Google To Challenge Facebook Again
Hugh Pickens writes "Google is set to make a fresh attempt to gain a foothold in the booming social networking business, seeking to counter the growing threat that Facebook poses to some of its core services. USA Today reports that the search giant is upgrading Gmail to add social-media tools similar to those found on Facebook, including photo and video sharing within the Gmail application, along with a new tool for status updates. According to reports, Google is planning to give Gmail users a way to aggregate the updates of their various contacts on the service, creating a stream of notifications that would echo the similar real-time streams from Facebook and Twitter. Google's decision to exploit the heavily-used Gmail service as the basis for its latest assault on the social networking business partly reflects the failure of Google's previous stand-alone efforts to enter the social networking sector. Its Orkut networking service, though launched before Facebook, has failed to gain a mass following in most parts of the world, despite success in Brazil, and its acquisition of Twitter rival Jaiku ended in failure after it scrapped development of the service." Update: 02/09 19:32 GMT by KD : It's been announced as Google Buzz; CNET has a detailed writeup.
Although it would take quite a few HCI PhDs to figure out how to do it all without cluttering an already cluttery gmail UI.
An old-timer with old-timey ideas.
Neither company values privacy and just wants all the data for advertising so what difference does it make?
I think many people (though probably not enough) already worry about what Google and Facebook separately know and track about their online and private lives. Putting them both together under the control of just one of those companies? No thanks. A million times no.
Google will fail to get a foothold for one reason laziness, the masses will not want to change over their account to something else. There is little innovation to be had in social media and the little tweaks that facebook does not copy from google will not be enough for people to deal with the hassle of changing.
Knowledge = Power
P= W/t
t=Money
Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
Innovation and producing the "Next Big Thing" is the more difficult but potentially more rewarding path.
Slapping lipstick on your competitor's pig is the easy shortcut.
Does it really matter whom you upload your private data to? Once it is out of your hands, it does not matter if it is with google, facebook, yahoo or msn
I think the social thing is more about being (or seeming) cool than anything else. The target of Facebook is people wanting to have an audience for wathever idea they can have to appear cool (and waste some time gaming).
So, what Google really needs to attract those people is becoming cooler, while remaining a good tool for productive people. The target is difficult to reach, but I would advise starting with games, there is potential for creating community there that is badly exploited on the Facebook side.
If Google pimps up GMail enough, with file-sharing, social networking, instant-messaging, and gee-whiz features, it will get blocked at our firewall as a security risk.
Right now, Google Chat is blocked. Google Voice is blocked. YouTube is blocked. Google Docs is blocked.
Keep it up, Google, and I won't be able to use much Google at all at work.
Now, for those of you who have no responsibilities, feel free to flame on and explain why my corporate masters are shortsighted, maniacally obsessed with control, and oblivious to reality in their vain attempt to secure the corporate data, protect our customers' information, and be responsible to the shareholders. It starts out as funny, then becomes annoying, and finally settles into a tragic display of ignorance of the reality of large corporation security issues.
It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye. Or $50 million.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
I think you're crazy if you believe that the 13-20 crowd is even vaguely aware of the concept of online security. In my experience they view privacy and security as hurdles, not assets, for the products they use online.
Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
> Google needs to find one niche for the age 13-20 crowd
> Personally, I think that niche is security.
You must know different 13-20 year olds than I do.