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Tuesday, July 15, 2003
Yahoo-Overture Deal
Yahoo bought Overture for USD 1.63 billion in cash and stock, or about 10% of its market cap. WSJ interviews Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Watch, who says:
News.com: "Yahoo for now will face off most directly with Google, but analysts said the wild card will likely be Microsoft. MSN is Overture's biggest partner, delivering as much as one-third of Overture's revenue this year, or an estimated $350 million. As a result, many industry watchers say that it is only a matter of time before MSN takes stock of its alternatives, including replacing Overture with Google on its Web sites and hastening efforts to build its own Web search technology." Interesting times in the Search Kingdom. I wonder why Microsoft still cannot make an open all-cash offer for Overture, along the lines of what Oracle is trying to do with PeopleSoft. All that Yahoo's offer means is that Overture is in play - am not sure it is the last world. Having Overture out of the game would leave it a race between Google, Yahoo and MSN, with the latter now having a lot of catching up to do. Wonder what Microsoft Research with all its multi-billion dollar spends was doing as the world of search was evolving. Goes to show that money does not necessarily translate into good ideas. It is still possible for the small, smart companies to win. I had pooh-poohed Overture's model of paid search placements when they had started many years ago. I was wrong. I always felt that search is what you give on the basis of what's there on the web, not what people are willing to pay for it. Today, paid search is the fastest growing segment of the business. Related Entries: [All]
Our Info Aggregator tops RSS Aggregators Review
About.com (Heinz Tschabitscher) has a review of 10 RSS/News Aggregators, and our very own Info Aggregator is tops! We got a rating of 4.5/5. Here is what Heinz has to say.
Great day for us! And we have to start working on the drawbacks that Heinz has pointed out. Related Entries: [All]
BlogStreet
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Great news! Congrats. Posted by SrijithYes, this is great Rajesh -- congrats from Infinite Ink too! This is also great news for IMAP because it will help to spur the developers of IMAP clients to add support for things like user-defined labels, IMSP, and other features that power IMAP users want. -Nancy
Web is the Place
ongoing Tim Bray: "All computer applications fall into one of three baskets: information retrieval, database interaction, and content creation. History shows that the Web browser, or something like it, is the right way to do the first two...If you want to develop software, you can build for the Web and/or Unix and/or OSS platforms; or alternatively, you can be a sharecropper."
Web Services
Doug Kaye writes: "Services are rapidly gaining ground in the IT world as well. Services are a new way of building distributed applications. We have five decades of experience with traditional applications, but just a few years with those built from services." He considers an example: the calculation of sales tax or VAT.
Loose coupling is the way of the future.
Evolution 2.0 UI Proposal
My email client is Evolution, so this is of natural interest to me. They have some pictures of what the UI could look like in the future.
Dashboard
DJ Adams writes about the Dashboard project of Nat Friedman.
Managing Email
Dennis Kennedy writes: "There are four points in the email process at which you can have a significant impact on email management: before a message sent to you, when you send a message, when or as you receive a message, and when you store or delete a message. An approach that attacks each of these four points will bring you the greatest benefit, but taking steps at any one or more of them will also help you."
TECH TALK: Useful Concepts: Development Economics
I know very little of Economics. Supply, Demand, Pricing are things which came in a text book almost two decades earlier in my life. Much of my decision-making has been drive more by gut and trial-or-error. Development Economics is a branch of Economics dealing with the economic transformation of developing countries, and so is even further removed from me. So, when I was discussing the problems of Rural India recently with Atanu Dey, I realised that while I can look at a very techno-centric view of the world, if that view of the world can get embellished by an understanding of some economic concepts, it will help me understand the problems and possible solutions better. A book I came across was Debraj Ray’s “Development Economics”. As I started reading it, I realised that this is something I should have tried to understand long ago. Many of us live in developing countries. The challenges of poverty, rural-urban migration, agricultural dependence may seem far removed from our lives in cities, but nevertheless do have an indirect impact. And if we decide to work on solutions to transform rural areas, we need to understand the issues well, lest we take half-measures and make the problem worse. Here is an excerpt from the book dealing with co-ordination failure. While the context may be from the point of view of rural areas, the problem is true of many other areas too – where many elements of a solution have to all come together simultaneously to be able to make a difference.
Rural India (and rural areas in most other developing countries) need such entrepreneurs. Tomorrow: Game Theory Related Entries: [All]
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