Google's Page plays hardball with Oracle
Google CEO Larry Page returned to a San Francisco court to take the stand as a witness in the legal battle between Google and Oracle over patents and copyrights related to Java.
Google CEO Larry Page returned to a San Francisco court to take the stand as a witness in the legal battle between Google and Oracle over patents and copyrights related to Java.
The trial between Oracle and Google, accusing the latter of copying Java code, continued yesterday with an Oracle slide deck laying out its argument before the court moved on to hear lead witnesses Oracle CEO Larry Ellison and Google CEO Larry Page.
The drama surrounding the jury in Oracle v. Google has heightened, causing deliberations to be briefly placed on hold on Monday.
Why do people change browsers? Not too many, I suspect, for this reason. And wait, isn't Chrome the default browser on most LG gadgets?
Now that Google News is out of beta after 1219 days (3.33 years, and I thought they would pull the trigger at 3.
Google's unintentional WiFi data collection may have tapped information from some members of Congress - but if those lawmakers had unsecured networks at home, doesn't that suggest they're a bigger part of the problem?
Last week, Robert Scoble wrote:So, every month that Microsoft and Yahoo will be stuck in some courtroom arguing out why this is a good deal means money in the bank for Google as they close mobile phone deal after mobile phone deal.Forget the courtoom thing for a moment because it won't be the rainmakers that are in court.
Jeff Jarvis picked up on my post the other day about GData, Is GData knocking down Google's walled gardens, or enabling a new kind of portal? Google's new syndication protocol which is an extension of both RSS and Atom.
Ionut has an interesting post about what the world would be like without Google. I agree that the Internet would be quite a bit different than it is today.
About 5 hours after signing up for Google Checkout, I noticed a message from Mastercard on the machine stating my card was blocked because of suspicious activity. How could that be?