The security risk in Web 2.0
Security has become a no-brainer for desktop software, but the same doesn't hold true for the booming world of Web applications.
Security has become a no-brainer for desktop software, but the same doesn't hold true for the booming world of Web applications.
Jimmy Wales is getting in the search business. All he wants is 5% of the market. That's nothing for somebody with Jimmy's audacious business acumen.
Google Investor Conference Call scheduled for May 31, 2006, 11am, pt; Webcast.
Wednesday's opening Keynote here in San Jose sees Guidewire's Carla Thompson joined on stage by senior representatives from many of the more interesting players in the Semantic Search space; Tomasz Imielinski from Ask, Peter Norvig from Google, Riza Berkan of Hakia, Scott Provost from Microsoft, William Tunstall-Pedoe of the UK's True Knowledge, and Andrew Tomkins of Yahoo.
I will post information about the conference call starting at 2:00EST.A New Perspective: The Consumer Electronics Buying Process2:00 Waiting for the call to start2:03 Still a few more minutes as people are still "dialing in"2:07 I will post any interesting topics during the conference call and questions during the Q&A.
Today was a bit more laid back, with all the talks happening in the main auditorium. In practice this meant a lot of people wandered in and out of the talks, to spend time schmoozing and having meetings.
January marks the beginning of an exciting new year which will be kicked off on January 5th in Las Vegas during the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES). Bill Gates is a regular keynote speaker, but interestingly this year he will be joined by CEO Terry Semel from Yahoo, and co-founder Larry Page from Google in separate sessions.
At Net phone confab, search giant takes meetings with service providers, sources tell News.com.
Google's OpenSocial announcement today suggests changes that may improve the future of social networking (click here for Dan Farber's coverage). Hidden from view during the press conference, an improvised parallel event arose spontaneously, raising deeper implications than the Google announcement itself.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt o "Personal Democracy": Up For Sale!