Battle by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      What happened to judging products on their merits? Has Microsoft really damaged you so much that whatever they do meets so much resistance that the sheer *thought* of using a product would make you cringe?

      It's called boycott ie. when you use an alternative product simply because you don't like the business practices of the company that produces it. Doesn't matter whether they have a better product or not; MS has demonstrated that they can't play nice. Of course Google is not perfect but they're at least better. Easy decision for me: I choose Google.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    84. Re:Big Battle by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Bing isn't really gaining that much market share. Remember back in the day when Google came out? They practically killed their competitors (Yahoo, Altavista, MSN) in 2 years. In 2005 they gained over 20% in 6 months, much better than Bing which is a rebranded MSN, Live, etc. Only because of their marketing and practically paying people to use their engine are they gaining a few percentage points. Even MSN Search had higher market shares in the past.

      Either way, I don't like Bing - even if it wasn't from Microsoft, it's a bit too heavy and a bit too slow (237k and 2.26s for all those stupid javascripts and images to load while google comes in at 75k at 690ms)

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    85. Re:Big Battle by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      Amen. The Memory Stick format is such a blatant grab for cash at the expense of customers it's ridiculous.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    86. Re:Big Battle by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      They may have improved Bing, but overall I find google gives me results "I am looking for".

      Tested this with Blindsearch.

      http://blindsearch.fejus.com/

      I would take the "gaining marketshare" with a pinch of salt. As it is very different then people actually changing search engines.

    87. Re:Big Battle by trapnest · · Score: 0, Redundant

      All I can say to this is: lolololololol.
      Good one mate.

    88. Re:Big Battle by marcansoft · · Score: 1

      I hate microsofts business practices as much as the next guy on slashdot, but Bing is something they're actually done really good.

      I disagree. So far, I've found no compelling issue to switch to Bing. I see it return noticeably lower quality search results (at least for international users). I did some tests with a certain class of internet scams that try to sell you freely available software and found that international Bing users were exceedingly likely to never notice, as they'd get scam result after scam result, while Google users would receive various "XX is a scam" results as the first few, so it looks like Bing is particularly vulnerable to the usual cross-linking tactics used for affiliate marketing scams. Their indexing bots are intentionally ill-behaved. I've blocked their entire IP space because they've made a habit out of randomly ignoring robots.txt and spoofing their user agent to various versions of IE.

      Once Bing starts returning decent quality results and does so without violating accepted behavior guidelines for bots I'll give it a shot again. Until then, I'm not touching it.

    89. Re:Big Battle by Comboman · · Score: 1

      Either the results have changed since you posted or the Canadian version of Bing has different results. When I clicked those links, the first hit on both Google and Bing was a root777.com page about this controversy. The Yahoo Answers page about Macs didn't show up on either search. Keep in mind that it is possible for third parties to 'game' the search results of even the venerable Google (the racist picture of the First Lady showing up as the first hit in a Google Image search being a recent example).

      --
      Support Right To Repair Legislation.
    90. Re:Big Battle by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      If you do go with MS' cobbler then google does out of biz and you get your just desserts?

    91. Re:Big Battle by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      I though it was ... "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, you can't, can't fool me again."

    92. Re:Big Battle by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Nah its a bunch of people whining about search results including /. posts.

    93. Re:Big Battle by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      I just double checked, and I still get the 'mac' result in the U.S. Very curious that Canada gets a different result. Can someone else confirm?

      Here's the first returned link in the U.S. for Bing if anyone is curious:

      http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20061212021150AAOfyNz

      If you search the return link however, there are no phrases matching "why is windows so expensive" or "why is microsoft windows so expensive", or any other variant of that phrase that I can see.

    94. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a word...Yes.

      A person may make a mistake, be labelled as a thief or criminal, be punished, and change their ways. I would give them a second chance and not hold past mistakes against them. I may even give them a third.

      Microsoft is not like such a person. I've given them way too many chances already, they've almost never been punished for the mistakes they've made (albeit they're mostly "moral" crimes than outright "legal" crimes") and have never shown true regret at these transgressions.

      So yes, they have to prove, beyond every reasonable and not-so-reasonable doubt that it's safe for me and for my future concerns to use or subscribe to one of their products.

      Just to put this inperspective, I still judhe each of their efforts on it's own and have in fact been convinced in some areas. But I am forever vigilant and cautious about each new step and direction that company takes. As someone who works in IT they have as much power and influence over my small world as you would expect a government and laws have over everyone else.

    95. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That tool you're thinking of is:

      http://www.blindsearch.fejus.com/

    96. Re:Big Battle by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      They must be different, because the US version definitely returns "Why are Mac's so expensive?" as its first link, as of when I checked 10 seconds ago.

      In fact, have a screenshot!

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    97. Re:Big Battle by IICV · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They have stifled innovation for years (for an example see IE6 - allowed to totally stagnate once it had a dominant marketshare, only updated again once its share was threatened several years later).

      This is what's really insidious about Bing. What happens if Microsoft wins the current search engine wars, like they did the browser wars or the operating system wars? Will they keep on innovating, or will search stagnate for a decade?

      Whenever Microsoft wins, everyone else loses.

    98. Re:Big Battle by D'Sphitz · · Score: 1

      (for example, they use flash instead of silverlight, because flash is installed on so many machines, and do not try to promote silverlight on cost of their search engine).

      http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2587/3785979156_e06cb135cb_o.png

    99. Re:Big Battle by Comboman · · Score: 1

      Weird! Here's a screenshot of the results I see: screenshot

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    100. Re:Big Battle by Zarf · · Score: 1

      Interestingly.. what happens with...
      "Why is Microsoft Windows so awesome?" ... which is more relevant?

      http://www.bing.com/search?q=Why+is+Microsoft+Windows+so+awesome&go=&form=QBRE&qs=n

      http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Why+is+Microsoft+Windows+so+awesome%3F&aq=f&aql=&aqi=&oq=

      I think the Google search is actually better... but I could be biased.

      --
      [signature]
    101. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You don't understand the difference between a monopoly and a dominant market share, do you?

    102. Re:Big Battle by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      LOL ;) Bing Response: We did not find any results for "Why is Microsoft Windows so awesome".

    103. Re:Big Battle by schon · · Score: 1

      the thought of using bing makes me cringe

      What happened to judging products on their merits?

      Why are you assuming he's not judging it based on merit?

      Maybe he likes his search engine to be unbiased?

    104. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I switched to Bing today and so far, I'm liking it.

      captcha: optimism

    105. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there anyway to opt out of Google gathering data on myself and my family?

      Nope. You can block it on your system, but other sites, browsers, and even OS's will still report on you. You can't send to gmail accounts and not expect Google to learn things about you.

      Opt in is good. No opt out is pure evil.

    106. Re:Big Battle by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Remember back in the day when Google came out? They practically killed their competitors (Yahoo, Altavista, MSN) in 2 years.

      I remember when Google came out and killed their competitors (Altavista, Excite, Lycos, Yahoo, etc...). However, your list includes an entry that didn't exist when Google entered the market...

      In 2005 they gained over 20% in 6 months,

      [citation needed]

      ComScore Networks reported that Google had a 6% (from 36.3% to 42.3%) increase between February 2005 and February 2006.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    107. Re:Big Battle by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there's quite a bit more

      After everything you've already listed, I find it hard to imagine a list of "more" that wouldn't include seppuku in it somewhere.

    108. Re:Big Battle by mrjohnson · · Score: 1

      From what I can tell, most of those SEO strategies are much more successful on Bing than on Google. I have several sites that rank well in Google despite never really working on SEO. It's a competitive category and the other sites are spamming the web with all kinds of links.

      On Bing, my sites rank nowhere. In fact, they're found several pages into the search, long past some really obscure sites.

      Bing is pay to play. Maybe people like that, I don't know. I would rather keep the more democratic Google, who works hard to keep the spammers out.

    109. Re:Big Battle by xigxag · · Score: 1

      Even if one were to concede that Microsoft is deliberately sabotaging the credibility of its own search engine through such a ham-fisted method, the end result of all of that makes no sense. The link given is in no way favorable to Microsoft. The questioner vehemently disses Microsoft, asks the question in a way which is not hostile to Apple, and the answerer gives a reasonable, non fanboi-ish pro-Apple explanation. In other words, this allegedly deliberately crafted by Microsoft link fails to make Apple look bad in any way.

      I understand the desire of some people to construct an anti-Microsoft narrative for every situation, but in this case, it doesn't scan.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    110. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why show a link that doesn't match the phrase searched for? People don't have to read it and the link itself is not that inflamatory about Windows. In fact, it barely mentions it.

      Since when was MS known for finesse?

    111. Re:Big Battle by liquiddark · · Score: 2, Funny

      What entire industry has Microsoft hindered, exactly? The IT industry, where they've delivered software and service as a package deal at a level that has made them ubiquitous based on their merits? The software development industry that uses COM and descendants (and DDE before it, even) to implement technologies in self-organizing ways that are occasionally just shy of magical? The tech industry in general, where Microsoft has often driven innovation through both positive (advanced APIs to cover difficult low-level details without smothering the gains they provide) and negative (favouring features over raw performance) drivers?

      Open Source is not an industry. It's an approach to a problem. Microsoft has hindered open source, there's very little doubt about that, but it's far from the only effect they've had on software development.

    112. Re:Big Battle by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      Let me know when that happens.

      Until then, a thief is a thief as long as they remain an unrepentant thief.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    113. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "The privacy of Google users matters, and Google has promised to disclose information to the Government only as required by law." .. so much for "fighting" it.

      It means Google actually requires a court order, whereas Yahoo and MS will just hand over info to any government agency that asks. And since we already know from other articles that the government has been asking for lots and lots of info, on questionable grounds that a judge might not give them a warrant for... we have the difference between privacy and mass data mining fishing expeditions.

    114. Re:Big Battle by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      For me, the first hit is the Google Trends page for the specific search string. Yup, we have just slashdotted a search term.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    115. Re:Big Battle by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 1

      Based on their merits?

      The Windows API is so broad, so deep, and so functional that most ISVs would be crazy not to use it. And it is so deeply embedded in the source code of many Windows apps that there is a huge switching cost to using a different operating system instead...

      It is this switching cost that has given the customers the patience to stick with Windows through all our mistakes, our buggy drivers, our high TCO, our lack of a sexy vision at times, and many other difficulties [...] Customers constantly evaluate other desktop platforms, [but] it would be so much work to move over that they hope we just improve Windows rather than force them to move.

      In short, without this exclusive franchise called the Windows API, we would have been dead a long time ago.

      --Internal Microsoft memo drafted for Bill Gates, Feb 21, 1997

      In 2002, Be Inc. sued [4] Microsoft claiming that Hitachi had been dissuaded from selling PCs loaded with BeOS, and that Compaq had been pressured to not market an Internet appliance in partnership with Be. BeOS also claimed that Microsoft acted to artificially depress Be Inc's IPO. The case was eventually settled out of court[5] with no admission of liability on Microsoft's part.

      --Wikipedia page about BeOS

    116. Re:Big Battle by liquiddark · · Score: 1

      What exactly are you proving there? That Windows has built-in lock-in and competes (sometimes unfairly) with other vendors? I would suggest that you try working in a large company for a while and see how difficult that world is, how impossible the challenge of providing a common infrastructure without the kind of high-class vendor support Microsoft products come with, before you call up a couple of half-assed examples that are provably wrong about why people use MS. People use MS because they know it has a huge weight of support behind and in front of it. BeOS replacing Windows was NEVER a real possibility for anyone with systems more complex than a couple of connected workstations. The Windows API has been over as a concern for ten years, yet people still use Windows.

    117. Re:Big Battle by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

      Not sufficiently painful. Not sufficiently drawn out. Suicide in this case would just be a case of escaping your duities. :-)

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    118. Re:Big Battle by theun4gven · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm still not buying it. I think it's just a kind of naturally reified Googlebomb/Bingbomb. At this point, all you have to do is start typing "Why is" into EITHER search engine and that entire question will appear as an autocomplete, so clearly, you're not getting unadulterated results in either case.

      Yet, if I enter "Why is Microsoft Windows so awesome?" as my question, the second result, ON BING, leads to a page explaining why Linux is better than Windows. Google actually gives more favorable results toward Windows.

      So what you are saying is that, even though Bing may not be biasing results, in both the "Windows more expensive" and "Windows so awesome" searches Bing returns poor results with Google's being much more relevant?

    119. Re:Big Battle by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      I've personally judge it after using it and it does not offer enough over Google, I find some its results for certain searches to be questionable and quite frankly I don't support any company that uses it advantages in other areas to gain an artificial advantage (ie making your search engine the default in your market dominating browser).

      If MS pays to be the search engine on the iPhone I'm fine with that. I wouldn't fight it but I would still think making it the default on IE is wrong.

    120. Re:Big Battle by Ykant · · Score: 1

      there was this site that compared Bing/Google/Yahoo and had you pick your favorite and then told you what it was, don't know the URL at the time

      http://blindsearch.fejus.com/

      --
      Spelling, grammar, punctuation? We need something that checks logic.
    121. Re:Big Battle by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Also, where was microsoft when Google was making a stand in China?

      Touching themselves over the thought of Google leaving a potentially huge market.

    122. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "why ipod is better than zune" on Bing yields "10 Reason Why the Zune is Better Than the iPod" as number 1. I'm sure the list goes on and on.

    123. Re:Big Battle by JD-1027 · · Score: 1

      And I've compared the search results, 80% of the time I prefer Google's results (there was this site that compared Bing/Google/Yahoo and had you pick your favorite and then told you what it was, don't know the URL at the time)

      I've always wanted to do this objectively, so I found the following site. Not sure if this is the one you mentioned, but it worked great.
      http://blindsearch.fejus.com/

      I found that site by searching for "bing google yahoo search compare" on google. Doing that using our search compare, I chose the correct search site for the answer I was looking for (though it was one link deeper than direct)...
      http://blindsearch.fejus.com/?q=bing+google+yahoo+search+compare&type=web

      Then, couldn't resist a Meta compare...Which site is better at telling me which site is better...
      http://blindsearch.fejus.com/?q=which+is+better%2C+google%2C+yahoo+or+bing+search&type=web

      My results are similar to yours. I favor Google about 70-80% of the time.

    124. Re:Big Battle by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      . There are plenty of other people who have not already demonstrated their untrustworthiness, so I can get by without that former thief just fine.

      Well, in the search-engine world, you have Google and Ask. Yahoo is really just a skinned [seems to flip between Bing and Google]. So who is your trusted source? MS just wants your money, Google wants your life. I wouldn't trust either. So which search should I use?

      I tend to still use Google a little more, but I'll go to Bing instead of the second page of Google results.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    125. Re:Big Battle by Zarf · · Score: 1

      Ah, should have pasted this instead:

      http://www.bing.com/search?q=%22Why+is+Microsoft+Windows+so+awesome%22&go=&form=QBRE&qs=n

      http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Why+is+Microsoft+Windows+so+awesome%3F%22&aq=f&aql=&aqi=&oq= ... somehow the quotes fell off.

      Yep. No results from Bing. So Bing doesn't think Microsoft Windows is awesome?

      --
      [signature]
    126. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >

      In any event, part of the issue is that we have become trained to think of the way that Google ranks things as the standard, and anything divergent from that ideal as skewed and purposefully deviant.

      Uh. Yeah... 'cuz it's the best one that has ever existed? When something better shows up we'll feel that way about it. By the way... Bing ain't it.

    127. Re:Big Battle by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      High-class vendor support?

      I notice you said LARGE company. I suppose they answer the phone when it's another Fortune 500 calling.

      People buy Microsoft because it's all there is, in the flattened environment that Microsoft has successfully plowed clear of competitors.

      Now, go back to your office and close the door.

    128. Re:Big Battle by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      Same thing as with other Microsoft products: it sounds good in theory, it has lots of features, but it doesn't do its primary function very well.

      It's primary function, as seen by it's developers, is competing with Google. It's a second matter to them whether or not it's a good search engine.

      That's how Microsoft has always been. They open business units based on perceived threats to their market share.

    129. Re:Big Battle by liquiddark · · Score: 1

      Way to not make a point. I promise I'll go back to the office as long as you promise to get back under your rock and keep your beard to yourself?

    130. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know what you mean.
      I hate this one person who works for subway (just a nasty personality). The thought of her preparing my food makes me ill.
      I once went in and saw that she was working and walked right out.
      That's how I feel about bing. (she would be microsoft)

      I know what you mean
      I hate this one person (just smelly with flies buzzing around him all the time and no social skills). The thought of him anywhere near me makes me ill.
      I once saw him walk in the subway where I work and was so relieved when he walked out.
      That's how I feel about nerds. (he would be linux)

    131. Re:Big Battle by kregg · · Score: 1

      1.I judged Bing by doing a search on the word Linux and at the time it came up with the top result for a linux vs MS Server page on Microsoft. Ok so they fixed that but still. How can I trust them to not hide things from me.

      2. Yes. Have you see the Windows 7 party video on YouTube, or have you used Windows Mobile? All very cringe worthy. Bing is just a copy of Google with a fancy background.

      3. I would have more respect for Microsoft if they didn't always try to lock you in to their products e.g Sharepoint, Office, C# etc.

      4. Hard to say....

    132. Re:Big Battle by woongbin · · Score: 1

      Well, they get the same first result. Please don't tell me Bing's copying Google's result real-time.

    133. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YES

    134. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      Yes

    135. Re:Big Battle by swillden · · Score: 1

      On a social analogy, is a thief always a thief, even when he shows remorse and changed his ways?

      What evidence is there that Microsoft has changed it's ways? There certainly has never been any showing of remorse.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    136. Re:Big Battle by swillden · · Score: 1

      You're too young to have lived through all of the despicable things MS did in the early to mid-90s, aren't you?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    137. Re:Big Battle by liquiddark · · Score: 1

      What did they do, exactly? They bombed a country, maybe? Killed some orphans?

      No. They outcompeted their competitors based on merit - Linux being a total joke at the time for anyone who didn't want to send out their home or work computer for a week and didn't have a kernel programmer on hand to fix things when they went pear-shaped, Apple being in utter disarry, Commodore, Be and Atari in the process of failing quietly for reasons that had nothing to do with Microsoft - and in the process they overstepped some ethical lines, which nobody's contesting. But they didn't cause anyone's stuff to stop working in ways that killed anyone. The very commonality of their products made it possible to build a working commercial ecosystem, which is how we all got nice shiny new computers that do all kinds of cool things that are (on the back end) unimaginably complex based on a couple of simple clicks. They built a stable, relatively secure core (NT) for business and a friendly, futz-ish front end for the home (95 et al) and then eventually they brought those worlds together.

      Despicable? Seriously, buy yourself a dictionary.

    138. Re:Big Battle by swillden · · Score: 1

      No. They outcompeted their competitors based on merit

      Yep, you weren't around. Merit had next to nothing to do with it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    139. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    140. Re:Big Battle by pydev · · Score: 1

      It's primary function, as seen by it's developers, is competing with Google. It's a second matter to them whether or not it's a good search engine.

      And it doesn't do the former particularly well because it doesn't do the latter particularly well.

      At best, Bing is a barely credible placeholder right now for Microsoft to try their usual bundling and tying games with.

    141. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bing fails at search so why bother with it? 9 out of 10 times it simply does not answer with useful information. The day Safari only uses Bing is the day I find a new browser.

    142. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. I hate everything about their software products. I will not use them unless I have no viable alternative, and I will go out of my way to use not-quite-viable alternatives instead if I have to.

      Such anger over computer software. You must not get laid much.

    143. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Words of wisdom.

    144. Re:Big Battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happened to judging products on their merits?

      It is quite common to judge products based on the manufacturer's reputation.

      It's both funny and sad to me that this slashdot community full of supposed scientists (computer or otherwise) react so emotionally based on biased notions and groupthink.

  2. It's not a search engine by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

    With apologies to a poster on one of the rumor sites, Bing is not a search engine, it is a decision engine.

    But in all seriousness, the only reason why Apple would even consider doing this, is if Google already abandoned them elsewhere, and there are no signs of that.
    I'm pretty positive that Steve hates Microsoft, what it stands for, and the way it does its business. Pretty much like many Linux folks do.
    If he should allow for this, I'll eat my shorts. (Figuratively!)

    --
    If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    1. Re:It's not a search engine by bloodhawk · · Score: 1

      Google are agressively trying to take Apples market, I am pretty sure Steve Hates losing money more than he hates Microsoft, At least his shareholders better hope so.

    2. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Steve once said, after Apple took $150M USD from M$ a few years ago, that it was not necessary for Microsoft to fail for Apple to succeed.

      He may hate M$, but he's a smart businessman, and Apple and M$ have worked together more than you'd think over the years.

      I hope the rumor is true, I'm not a fan of Google, or M$, but I'm tired of being mined for data, and right now M$ has a better privacy message.

      Even better would be an opt in on all data mining, but we all know there are too many well funded lobbyists flying first class from Silicon Valley/Redmond to ever let that happen.

    3. Re:It's not a search engine by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Microsoft saved Apple. Microsoft kept Apple viable in the workplace by continuing to release Office for Mac (indeed, Office on a Mac is much nicer than Office on a PC.) Apple produces great hardware to run Microsoft software, even their OS, on. And while Jobs is an avid competitor, I seriously doubt that the has any animus for Microsoft.

      Google, on the other hand, is threatening Apple in its biggest growth market: mobile devices. Google offers an alternate ecosystem to Apple, to .Mac and now iDisk. Google is encroaching, encroaching, encroaching more into Apple territory than Microsoft is. Apple probably feels betrayed by Google (and vice versa, after the rejection of Google's app in the AppStore.)

      All three are competing with each other in various sectors, but I think if there is bad blood anywhere right now, it is between Apple and Google.

    4. Re:It's not a search engine by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 2, Funny

      good insight

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    5. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But in all seriousness, the only reason why Apple would even consider doing this, is if Google already abandoned them elsewhere, and there are no signs of that.

      But in all seriousness, the only reason why Apple would even consider doing this, is if Microsoft dangled more $$$$$ in front of their face. Apple isn't referring traffic to Google for free just because they're cool dudes, you know.

    6. Re:It's not a search engine by westlake · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm pretty positive that Steve hates Microsoft, what it stands for, and the way it does its business. Pretty much like many Linux folks do

      Apple and Microsoft have had a mutually profitable - symbiotic - relationship for thirty years.

      Apple sells an upscale urban lifestyle.

      Microsoft solid middle class value.

      Both have a very clear notion of how to profitably leverage the other's platform. Windows gets iTunes. The Mac gets MS Office.

      Hate makes good theater - but rarely good business - and the geek needs to remember when he is watching a show.

    7. Re:It's not a search engine by introspekt.i · · Score: 1

      I know corporations are essentially people, but I didn't know that they had feelings.

    8. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way idiots like you talk, one could be forgiven for thinking that Microsoft board members have been given a free rein to use shareholder profits to bribe everyone in sight.

    9. Re:It's not a search engine by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OK, that's a fair dig, especially because I'm criticizing that idea implicitly at the beginning. But it wouldn't be a stretch to say that the senior management of Apple might be cheesed at Google...

    10. Re:It's not a search engine by perpenso · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Apple produces great hardware to run Microsoft software, even their OS, on.

      Apple's switch to Intel CPUs was a good thing in and of itself, it erased the performance gap. However the single thing that did the most to improve Apple's market share may have been Apple's support of Microsoft Windows on their hardware. For decades having to choose PC or Mac blocked sales, some folks were interested in Mac but needed a PC for compatibility with work or gaming. With Boot Camp the PC or Mac choice was no longer a barrier, you could have both on the same system.

      To a lesser degree the switch to Intel performed a similar role. Emulation of Windows became practical since the CPU instruction set no longer had to be entirely emulated.

      --
      Perpenso Calc for iPhone and iPod touch, scientific and bill/tip calculator, fractions, complex numbers, RPN

    11. Re:It's not a search engine by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      But in all seriousness, the only reason why Apple would even consider doing this, is if Google already abandoned them elsewhere

      I'd have thought the only reason Apple would consider this is if Microsoft were offering them more money than Google. Assuming Bing is a suitably competent alternative Apple would be insane not to consider it as an option. Similarly Google would be insane to pin all their mobile hopes on Apple's platform.

      I think anyone trying to make this into some drama is missing the fact that nothing here suggests either of the companies are making emotionally driven decisions, merely rational ones.

      After all, Apple dropping Google is hardly a move that would make Google reconsider Android, it will merely make it more obvious why Google can't afford to put all their, er... apples in the one basket.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    12. Re:It's not a search engine by prockcore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm pretty positive that Steve hates Microsoft

      Yes, but he absolutely *hates* Eric Schmidt. He hates how much the iPhone is beholden to Google. Notice how Google has basically been prevented from making iPhone apps now. Why would Apple kill Google Latitude, yet allow Loopt (even use Loopt in their advertising)? Of course we now know that Apple killed Google Voice, not AT&T.

      Google Goggles, Google Navigation, even Google Sky Map... all droid-only, and I doubt it's because of Google. The only thing coming out of Google for the iPhone are web apps that Steve Jobs has no control over.

    13. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple was not *SAVED* by Microsoft. Apple still had cash in the bank. The $150 million investment in non-voting stock and other agreements such as Office for 5 years where part of a very serious IP theft and patent suit Apple had against Microsoft related to Video for Windows. Steve turned it into an opportunity to get some positive press for Apple by spinning the settlement into a "vote of confidence" from Microsoft and Bill Gates.

      Google is pissing me off with the wild encroaching into all sectors (not unlike MS) but I do not want BING. It sucks.

    14. Re:It's not a search engine by derGoldstein · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Before the Android/Schmidt/NexusOne business, Jobs would probably hate having an MS logo anywhere on the iPhone far more than losing some cash to Google. Now though, it's like you said -- they're seriously being aggressive about pretty much everything that Apple was aiming for from the moment they released the iPhone. Things like Chrome OS seem like vaporware now, but if some new netbook/tablet form factor takes off, Google is ready with their code. Their different "vectors of attack" include both MS *and* Apple, they're not blind to the usability angle that Apple has, and they're trying to "steal as much thunder" as they can in any area in which (they think) they can compete.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    15. Re:It's not a search engine by Fotograf · · Score: 1

      do you think anybody would care about ipod if there would be macos required?

      --
      God's gift to chicks
    16. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      icrosoft is trying to break google because they know they will not break apple. Apple will be the dominate one in all of this no matter what option they make as they always buck the trend and get things right the first time (and before everyone else).

    17. Re:It's not a search engine by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs even introduced Internet Explorer for the Mac once upon a time. Shipping with OS X.

      This is an example of how far he is ready to go for profits. That was the same Steve Jobs as is running Apple today.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    18. Re:It's not a search engine by indiechild · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the whole thing has been blown way out of proportion. Of course Apple is going to negotiate with Google and Microsoft. They want to get a better deal, as John Gruber puts it:
      http://daringfireball.net/2010/01/apple_google_bing_search

    19. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "indeed, Office on a Mac is much nicer than Office on a PC"

      Personal preference. I always thought the Mac Office felt horrible and slow. Both the different UI and the responsiveness.

      MS Office 2007 on Windows got it right with the ribbon bar. Have to admit I was sceptic, but am a convert now.

    20. Re:It's not a search engine by RedK · · Score: 1

      Google, on the other hand, is threatening Apple in its biggest growth market: mobile devices.

      Microsoft on the other hand is threatening Apple in its biggest growth market: mobile devices. What's the difference ? Zune, Windows Mobile, ring a bell ?

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    21. Re:It's not a search engine by Mordaximus · · Score: 1

      You need to dig a little deeper friend. All of the nice little things Microsoft did was part of patent infringement negotiations. The cash infusion, the agreement to continue making Office for Mac (the agreement was for 5 years) and Apple making IE the default Mac OS browser were all part of that. By the way - IE being the default browser meant Netscape wasn't. How very nice and generous of them.

      They weren't being nice, they were trying to stay out of court. Saved Apple, indeed.

    22. Re:It's not a search engine by nine-times · · Score: 1

      (indeed, Office on a Mac is much nicer than Office on a PC.)

      That may be your opinion, but they still use Entourage which still doesn't have full Exchange support. I don't know how Microsoft could more blatantly trying to trash the viability of Office for OSX in the corporate world than to hobble Exchange support.

      Microsoft dropped Exchange support right around the advent of OSX, which was right around the same time they stopped developing IE for Mac, which was also around the time that Apple started to make their comeback. So when you look at it that way, it looks like Microsoft propped up a minor competitor when they were being prosecuted for antitrust violations only to drop support when that competitor stopped being so minor.

      Even now, none of Microsoft's Mac software adheres to Mac conventions. They do crap like stick their configuration files into your "Documents" folder. Now supposedly they're going to start offering Outlook for Mac in the next year, but we'll see how that turns out.

    23. Re:It's not a search engine by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Google, on the other hand, is threatening Apple in its biggest growth market: mobile devices.

      Let's not forget that Microsoft also has a phone OS, owns Danger, and has announced that they plan on releasing a Microsoft-branded phone in the next year.

    24. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way ignoramuses like you talk, you would think that Google didn't already bribe everyone in sight.

      Sorry you are too dumb to realize that everyone from Apple to Verizon are getting kickbacks for those google searches.

    25. Re:It's not a search engine by mamer-retrogamer · · Score: 1

      It's true that Microsoft gave Apple an infusion of cash and guaranteed software support for the Mac platform just when it needed it most, but Microsoft was not doing it to be benevolent. It was just beginning to defend itself from the accusations of being a monopoly and needed a "harmless" alternative to the Windows ecosystem they could point to. At the time, Microsoft needed Apple to survive.

      Microsoft never thought in a million years thought Apple could ever be a serious competitor to their core business. After all, Microsoft's main business was selling software to computer manufacturers, while Apple sold consumer computer systems directly to a limited subset of consumers. To Microsoft, Apple's competitors seemed to be the likes of IBM, Dell, Gateway, Compaq, HP, Packard Bell, etc., all of which purchased their software from Microsoft. With an over 90% market share, Microsoft didn't seem to have anything to worry about from the "beleaguered" Apple.

      Fast forward about a decade and a half. The internet has exploded and become the primary way people get and store information. For the first time in computer history, you are less tied to a specific application written by a specific company to access information. As a result, Apple's computer market share is over 10% for the first time since 1994. More and more people are even using non-PC devices to access information. In the exploding smart phone market, Microsoft is now in third place behind Research In Motion and Apple. And with Google now throwing its hat into the smart phone market ring there is even more competition in that sector.

      Microsoft is competing with Apple the mobile music device market, and losing. Microsoft is competing with Nintendo and Sony in the home video game market, and losing. Microsoft is competing with RIM and Apple in the smart phone operating system market and losing. Microsoft is losing on a lot of fronts.

      Sure, Microsoft is winning is in PC operating systems and PC business software. But as more and more people realize that they don't need a PC with Microsoft software to access and process their information, that market will become less and less important and will lose "share" to seemingly unrelated market areas.

      Make no mistake, Apple and Microsoft and Google and Sony and a litany of other technology companies are direct competitors in the, as yet, undefined "electronic information access" market.

      As much as the iPhone is locked down, Apple still seems to remember that it is damned near impossible to make a successful computer systems or information access devices without successful third party support. And it gets real complicated when your third parties are also your competitors. Which competitor should Apple help gain a foothold in a market they are nearly dominating? Microsoft? Google? Of course, the simple answer is neither, but that just would hurt Apple in the long run.

      Now that we are emerging from the dark ages of the Microsoft monopoly of computer tech, we are headed into very interesting times indeed.

      --
      Schrödinger's cat is not amused—maybe.
    26. Re:It's not a search engine by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The $150 million investment in non-voting stock and other agreements such as Office for 5 years where part of a very serious IP theft and patent suit Apple had against Microsoft related to Video for Windows. Steve turned it into an opportunity to get some positive press for Apple by spinning the settlement into a "vote of confidence" from Microsoft and Bill Gates.

      Oh yes, I'm sure that Steve was particularly happy to get IE as a default browser for MacOS. You can practically see him beaming in that video!

    27. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even now, none of Microsoft's Mac software adheres to Mac conventions. They do crap like stick their configuration files into your "Documents" folder. Now supposedly they're going to start offering Outlook for Mac in the next year, but we'll see how that turns out.

      Ooh and Mac Software on Windows follows Windows conventions perfectly! See iTunes, Quicktime etc..

    28. Re:It's not a search engine by unix1 · · Score: 1

      And while Jobs is an avid competitor, I seriously doubt that the has any animus for Microsoft.

      Google, on the other hand, is threatening Apple in its biggest growth market: mobile devices. Google offers an alternate ecosystem to Apple, to .Mac and now iDisk. Google is encroaching, encroaching, encroaching more into Apple territory than Microsoft is. Apple probably feels betrayed by Google (and vice versa, after the rejection of Google's app in the AppStore.)

      All three are competing with each other in various sectors, but I think if there is bad blood anywhere right now, it is between Apple and Google.

      Well then Apple has something coming to them if they don't see that they will have just as much (if not more) beef with MS as they do with Google. Let's go through your list:

      - alternate ecosystem to Apple on mobile devices: check (wait until WinMo7 later this year for a bigger surprise)
      - .mac: check (hotmail, msn, etc.)
      - iDisk: check

      They will still be competing in the area of phones, tablet devices, notebooks/netbooks. And we didn't even get started on desktop/laptop operating systems where MS has anywhere from 80% to 90% market share.

      Oh and they've got something else coming to them - MS' motto is NOT "do no evil". In short, they should be aligning themselves with Google even if they get half the "deal" they think they are getting from MS. I thought they'd been burned before by the same company... fool me once....

    29. Re:It's not a search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the whole thing has been blown way out of proportion.

      Really? Which part?

      Android competes with iPhone.

      Google's online services compete with MobileMe.

      Android and Chrome OS compete with OS X for home, tablet, and light laptop use.

      YouTube just started competing with iTunes.

      It looks like Google is moving into online music as well.

      And Apple simply doesn't have what it takes to compete. OS X is aging and bloated and MobileMe never scaled.

  3. Microsoft a pawn? by timmarhy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    MS is hardly anyones fool. what is far more likely is that MS will play the 2 off against each other. Apple's piss weak market share makes them less of a threat, so initally siding wiht them is logical. Next i bet you'll see MS leverage this into a windows mobile version of the iphone. mark my words children....

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Nostradongus · · Score: 1

      Piss weak market share of what? Smart phones? Personal music players? Online music sales? I doubt Apple will side with Microsoft and if they do, it'll only be temporary. It seems more than likely that Apple will buy out some small company and create a Jobs search engine.

    2. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 2, Funny

      MS is hardly anyones fool. what is far more likely is that MS will play the 2 off against each other.

      Haw! MS is the ugly fat chick in the room. A company would have to be desperate to be with her. Microsoft is synonymous with "cheap".

    3. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Apple has a stellar history of cloud services? If Apple buys out a search engine, the only thing that will happen is that it will tank and than stay on life support until they rename it and try again.

    4. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by mevets · · Score: 4, Funny

      to say nothing of her transmittable diseases....

    5. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      MS is hardly anyones fool. what is far more likely is that MS will play the 2 off against each other. Apple's piss weak market share makes them less of a threat, so initally siding wiht them is logical. Next i bet you'll see MS leverage this into a windows mobile version of the iphone. mark my words children....

      Wha'? I know people don't read the articles here - but you should at least consider reading the summary. We're talking about the iPhone and mobile devices and search - not personal computers. Apple's marketshare is pretty darn good (to say the least). As far as Windows Mobile goes... I know some guys that work in that group, and they don't currently expect it to even exist in another year or two. It is not Microsoft's golden child by any stretch of the imagination.

      Seriously - Microsoft hasn't managed to leverage their Windows near-monopoly into a dominant position in any of these spaces. I'm glad you're happy with your Zune, but... wow. Seriously.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    6. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by jim_v2000 · · Score: 5, Funny

      >a Jobs search engine.

      It would be like Google, but the only button would be the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    7. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by johncadengo · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I don't see Microsoft as a pawn at all. It seems to me that they are employing the well-known and time-proven strategy of divide and rule.

      --
      My page.
    8. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by introspekt.i · · Score: 1

      I'd liken Microsoft to some kind of weird arms dealer in this scenario. It pretty much can't lose if Apple is using its products in some vendetta against Google.

    9. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Troll

      clearly you didn't read my post at all Mr knee jerk.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    10. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by spintriae · · Score: 1

      AskJobs? I doubt it will give you many answers. And I predict a strict secrecy clause in the TOS for the answers is does give.

    11. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by spintriae · · Score: 1

      > Next i bet you'll see MS leverage this into a windows mobile version of the iphone.

      And then what? A Windows 7 version of their Macbook? I don't think so, Tim.

    12. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

      At least they're responsible enough to distribute their own prophylactic lately.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    13. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

      Which is a nice departure from their default strategy: throwing money bags at a problem until it's "solved".

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    14. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

      I'd liken Microsoft to some kind of weird arms dealer in this scenario

      That's too bad, I think they've cultivated their drug-dealer likeness almost to perfection. At any rate, the ATF should still keep an eye on them.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    15. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by derGoldstein · · Score: 3, Funny

      There would be no buttons. No buttons at all.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    16. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, because Apple has never cut a deal with Microsoft when they had "piss weak" marketshare (by the way, the iPhone's marketshare is far from "piss weak"), and Apple ended up coming out stronger than ever.

      Apple isn't stupid either.

      And about your WinMo thing, Apple prides itself far too much on its hardware-software integration to let that ever happen.

    17. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Clearly you are utterly ignorant of the subject. A Windows mobile version of the iPhone? That's like a Susan Boyle version of Angelina Jolie.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    18. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong - the entire page would be a button.

    19. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      and you know what, Susan Boyle has sold millions of cd's on the back of one damn song. your going to need to come up with a better example then that. remmeber apple doesn't give 2 shits as long as it's selling iphones.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    20. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by indiechild · · Score: 1

      You'd start typing, and your results magically appear!

    21. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by MrMr · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is synonymous with "cheap"
      I think you may have misinterpreted their low TCO campaigns.

    22. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by vilms · · Score: 0

      >a Jobs search engine.

      It would be like Google, but the only button would be the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button.

      And it would announce the results of the search on time, but wouldn't actually "ship" them to you until March.

    23. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by jimicus · · Score: 1

      >a Jobs search engine.

      It would be like Google, but the only button would be the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button.

      Which, to be fair, would work perfectly well 98% of the time. But you'd wind up with one group of people who ignored the 2% of the time it didn't, claiming it to be totally infallible and another group which focused on the 2% of the time it didn't work to denounce it as a lousy product.

    24. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      But unlike Susan Boyle, the iPhone and Angelina Jolie are primarily masturbation aids. Use that analogy to prove your point.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    25. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      All there would be is the sound of one hand wanking.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    26. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually that's not such a bad idea. Why would you need a button anyways, just update the search results on the fly while user types. Might increase the search engine server load substantially, though

    27. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'll reinvent the wheel just for this!

      Or better yet, they'll just use fire.

    28. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a lonely virgin that will never get sex from anything but your hand or your fleshlight?

    29. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Piss weak market share of what? Smart phones? Personal music players?

      Phones yes, music players no. But given he was talking about Microsoft, I presume he meant operating systems - and he's right, it would be reasonable for MS to consider Google more of a threat than Apple.

      Indeed, their focus on music players, music stores and phones, rather than Macs and OS X, adds to that point. With the "istale", if it's actually released, rumoured to be an Iphone device rather than a Mac, this trend will continue, making them even less direct competition to Microsoft.

    30. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Which would take you to the Apple home page.

      People would then praise how it Just Works, because if you want to search for the Apple home page, it does so without you even having to tell it. Questions about searching for other pages are dismissed with "But why would I want to do that?"

    31. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      We're talking about the iPhone and mobile devices and search - not personal computers. Apple's marketshare is pretty darn good (to say the least).

      Apple are about 5% max in the phone market last time I looked. Which is what I thought the Mac's market share was around, too.

      As far as Windows Mobile goes... I know some guys that work in that group, and they don't currently expect it to even exist in another year or two.

      Which just adds to his point - since MS aren't in that market significantly, they're even less in competition with Apple these days.

    32. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but it would still have to be white?

    33. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      >a Jobs search engine

      Wouldn't that be Craigslist?

    34. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      >a Jobs search engine.

      It would be like Google, but the only button would be the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button.

      Really? I didn't think Jobs had anything to do with GNOME!

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    35. Re:Microsoft a pawn? by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Because everyone would be querying the database 5-10 times per second for each search.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  4. Marketshare gains misleading... by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I like competition as much as the next guy.

    However, I am really suspicious of Bing's marketshare numbers. Has no-one else noticed that many of those demonic hoverover underline word links pull up Bing now? How much of the increase is because people lingered a little too long over a word on a web page?

    Furthermore, anything with a small marketshare can easily post impressive percentage gains quickly...

    Bing's results are as you say pretty decent, however I really don't like the super-heavy home page with the ginormous image. It's cool once but I just can't have that for a page I pull up so often... even if cached, the image is just too annoying over time. Goolge has the simplicity aspect right.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by sopssa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I never see either Bing's or Google's homepage. I just search using my browsers search bar. Actually I was surprised to see Google's fade-in homepage manually after friend told about it.

    2. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by jhol13 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Goolge has the simplicity aspect right.

      I *really* hate Google for destroying the right-click copy-link-location. Maybe I'll change to Bing, it does not do that.

    3. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by LoverOfJoy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Another factor could be Club Bing. They allow you to earn prizes by playing their games. The games? They are games that do searches on bing.com. So for instance, every word you enter into a crossword puzzle gets a search on bing. If you click for a clue, it does another search. One game easily makes 45 searches or more even if you don't use any hints. Because of the prizes, people are always finding ways to set up bots on multiple accounts to try to get more and more points. Even if Microsoft catches them and invalidates their points, I imagine the searches done still count toward how often Bing is used. It doesn't matter that no one bothers to look at the search results (except briefly if they need a clue).

    4. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by sopssa · · Score: 1

      Goolge has the simplicity aspect right.

      I *really* hate Google for destroying the right-click copy-link-location. Maybe I'll change to Bing, it does not do that.

      This is because they want the data on which result you click. What, you though they didn't do that? When you're clicking any Google link, theres subsequent javascript request being sent to Google on what link you clicked. Completely invisible for user, but good data for Google.

    5. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by lorenlal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The other thing that bothers me about the marketshare numbers is that Microsoft is working the Bing advertising to a point where I can't avoid seeing it. I also notice that somehow Bing seems to be popping up in places that I didn't even think they could. Notice what's powering the map on that page?

      Add in the $500 Bing agreement with Verizon.

      Add in the fact that Bing is really doing well taking share from their partner.

      To me, it boils down to this: I don't trust many people.

      I hardly trust Google, but I have yet to see them engage in practices where they abuse their market share. Please correct me if I've missed something.

      I know what Microsoft does when they dominate market share... And right now, this product is gaining market share because MS is pouring money into it at a pace that they can't intend on maintaining. I don't know what their plan is, but I have a feeling that this one's not following the "embrace" part of their normal business model. I can't wait to see what they do once Bing closes in on 30% (assuming it keeps gaining). My guess is that they'll find a way to blend it with the desktop OS, and "integrate" it with the desktop search. I'm also sure that desktop search will extend to the general web.

    6. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      google? How about buying up other companies (including competitors/potential competitors) and killing off their products?

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    7. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right-click copy/paste link? That still works for me but then again I have *.google.com in the IE7 Restricted Sites zone so I'm not running any JavaScript stuff. Tested this using a Google search for... google. Tried right-clicking several of the links on the first two pages and I could copy the text from the Properties dialog box.

    8. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I like competition as much as the next guy.

      Hi, I'm the next guy.

      Competition is generally good, but in this business there's not enough of it to make it all that great.

      Microsoft sucks. Security has always been a problem, but the thing about them that bugs me the most is that I can't but a nice (17") laptop without also buying a license for an OS I'm not even going to use.

      Apple sucks. I could go on and on about how much they suck, but I'll be brief. The worst thing about them is that they get away with more crap than Microsoft, thanks to their slick marketing campaign.

      Google sucks. Well, sort of. Their search engine is great, and they seem to have a lot of offerings, but thanks to the 'Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer', I've always been a little suspicious of any of their software products.

    9. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by linumax · · Score: 2, Informative

      This concern was also raised here. The behavior appears to be browser dependent. I get the proper URL in clipboard using Chrome/Safari/Opera but the modified Google URL using Firefox.

    10. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by icebraining · · Score: 3, Informative
    11. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see them engage in practices where they abuse their market share.

      People often say this. What's the matter with you? Privacy not an issue to you? Even if you don't care if your medical records and employment histories were publicly available, surely the endless stream of acquisitions should alarm you. Google is very quickly becoming the hub of a monoculture far larger than anything Microsoft could ever achieve.

      --
      I hate printers.
    12. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by schnablebg · · Score: 1

      The map on weather.com has been Live (now Bing) maps for as long as I can remember.

    13. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Em+Ellel · · Score: 1

      I *really* hate Google for destroying the right-click copy-link-location. Maybe I'll change to Bing, it does not do that.

      Erm, ok, I'll bite - how so? I have no problems doing "copy link location" on Google or for that matter on Bing. If you are on a Mac, you might have to hold one of the keyboard modifier buttons to "right click" - but that's hardly Google's fault.

      -Em

      --
      RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
    14. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? It may be my browser, but seamonkey has a copy link location, and it doesn't do anything different from any other website.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    15. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a simple redirect, no javascript needed.

    16. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Em+Ellel · · Score: 1

      This concern was also raised here. The behavior appears to be browser dependent. I get the proper URL in clipboard using Chrome/Safari/Opera but the modified Google URL using Firefox.

      Sounds like maybe it was either a temporary issue or FUD. Works fine for me on FF. Or maybe original reporter have some ad-ware on their machine.

      -Em

      --
      RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
    17. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by TeXMaster · · Score: 1

      Goolge has the simplicity aspect right.

      I *really* hate Google for destroying the right-click copy-link-location. Maybe I'll change to Bing, it does not do that.

      What's that? right-click copy-link-address works perfectly for me on Google search links in Opera

      --
      "I'm never quite so stupid as when I'm being smart" (Linus van Pelt)
    18. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by blai · · Score: 1

      Others would think of doing that with an onclick event, not a href attribute containing javascript.

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    19. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by hairyfeet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well to add my exp I have just tried it using Firefox on both WinXP and Windows 7 HP x64, and both seem to be working fine. The only search where I noted the supposed behavior was when I did some Google shopping for Zoom Bass Pedals (my old one is just about had it and I love their fat compression) and that is to be expected since it IS Google shopping.

      I tried the same shopping search on Yahoo and found the same redirect behavior. So maybe the person was shopping via Google? Because I just couldn't get the redirect behavior on standard results from either search engine.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    20. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by derGoldstein · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ditto. Whenever I hear (usually reported somewhere) that google is pushing something, or they've added new features/options, I'm surprised even though I used it almost exclusively. This goes for youtube and google news as well. They'll occasionally throw something on one of the front pages, even though most users that are even moderately experienced will dispense with those entry/landing pages as soon as they figure out how. The same goes for Wikipedia -- if I want to find something, I'll just prefix the search term with "wikipedia", I won't actually go to wikipedia.org. I didn't know where *was* a beta interface until someone mentioned it to me (though to be fair, there's a small "try beta" link on every wikipedia page now).

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    21. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hardly trust Google, but I have yet to see them engage in practices where they abuse their market share. Please correct me if I've missed something.

      They are many complaints about their treatment of their ad clients and hosts. Do a search for Google at theregister.co.uk (better do a google search of the site, as their built in search is poor) and you'll see lots of examples of abusing their market position.

    22. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by derGoldstein · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Have you looked over the hacks that Google Analytics uses? You think that click tracking is an issue? They make the browser effectively "watch you back" with that stuff. If you go over the source, you'll see a nice sliding scale of technology: The first options are always basic HTML, often with deprecated tags, for old/slow machines. As you progress upwards, more and more layers of interface interaction are added, along with huge amounts of data collection. After browsing through enough of their page sources, I'm starting to think that the privacy nuts aren't as nuts as I used to think.
      If you want to try this yourself, download Firebug, and add a bunch of monitoring add-ons to it. You'll be amazed at how "chatty" google pages are.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    23. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pro tip: Zoloft doesn't suck.

    24. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by denmarkw00t · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I started noticing this as I link my friends to things quite often, and its annoying. So, what do you do? Double-click the plain-text URL under the result, Ctrl+C and Ctrl+P - ta da! And if I'm not sharing links, I'm using Google to go to Wikipedia or look up code references. I certainly don't go to or xxxxxxxx.xxx from Google, I know those URLs by heart.

      As much as I don't care for their data mining business, I don't care who knows that I'm fervently trying to find that Gizmodo article I read five days ago.

    25. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Grey+Ninja · · Score: 1

      Yes, and it makes us all nervous. But we've yet to see them really abuse the knowledge.

    26. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The worst was then Jay Leno did a skit on his show about using Bing image search. It was the most lame product placement. It was so cheesy even if Bing was good I wouldn't want to use it after such a lame placement. Of course Apple pays for placement in so many places when you watch TV you would think the world is 90% Apple desktops. Screw em all, I can't wait for Baidu to launch an English language search.

    27. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Random5 · · Score: 1

      Works fine for me, but I'm using chrome. Wait, works in IE too... WTF are you talking about???

    28. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by justleavealonemmmkay · · Score: 1

      google recently started suggesting non exact matches and giving them a high rank too. I really hate them for that.

    29. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by gabba_gabba_hey · · Score: 1

      Hmm, just to add to the other replies to this, I don't see that here in FF either.

      "Copy Link Location" works as it should. I see there is an onClick event registered on all of the links that sends some data back to google (which I would expect for their data mining) but as far as copying the url and pasting it elsewhere, it works fine.

    30. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      I never see either Bing's or Google's homepage. I just search using my browsers search bar. Actually I was surprised to see Google's fade-in homepage manually after friend told about it.

      On Firefox, the search text will remain in your search bar after you press enter. I really hate this behaviour, because it shows the next person my browsing history. So I often press CTRL-K, then press enter and view the home page.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    31. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by darthflo · · Score: 1

      I could never really figure out a pattern when Google would distort the links and when it wouldn't, but trusting them to look over live code in their main app, I'm guessing this may be browser-dependent. If the client is a Version of Firefox with the HREF PING "feature", they might make use of that; if the client is known to run JavaScript, onclick is the way to go and finally, if none of the others apply, the links are rewritten to go through google.com/url.

      Also, did you really see an a href attribute containing javascript in your Google search results? The whole idea sounds too dumb for Google to me.

    32. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by derGoldstein · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      How the hell is this "trolling"?? The last line in that post literally instructs you on how to see this for yourself. Nice modding.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    33. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by MrMr · · Score: 1

      That's odd, I still get those. They're rubbish links running through the Google spyware-system, but they are there.
      For instance my first hit for Bing is: '....google.../url?sa=t&source=web&ct=res&cd=1&ved=0CAcQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bing.com%2F&ei=8xRYS-yCOsfx-QbzpImJBA&usg=AFQjCNH_kUbuWB-3hS1tAW84OLUSYqT8MQ'

    34. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by bjourne · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you are talking about the green address line, then that is more often than not truncated in some way. The only (simple, non-technical) way to get the address is to click the link, let the page load and copy the url from the address bar.

    35. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Marcx77 · · Score: 0

      You could also bypass the search bar by using shortcuts. I've set up my Firefox with 'g' as a keyword for the search bar on the Google homepage. So when I want to search something, I hit alt-d, g, , . No mouse or page load required, thus fast as hell.

    36. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      You can clear the search area *after* you search.

      But I agree it would make more sense for the search to clear out after you do it.

    37. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by pydev · · Score: 1

      Many people find that behavior useful, which is why it's the default.

      There's an extension that changes that behavior and clears the search right away.

    38. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      I did some searching on how to configure this, because it's really useful. For others: the following URL gives good info: http://www.techzilo.com/search-google-address-bar-firefox-google-chrome/

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    39. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by michaelhood · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you're logged in and have web history disabled, you should never see this sort of behavior.. drove me nuts until I figured that out. If you're logged out I'm not sure what the situation is, I'm always logged in for gmail.

    40. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by michaelhood · · Score: 1

      That's odd, I still get those. They're rubbish links running through the Google spyware-system, but they are there.

      For instance my first hit for Bing is:
      '....google.../url?sa=t&source=web&ct=res&cd=1&ved=0CAcQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bing.com%2F&ei=8xRYS-yCOsfx-QbzpImJBA&usg=AFQjCNH_kUbuWB-3hS1tAW84OLUSYqT8MQ'

      https://www.google.com/history/edit

      Clear your web history and it should pause it. That will stop this behavior..

    41. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by MrMr · · Score: 1

      That doesn't help for me: google tells me the history is switched off, but the link that shows 'www.bing.com' on the first mouse-over still copies as a link to a google server.

    42. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      you can just prefix it with "wiki" it has the same effect and takes less time/is less prone to typos

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    43. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      > I really don't like the super-heavy home page with the ginormous image. It's cool once but I just can't have that for a page I pull up so often...
      > even if cached, the image is just too annoying over time.

      The image is loaded dyamically using javascript after the page has already loaded and rendered. It therefore doesn't actually delay when the page becomes usable for searching. The only irritaing thing is that the image always has a different name, so can't adblock it if you don't like it appearing.

    44. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by nmg196 · · Score: 2, Informative

      > When you're clicking any Google link, theres subsequent javascript request being sent to Google on what link you clicked

      Nope. That's not even possible. Once you've gone to another site, no javascript events on the original site can fire. It's not even physically possible. Don't make stuff up please. They could do it using the Google Toolbar, but not using javascript. The closes thing they do is to use a 302 http header redirect, but again, that's got nothing to do with javascript.

    45. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the fox gets to sleep in the henhouse until the morning the farmer wakes up and all his chickens are gone?

    46. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      Yes, for most people this is useful behavior. There are a couple of extensions to clear the search field after pressing enter, but they have not been maintained, as far as I can see.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    47. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      im all over white backgrounds, its too corporate, black backgrounds are more hip oldschool style. and easier on the eyes at night time.

      Common google, do a time based CSS for us geeks.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    48. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by RedK · · Score: 1

      It's probably people that use Firefox and NoScript together that get the redirect URL instead of the direct URL. If you look at the source of the page, the "href" for the links is the proper URL and it's through Javascript that the redirection is done when you click on it. With NoScript active for google.com, they have no choice but to make the "href" the redirect URL so they still get the stats.

      So do yourself a favor if you really need the feature, allow javascript on google.com.

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    49. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by konohitowa · · Score: 1

      I personally found this interesting: http://siteanalytics.compete.com/bing.com/

      Essentially 50 million instant, unique visitors at launch with little growth since. Granted, this doesn't appear to have December numbers in it, and I can't attest to the accuracy or inaccuracy of Compete -- but it still made for an interesting data point.

    50. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by lorenlal · · Score: 1

      What's the matter with you? Privacy not an issue to you?

      Many things, and privacy is an issue to me. I also understand that the web is not a place where privacy really exists. Anyone who runs a mail server, a search engine, and who spiders the web has access to all the information I could ever produce.

      Even if you don't care if your medical records and employment histories were publicly available, surely the endless stream of acquisitions should alarm you. Google is very quickly becoming the hub of a monoculture far larger than anything Microsoft could ever achieve.

      I don't believe that Google will get my medical records... Unless I import them and hand them over. I certainly don't plan on doing that.

      I also do not see anything about Google storing my employment history. BTW - Since I throw that into my resume, I already assume that some search engine has that anyway.

      And endless strings of acquisitions, on their own, are not untrustworthy. It's what they do with those products. A poster above yours mentions "buying competitors/potential competitors" and "killing them off." That would certainly be a problem to me, and I'd love to see some cases.

    51. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if you don't care if your medical records...were publicly available

      Is it safe to assume that you aren't just spreading FUD, and that you are going to back that up with a citation?

    52. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by ErroneousBee · · Score: 1

      Except its not a fox, its a dog. Foxes have a known history of abusing henhouse market share, dogs and google dont, whereas Steve Ballmer can often be found with feathers in his teeth.

      I think this would have gone better if we had started with a car analogy.

      --
      **TODO** Steal someone elses sig.
    53. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      Add in the $500 Bing agreement with Verizon.

      $500?? A true bargain!

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    54. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      <=== His point.
      <=== You.

    55. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because there are no automated services hitting Google that get reported in their statistics ~

    56. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by trapnest · · Score: 1

      Is is bad I prefix it with "wikiped"?
      Related - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOvglodUIcA

    57. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by trapnest · · Score: 1

      That's the problem. If I want to right click and get a link I can't get just the url.
      For example, if I search "Hello kitty":
      The first result is for sanrio.com, I right click and click Copy Link Address in Chrome,
      Instead of getting just the url for sanrio.com I get... oh. .....

      It seems they've changed that behavior...

    58. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by trapnest · · Score: 1

      I can report that google used to do this for all of their results, but that has changed it seems.

    59. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      What?? Right click works, I just tested it. You can copy the link location, open in a new tab/window, copy text... What are you talking about, and who are you trying to troll?

      Me, I guess. You got me. IHBT.

    60. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny that you add "wikipedia" to your search terms. I do as well, except all you need to add is "wiki" and it almost always works...

    61. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      Just block bing using a firewall? But people will use what they will use. Some like Google, some like Bing, and some like AltaVista.

    62. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by theJML · · Score: 1

      Is this a windows thing, because it works perfectly in firefox for linux. And it works in lynx/elinks... (couldn't test it on IE as I'm not about to try to put that on my Ubuntu machine here at work and it's not on my iPhone (thankfully))

      --
      -=JML=-
    63. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      I just use the search engines area on the right. I have it setup to open a new tab on enter so I go straight to the results of whatever engine (site) I chose.

    64. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      Don't use Chrome?

    65. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by eihab · · Score: 1

      The closes thing they do is to use a 302 http header redirect, but again, that's got nothing to do with javascript.

      Wrong. Google attaches an OnMouseDown event to all the links on the search results page, which means even if you right click on a link that event fires and Google knows you right clicked on it.

      The function that handles that event creates a new image object that has an src (loads from) www.google.com/url?sa=T&source=...&oi=..&cad=.. ...

      Everything after the /url part of the image are pairs of key/value tokens. So the script running at /url gets:
      Sa = T
      source = ...
      etc.

      These key/value pairs basically contain what search terms you used, which link you clicked on, etc. And since the request is on google.com the /url script gets your cookies for Google too so it knows who you are.

      This is basically what webmasters did back in the day with transparent 1 pixel images for web analysis tracking, only in this case the image is never embedded in the document or even used, its object is generated on the fly using Javascript and the /url script never even returns anything when your browser tries to request the image, just a HTTP 204 (no content).

      Bing seems to have an OnMouseDown event too, so I'm assuming it's doing something similar. I didn't dig into the code though.

      --
      If you can't mod them join them.
    66. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Unless, as frequently happens to me, I do a search, then realize I'm not getting good results, and modify the search. If the search goes away, I've got to type it in again; if not, I modify and go.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    67. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Nope. That's not even possible. Once you've gone to another site, no javascript events on the original site can fire. It's not even physically possible. Don't make stuff up please.

      They do it before the navigation takes place. The way it is done is rather hideous - they attach a handler for onmousedown event for all result links, so when you start clicking (but before the browser treats it as a navigation request), they replace the value of href attribute (which is normally the plain target URL) with the one that redirects the request through a Google server. That server registers your click, and then responds with a redirect to an actual URL.

      If you open any Google results page in Firefox, right-click on a result link, and select "Inspect Element", you'll see the onmousedown script in DOM inspector window. It also shows up if you right-click a link and do "Copy Link Address" (but only in FF).

      For what's it worth, Bing seems to be doing the same thing.

    68. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by schon · · Score: 1

      Three options - either use a bookmarklet to strip the redirects; install the Mozilla Googlebar, which has an option to remove the redirects; or use GreaseMonkey to do it (I'd bet there's already a GM script somewhere to do this.)

      My bookmarklet to remove redirects looks like this:

      javascript:(function(){var%20k,x,t,i,j,p;%20for(k=0;x=document.links[k];k++){t=x.href.replace(/[%]3A/ig,':').replace(/[%]2f/ig,'/');i=t.lastIndexOf('http');if(i>0){%20t=t.substring(i);%20j=t.indexOf('&');%20if(j>0)t=t.substring(0,j);%20p=/https?\:\/\/[^\s]*[^.,;'">\s\)\]]/.exec(unescape(t));%20if(p)%20x.href=p[0];%20}%20else%20if%20(x.onmouseover&&x.onmouseout){x.onmouseover();%20if%20(window.status%20&&%20window.status.indexOf('://')!=-1)x.href=window.status;%20x.onmouseout();%20}%20x.onmouseover=null;%20x.onmouseout=null;%20}})();

    69. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by Mashdar · · Score: 1

      Whenever I hear (usually reported somewhere) that google is pushing something, or they've added new features/options, I'm surprised even though I used it almost exclusively.

      This is exactly what I love about Google, and exactly why I have used facebook.com only twice this year. Every time I log in to facebook.com all of the menus have changed... And some "features" have been added to make ninja-zombie-robots spam me with 100 more things on an icon-driven list of drivel. I just want my damned friends list and some photos. bring back thefacebook.com!

    70. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Nice theory, except that I had NoScript disabled for those sites. I think more likely they are using a redirect on the shopping site to see what kind of numbers they are getting for shopping, probably so they can set ad revenue. But I have NoScript disabled for both Google and Yahoo shopping and am still seeing the redirect, and I also tried the same searches from my oldest boy's Opera. Same result with redirect, so it has to be a shopping thing since I am not using privoxy or anything that would interfere with Opera.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    71. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      This happens at least with Ubuntu 9.10 and www.google.fi with the cookies I happen to have.

      For certain.

    72. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Well you won't get away from mousedown on Bing. Here's what their link consists of:

      <h3><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie" onmousedown="return si_T('&amp;ID=SERP,119.1')"><strong>Pie</strong> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</a></h3>

    73. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      BTW, I'm aware you mentioned it but you didn't really go into and your post is tl;dr so I made it clearer for others.

    74. Re:Marketshare gains misleading... by michaelhood · · Score: 1

      Try enabling web history and then clearing & disabling it.

  5. as the old saying goes by stimpleton · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As the old saying goes...Adversity makes strange bed fellows.

    --

    In post Patriot Act America, the library books scan you.
  6. Will you finally own up to Apple's Evil? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 0, Troll

    When will you Microsoft haters finally recognize that Apple does just as much sneaky crap as Microsoft... The difference is that Apple gets away with it.

    So lets get this straight...

    Apple will now force me to use BING, rather than Google?

    Where are all of the EU Anti Trust whiners/MS haters now?

    1. Re:Will you finally own up to Apple's Evil? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The thing I love about this story, in the way that I love to see a brawl break out in the stands, is that while Microsoft aficionados - or even tolerators - are a distinct minority in Slashdot, Apple fans and Google fans are about equal in representation here. So this is a perfect wedge story. (Grabs popcorn.)

      For myself, I use Google Products and Microsoft Office on Mac OS X 10.6 on my MacBook Pro, running Windows 7 in Parallels and bootcamping to play games. I like open source stuff when I can use, too (scientific and data viz/analysis software especially - yay, R.) So, I don't have a dog in this fight. Or, I have 3 dogs. That all smell. I do like the Google dog just a little better than the others, though.

    2. Re:Will you finally own up to Apple's Evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly - now stop hogging the popcorn!

  7. Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Apple is also working on ways to manage ad placement on its mobile devices"

    What the hell is that line about. Apple better not be spamming the fuck out fo me when i'm paying for their fucking devices and software AND cell service.

    FUCK YOU APPLE.. Dont even try it.

    1. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by DirtyCanuck · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The million dollar question is would you still object if you had a reduced bill?

      Discounting phone bills in exchange for AD space is a quick way to have everybody consider it.

      They can make those losses back with ad revenue and data mining ;)

    2. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      someone needs decaf, stat!

    3. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by binaryspiral · · Score: 1

      Here's your million dollars - no.

      How much ad revenue would they make on me, you, or the average schmoe? A few bucks at the most per month? Hardly justifies giving up my screen and bandwidth for a token discount on an outrageously expensive cell phone bill.

    4. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Cool your jets, seriously. They are most likely talking about advertising inside of free applications from the iTunes store. Don't like it? don't use the app, or spend $2 or $3 for the "full" (non-ad-supported) version. There was even talk about Apple competing with Google to purchase "Admob" at one point, a company that does a very significant portion of advertising for the free games on the itunes store.

      http://precursorblog.com/content/whyhow-did-google-outbid-apple-admob-schmidt-google-apple-not-primary-competitors

    5. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by TrancePhreak · · Score: 2, Informative

      Don't forget that the AT&T data plans are not unlimited. They'd likely be seeping off your available data usage.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    6. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by arose · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Has it actually ever worked that way when ads get introduced to a previously ad free service? It sure seems to gravitate to 'free money' instead of 'pass along the savings'.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    7. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by derGoldstein · · Score: 4, Funny

      Getting an iPhone is like walking into a cool, refreshing pond, which just happens to be full of leeches. You'll be comfortable as long as your body can generate blood fast enough.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    8. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Discounting phone bills in exchange for AD space is a quick way to have everybody consider it.

      eMachines has done this for computers, and just look at the great reputation they have now. ePhones can do the same for cell phones. Kudos for the idea, I don't see what could possibly go wrong.

      - Steve Jobs

    9. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Well, they'll ease the concept into you gently - imagery fully intended - by spamming you with directions to the nearest Starbucks. Or to the one next door if you're already in one. Which you will be.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    10. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by MrMickS · · Score: 1

      Erm. How about Google. Maybe people can't remember that far back but initially Google was just a search engine. Even now the ads aren't bold and brash, they appear to be just more results. Done right there is no reason why unobtrusive, but relevant, ads can't be placed in search results on the iPhone.

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    11. Re:Apple to force ads on the iPhone?! WHAT? by arose · · Score: 1

      You might have a point if google had been subscription service. However I don't consider things that go from a paid service to free to be a good example as it changes the dynamic completely.

      In short, I'm wondering if there is a service that permanently lowered it's rates after introducing ads.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
  8. And here I'm trying to get it off my Blackberry by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1
    It showed up after a software update, and for some reason doesn't have an entry in the Applications menu (where I can easily remove Google and other 3rd party apps if I want).

    What is really interesting about Bing on the Blackberry anyway if I accidently select it it (after a long time) loads a screen asking me if I agree to the EULA. I click the "I do not agree" button.

    It loads anyway.

    It's like a shoe that fits so tightly that I can't get it off my foot (maybe that was what Jerry was talking to Bill about?).

    1. Re:And here I'm trying to get it off my Blackberry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time for Opera Mini?

    2. Re:And here I'm trying to get it off my Blackberry by aplusjimages · · Score: 1

      Same here. Verizon pushed Bing onto my phone as well. I couldn't see where to delete it as well. I clicked on it as well just to see it and it automatically changed my home page and won't let me change it to anything else but Bing. Great.

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
  9. Re:Default but still switchable actually helps goo by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You are delusional. Most users do not switch their defaults. Most users do not hear about these kinds of decisions at all. And Google is an ad company. Not have Google be the default engine isn't a shot-across-the-bow, it's pissing in their Corn Flakes.

  10. Re:My old chess coach: "Move the pawn!" by Foredecker · · Score: 0

    Dude, Microsoft is never a pawn. We screw up from time to time, but the pawn? Nope, not in any scenario.

    --
    Jibe!
  11. Microsoft still way behind. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    What makes Google special isn't just its web search, it's the total value proposition. That little series of links across the top of the page. I can type a phrase and search the web. If that doesn't turn up what I want, I can just click "Images." Then "News." Then "Scholar." Then "Maps." I can search in a variety of well-sandboxed, semantically contextualized datasets for the same phrase, rapidly, without re-typing it, and at a single source.

    Beyond just searching, I have a single iPhone app (Google) that lets me manage documents, my email, and my searching all with a single interface and within a single authentication context, rapidly and a fairly solid history of reliability and predictability.

    When I can do all that with Bing, and with a site design that scales well from tiny devices to full-on desktops, let me know.

    Until then, I believe Google's basic business model is fairly secure. Bing? Bing just just web search for full-fledged personal computers. Sure, that's what made Google to begin with, but it's actually a tiny part of the total value proposition that Google represents today.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by jim_v2000 · · Score: 2, Informative

      >That little series of links across the top of the page.

      Bing has those.

      >lets me manage documents, my email, and my searching all with a single interface

      If you log into Bing, you also log into Windows Live, which gives you access to Email, Calendars, your 25GB SkyDrive, and (coming soon) online office apps. As far as being able to do those from the iPhone...I would expect to see that soon, if not already. There is a Bing app, but I don't know exactly what it does.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    2. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by alexandre_ganso · · Score: 2, Informative

      You mean, hotmail (or windows live mail now, whatever it is called, it's the same one as 1995)? That crap slow as hell and that works poorly even on IE8?

    3. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      You mean, hotmail (or windows live mail now, whatever it is called, it's the same one as 1995)?

      No, it's not the same as from 1995. It's been Web 2.0'd.

      It got worse.

    4. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      If you log into Bing,

      Why would I possibly want to log into a search engine? Logging in is an inconvenience for paid services or personal services, neither of which I want in a search engine.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    5. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Have you actually used it recently? Seems pretty clean and quick to me. But then again, I use Gmail mostly, and even then, I use the Windows Live Mail desktop client to access all my email accounts...so I don't pay much attention to the web front-ends.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    6. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      I was comparing to Google's services, such as email and calendars, troll. Obviously you don't have to log into Bing or Google to just do a search.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    7. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by alexandre_ganso · · Score: 1

      Yes, I tried it after I got replied here.

      I don't have this windows live mail desktop client. I used it on the web. And I agree with the post from SpeZek. It got worse indeed. It is slow as hell, I can't find a way to use it with the keyboard, I can't mark several messages most of the time, as if I mistake a small checkbox, every other selected mail is lost.

      And:

      Oh my god, it's full of spam!

      It worse than yahoo and WAY worse than gmail.

      Tried it on firefox and safari, though.

    8. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      You went here: http://mail.live.com/?

      It's not slow at all...but maybe that's because I'm using Chrome. It's also a really clean UI. But yeah, their spam filtering sucks.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    9. Re:Microsoft still way behind. by alexandre_ganso · · Score: 1

      Yes. I tried. And you made me waste my time with that crap again, now no chrome!

      I still cannot see messages' subjects. I still cannot select the messages right, and they still think I need viagra!

      I have to confirm about everything pretty much like vista. Don't they have an antivirus online? I would recommend them clamav.

  12. Human sacrifice by RevWaldo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Apple and Microsoft working together - mass hysteria!

    1. Re:Human sacrifice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple gets money, Microsoft gets exposure, Google gets a teeny bit of competition. Big deal...

      As long as Bing isn't the exclusive search engine, who cares?

      Nothing here... keep searching for a real story.

    2. Re:Human sacrifice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can't wait to see macheads arguing on /. that Microsoft makes a better search engine than Google. Golden stuff.

  13. If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple should realize that once MS comes on strong with Bing in this space, that they will use it on their phone. The issue here is that MS is composed of total idiots, HOWEVER, they like to throw money and their already established monopolies at other ones. As such, MS will go after Apple's iphone. And they will slowly eat away at them. OTH, if Apple either works with a different company, or even with Google, they will still remain the leader.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but I think that you are misreading this. The more likely scenario is that Microsoft is enlisting Apple's help in its battle against everything Google. Apple has been a niche market player for most of its existence and it wasn't until relatively recently, with the development of the iPod and later the iPhone, that Apple captured a franchise position in a new market (namely mobile audio and video distribution). Google, on the other hand, is the biggest threat that Microsoft has faced since its founding and it has wasted no time in moving aggressively against both Microsoft and Apple, once Erich Schmidt left the board (that was the final sign that a war was brewing), by attacking their established franchises. In the case of Microsoft it is Google apps and Chrome OS while for Apple it is Android and the Google phone. Microsoft benefits more from having Apple as an ally in the fight against Google rather than attacking Apple with Windows Mobile, which isn't a serious contender anyway, while Google delivers a body blow to Windows and Office. No, Microsoft and Apple will set aside their differences, for now, to address the challenge of Google.

    2. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The issue here is that MS is composed of total idiots

      And yet, they are one of the computer industry's biggest players, and their software is on the vast majority of desktop machines. Even if you believe it's all because of anti-competitive practices and shady business deals, that still points at them being anything but total idiots.

    3. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      So was Al Capone and his minons bright? Are the gangs of today bright? When you are FORCED to use illegal means to acquire and hold a monopoly, and to throw 10000x more money at competitor, then you are composed of idiots. Had MS been composed of brilliant ppl, then they would not have been forced to be illegal or to have to outspend their competitors by that amount.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    4. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah thank you WindBourne! With those wise words, I can't imagine why you are not a top executive at any of these companies!

    5. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've given reasons why Microsoft would court Apple to work against Google, but not why Apple would go along with MS's offers.

      IMO, Apple is far better off with two competitors than one (especially when the one is MS). Google is growing at MS's expense while creating new ways for Apple to grow at MS's expense. Should Google actually eclipse MS, that might be the time where Apple would shift alliances, but right now Google has only taken the first steps towards success; its attacks against MS dominance are all in the early stages. And things that Google makes that outclass MS software AND run on Apple systems are overwhelmingly to Apple's benefit, because before that the 'killer apps' were things that only worked in Windows, which created and maintained huge barriers to switching to Apple. The Windows->Google-on-Mac->Apple path is an easier one for Apple to thrive in than the direct Windows->Apple path, since that middle step can do the hard part of getting you into MacOS. Even a Windows->Chrome->Google-on-Mac->Apple path works.

      The same logic applies to the hardware side also; Google's not particularly attacking Apple so much as attacking the much larger (in the phone industry) companies; the iphone has great publicity but hasn't grabbed much of the market. Google's growth there can, again, be at everyone else's expense and open the path for Apple's continued growth. Any deal Google makes is an opportunity for Apple to demand the same good deal, for example.

    6. Re:If so, Apple is hurting themselves more by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      You've given reasons why Microsoft would court Apple to work against Google, but not why Apple would go along with MS's offers.

      Apple would go along with Microsoft because the Android OS and Google phone represent a much more serious competitive threat to iPhone than Windows Mobile does. Apple should cooperate with Microsoft if that cooperation improves the competitiveness of iPhone vis-a-vis Android more than it helps Windows Mobile become a viable competitor. Microsoft hasn't shown much interest lately in improving Windows Mobile (that might change, but not quickly); preferring instead to put resources into Bing and shoring up the Windows and Office franchises.

      Google is growing at MS's expense while creating new ways for Apple to grow at MS's expense.

      Google is competing directly with Apple more and more these days and when it comes to mobile computing Google and Apple are basically on a collision course in the mobile device markets. As I have already said, the day that Eric Schmidt left Apple's Board of Directors was the confirmation that Google and Apple are now competitors; not partners.

      To use an analogy, I would compare this to the present geopolitical situation in Pakistan. The classic arch-enemy of Pakistan has been India (as Microsoft has classically been the arch-enemy of Apple). However many experts feel that Pakistan is underestimating the threat posed by the Taliban by continuing to focus their attention on India, which is not as pressing a problem as the Taliban. In a similar fashion, it would be a mistake IMHO for Apple to underestimate Google and mistake them for a partner rather than a competitor.

      The Windows->Google-on-Mac->Apple path is an easier one for Apple to thrive in than the direct Windows->Apple path

      And yet Apple has classically resisted third-party attempts to marginalize core Apple software packages because it is the total "package" (hardware + software) that constitutes the premium experience that Apple charges premium prices for. If Google apps compete effectively with Quicktime, iWork, GargageBand, etc...it lessens the reasons to buy an expensive Apple product when one could get the same Google apps on a cheaper commodity PC. Reducing barriers to "switching" is a two-edged sword for Apple. If Google succeeds in "replacing" premium apps on MacOS then Apple's pricing model is in trouble.

      Google's not particularly attacking Apple so much as attacking the much larger (in the phone industry) companies; the iphone has great publicity but hasn't grabbed much of the market. Google's growth there can, again, be at everyone else's expense and open the path for Apple's continued growth.

      The more that the iPhone edges out other competing phones and divides up the market between itself and the Android phones, the more that iPhone will find itself being targeted by Android competitors. The iPhone has more ground to loose in the phone market because it is already wildly popular. Thus, new iPhone customers must be convinced that iPhone is a better choice than a Blackberry or the new slate of competing Android phones; especially the Motorola Droid on Verizon.

      Any deal Google makes is an opportunity for Apple to demand the same good deal, for example.

      It is doubtful that Google will be able to make as good of a deal as Apple did with AT&T; especially on Verizon. Steve Jobs has a reputation as a very shrewd negotiator (when he chooses to negotiate rather than directly compete) and it isn't clear, at least to outsiders, that any particular individual at Google is his equal in that department.

  14. Micro$oft owns apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since the longest time, so no surprise here. Feel free to do some fact checking.

    1. Re:Micro$oft owns apple by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      since the longest time, so no surprise here. Feel free to do some fact checking.

      [Citation needed]

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    2. Re:Micro$oft owns apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You lazy SOB, here's the linky.

    3. Re:Micro$oft owns apple by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      A thirteen year old agreement (which has since expired) to develop software for the Mac is hardly what could be called "ownership." Nor is that $150 million in non-voting stock, which Microsoft sold long ago for a tidy profit.

      I own a staggering fourteen shares of AAPL; that's nowhere near the amount that MS owned but because mine is real voting stock, I actually have more control over the destiny of Apple than Microsoft ever did.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
  15. Re:Default but still switchable actually helps goo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does Google pay Mozilla tens of millions per year for default placement in Firefox then?

    I think you need to think about this a little more.

  16. ~90% desktop usershare makes M$ a pawn? by anglophobe_0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Whoever wrote that is obviously an apple fanboi.

  17. Microsoft scared or what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft (Stev Ballmer) must be really scared of Googles Android phones. First they have Verizon push a unwanted "upgrade" to Verizons BlackBerry users to set Bing as there only search engine choice. Now this. Go figure. I'm sure glad I own my phone.

    Own your phone: http://us.direct.openmoko.com/

    1. Re:Microsoft scared or what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the..

      That is the ugliest piece of shit I've ever seen. I guess it was designed by the same people who do the ugly linux user interfaces.

      No thanks, I'll keep my iPhone.

  18. The editors must use Bing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since they ran basically the same story three days ago.

  19. More like a whore by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    No, no, not what you think, more like "Who're we dealing with today"

    You know, like Where do you want to go today. Really.

    P.S. And not because of the earlier item re MS siding with AT&T vs. Tivo.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  20. One person .... ??? by kWahab · · Score: 1

    'Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy,' says ONE person familiar with Apple's thinking. 'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.'"

    I wonder who it is ?

    1. Re:One person .... ??? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      'Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy,' says ONE person familiar with Apple's thinking. 'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.'

      "I wonder who it is ?

      Microsoft is a "pawn" in this battle in the same way as the US was a pawn in the Iraq-Iran war. The US was not a combatant, but this did not make them Iraq's bitch. In fact it was quite the opposite and the same is true with most of MS's deals historically, unless you're bigger and smarter then MS you'll end up as their bitch, not even IBM could avoid this... twice.

      As for the war, it seems to be a little one sided with Apple doing all the fighting. Apple is switching to Bing, Apple de-listing/rejecting Google applications. Google on the other hand has not attacked Apple, Google is focusing on it's core offerings (Search, Advertising, Android and so forth) as well as branching out into new ones like Retail (the Nexus one, and yes they need to get more experience at selling fast) but not actually attacking Apple.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    2. Re:One person .... ??? by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      I thought Google's core offerings were search and ads. The smartphone platform that is seen as the biggest threat to the iPhone is still a bit too recent for me to consider it a core offering. And it also nicely illustrates how Google is moving in on Apple's territory. And Google's Something One smartphone is a very direct attack on one of Apple's most profitable markets.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    3. Re:One person .... ??? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I thought Google's core offerings were search and ads.

      Sofware development and imagery are other core offerings. Google have a sizable stake in GeoEye(satellite imagery), Android counts as software development. Until now Google's only customer for development is Google, but this does not exclude it from being a core offering.

      One smartphone is a very direct attack on one of Apple's most profitable markets.

      Competition is not an attack.

      This in no way inhibits or seeks to inhibit Apple. When a company loses to fair competition it is because that company could not compete, not because it was under attack. In this way Google's entry into the phone market is not an attack any more then Apple's entry was an attack onto Nokia et al.

      Fair competition is akin to natural selection, being killed in a war is artificial selection. Entirely different beasties.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  21. 'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.' by NoPantsJim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure. The corporation with the $271.6 billion market cap is the pawn in the battle between two corps with market caps around $190 billion. That makes sense.

    1. Re:'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.' by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      More details on the various players here.

    2. Re:'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a big freakin' pawn.

    3. Re:'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.' by tokul · · Score: 1

      The corporation with the $271.6 billion market cap is the pawn in the battle between two corps with market caps around $190 billion. That makes sense.

      It makes sense when bigger part of 271 billion market cap comes from completely different market and 190 billion corps have higher market share in selected market.

    4. Re:'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.' by NoPantsJim · · Score: 1

      I suppose what I mean is that pawn implies being pushed around for someone else's goals. I don't think Microsoft is dumb enough to let Apple dick them around just to screw Google. If anything, Microsoft would find a mutually beneficial middle ground.

      My main argument with the summary was the use of the word "pawn". I am no Microsoft fanboy (or Apple fanboy for that matter) but implying Microsoft would be dumb enough to get led around by a smaller company irked me.

  22. Who approached who? by atomicstrawberry · · Score: 1

    Whether or not the two companies are talking isn't really as relevant as who it was that brought up the possibility. Did Apple approach MS (in which case it's all but assured to happen) or did MS approach Apple as a potential vehicle for marketing Bing to people? Semantics, maybe, but the origin of the push will make a big difference to the outcome of any talks.

  23. "Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle" by spintriae · · Score: 1

    Who are the other seven pawns at Apple's disposal? Yahoo maybe? Who else?

  24. Pirates of Silicon Valley by salemboot · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Used to as a child, I wanted a computer. On Christmas one year I got a vic-20. Like everybody else I played games on it. It didn't do much. What was the purpose for it? Back then we couldn't type papers in a word processor. You could make blocks move around and save them to a tape-player. So I didn't get hooked because I had an Atari. I could sit down and play for 10 minutes and leave it behind. But none the less I struggled to learn. So eventually I got a Tandy 1000 sl. I played more games on it. This has been the recurring factor throughout life. Now-a-days we just update facebook and taut how cool we are because we compiled a kernel in Linux. We express how elite we are by the mods we make to our game consoles. How we put down $300.00 for an operating system just so we could play a game. Switching operating systems, worrying about virus's, different component support, drivers, dvd-playback, why is it nobody is happy? Point of this is watching the original movie you developed an opinion that Gates, Jobs, and everyone else were just a bunch of jerks wasting our time. Money

  25. The missing detail by dangitman · · Score: 1

    This rumor is correct in a way, but is missing crucial details. The iPhone's search will be powered by a Bing... but it will be Bing Crosby.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
    1. Re:The missing detail by Itninja · · Score: 1

      But in time that engine will become obsolete and then it will be powered by Denise Crosby. But we all know how that will end: less than a year and the engine will demand a more prominent role and probably just up and quite altogether. Only to come crawling back a few years after that to play it's own hybrid offspring from another time-line. Bitch.

      --
      I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
    2. Re:The missing detail by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Then the engine will host a documentary about the Bingies.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  26. Blame Firefox by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Informative

    I *really* hate Google for destroying the right-click copy-link-location. Maybe I'll change to Bing, it does not do that.

    Google didn't do that. Pretty much any browser except for Firefox copies the REAL link just fine.

    Firefox instead tries to go the extra mile by looking at the href, noticing there's an onclck(), and following that to figure out what URL will be called when you, well, click. So it copies some URL you are never meant to see, much less copy. The fact is that Firefox is NOT copying the visible text, and I don't think it's fair to blame that on Google.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Blame Firefox by causality · · Score: 4, Informative

      The fact is that Firefox is NOT copying the visible text, and I don't think it's fair to blame that on Google.

      Have you used Firefox? It has two options: one is "Copy" which copies the visible text; the other is "Copy Link Location" which places the URL in the clipboard. In this case, Firefox is not copying the visible text because the user is not telling it to do that.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    2. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I have noscript on. I'm always getting the real URL. I guess that some people hate noscript, but it works just fine for me.

    3. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Firefox does the right thing here because it shows you the actual URL you'll be directed to. Anything else is fundamentally broken and a detriment to security.

    4. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't the web supposed to have standards? Then what someone is telling me is that either Google has f'd off w/ the standard and has their links broken, or firefox f'd off w/ the standard on their browser.. SURELY it has to be one or the other, it CANNOT CONCEIVABLY be both...

      seriously.. I don't see a document with an RFC Number specifying the proper handling on copying link locations that may happen to have javascript onclick events, you find that document, that spells it out in terminology a retarded 3rd grader (That's ME!) can understand -- and I'll concede that maybe one or the other has some fault and that it's not both.

    5. Re:Blame Firefox by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Informative

      Have you used Firefox? It has two options: one is "Copy" which copies the visible text; the other is "Copy Link Location" which places the URL in the clipboard. In this case, Firefox is not copying the visible text because the user is not telling it to do that.

      You still misunderstand. For Google result pages, the href attribute of the links is actually the original URL (which can be trivially checked by looking at the source HTML). However, the page also has some JavaScript which intercepts clicked links, and redirects you via Google so that they detect the click. The problem with Firefox is that its "Copy Link Location" command does not copy the value in a/@href (as all other browsers do it), but tries to be smart, looks for said associated script, and sees where it will forward you to.

    6. Re:Blame Firefox by garry_g · · Score: 2

      And that is the fault/error on the side of Firefox why? Sorry, but Firefox goes that extra mile because webpages might lead you somewhere else than they actually pretend to lead you ... complain to Google about doing that, or write a Greasemonkey script to clean up that click-tracking ... (I wouldn't wonder if such a script already existed ...)

    7. Re:Blame Firefox by lewko · · Score: 0, Troll

      Sorry, but Firefox goes that extra mile because webpages might lead you somewhere else than they actually pretend to lead you ...

      Oh please. As if that would ever happen.

      Grow up.

      --
      Do you or your partner snore? - Visit www.snoring.com.au
    8. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The standard was <a ping...>. Unfortunately, "privacy" folks went nuts about it and didn't want any browser to support it. Firefox implemented it but turns it off by default.

      At the time, some folks such as me pointed out that a site could always do whatever it wanted with the html, so limiting this kind of an interaction was a pointless battle. By not supporting ping we'd just make the sites use redirectors or javascript hackery to get the same information. Thanks to the anti-ping folks, we got the fun of open redirector vulnerabilities, now we have links that don't copy, and at no point did the analytics information that sites collect ever change. Thanks!

    9. Re:Blame Firefox by KiloByte · · Score: 2

      So Firefox is the only one not vulnerable to false links. It tells you where the link actually leads instead of where it claims to.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    10. Re:Blame Firefox by darthflo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nobody's at fault. The standard defines how authors (including Google) are to write their pages and how User-Agents (including Firefox) are to render it. It doesn't define how the browser chrome's supposed to look (heh, d'you really think the fugly hack Firefox' interface is or that cluttered mess called Internet Explorer would've made it through?). What's defined, almost down to the pixel, is the rendered page, bordered on top by the tab, on the right by the scroll and on the bottom by the status bar.

      Google uses two attributes of the A tag in conjunction: HREF and ONCLICK. Href tells the user-agent where to send the client if the link is interacted with, i.e. clicked on or highlighted and confirmed with a press of return. This is meant to be the destination site. Most user-agents reveal this information to their user when hovering over the link. This can be helpful when deciding whether to visit the page or not. Sending it through a forwarder is allowed but generally considered bad behaviour, because it removes the ability to "look ahead" from the user.
      The onclick attribute is a call to an embedded script in the page. This could be used to do additional processing when clicking a link. For example, href could be used with target to open a link in a new window. Onclick could be used to open a window of a specified size and configuration for all clients who run scripts, while those who don't will get the default window. With smaller capabilities from the browser, the experience would degrade gracefully. Onclick can, as Google prominently demonstrates, also be used to track which search results their users click on for a given query. Their rationale is most likely getting feedback in order to improve their search results. Obviously, there is a slight loss of privacy.

      Now on to "Copy Link Location". This feature is a part of the browser. HTML or related standards won't touch this, so Firefox doesn't violate any standards there. Applicable standards would be along the lines of the Gnome Human Interface Guideline or the equivalents for other platforms. None of those define the expected behaviour of "Copy Link Location" in relation to a hypertext document.
      The only standard that applies is user expectation, which should be copying the href attribute. Fx tries to go above and beyond that and catch the actual location the user might be forwarded to by extended onclick attributes. For some combinations of href and onclick, this can yield better results. For some (including Google), it won't.

      TL;DR: No standard applies. Firefox attempts to go above and beyond user expectations, fails to deliver and is somewhat at fault.

    11. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You only get "Copy" if you select the text and then right-click. If you just right-click on a link you get "Copy link location".

    12. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Firefox does the right thing here because it shows you the actual URL you'll be directed to. Anything else is fundamentally broken and a detriment to security.

      If you are depending on people reading link text for your "security", I'd say that's fundamentally broken. If it matters, one should be using certificates, SSL, and whenever available, DNSSEC. Anything else opens up far too many alternative avenues for trickery. Furthermore, if you don't trust the html of the page you are on, you probably should not be clicking on anything anyway, as there are still many bad tricks the author can pull on you using tools such as invisible elements and iframes. I guess Firefox is now helpfully executing those click actions automatically without you clicking on them; there may be interesting new possibilities there I guess.

      Back to non-malicious sites, Firefox has now broken perfectly honest redirectors all over the web for a minimal to nonexistent additional security.

      P.S. since you seem to think Firefox should display the actual URL you'll be directed to, why shouldn't it show where the redirector is going to send you, rather than the redirector itself?

    13. Re:Blame Firefox by Rhaban · · Score: 1

      Firefox goes that extra mile because webpages might lead you somewhere else than they actually pretend to lead you ...

      And how does stopping you from copying the url in the href by replacing it with the url where javascript would redirect you helps at all, when you do want to go to the href url?

    14. Re:Blame Firefox by garry_g · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In the case of "poison" links, at least you see that you're at the wrong place ... and, as someone else stated, you can still copy the verbose link (i.e. text) from the google page ... still, just because Google uses JS to hide their clicktracking, Firefox isn't at fault for using the actual link ... one could maybe add another context-menu-entry in such cases to allow for copying either the HREF or the JS link ...

    15. Re:Blame Firefox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your first paragraph clearly shows that you don't understand the problem. As for the rest, there's absolutely no guarantee that the pages you're directed to are even "redirectors."

    16. Re:Blame Firefox by xigxag · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think it is fair to blame it on Google. Look at the status bar. Hovering over the link shows the actual link. But as soon as you press right-click, regardless of whether you actually copy anything, the link changes to a referrer. If I had to guess, I'd say it was done as part of the collaboration between Google and Firefox. Firefox is paid for by Google, and so this is simply another way for the browser to make itself valuable to its benefactor.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    17. Re:Blame Firefox by LiquidFire_HK · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but I don't see anything that indicates this is the case, nor can I see how this would even be possible to accomplish. How would you know where some piece of JS will redirect you to without executing it?

      At any rate, copying Google search result URLs works just fine for me in Firefox.

    18. Re:Blame Firefox by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      Curious, you're right, I hadn't noticed that. It appears that Firefox actually changes the href in the DOM as soon as you right click on the link

      1. Search for "CPAN"..
      2. However over the first link (to cpan.org)
          Status bar shows the unadorned link, "http://www.cpan.org"
      3. Right click on the link
          Status bar now shows the google passthrough link, "http://www.google.com/url?..."
      4. Hightlight the CPAN hyperlink, right click and view source
          The href has been changed

    19. Re:Blame Firefox by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but I don't see anything that indicates this is the case, nor can I see how this would even be possible to accomplish. How would you know where some piece of JS will redirect you to without executing it?

      Well, if the piece of JS is just a single function call that redirects to a given URL, it would be fairly trivial. No-one is saying that it can handle arbitrary URLs, only the common cheap trick of a one-liner in onclick. Many web crawlers could handle this for years.

      In this case, though, I've played with it in Firefox DOM inspector, and it's a tad different. Google doesn't use JS directly to navigate you to a different page. Instead, they change the value of a/@href when a mouse button is pressed over it (onmousedown)! The difference is that in Firefox, that handler is (for some reason) called on any mouse button, so invoking context menu on the link also does it; while in IE/Chrome/Opera/... it only happens on left mouse button down, so context menu is not affected.

      Either way, definitely a hack on Google side.

    20. Re:Blame Firefox by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It's not Firefox's fault. See my post above for an explanation of what Google actually does (it's more subtle than just intercepting onClick).

    21. Re:Blame Firefox by causality · · Score: 1

      Have you used Firefox? It has two options: one is "Copy" which copies the visible text; the other is "Copy Link Location" which places the URL in the clipboard. In this case, Firefox is not copying the visible text because the user is not telling it to do that.

      You still misunderstand. For Google result pages, the href attribute of the links is actually the original URL (which can be trivially checked by looking at the source HTML). However, the page also has some JavaScript which intercepts clicked links, and redirects you via Google so that they detect the click. The problem with Firefox is that its "Copy Link Location" command does not copy the value in a/@href (as all other browsers do it), but tries to be smart, looks for said associated script, and sees where it will forward you to.

      When you don't accept or execute Google's Javascript, the "copy link location" works as you would expect for every other site. As their search engine is the only service of theirs that I use, it's easy for me not to accept their JS.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    22. Re:Blame Firefox by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Actually the error should lie with Firefox because what Google does is not Google specific. If most of the major search engines do it then you should account for that.

      But that said, I tested Firefox and it does copy the correct URL. I'm not sure what other people have that's causing it to act different.

      Bing:
      <h3><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie" onmousedown="return si_T('&amp;ID=SERP,119.1')"><strong>Pie</strong> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</a></h3>

      Ask.com
      <a target="_blank" class="L4" onmousedown="return fp(this,{en:'sx',io:'0',b:'a002',tp:'d',ec:'2',ex:'tsrc%3DRFE'},'false',0)" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie" id="r1_t"><b>Pie</b> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</a>

      Yahoo's solution, while different, is, imo, worse:
      <a href="http://uk.wrs.yahoo.com/_ylt=A03uv8YGr1hLLIwA_2xLBQx.;_ylu=X3oDMTE1MGRnOXJpBHNlYwNzcgRwb3MDMQRjb2xvA2lyZAR2dGlkA1VLMDY1MF82NTA-/SIG=11kfvbjli/EXP=1264189574/**http%3a//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie" class="yschttl spt" orighref="http://uk.wrs.yahoo.com/_ylt=A03uv8YGr1hLLIwA_2xLBQx.;_ylu=X3oDMTE1MGRnOXJpBHNlYwNzcgRwb3MDMQRjb2xvA2lyZAR2dGlkA1VLMDY1MF82NTA-/SIG=11kfvbjli/EXP=1264189574/**http%3a//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie"><b>Pie</b> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</a>

  27. Maps? by thzinc · · Score: 1

    Will Apple ditch Google Maps in favor of Microsoft's offering as well, or is really just an addition to the list of search providers in Safari?

  28. IBM and Intel were once Apple's enemies ... by perpenso · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    As the old saying goes...Adversity makes strange bed fellows.

    Both IBM and Intel were once portrayed as "enemies" by Apple, and both were lampooned in the Apple ads of the day. Partnering with IBM or Intel was once considered inconceivable by Apple's more "enthusiastic" fans. Yet it happened. It would be more difficult in the Microsoft case, but with Apple anything is possible.

    --
    Perpenso Calc for iPhone and iPod touch, scientific and bill/tip calculator, fractions, complex numbers, RPN

    1. Re:IBM and Intel were once Apple's enemies ... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It would be more difficult in the Microsoft case, but with Apple anything is possible.

      Given that it happened in the past, why would it be particularly difficult?

      Jobs may have some personal feelings about it, but he's also a very good businessman, and business is business.

  29. Total world domination! by Fished · · Score: 4, Funny
    1. First, they ignored us.
    2. Then, we declared war on them.
    3. Then, they ignored us.
    4. Then, we took the webservers. And they kind of noticed us.
    5. Then, they ignored us.
    6. Then, we took the netbooks. And they really started noticing us.
    7. Then, they ignored us.
    8. Then, we took the mobile phones. And they started to worry.
    9. Then, we ignored them. And they stopped ignoring us. Kind of.
    10. Then, came the next big thing. And it didn't say, "Microsoft," but came from Google or Apple.
    11. Then, we ignored them completely. And it ran Android and OSX/FreeBSD.
    12. And then, we won.
    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    1. Re:Total world domination! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No matter how iPhone will start their next step, as one of crazy Nintendo fans, this is really attracting to me!

      http://www.jojam.tw/blog/post/26323134

      Don't worry about the mandarin, just see the pics and u'll know their idea. Fantastic!!
      Honestly, if Nintendo publish this Nintenphone, iphone / android will face a serious threat.
      And, embed Bing or Google as the primary search enginge seems not an important issue for Nintenphone users.

    2. Re:Total world domination! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but if you're talking about Linux, you did not take the netbooks. You fucking lost. You didn't take the mobile phones. You fucking lost. And you don't ignore them. You fucking complain about them like little bitches every two fucking seconds around shitholes like this filled with other deranged fags who believe Linux will ever be anything other than useless. Linux failed a long time ago, and that will never change. They ignored you because you fat, nerdy, man-tittied assholes are no threat. You fucking lose.

  30. Isn't it like in Battlestar Galactica (spoiler) by dushkin · · Score: 1

    when we realize that a character we kinda like (Apple) goes against a character we mostly love (Google) because it turns out IT'S ACTUALLY A FUCKIN' CYLON SYMPATHIZER, YOU GUYS! (Microsoft)

    --
    o hai
  31. 4/1? by ryanhos · · Score: 1

    Wow...April is coming early this year.

    --
    "I threw up my hands in disgust and wondered if it had been such a good idea to have eaten my hands in the first place."
  32. Strategery by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has finally awakened to the fact that they're fighting for their life here. It's good that they've woken up in that Redmond ivory tower - it means they'll finally have to start thinking about what products we might want, how they can increase demand be delivering features and security. This is a lot better than the previous model of telling us what we should want. It's bad because it's easier to kill a sleeping giant than one that's alert and fighting.

    It's bad in that once awakened, they fight hard and take no prisoners. It means they will induce more OEMs to force Bing on us - in fact word has it they're negotiating with Apple for just that. I hope that Jobs will be enough offended by the idea of a " Bing powered iPhone " to prevent that. Not only are they forcing the search engine, but they want top billing. That's hubris. I would be offended too if I engineered this device that swept the mobile phone world, only to find that someone else who did everything they could to prevent it wanted to claim they "powered" it. It would take a lot of money to assuage my ire. Office 11, crippled in the usual ways, would not cut it for me, and I don't think Steve Jobs is dumb enough to take that deal.

    Regardless this represents a phase change in their strategy that we should be alert to.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Strategery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know how I know this is a copy-paste rant? By the fact that you're linking the same article we're discussing right now as though it were some clever citation to support your point.

      Also, I think you misunderstand the "Bing powered iPhone" thing. I don't see anything there that says that Bing wants "top billing". It looks like you think it's about turning "iPhone" into "iPhone, powered by Bing" or putting "powered by Bing" logos on the UI. But "powered by Bing" looks like pcmag's words, not Microsoft's or Apple's.

      "It's bad because it's easier to kill a sleeping giant than one that's alert and fighting. "

      If the earlier good things are true, then why do you need to kill it anymore?

  33. calling bullshit by Tom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm calling bullshit on this one.

    Apple goes for "sexy" in everything it does. Tell me where Bing is sexy? It has no appeal whatsoever to anyone I know. Heck, 80% of the people I know probably don't even know what the heck it is and would guess it's a new clothes shop or something.

    I also think Apple got into bed with MS once and still feels somewhat sorry about it. After initial great support (IE on Mac is said to have been far better than the windos version) MS did to them what they do to everyone: Let them hang. I doubt that brings them much love from Apple.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:calling bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This whole sex appeal thing has to be some of the biggest BS I've seen. Sex is such a big thing for many people that they will project it onto anything. You'd have to be silly to actually try to base some reasoning on this "sexy" concept in that way. Besides, what's so sexy about Google?

  34. Dirty Tricks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wwwbing.com

    Also try removing the first dot after doing any search in bing......

  35. "We"? by CountBrass · · Score: 1

    "We"? Either you're over-identifying or you have some serious psychological issues. Either that or Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer have joined Slashdot although I struggle to see why they'd use 'foredecker' as their username.

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    1. Re:"We"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People use "we" when they identify with their places of work -- I certainly do -- and Foredecker often mentions working for MS. So what is the problem?

      Considering a company "us" is fairly logical and doesn't imply the person thinks everyone in the company agrees on specific issues or that he has psychological issues to me. Maybe you'd like to explain?

    2. Re:"We"? by Foredecker · · Score: 1

      CountBrass - I work at Microsoft. I'm a dev manager in Windows. Ready my profile. Its very easy to find and quite public.

      I think I can safely say 'we'.

      -Foredecker

      --
      Jibe!
  36. Pfft. by CountBrass · · Score: 1

    You mean in the same way that the Zune "slowly ate away at" the iPod?

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    1. Re:Pfft. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Apple never helped MS with any of that. OTH, MS made friendly with many companies and then destroyed them after they had the advantage. Apple's desktop comes first to mind. Sybase is next. But so does Borland, AOL, Novell, and netscape. In fact, when MS wants into an area, they are more than happy to destroy any 'Friend' to get to what they perceive as a threat.

      Intuit, Survives because they have a monopoly backing their books desktop. Without that, intuit would have lost LONG ago. Basically, when a company falls into bed with MS, MS will us that knowledge and position to destroy.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  37. Cars? by CountBrass · · Score: 1

    So what you're saying is that Apple, a character kinda like (Volkswagen) goes against character and gets bought out by (Porsche), a much smaller company. But it turns out IT'S ACTUALLY A FUCKIN' CYLON SYMPATHIZER(sic), YOU GUYS (because Volkswagen turn around and take over Porschs). Is that what you're saying?

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    1. Re:Cars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wat.

  38. re:Bing To Become Default iPhone Search? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NO. FUCK YOU!

  39. interface by StripedCow · · Score: 1

    Let's hope that they will polish up Bing's interface while they are at it.

    --
    If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
  40. not even in the same league / market by pydev · · Score: 0, Troll

    The only area where Google and Apple are seriously competing is in the smart phone market. And even there, the iPhone isn't even in the same league: you can get nice Android devices for a third of what an iPhone costs. Same goes for Apple's online offering, Mobile Me, compared to Google. The most-used apps on the iPhone (and probably any other smart phone) are Google's. There is nothing Apple offers that anybody outside its 1% sliver of the phone market cares about.

    For Google, Android is a means to an end: to get people to do things on-line more of the time. That's why Google gives Android away. For Apple, the iPhone itself is the product. It's a conflict alright, but on very unequal terms, and terms that are quite unfavorable to Apple. The same kind of conflict is going to arise over Google Chrome vs Apple's tablet and ultralight offerings.

    1. Re:not even in the same league / market by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Fuck off fanboy.

    2. Re:not even in the same league / market by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      The most-used apps on the iPhone (and probably any other smart phone) are Google's. There is nothing Apple offers that anybody outside its 1% sliver of the phone market cares about.

      Dude, you've got this seriously wrong, iTunes is the killer app. The iPhone isn't really a smart phone, it's an iPod with a built in phone. It got people who don't even know what a smart phone is buying them.

        Android is a smart phone users/geeks gadget, I don't think the overlap is that great.

    3. Re:not even in the same league / market by pydev · · Score: 1

      The iPhone isn't really a smart phone, it's an iPod with a built in phone

      Interesting point, but it doesn't change the 1% market share and 3x price. And there are plenty of MP3 and music apps on Android.

      I'm not sure how much that accounts for the popularity of the iPhone. I always carry an iPod Nano for music, regardless of which phone I'm using; I never found it made much sense to use the phone for MP3.

      Android is a smart phone users/geeks gadget, I don't think the overlap is that great.

      Well, whatever the reason, we seem to agree there; this is not an epic Google/Apple battle.

    4. Re:not even in the same league / market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that your homepage, phlogy.com, lists dozens of inane little iPhone apps, it's not hard to see where your antagonism comes from.

      No wonder that with crap like yours, the App Store has so many "applications". How many minutes did it take to write each of them? Do you scrape the data off Google? You don't license it, do you? Anyway, this seems like a perfect set of little apps to add to create for Android for free.

    5. Re:not even in the same league / market by radish · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm sorry - are you high? You claim that iPhone has "1%" of the smart phone market, and that Android has more? Utter crap. The most recent data I could find from the end of last year gives Apple 18%, behind Symbian and RIM. Android is showing a whopping 3.5%. Now I'm sure Android did much better in Q4 and will continue to rise, but I would bet my house they won't even reach iPhone by the end of 2010, never mind pass them.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    6. Re:not even in the same league / market by pydev · · Score: 1

      You claim that iPhone has "1%" of the smart phone market

      No, I claim that iPhone has 1% of the phone market, which it does.

      and that Android has more?

      No, I did not. Go back and read what I wrote.

      There just is no "battle" here. Google may be a threat to Apple, but Apple just isn't a threat to Google.

  41. 1984 by davygrvy · · Score: 1

    Images of 1984 by George Orwell pop into mind like the three factions: Eastasia, Eurasia, and Oceania. “War is Peace” "Freedom is Slavery” and “Ignorance is Strength.” It's always 2 vs 1

    --
    -=[ place .sig here ]=-
  42. Integrate with desktop search by Moabz · · Score: 1

    Bing, you got it ...
    Adds delivered to your desktop

  43. Past companies who partnered with Microsoft by Solandri · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some past companies who partnered with Microsoft (or tried to):

    IBM
    Spyglass
    Stac Electronics
    Sun
    Sendo
    OpenDocument

    Good luck, Apple!

    1. Re:Past companies who partnered with Microsoft by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Apple should be on that list, as well - it's nothing new for them.

      However, the difference between other companies on said list and Apple is that Apple actually benefited a lot from doing so.

    2. Re:Past companies who partnered with Microsoft by ucblockhead · · Score: 1

      You forgot one former partner.

      --
      The cake is a pie
  44. Hoverover? Just Say No To Active Content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Switch off Javascript. And Flash. And Silverfoo.

    Besides, it would have spared us some embarrasment as of lately (Google, I'm looking at your employees).

    Help making sure that the Web works without active content (Slashdot, I'm looking at you -- although you belong to the more benign of the pack, you still keep insinuating how much better the 2.0 world is for me).

  45. Bias in results by polyp2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Search
    "switching to ubuntu" on bing ,
    and then try Google.

    Googles first result is "switching to ubuntu from windows"
    Bings first result is "switching to ubuntu from OSX"

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    1. Re:Bias in results by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      SwitchingToUbuntuFromWindows on the Ubuntu wiki is the first hit on both for me.

      Bing search
      Google search

    2. Re:Bias in results by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Look at the auto-suggest. It suggests something up to "switching to" and then goes away where as it does not on Google. Further examination shows that auto-suggest mysterious dies when trying to combine both ubuntu and windows together.

      "unbuntu to windows fails", even "unbuntu windows" fails, "ubuntu download" works but trying to get anything after download seems to fail especially typing windows.

      A lot of people are dependant on auto-suggest now, especially for topics new to them (ie switching to a new OS) and by manipulating the results of auto-suggest (but not the actual results) they can sway people without being flat out accused of censorship of the competition.

    3. Re:Bias in results by man_ls · · Score: 1

      Auto-suggest tends to be generated based on search popularity. If not a lot of people are typing the terms you want to see, they're not going to show up in auto-suggest. Unless someone added them manually, I suppose -- but that's where the REAL bias would be.

    4. Re:Bias in results by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      That would make sense if there weren't documented examples of biased results linux auto suggestions

      http://lpdc.be/colar/brols/Google-Bing.png

      Similar things happened with search for blue screen of death and windows as I recall. Admittedly both instances don't do that now which is no surprise considering how much attention it received.

  46. 2nd Source? by phooka.de · · Score: 1

    All articles I see refer to business week.

    Can we have a second independent source, please?

    It sounds implausible enough to drive business week's webtraffic. It includes all bis three in IT, a sure way to generate traffic. It implies that Apple-Fanboys will soon support the arch-enemy, a sure way to boost webtraffic.

    I don't buy it, not without a second source.

    1. Re:2nd Source? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      All articles I see refer to business week.

      I think the Ferengi Times covered it, but that periodical is only available on Ferengenar and on Wall Street.

  47. It better be configurable back to Google... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is all I am saying.

  48. Re:Porn Search Engine by garfi5h · · Score: 1

    Behold. A new search engine will arise: bingbus.com. The ultimate porn search engine.

  49. Comeon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I have no love for Bing. Ive tried and tried, but its nowhere near Google in delivering relevant results.
    Also Bing often waste space by delivering the same results over and over. It feels like the 90s again..
    If someone wants to praise Bing, then please show the result comparisons, or shut up ;-)

    However, Windows XP is probably the most useful, easy, flexible and pretty stable OS out there. Its a neat combination of many things, and even has lots of free software / freeware going for it (bye bye OS X!). With Styler and some DLL hacks, you can even style XP to look better than Vista.
    Microsoft Office is and has always been at the forefront of office automation, which sorry to say, OO just cant compete with due to its java dependency and poor UI designers.
    VBA is just pure genious. Now everyone can make their own automations, and quickly utilize the power of MS Office, SQL Server and any COM/Dotnet apps. Once you have weeded out the security holes, it DOES deliver much of what was promised with IT.. Nobody has ever come near this usability yet, and its been here for years.
    Yes, I have used Lotus 1-2-3 and other spreadsheets, Wordperfect. They were good, but somehow lost the battle. Too bad, but honestly, Ive always prefered Word and Excel.

    How many millions of users make their own Excel sheets, Word documents, Powerpoint presentations? Lots! Some even go so far as to make their own in-house applications with them, and its really quick (and dirty), but it gets the job done!

    Give praise where praise is due dude, because nobody else has ever come close to striking the right balance what Microsoft has over the years.
    Theyve been providing the best tools for office workers for years, and nobody has been able to bring so much as a dent to their market.
    Maybe Windows7 will also be good, its too early to tell, but it looks promising. I just wish they could clean up their GUI, instead of clutter it more (bye bye Vista!).

    Btw, every time I go with Linux (Red Hat, Debian, Ubuntu, ...etc... etc), I end up having to fix broken ACPI, broken distro-hacks which bypasses /etc/network/interfaces and then manages to break itself, and other silly things which should just work out of the box. Granted XP also has its share of fail, but as long as you dont have proper end-user testing and test-cases, Ubuntu will never be ready for the masses. Hello, why not do automated test-cases of distros? Then ACPI will be easy to test in every release
    Linux is Good for serving though, but I had to spend a day fixing the ACPI because my server is now a laptop (with batteries as UPS - pure genius), and the screen would just blank, not go off, among other silly failures in Ubuntu 9.04 (I couldnt use 9.10 because of incompatibilities with Dell hardware). Such failures, if left unnoticed, can actually melt a laptop (when u need to have the lid closed)!

    I WISH there were more and better alternatives out there, but they *need* to properly test and update their software first, before I can bother using it on the desktop. This has been the state for Linux in the past 10 years. Every time I install Linux, I have to spend days fixing what should work out of the box. It just takes longer time than XP, which is not such a moving target, and you dont need more than TweakUI, Styler, Portable Apps (no I DONT want/need MS Install Shield!), MS Office and the dozens or so OS configurations u love to hate ;)

    With experience, I can get XP up and running in like 4-5 hours. Linux may take several weeks to weed out the bugs, especially if you want the desktop experience.. Not worth it IMHO.

    1. Re:Comeon by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      Let me put this in a bad car analogy for you:

      I've always driven Chevys. I've had 5 of them so far, and I love'em. I know how to change the oil, I can get parts easily, and I can do lots of general maintenance without much hassle. I've even replaced the engine in my old Corvette with a new 350 after I blew up the original (I know, my bad >.

      Now my wife has convinced me to buy a Toyota. It took me over an hour just to figure out how to change the oil. From looking at the Haynes manual, I think I might have to take out the engine just to change the fuel filter.

      Why are Toyotas so terrible? Are they a clearly inferior product? I'm comparing apples to oranges here, but our new Toyota gets 2-3 times better gas mileage than my old Corvette. It might not be as easy to fix when certain things break, and the sound system is clearly inferior to the one I'd put in the Corvette, but mostly things in the Toyota do work better than in any of the Chevys.

      When shit breaks, I'm clueless. Because I've only ever had Chevys. It's not Toyota's fault I have an extremely narrow breadth of experience in the automotive repair field. That's my fault. My ignorance doesn't make Chevy a better manufacturer.

      Stop blaming Linux for your lack of experience.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    2. Re:Comeon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would only be equivalent if the Toyota was cobbled together in someone's backyard, you could never predict just how well any individual car would actually run, dealer support was limited to a stack of repair manuals that were 2 years out of date and hidden in someone's garage, and other Toyota owners were rude and condescending and flat-out antagonistic to new Toyota buyers. Sure, the engine compartment is easier to open and there's plenty of room to tinker, but once you're in there, nothing is labeled and all the parts just kind-of-sort-of fit together, and if you ask the guy (named RazrWyr) who sells parts for Toyota (only available at a flea market unless you're willing to pay for a personal mechanic) whether the part will fit your particular Toyota, he calls you a faggot and throws things at you.

  50. Microsoft & Apple by Ice+Wewe · · Score: 1

    If this is anything like their previous relationships, it won't end well.

    Remember those early versions of OS X? The ones that shipped with IE 5 as the default (and only) web browser. Any self respecting person would immediately uninstall IE after downloading Mozilla/Opera/Netscape because IE 5 was horrible.

    I think we should give Microsoft a chance to show that they've changed, but if history is any indication, this agreement will likely end up causing user frustration and resentment.

  51. Oh Steve! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In this episode Steve job learns that while my enemy's enemy may be my friend, that will be of little comfort when I feel a cold steel blade in my back.

  52. Apple Vs Google by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

    soory Google is in the Advertsing business Apple is not. In No way at all is Apple Googles primary enemey or vice versa

  53. When has MS changes its ways? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    I hear you saying that you think MS is a reformed thief. Fine, but where is your evidence? I seen them not change at all. People have been saying for over 10 years that MS has changed and it is never true.

    But fine, point me to some evidence.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:When has MS changes its ways? by DerPflanz · · Score: 1

      I hear you saying that you think MS is a reformed thief.

      In that case, you heard wrong. I merely ask questions. It seems like Microsoft cannot do anything right, whatever they do. The fact remains that they did a lot of questionable things, have been convicted and created bad products. But, if they do make something useful or of good quality, it gets judged based on those previous products and actions. I think people should judge products on their merit or quality. Of course you would be suspicious if it came from a producer that has created only bad products before. But if you dismiss the product beforehand, the company will never have any chance to become better.

      --
      -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
    2. Re:When has MS changes its ways? by jgagnon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But life doesn't work that way. If someone is convicted of being a child molester 40 years ago and hasn't had a single "incident" since, I still wouldn't let them near my kids. That's an extreme example, but that's the way many people seem to think. In this case, Microsoft has a long history of abusing user and partner trust, so why should anyone believe anything they do now is trustworthy? It doesn't matter if they produce the "best product ever" because some (maybe even many) people will always consider their actions in the past as relevant to what they're doing now. And those people, historically, have good reason to be suspicious.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    3. Re:When has MS changes its ways? by DerPflanz · · Score: 1

      But life doesn't work that way.

      It does for smaller crimes. But, you give me a good answer to my question. For you, Microsoft will never be redeemed for their crimes, or at least not in our lifetime.

      --
      -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
  54. Well, I am suprised by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    I frankly didn't see this coming. Steve Jobs must really be asleep at the wheel.

    So, Google launches a mobile phone and all of sudden that is the big enemy? The biggest competitor? Has Jobs gained his kidney in exchange for his brain?

    Google vs Apple: mobile phone.

    MS vs Apple: Mobile phone, OS, Browser, Office productivity, home movie making software, media codecs, media plugin for browser, music shop, MP3 player (iPod vs Zune), portable media player (iPod touch vs Zune HD), Tablet, server OS...

    The list probably goes on, but anyone with a brain will notice the difference already in the list size.

    Apple seems to be cutting of its head to spite its face. They don't want google to have iPhone search data... why? Because MS won't be using the data to promote their OWN smartphones AND everything else OVER Apples product.

    Either Apple sees google blowing them out of the water in every other aspect as well (do they think Android/ChomeOS could wipe OSX of the map?) or they got VERY short memories. MS does NOT play well, they should know this, they been screwed before.

    I predict that this will NOT work out well, don't know how it is going bite Apple in the ass, but if you seen as many butts with MS tooth prints in it, you know the signs.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  55. What could they do? by Lorien_the_first_one · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To put this post in context, check out this video to see what I mean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YExl9ojclo

    In Microsoft's fantasy world, everyone uses Windows, Microsoft development tools and there is no competition. What could they do to regain my respect? Stop lying about their competition (especially Linux), drop their patents and lawsuit threats, embrace and support open standards without extending them with proprietary lock-in. Put customers first before the egos of executives and shareholders. Quit trying to embrace, extend and extinguish FOSS.

    Oh, and they could try making better software instead of spin.

    I know. They have a business model they are trying to support, and shareholders to satisfy. But their all-encompassing, over-arching, take-no-prisoners attitude has gotta go.

    --
    The diversity and expression of human opinion is essential to human survival.
  56. Gotta agree by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    I just don't get the logic of competition either, already posted elsewhere in this thread but MS competes with Apple on far more fronts, practically ALL of them. The only difference is that Apple sells desktop PC's and MS doesn't. But MS is coming out with a tablet, as is Apple, they both got mobile phones AND mp3 players, server OS...

    I just don't get it.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  57. Tailored PR? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this, a Bing press release tailored for Slashdot? The only market share Bing is gaining is from old Yahoo and Live users.

  58. Re:Perverse Bias in results by grepppo · · Score: 1

    Even worse, at the bottom of the bing search "Six reasons to switch from Ubuntu to Vista" !!!??

  59. a pawn in that battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy,' says one person familiar with Apple's thinking. 'Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle"

    If Apple thinks it can play off Microsoft against Google then they are deluded. You got that backwards Apple is a pawn in Microsofts battle with Google. It's not the first time Apple has proved usefull to Redmond, indeed Microsoft has been known to funnel revenue their way under the guise of cross-licensing and 'investment'. Of course in the process, that renders the Apple a niche market. The graveyard is littered with Microsoft partners .. :)

  60. Apple was not *SAVED* by Microsoft by beetle496 · · Score: 1

    Please mod parent up. Please mod grandparent down.

    --
    I paid the going retail price for a Windows screen reader and got a free Unix computer!
  61. That's funny, I don't see by aussersterne · · Score: 1

    Books
    Finance
    Scholar
    Translate
    Blogs
    YouTube
    Calendar
    Photos
    Documents
    Reader
    Groups

    or the "even more" link that takes you to yet more Google offerings.

    Much more, if you compare Google News to Bing News or Hotmail to Gmail, I think you'll find that there's still something significant missing from Bing, even if the word itself is there.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:That's funny, I don't see by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      No, it's not exactly the same, but it does have images, videos, news, etc that you can click to see without retyping your search.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  62. Huh? by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    Apple are so scared of Google they jump into bed with Microsoft? wow.

  63. The Unmentioned WHY by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    I have a theory about this, and it hasn't been mentioned in this thread that I've seen.

    Apple is considering this deal because it will significantly weaken MS, and Google both.

    Think if it this way, Apple has no dog in this show (Search), they don't care one way or another except for Google has Android, and MS is ... well MS.

    By having this deal, MS is funneling $ to Apple, for what? An icon on the iPhone? Apple knows that it would be fairly easy to ALSO install a Google Icon, and make it fairly easy for the average iPhone user to switch.

    Best of both worlds, Apple gets $ from MS, and doesn't prevent people from moving to Google.

    Well that and BING Is Not Google.

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  64. Feels like Bush having dinner with Bin Laden by AthleteMusicianNerd · · Score: 1

    Although Bush and Bin Laden having dinner would be less likely to surprise me.

  65. WTF are people smoking by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

    We've already established Apple doesn't feel it needs to crush opponents to win. It just needs to exist to win.

    Why does anyone think that Apple needs to get into bed with Microsoft over Google? Here's a tip, all three are competitors with each other in the mobile market. As far as device makers go, neither google nor M$ actually make their phones, the Nexus One is STILL AN HTC DEVICE.

    Please stop spewing this CRAP and sensationalistic reporting to keep people visiting the site. This is about as bad as suggesting Apple dump their hardware sales and license to Dell.

    1. Re:WTF are people smoking by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Probably because culturally we've adopted the unsophisticated view that for someone to succeed everyone else must fail and that anything short of total $NOUN domination is a failure.

      Tautology time: Apple is Apple. As long as Apple remains Apple and is profitable as Apple, Apple doesn't need to try to become Google or Microsoft. But in this mba laden world if Apple isn't increasing their market share (never mind if they are profitable already at their current share) at their competitors expense then they are obviously failing.

  66. Re: Microsucks didn't save Apple by pubwvj · · Score: 1

    Microsoft didn't save Apple.
    Apple doesn't need Office.
    Office is an elephant in a row boat.
    Too much feature bloat and lack of focus.
    Elephants also don't have thumbs.

  67. Browser defaults by phorm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Notwithstanding the idea of google being a "nice, new cafe", you forgot the part where the own the maker of your car's GPS, or whatever, and when you look up any food the GPS defaults to setting your route to their restaurant.

    Would Bing be nearly as big if it weren't the default search engine in IE? I doubt it. Having an alliance between MS and Apple making it default on iPhones makes it even worse...

  68. Al-Quaeda air by phorm · · Score: 1

    If Al-Quaeda suddenly started donating to orphanages, building schools, and then started an airline with cheap booze, hot stewardesses, and free flights for Americans... would you fly with them?

    How about you throw in that in the meantime they're still planting roadside bombs and otherwise doing other evil things.
    But hey, it's a free first-class flight. Never mind that looming tower in the distance.

    With a well-deserved reputation, it will be a LONG bloody time before many in the industry trust MS, if ever. Probably not until their "mighty empire" has been brought down more than a peg or two and they *HAVE* to behave in order to do business, as opposed to bulldozing their way through competition.

  69. Re:Default but still switchable actually helps goo by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

    With all the cash they've got they can probably afford Frosted Flakes.

  70. Searching on "google is evil" by Beerdood · · Score: 1

    I thought those results seem a bit skewed, so I thought I'd do a search on "why is google evil", on bing and on google.

    If you look at those results, the google results actually have more page links related to google being evil (all on first page, exception of one like to a google corporate policy. The same search on bing only returned half of the pages actually linking google to evil (#3,4,5 are links specifying that google isn't evil). Clearly bing has a pro google bias, and google has some sort of grudge against google!

    I'm not defending microsoft here, and I don't understand their search strategy, but maybe their search results deliberately return some opposites or counterpoints to the question asked / standpoint. Personally, I would rather have a search engine show a couple of counterpoints on searches like "Democrats are destroying America", "Republicans are destroying America", "Why religion is right", "Why religion is wrong" etc... Maybe it'll help people see multiple viewpoints and be a little more objective.

    --
    Global warming and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking number of pirates - Gospel of the FSM
  71. User choice by Macka · · Score: 1

    If Apple do go down this route they had better leave the option open for users to change back to google if they see fit. I have no interest in using Bing - I'm very happy with the search results I get from google thanks.

    And if Apple decide to do a Verison and take the choice away from me then I won't hesitate to take the option to jailbreak my iPhone: something I've never felt the need to do before now. I expect I would not be alone either.

  72. The future is one word... by mantissa128 · · Score: 1

    Goople.

  73. Actually quite the opposite by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    So Firefox is the only one not vulnerable to false links.

    Firefox is the only one that copies a link I cannot see in the href when I view source. And you are claiming it is less vulnerable...

    What it is regardless, is less useful. If someone has an href that's what I want to copy, not whatever horror Javascript is performing upon the link.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  74. I'll vouch for Foredecker... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To whom it may concern: Foredecker's telling it HOW IT IS!

    Foredecker's actually PRETTY "Famous" online AND IN THE "REAL WORLD" too, with he being featured @ many events as a GUEST SPEAKER for MS!

    He is OFTEN the rep MS uses in those cases in fact (he's also really SENIOR MGT. @ MS) for speaking on things "PERFORMANCE" as the mgt. figure @ MS who does so for "THE CLIENT PERFORMANCE DIVISION" of MS...

    FOREDECKER's no bullshitter on that account!

    Yes, I had to... So, I checked into it myself too!

    ALL per our discussions noted here on HOSTS files in the URL's next below, now being unable to use 0 in HOSTS as a blocking address and on the local DNS Client cache service too...

    (I.E.-> Using 0 in a HOSTS file makes them now smaller & faster, but, since you cannot do that now on Windows 7/VISTA (here since 12/08/2009 @ least, it could use it before that MS patch Toesday for a LONG time, & Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003 still can though, & MS put that into Windows 2000, not in its ORIGINAL distro, but later in a service pack - so, someone saw the performance gains it that I am extolling for that now & yes, pinging a 0 blocked address sends back a valid 0.0.0.0 on Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003 still)?

    E.G.-> You get MUCH larger & slower HOSTS files loads into memory AND slower internal parsing of HOSTS files records (because, per line in a hosts file, especially a larger one? 0 = 1 byte is far smaller than 0.0.0.0 = 7 bytes, & certainly smaller & FASTER than the default 127.0.0.1 "loopback adapter address" = 9 bytes per record IN HOSTS FILES... (which the latter also incurs a loopback operation too, the others do not) by far...

    This ALL matters on performance, and especially on HOSTS files with more records than usual in them, larger HOSTS especially)

    ALSO, per our same discussion there, on the local DNS Client Cache in Windows breaking down on larger HOSTS files too!

    That all took place, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1467692&cid=30384918 AND HERE -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1513822&cid=30819978 ) so, don't doubt him guys.

    Which he conceded I may have a SOLID point on (I do & I know it - all the numbers & "physics of it" tend to bear it out is why in valid testing + math alone)

    Lately I also sent he an email on pagefile.sys having problems on being told NOT to form on C: but instead on other drives - why? Because it too, adversely can affect performance OR enhance it... how so? Well, because you can MOVE a pagefile.sys, or even SPAN it (@ least in Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003) or remove it from C: altogether in older MS' OS...

    (That's done by moving the pagefile.sys to HDD's as one way, & I used to do that, circa 1994-2002, before I started using TRUE SSD's (not FLASH RAM slower on writes based ones))

    HOWEVER - A faster & better PERFORMING way is on SSD's, like the kind I use that use TRUE RAM (DDR2 now) like a GIGABYTE IRAM)!

    THE PROBLEM IN WINDOWS 7 I am seeing on THAT account though?

    Well, that is that Windows 7 64-bit @ least, DEMANDS to have @ least a 16mb sized one there on C:, & I'd rather not have my main OS & Programs bearing disk contending with paging ops!

    By moving the pagefile.sys to ANOTHER DRIVE, especially a SSD, in effect "speeds it up" on C: where my programs & OS are, even more by not having it do paging but only instead loading programs &/or data instead (makes TOTAL sense & that's another thing for MS to look into for PERFORMANCE' SAKE))

    So far, he's been pretty good about keeping in touch with me about this... & he is NOT a b.s.'er about working @ MS either...

    APK

    P.S.=> Now, though? LOL, I want to see what happens per our email exchanges on HOSTS being unable to use 0 in a HOSTS fi

  75. CountBrass, I'll vouch 4 Foredecker, see inside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To whom it may concern: Foredecker's telling it HOW IT IS!

    Foredecker's actually PRETTY "Famous" online AND IN THE "REAL WORLD" too, with he being featured @ many events as a GUEST SPEAKER for MS!

    He is OFTEN the rep MS uses in those cases in fact (he's also really SENIOR MGT. @ MS) for speaking on things "PERFORMANCE" as the mgt. figure @ MS who does so for "THE CLIENT PERFORMANCE DIVISION" of MS...

    FOREDECKER's no bullshitter on that account!

    Yes, I had to... So, I checked into it myself too!

    ALL per our discussions noted here on HOSTS files in the URL's next below, now being unable to use 0 in HOSTS as a blocking address and on the local DNS Client cache service too...

    (I.E.-> Using 0 in a HOSTS file makes them now smaller & faster, but, since you cannot do that now on Windows 7/VISTA (here since 12/08/2009 @ least, it could use it before that MS patch Toesday for a LONG time, & Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003 still can though, & MS put that into Windows 2000, not in its ORIGINAL distro, but later in a service pack - so, someone saw the performance gains it that I am extolling for that now & yes, pinging a 0 blocked address sends back a valid 0.0.0.0 on Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003 still)?

    E.G.-> You get MUCH larger & slower HOSTS files loads into memory AND slower internal parsing of HOSTS files records (because, per line in a hosts file, especially a larger one? 0 = 1 byte is far smaller than 0.0.0.0 = 7 bytes, & certainly smaller & FASTER than the default 127.0.0.1 "loopback adapter address" = 9 bytes per record IN HOSTS FILES... (which the latter also incurs a loopback operation too, the others do not) by far...

    This ALL matters on performance, and especially on HOSTS files with more records than usual in them, larger HOSTS especially)

    ALSO, per our same discussion there, on the local DNS Client Cache in Windows breaking down on larger HOSTS files too!

    That all took place, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1467692&cid=30384918 AND HERE -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1513822&cid=30819978 ) so, don't doubt him guys.

    Which he conceded I may have a SOLID point on (I do & I know it - all the numbers & "physics of it" tend to bear it out is why in valid testing + math alone)

    Lately I also sent he an email on pagefile.sys having problems on being told NOT to form on C: but instead on other drives - why? Because it too, adversely can affect performance OR enhance it... how so? Well, because you can MOVE a pagefile.sys, or even SPAN it (@ least in Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003) or remove it from C: altogether in older MS' OS...

    (That's done by moving the pagefile.sys to HDD's as one way, & I used to do that, circa 1994-2002, before I started using TRUE SSD's (not FLASH RAM slower on writes based ones))

    HOWEVER - A faster & better PERFORMING way is on SSD's, like the kind I use that use TRUE RAM (DDR2 now) like a GIGABYTE IRAM)!

    THE PROBLEM IN WINDOWS 7 I am seeing on THAT account though?

    Well, that is that Windows 7 64-bit @ least, DEMANDS to have @ least a 16mb sized one there on C:, & I'd rather not have my main OS & Programs bearing disk contending with paging ops!

    By moving the pagefile.sys to ANOTHER DRIVE, especially a SSD, in effect "speeds it up" on C: where my programs & OS are, even more by not having it do paging but only instead loading programs &/or data instead (makes TOTAL sense & that's another thing for MS to look into for PERFORMANCE' SAKE))

    So far, he's been pretty good about keeping in touch with me about this... & he is NOT a b.s.'er about working @ MS either...

    APK

    P.S.=> Now, though? LOL, I want to see what happens per our email exchanges on HOSTS being unable to use 0 in a HOSTS fi

  76. Listen DIPSHIT, DISPICABLE is exactly right by omb · · Score: 1

    As a twice convicted corporatist criminal convicted on two continents and with innumerable convictions for theft, the officers should be in a Supermax.