Who will topple first? Google or Microsoft?
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Will Google ever be toppled from search? Will MS ever be toppled from OS or from Office apps? If so, which will happen first? In theory it should be easier to topple Google than MS. In practice Google seems to be just as hard to topple as MS.
Kevin
Google. If Microsoft wants to hit Google hard, all they need to do is ship IE with a built-in ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads. Boom, Google comes crying and screaming like a little baby.
Religiously blogging on the intarwebs since the early 21st century: Kineti L'Tziyon Judah Himango
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Google is in the advertising business. They may have competencies in hundreds of other areas but over 90% of its revenues come from advertising. Invent a better advertising system and Google will topple. It will be unable to sustain all its free services. You don't have to compete with Google's email or mobile OS products, you only have to compete with their advertising product (good luck with that.) (Just saying you shouldn't confuse what a company does with what pays the bills. Microsoft has expensive departments carried by just a few core departments that make all the money. So they are susceptible too.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
I agree with you partially. But people advertise on Google because lot of people use their search because their search is good. Same thing about the Google apps. Companies advertise in Superbowl (or cricket world cup final) because more people watch it. What I am interested in seeing is how the revenues are divided across different departments (search, apps, maps etc).
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Paul Watson wrote:
That is from a user perspective though.
It comes down to users ultimately.
Paul Watson wrote:
So to topple Google you topple their advertising revenue (not search.)
How would you topple their advertising model without producing a product that consumers want to use?
Kevin
Advertisers are users too. Their adoption of Google has helped make Google popular (and a bit chicken/egg with users using Google making Google attractive to advertisers and round we go.) But I agree that other users are important too and of course you have to make a product users want. I'm just saying that you have to take Google's money to topple them. You can build a better email system than GMail or build a better browser than Chrome or build X better than Google's version and you won't topple them. Building a better search would hurt Google but their advertising revenue isn't all off the back of their search traffic anymore. So you want to beat Google at advertising if you want to topple Google. Of course, Google would try to simply buy you out at an early stage if you had a better system than theirs. Microsoft is a bit more diversified than Google.
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
How would you topple their advertising model without producing a product that consumers want to use?
You don't need to invent the better product. You need ad-space for your better-advertising system. There are popular websites (Facebook) and products (mobile phones) that would only too happily use your better advertising system over Google's. This is why you don't really need to target the users, you target the ad-space and the ad-buyers. Obviously Google owns quite a bit of ad-space (google.com and Ad-Sense using websites) but the web is big and changing advertising systems is easier than trying to build your own ad-space site for your better advertising system.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Paul Watson wrote:
That is from a user perspective though.
It comes down to users ultimately.
Paul Watson wrote:
So to topple Google you topple their advertising revenue (not search.)
How would you topple their advertising model without producing a product that consumers want to use?
Kevin
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
How would you topple their advertising model without producing a product that consumers want to use?
Using a system of shell companies, trickery and a web of lies you make a competing company that "is generating tons of interest." When all these companies "invest" in this new company and talk about the better deal they get for advertising other companies start leaving google. Use the early changers as proof that google is failing. You then pull your advertising, and then other companies follow suit Google is in trouble. Sometimes the perception of weakness is enough to be weakness.
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Google. If Microsoft wants to hit Google hard, all they need to do is ship IE with a built-in ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads. Boom, Google comes crying and screaming like a little baby.
Religiously blogging on the intarwebs since the early 21st century: Kineti L'Tziyon Judah Himango
Judah Himango wrote:
ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads.
It's not difficult to find a workaround for ad-blocker. Google can find a workaround and it will be instantly deployed. Now MS may make Google workaround not to work, but the deployment part will be difficult.
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I agree with you partially. But people advertise on Google because lot of people use their search because their search is good. Same thing about the Google apps. Companies advertise in Superbowl (or cricket world cup final) because more people watch it. What I am interested in seeing is how the revenues are divided across different departments (search, apps, maps etc).
No doubt Google owns a lot of ad-space but they don't own all of it and there are significant sites that don't use Google advertising. Offer them a better advertising system and then target the sites that do use Google advertising. Show them the money and they'll switch. End up with just Google owned sites running Google ads. You are right that it would be interesting to see the break-down of Google ad-space. Their search is good and it is a big ad-space but I'm not sure (gut assumption, no figures to back that up) Google could survive on it alone these days. There is also the case for going at it through the advertisers. Show them good results for non-Google ad-space and they'll start diverting money to you and then Google will suffer. It's not so much about the users. We play a part but we aren't as powerful as we think we are. If we were we'd have killed off that Gator company years ago.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Judah Himango wrote:
ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads.
It's not difficult to find a workaround for ad-blocker. Google can find a workaround and it will be instantly deployed. Now MS may make Google workaround not to work, but the deployment part will be difficult.
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
Now MS may make Google workaround not to work, but the deployment part will be difficult.
Windows update. Not like they haven't forced me to take their stupid "Geninue windows" checking tool or not be able to do anything for updates...
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
Now MS may make Google workaround not to work, but the deployment part will be difficult.
Windows update. Not like they haven't forced me to take their stupid "Geninue windows" checking tool or not be able to do anything for updates...
ragnaroknrol wrote:
Windows update.
Do you know how many people keep their systems up to date with Windows Update as soon as an update is released? Very few. Most companies only selective deploy windows upates. Windows Update is not an efficient tool for deploying updates. It's a lot efficient than deploying using CDs but it still lacks the efficiency of deployement of web sites/web applications.
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Will Google ever be toppled from search? Will MS ever be toppled from OS or from Office apps? If so, which will happen first? In theory it should be easier to topple Google than MS. In practice Google seems to be just as hard to topple as MS.
Kevin
The EU will prevent either from toppling the other in the interest of competition. Only an EU firm would ever be permitted to topple either...
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Deyan Georgiev wrote:
There are Google alternatives out there/far weaker though
I wouldn't say they are far weaker, but they are weaker though. They need to be better to make any headway, not just as good.
Deyan Georgiev wrote:
there are no alternatives for the Microsoft’s OS or Dev Tools
I thought there were plenty of alternatives. Perhaps you mean there are no half decent alternatives?
Deyan Georgiev wrote:
I wouldn’t bet my money on a company which entire income is based on advertisements
Google's isn't, though the bulk of it is.
Kevin
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
I wouldn't say they are far weaker, but they are weaker though. They need to be better to make any headway, not just as good.
That was exactly my point.
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
I thought there were plenty of alternatives. Perhaps you mean there are no half decent alternatives?
Linux is still too generic to be used from other then sys admins, programmers or dedicated teenage geeks. The GCC is a very good compiler but without a good interface for the GDB, decent IDE and visual framework it is useless for creating business software of any kind.
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
Google's isn't, though the bulk of it is.
Not sure I understand this. :)
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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The EU will prevent either from toppling the other in the interest of competition. Only an EU firm would ever be permitted to topple either...
With an EU software titans like SAP and their Cristal Reports I don’t think this would happens any time soon.
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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Google. If Microsoft wants to hit Google hard, all they need to do is ship IE with a built-in ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads. Boom, Google comes crying and screaming like a little baby.
Religiously blogging on the intarwebs since the early 21st century: Kineti L'Tziyon Judah Himango
Judah Himango wrote:
Google. If Microsoft wants to hit Google hard, all they need to do is ship IE with a built-in ad blocker that blocks Google AdSense ads. Boom, Google comes crying and screaming like a little baby
I like your style, maybe it would be worth our while writing an Ad blocker addin for free.
Software Kinetics (requires SL3 beta) - Moving software
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
Fortunately, both businesses have expanded into different areas which makes it difficult for anyone to topple them.
Well, I really meant topple them in their core products. I don't expect either to be toppled solely by their being toppled in their core products. However, I would say that, for me, it is the combination of their other products that makes it difficult for me to junk their core products. E.g., I use a number of Google's cloud apps. and it is convenient to also combine those with its search products. So Bing/Yahoo would have to be much better to win me over.
Kevin
I think Microsoft unless it changes its pricing model. There comes a point when an OS and an office suite is good enough for 99% of the people so no need to buy it again.
John
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No doubt Google owns a lot of ad-space but they don't own all of it and there are significant sites that don't use Google advertising. Offer them a better advertising system and then target the sites that do use Google advertising. Show them the money and they'll switch. End up with just Google owned sites running Google ads. You are right that it would be interesting to see the break-down of Google ad-space. Their search is good and it is a big ad-space but I'm not sure (gut assumption, no figures to back that up) Google could survive on it alone these days. There is also the case for going at it through the advertisers. Show them good results for non-Google ad-space and they'll start diverting money to you and then Google will suffer. It's not so much about the users. We play a part but we aren't as powerful as we think we are. If we were we'd have killed off that Gator company years ago.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
Ok here is the breakdown: 67% of Google revenue comes from ads on Google Websites (Gmail, Google.com etc) 30% comes from ad-words (or doubleclick stuff) running on other websites 3% comes from licensing What I could not find was the division within the Google websites. What you are talking about is the 30% which is significant but not critical. In the end you have to develop better search, maps, mail apps, docs apps, videos apps, etc. to eat up Google revenue. I think search may make up more than 70% of ad revenues from Google web sites. So if someone develops a better search they still have a chance (unless they don't get acquired by Google).
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Ok here is the breakdown: 67% of Google revenue comes from ads on Google Websites (Gmail, Google.com etc) 30% comes from ad-words (or doubleclick stuff) running on other websites 3% comes from licensing What I could not find was the division within the Google websites. What you are talking about is the 30% which is significant but not critical. In the end you have to develop better search, maps, mail apps, docs apps, videos apps, etc. to eat up Google revenue. I think search may make up more than 70% of ad revenues from Google web sites. So if someone develops a better search they still have a chance (unless they don't get acquired by Google).
Good figures thanks. You can still hurt Google by talking to the advertisers who are the ones giving Google money. They will accept better ROI over pure traffic numbers. Advertisers are already wising up that traffic != That 30% isn't insignificant. It, and other ad-space on other sites, represents the wedge you use to pull advertising money away from the 70% properties. (Not saying any of this is easy. If it were it would have been done. But don't think the 70% represents an unassailable fortress.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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ragnaroknrol wrote:
Windows update.
Do you know how many people keep their systems up to date with Windows Update as soon as an update is released? Very few. Most companies only selective deploy windows upates. Windows Update is not an efficient tool for deploying updates. It's a lot efficient than deploying using CDs but it still lacks the efficiency of deployement of web sites/web applications.
You know how many people go insane when the media says there is a virus that can kill your machines out there? They run it immediately if told. So you make IE have code to block ad sense. Since you are asking for a lawsuit anyway, might as well go whole hog and make it work. Put in code to make IE go flaky and prompt the user to run windows update on the machine when it is told to because a new update to break ad sense again is ready. "Oh, explorer is getting slow and having problems with some sites, it says to run updates to fix this. Guess I will."
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Kevin McFarlane wrote:
I wouldn't say they are far weaker, but they are weaker though. They need to be better to make any headway, not just as good.
That was exactly my point.
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
I thought there were plenty of alternatives. Perhaps you mean there are no half decent alternatives?
Linux is still too generic to be used from other then sys admins, programmers or dedicated teenage geeks. The GCC is a very good compiler but without a good interface for the GDB, decent IDE and visual framework it is useless for creating business software of any kind.
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
Google's isn't, though the bulk of it is.
Not sure I understand this. :)
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
Deyan Georgiev wrote:
but without a good interface for the GDB, decent IDE and visual framework it is useless for creating business software of any kind
*cough* Qt Creator[^] gdb interface? Check. Decent IDE? Check. Visual framework? Check. :)
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Media2r wrote:
Careful now - you might invoke the wrath of the almighty "ah blow me!" CSS...
FTFY Don't mention it ;)
If the post was helpful, please vote, eh! Current activities: Book: Devils by Fyodor Dostoyevsky Project: Hospital Automation, final stage Learning: Image analysis, LINQ Now and forever, defiant to the end. What is Multiple Sclerosis[^]?
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Media2r wrote:
Careful now - you might invoke the wrath of the almighty "ah blow me!" CSS...
If the post was helpful, please vote, eh! Current activities: Book: Devils by Fyodor Dostoyevsky Project: Hospital Automation, final stage Learning: Image analysis, LINQ Now and forever, defiant to the end. What is Multiple Sclerosis[^]?
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Will Google ever be toppled from search? Will MS ever be toppled from OS or from Office apps? If so, which will happen first? In theory it should be easier to topple Google than MS. In practice Google seems to be just as hard to topple as MS.
Kevin
I know not this "Google" of which you speak.