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2007年11月10日星期六

Google Shares May Rise to $1,000, Fund Manager Jacob Predicts

By Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Google Inc. shares may surpass $1,000 over the next year as the world's most popular Internet search engine trounces competitors, said Ryan Jacob, manager of the best-performing technology fund.

The Mountain View, California-based company's stock reached $700 on Oct. 31 after rising to $600 earlier in the month. A price of $1,000 would be a 44 percent increase from yesterday's close.

Google is ``taking share from smaller players and consolidating their lead among larger competitors,'' Jacob, who made Google his second-largest holding in his top-performing Jacob Internet Fund, said in an interview yesterday in Boston. ``I don't think $1,000 price targets are a stretch.''

Apart from dominating the market for Internet search, Google this month said it would create a mobile-phone operating system for handsets sold by Sprint Nextel Corp. and T-Mobile USA Inc. The agreement could increase advertising revenue, which accounts for 99 percent of its $10 billion in annual sales.

Google started what it calls the Open Handset Alliance to make free software that will help the phones run applications. Nokia Oyj and Microsoft Corp. have separate phone operating systems that aren't open to developers.

``With its new mobile system, Google is getting out in front,'' Jacob said.

Google fell $20.76, or 3 percent, to $673.08 at 10:35 a.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading.

The $80 million Jacob Internet Fund has climbed at an average annual pace of 34 percent over the past five years to rank as the best-performing technology fund, according to Morningstar Inc. in Chicago. Google represents 7.1 percent of its assets.

Earnings Growth

Google's shares trade at 56 times this year's estimated earnings, making them more than twice as expensive as Microsoft. Jacob said Google's shares aren't too expensive because earnings are growing faster than its stock price.

Google's third-quarter net income rose 46 percent to $1.07 billion as sales advanced 57 percent to $4.23 billion.

Jacob, 38, started the fund in 1999, just months before a three-year rout in technology stocks began. The fund lost 79 percent of its value in 2000, 56 percent in 2001 and 13 percent in 2002.

This year, the fund has risen 11 percent, trailing 92 percent of other technology funds, according to Morningstar. The fund has been hurt by investments in small companies whose shares are deemed cheap compared with earnings, Jacob said.

Among the fund's biggest holdings, Napster Inc., the Los Angeles-based music-download service, has lost 11 percent this year, and Openwave Systems Inc., a Redwood City, California- based maker of communications software, has plunged 63 percent.

The fund's biggest holding is Sohu.com Inc., China's third- biggest Internet portal. Sohu shares have more than doubled this year, as the company has benefited from operating the official Web site for the Beijing Olympics. Jacob holds a quarter of the fund in Chinese stocks, the most he's ever invested in the region.



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因为失去了所以才会珍惜,我不会因为失去而懊悔,平坦不会是我希望的

2007年10月14日星期日

Fwd: Google Alert - tour

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Google Alerts <googlealerts-noreply@google.com>
Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 06:22:34 -0700
Subject: Google Alert - tour
To: zyongxin2916@gmail.com

Google News Alert for: tour
Langer Leads Champions Tour Event
The Associated Press -
Langer, who is active on the PGA Tour, is playing in his fourth
senior event since turning 50 on Aug. 27. He set the course record
with a 62 on Friday. ...
See all stories on this topic
LPGA Tour: The Best Value In Town
TravelGolf.com - USA
I know two things about the LPGA Tour in these here United States of
America. The first is that a terrific relationship of symbiotic
proportions is ...
See all stories on this topic
Gonzo Tour Kicks Off
MTV.uk - London,England,UK
Gonzo On Tour's 5th Birthday has started in style with a top notch
gig in Birmingham. Funeral For A Friend headlined the tiny Barfly show
supported by ...
See all stories on this topic
Randhawa takes lead at Indian Open
AFP -
Randhawa, a six-time winner on the Asian Tour, produced a superb
five-under-par 67 at a sun-baked Delhi Golf Club to tie with overnight
leader Chapchai ...
See all stories on this topic
Sonia to tour Rae Bareli
Times of India - India
LUCKNOW: Congress president Sonia Gandhi is expected to arrive in
parliamentary constituency Rae Bareli on October 16 for a three-day
tour. ...
See all stories on this topic
Rallying-Tour of Corsica second leg results
Reuters UK - UK
Oct 13 (Reuters) - Tour of Corsica second leg times from Ajaccio,
France on Saturday 1. Sebastien Loeb (France) Citroen 2 hrs 20 mins
58.600 2. ...
See all stories on this topic
McNeil claims lead at Frys Open
AFP -
LAS VEGAS, United States (AFP) ― George McNeill put himself in pole
position to claim his first PGA Tour title on Saturday, firing a
five-under-par 67 for a ...
See all stories on this topic
More surgery for Freddie
The Press Association -
An ECB statement also suggests the 29-year-old is not thought likely
to be fit in time for the tour of New Zealand in February and March
next year, ...
See all stories on this topic
Teenager McIlroy remains on course to make history
AFP -
MADRID (AFP) ― Northern Irish teenager Rory McIlroy remained on
target to become the youngest European Tour winner after the third
round of the Madrid Open ...
See all stories on this topic
Google Blogs Alert for: tour
Virtual Book Tour
By johngrant
tour-banner.jpg I'm taking CULLOTTA on tour during the month of
November. You can view my Tour home page at:
http://virtualbooktoursforauthors.blogspot.com/2007/10/cullotta-virtual-book-tour-07.html.

Las Vegas and the Mob - http://johngrant.wordpress.com

The School - UK Tour and Début Single
By Tom(Tom)
The School, who have recently signed to Spain's Elefant Records, have
announced details of their début single and a UK tour. The single will
be All I Wanna Do and will be released next month. It's apt that the
band, who play indie pop ...
Indie MP3 - Keeping C86 Alive! - http://www.indie-mp3.co.uk/index.htm

THE LODGER ANNOUNCE US TOUR DATES...
By Dean(Dean)
There are nine dates planned for the East Coast tour - see The
Lodger's official website for full details. The Lodger - Many Thanks
For Your Honest Opinion [MP3]. The Lodger - Kicking Sand [MP3]. +
Official website [link] ...
Everyone Could Be Light Green - http://areyoulightgreen.blogspot.com/

Haunted Tours for Halloween Fun: East Coast Edition
By Kelly Amabile
Alexandria, VA: This Colonial Tour Group runs their original Ghost
and Graveyard Tour, as well as a special enhanced Halloween version,
several times throughout the autumn months. Atlanta, GA: How about a
haunted tour on two wheels? ...
Gadling - http://www.gadling.com

WHS Hosts Lantern Tour Sunday at Willowbrook Cemetery
By editor@westportnow.com(editor@westportnow.com)
The Westport Historical Society will host its fourth annual Lantern
Tour Sunday at 5 pm at the Willowbrook Cemetery, 395 Main St.
WestportNow.com Image Staples senior Jacob Henkoff portrayed Robert
Gault during last year's Lantern Tour. ...
WestportNow - http://www.westportnow.com/
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2007年10月8日星期一

Google Cash Review - Good Or Bad?

I decided to write this Google Cash review after having a chance to
see what lies behind the training package's 100 percent satisfaction
guarantee. In this short review, I'll go over what you can
realistically expect to get out of an investment in Chris Carpenter's
latest edition and end with whether or not I think it's worth your
investment.

If you're an internet marketer who is struggling to make money online
from home, you might want to look into Google Cash. This comprehensive
training package includes, among other things, 24 videos that can get
you on the fast track to making boatloads of money sitting at your
computer.

Proclaimed "the safest way to enter a market" and "the world's fastest
business opportunity" by AdWords Guru Perry Marshall, Google Cash can
teach you how to jump into a new market in as little as 15 minutes.
You can do this all without having to deal with email lists or
inventory. In fact, to implement the strategies outlined in the guide,
you don't even need to have a website!

Google Cash can give you all of the tools you need to make an excess
of $33,000 each month, enabling you to quit your day job and spend
more time doing the things you love. Think of the extra time you can
spend with family and friends, or even just watching TV all day!
Finally, you can have the money to buy your dream car or travel the
world.

The best part of the Google Cash system is that if you don't see the
results outlined in the website (some of which I've detailed above),
you get your money back. Coming in at well under $100, the program
comes with seven free bonuses which are worth almost $700. Available
for immediate download, I highly recommend Google Cash to anyone who
needs more money. With such a great guarantee, you've got nothing to
lose by trying it out!

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2007年10月6日星期六

Keep America Beautiful, Inc. Partners with Google to Promote International Cleanup Weekend

STAMFORD, Conn., Oct. 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Keep America
Beautiful, Inc., the nation's largest community improvement network,
is pleased to join forces with Internet information provider Google,
Inc. in promoting "International Cleanup Weekend," October 13-14,
2007.

The worldwide event, conceptualized by Google, is intended to
democratize local environmental stewardship activities by giving
individuals the event framework and collaboration tools they need to
choose areas of need in their own communities, organize an event,
invite friends, and share the results. Any location can be the focus
of a cleanup activity, including parks, beaches, rivers, trails, and
other public lands.

"Keep America Beautiful believes that each individual's daily choices
and actions have a huge impact on communities and on the environment,"
said Keep America Beautiful President G. Raymond Empson. "Google's
International Cleanup Weekend embodies this spirit of grassroots
action, enabled by modern technology. We're happy to be involved."

Integral to the concept are Google's "Google Maps" online tools
(maps.google.com). Event participants are encouraged to use Google's
easy-to- use interface to map the areas where they will be working.
Once mapped, they can then broadcast their event to other volunteers
and their larger communities.

Get started with your local cleanup activities, or see what's
happening on a global scale at
http://maps.google.com/help/maps/cleanup/.

About Keep America Beautiful, Inc.

Keep America Beautiful, Inc., established in 1953, is the nation's
largest volunteer-based community action and education organization.
With a network of nearly 1,000 affiliate and participating
organizations, Keep America Beautiful forms public-private
partnerships and programs that engage individuals to take greater
responsibility for improving their community environments. To learn
more about Keep America Beautiful, go to www.kab.org.

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2007年10月4日星期四

Google proposes 'crumbled cookies' in privacy pledge

Google has proposed breaking up the information gathered on users of
its services in order to better preserve their privacy. The company
told the US Senate that it was investigating the measure after
consultation with privacy groups.

The company made the claim in a submission to the Senate's
investigation of its proposed $3.1bn acquisition of online advertising
giant DoubleClick. The Senate is probing the deal over widely-held
fears that it would create an online advertising monopoly, and that
the huge amount of information held by the combined company could lead
to privacy breaches.

Google's Chief Legal Officer David Drummond made a written submission
to the Senate outlining some of the action the company proposed to
take to alleviate privacy fears.

One proposal, according to Reuters news agency, was for a 'crumbled
cookie', which would be a way of storing personal information
separately without identifying it all as coming from one person or
machine.

"We have consulted with numerous privacy, consumer and industry groups
in developing these ideas and have endeavoured to be responsive to
their concerns," he wrote in his submission, according to Reuters.

After the hearing, at which he also gave oral evidence, Drummond told
reporters that he thought it was unlikely that the Government would
impose any conditions or controls on the deal.

Microsoft also appeared at the hearing, and General Counsel Brad Smith
told Senators that the deal would put Google in control of 80 per cent
of the market for both text and banner adverts on the internet.

Google's Drummond countered with the argument that if the market were
a monopoly, Microsoft itself would not have paid $6bn for DoubleClick
competitor aQuantive, a purchase the company announced in May this
year.

Google said at the hearing that it made a priority of privacy, but the
company has been in the headlines this week over an alleged security
breach in its Gmail internet email service. A security researcher
called Petko Petkov said that he had found a way to hack the Gmail
system and divert incoming emails to another mail account.

Google's privacy policies have been under fire in recent months. It
announced earlier this year that it would delete identifying
information connecting people to their Google internet searches after
18 to 24 months.

That provoked an outcry from users and privacy activists who had not
been aware that such logs had been kept indefinitely. The company
reduced the term to 18 months but still faces opposition from privacy
activists who believe that the data should not be kept.

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2007年10月1日星期一

Google to Sell Web-Page Ads Visible on Mobile Phones

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17 ― In another step to extend its dominance of
online advertising, Google said Monday that it would begin selling ads
on Web pages that are viewed on cellphones.

The company said that its new product, AdSense for Mobile, would
establish a cellphone advertising network in which Google would match
ads with the content of mobile Web pages, much as it does online.

Other Internet giants, including Yahoo and AOLTime Warner, as well as
some start-ups, have also created advertising networks tailored for
mobile phones.

Dilip Venkatachari, product management director for AdSense, said the
ads would provide a new source of revenue for publishers and could
encourage more online sites to create mobile-focused Web sites. Like
most other Google advertising systems, ad prices will be set through
an auction and and advertisers will pay when a user clicks on its ad.

Mr. Venkatachari said Google had encouraged publishers to have no more
than two ads per mobile page, a smaller number than typically appear
on a PC's Web browser.

Google has been testing the system with a limited number of
advertisers and publishers this year. On Tuesday, it will open it to
all mobile publishers in 13 countries, including the United States,
Britain, France, China and India.

Last summer, Google began selling ads that appear next to search
results on mobile phones through a program known as AdWords. Last
week, it said that all of its online AdWords advertisers, which are
said to number in the hundreds of thousands, would be eligible to have
their ads appear next to search results on cellphones.

Google's further inroads into mobile advertising have long been
expected. But the market remains relatively small, and analysts do not
expect the new service to contribute much soon to Google's bottom
line.

Still, advertisers and publishers appear to be growing increasingly
comfortable with mobile advertising. AdMob, a start-up that runs a
mobile advertising network, showed 230 million ads in January and
expects to show about 1.5 billion this month, said Omar Hamoui, its
founder and chief executive.

"The reason that Google and others are getting in is that the market
is growing so rapidly, so people are getting very excited," Mr. Hamoui
said.

Earlier in the year, AOL acquired Third Screen Media, an AdMob
competitor, while Microsoft acquired ScreenTonic, a mobile ad company
based in Paris. On Monday, Nokia said it would buy Enpocket, a company
in Boston that displays ads on cellphones.

Microsoft said it was expanding a mobile search partnership with
Sprint first announced last November. Since then, Microsoft's search
technology allowed Sprint customers to look for ring tones and local
Web content, like restaurants and stores. Starting Tuesday, Sprint
customers will be able to use Microsoft's service to search the entire
Web on their cellphones.

In addition, customers will be able to choose to have Sprint track
their whereabouts, so that when they search for local content, they
will not have to type in their location.

Users will also have access to these services through voice-activated
technology, allowing them to speak into the device rather than
triple-tap or type in a keyword.

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Capgemini backs Google software

TECH CONSULTANTS Capgemini have decided that it will recommend
Google's online suite of office software to its corporate customers,
instead of similar offerings from Microsoft and IBM.

According to its press release, the outfit has embraced, cuddled and
otherwise kindoddled Google's software bundle, which includes e-mail,
word processing, spreadsheets and calendar management.

Apparently Capgemini can influence the software choices of more than a
million PC users as its major customers include drug maker Eli Lilly
and accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Capgemini says it will continue to support business software made by
Vole and IBM but will back Google applications and help integrate them
into corporate systems. With the cheap licences involved for Google
software, Capgemini's blessing will give the search engine outfit's
software a lot of credibility.

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Google-hating Aussie watchdog smacked by confused judge

After accusing Google of misleading web users with its money-making
sponsored links, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
(ACCC) has been accused of saying things that don't make sense.

The ACCC showed up in Australian federal court yesterday, two months
after bringing legal action against Google, and Judge James Allsop
told the consumer watchdog that its court documents were almost
"incomprehensible," "opaque," and "somewhat repetitious," The
Australian reports. He then asked the ACCC to clarify its position
with new documents, planning to revisit the matter next month.

In July, the commission kicked off legal proceedings against Google,
two of its subsidiaries, and an Australian classifieds site called
Trading Post, alleging "misleading and deceptive conduct in relation
to sponsored links that appeared on the Google website." The ACCC
claims that the search giant fails to properly distinguish between
"organic" search results and advertising results, and it's annoyed
that Trading Post was able to attract customers using sponsored links
that included the names of two independent car dealerships, Kloster
Ford and Charlestown Toyota.

In accusing Google of violating Australia's Trade Practices Act, the
ACCC is sure that it's the first organization on earth to legally
question the distinction between search results that are paid for and
those that are not. In the U.S., close to a dozen companies have
brought suit against Google for allowing competitors to piggy-back
sponsored links on their trademarks, including American Airlines, but
in recent years, there's been relatively little controversy over the
way sponsored links are presented.

In 2001, an organization led by uber-consumer-advocate Ralph Nader
complained to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission about deceptive
sponsored links, and a year later, the FTC fired off a letter to the
country's search engines, insisting they clearly separate paid search
from unpaid. "Search engine practices weren't terrible at the time of
the FTC letter, and they're better now than they were in 2002," Santa
Clara University law professor and tech law blogger Eric Goldman told
The Reg. "In terms of confusion between ads and search results, we
really haven't seen much stress about that."

You could also argue that Google was clearly marking its sponsored
links well before the rest of the market. "Google's practices were
always better than the prevailing state of the art," Goldman
continued. On Google's main search page, sponsored links appear in a
tinted box tagged with the words "Sponsored Links," and they look much
the same on sites run by Google Ireland and Google Australia, the two
subsidiaries the ACCC is complaining about.

Of course, anyone who visits Google after fifteen years stranded on a
desert island may not understand the term "sponsored link." "You can
always do more to make it clearer that these are ads and not search
results," Goldman said. "Does the term sponsored link communicate 'ad'
- or does it communicate something else?"

When we contacted Google, it gave us a predictable response to the
news from Australia. "From the outset, we have stated this case is
wrongly based and we're now making our arguments to the Court," said
spokesman Rob Shilkin. "Our focus is on delivering relevant
information to Australian users and helping Australian businesses
enjoy the benefits of search marketing."

After the initial response from Judge Allsop, it doesn't look like the
company has all that much to worry about. (r)

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2007年9月8日星期六

Shawnee Mission-Homes tour’s a perfect way to shop for ideas

By JENNIFER BHARGAVA
The Kansas City Star
Kay Schoenfeld's home is one of four homes on the third annual
Renovation Sensation Tour, which benefits the SHARE Foundation at
Shawnee Mission East High School.
Kay Schoenfeld's home is one of four homes on the third annual
Renovation Sensation Tour, which benefits the SHARE Foundation at
Shawnee Mission East High School.
Kay Schoenfeld's Mission Hills home is one of four on the Renovation
Sensation Tour, which benefits the SHARE Foundation at Shawnee Mission
East. This photo was taken in the Schoenfelds' screened porch on
Wednesday.

Kay Schoenfeld doesn't mind if you snoop around her house for ideas.

After all, imitation is the highest form of flattery.

The decorator's Mission Hills home is one of four featured on the
third annual Renovation Sensation Tour, which benefits the Shawnee
Mission East High School SHARE foundation.

Schoenfeld and her husband bought the house in 2000 and completely
renovated it within one year.

"We fell in love with the charm of an old home and the view," she
said. "The house is so warm and inviting. When the former owners moved
out it needed a new family, and we gave it our own personal touch."

They removed walls, added windows, built a screen porch and attached the garage.

Decorating, however, was the most important part.

Antiques and contemporary art are sprawled throughout the "Mount
Vernon" style home, which has a neutral décor.

"It's harder to decorate your own home than it is someone else's,"
Schoenfeld said. "I knew exactly what I wanted, however ― lots of
bookcases. All my hobbies are in my books."

The Schoenfeld family's most recent project has been their
landscaping. This past spring, they put a garden in their back yard.

Although this is the first home tour the mother of three has been
showcased in, she is no stranger to the activity. She often goes to
home tours with friends to gather renovating ideas or holiday
decorating tips.

She hopes her home will inspire someone interested in trying something new.

"Buying a new house that needs work is scary," Schoenfeld said. "But
my family and I had fun during our renovation. We saw it as an
adventure. People just need to understand that it takes time and might
cost a little more, but it's worth it."

She is flattered her home is among the renovated houses chosen for the tour.

Another home in Mission Hills ― a New England-style house built two
years ago ― portrays a 1920s Traditional Colonial Revival theme.
Antique chandeliers grace the ceilings and crystal doorknobs are
placed on every door to represent the time period.

The third home, a Prairie Village ranch, bursts with color. Eclectic
homemade art and furniture brighten each room.

The final home on the tour ― near a lake in Mission Farms in Leawood ―
was built on the former location of the Saddle & Sirloin Club. The
clubhouse's stone now graces the inside and outside of the Colonial.

"A variety of themes is a very important factor when putting together
the tour," said Laurie Barnds, co-chair of the Renovation Sensation
Homes Tour. "We chose the houses based on recommendation and
word-of-mouth."

Barnds was one of the several parents who helped put together the tour
three years ago. When they were contemplating ways to help continue
funding the Shawnee Mission East student volunteer organization SHARE,
a home renovation tour seemed like a no-brainer.

"People are always looking for ideas for their homes," Barnds said.

So far, the tour has been a success. Last year, more than 700 people attended.

Barnds is thrilled to be part of a successful fundraiser for SHARE,
which is the largest non-profit student-led volunteer organization in
the country. In the past 20 years, the organization has grown to
nearly 80 projects, with students providing more than 25,000 hours of
volunteer service to the Kansas City area.

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Google Gap

In the arms race between Republicans and Democrats to exploit the
Internet as political tool, Democrats are winning.

By Mark Hemingway

In August 2006, just a few months in advance of the midterm elections,
26 million citizens were logging on to the Internet to get information
about the campaigns, according to a survey by the Pew Internet and
American Life Project. That amounts to 13 percent of all adults in the
country using the Internet as a tool to make informed political
decisions.
Nobody doubts that the Internet is increasingly invaluable for
disseminating political news and information as well as campaign
organizing and fundraising. Unfortunately, disinformation and media
manipulation are the chocolate and peanut butter of politics.
Substantial pitfalls remain for ordinary citizens looking to the
Internet for up-to-date and accurate political information. For
example, when you search the Internet for information are you seeing
an objective listing of what's notable about that candidate or issue ―
or are you seeing what someone else wants you to see?

That's the question raised by "Google bombing" ― Internet slang for an
attempt to influence the rankings of search-engine results by
manipulating the algorithm Google uses to catalogue web pages.
Google-bombing techniques can be quite sophisticated, but in a
nutshell: If enough blogs and/or web pages link to something using the
same "anchor text" in the link, then that web page will shoot to the
top of the Google results for the search phrase. One recent example of
Google bombing is how Stephen Colbert shot to the top of the Google
results for "greatest living American" by imploring his audience to
create links on their blogs and websites that linked the anchor text
"greatest living American" to Colbert's website.

However, many Google bombs are expressly political. The second Google
bomb ever created made George W. Bush temporarily the top search
result for "dumb mother**ker." Since then, Google bombs have gradually
gone from jokes and base political expression to an organized campaign
to affect public opinion in a way that some would say is insidious. In
some cases, a relatively small number of blogs have had a huge impact
on the rankings ― possibly as few as 32 blogs were able to make the
White House biography page for George W. Bush the number one search
result for "miserable failure" back in 2003.

And notably, since the inception of Google bombing seven years ago,
political Google bombs have been predominantly a tactic of the Left.
While Google bombing isn't exclusive to Democratic partisans (in 2004
a Republican blogger instigated a successful Google bomb for John
Kerry and "waffles"), the liberal blogosphere is far more actively
trying to Google bomb Republican candidates.

"The whole concept is born of the idea that both voters and
journalists are going to Google to find information about candidates
for office. If the liberal blogs can place links with damaging
information about Republicans in front of journalists and voters, then
they think they can negatively influence that candidate's electoral
chances," said William Beutler, Senior Online Analyst at New Media
Strategies and originator of the Hotline's Blogometer column, in
addition to being the writer behind BlogPI.net, a blog devoted to
tracking developments in the political blogosphere.

Here's how the liberal blogosphere put Google bombing to work in the
2006 midterm elections. In late October, just a few weeks prior to the
midterm election, blogger Chris Bowers* ― who's been the key
instigator of Google bombing Republican candidates ― crossposted a
plan to Google bomb 70 key congressional races on the hugely popular
liberal blogs MyDD.com and DailyKos.com:

Step One: With help from readers at Dailykos and MyDD, I will compile
a list of seventy articles, one for each targeted race. Every article
will focus on a different Republican candidate, and will be written by
as generally trusted a news source as possible. It will also present
as unflattering a view on the Republican candidate as possible. All of
these articles will be placed into a database that I will maintain
with the help of willing volunteers.

Step Two: Once the database is complete, BlogPac will purchase Google
Adwords that will place each negative article on the most common
searches for each Republican candidate. Simultaneously, I will produce
an article on MyDD that embeds that negative article into a hyperlink
that names the Republican candidate. I will then send a copy of that
post out to as many bloggers as possible, who can also place the post
on their blogs. One posting of this article will be enough.

Step Three: All further discussion of the Republican candidates in
question on all participating blogs should include an embedded
hyperlink that will increase the Google search rank of the article on
the given candidate.

The result of this should be that the most damning, non-partisan
article written on every key Republican candidate for House and Senate
will appear both high on every Google search for that candidate, and
automatically as an advertisement on every search for that candidate.
BlogPac will cover the costs. The netroots will supply the research.


Obviously, the 2006 midterms went very well for Democrats, though
there's no way to quantify the contribution of Google bombing to the
Democrats' electoral success, especially amidst all the G.O.P. scandal
and other national developments heading up to that election. But it
can't be discounted either.

A good case study is Kansas Congressman Jim Ryun, who lost a narrow
election for his seat in 2006 and was one of the candidates subject to
the netroots Google-bombing attack. "When a campaign goes wrong and a
five-term incumbent loses, there are a whole lot of things that have
gone wrong. So was the Google bombing the sole reason we lost? No. Was
it a part of it? Yes, but how big a part I don't know," said Drew
Ryun, the former congressman's son and himself a former deputy
director in the grassroots division of the Republican National
Committee.

Beutler, however, thinks that Google-bombing attacks are often less
than effective. "You're assuming that your link is putting information
in front of journalists or voters that they didn't already have.
Unfortunately, the things they are linking to are always things that
the [liberal] netroots have calculated will be bad for their
candidate," he said.

The wisdom of crowds doesn't always apply to the netroots in this
respect, notes Beutler, who cites a recent Google-bomb attack on John
McCain. "With McCain their Google bomb was something about McCain
supporting the Iraq war … I think everybody knows John McCain is a
strong supporter of the war in Iraq ― that's never been in doubt. I
don't think they're fundamentally changing anyone's perception of
him," he said.

Further, Google is not amused by the continued attempts to interfere
with the purity of search results. The first reaction at the Mountain
View headquarters was to ignore the manipulation of the search engine.
"We don't condone the practice of Google bombing, or any other action
that seeks to affect the integrity of our search results, but we're
also reluctant to alter our results by hand in order to prevent such
items from showing up," according to a statement Google released on
its website in 2005. But Google bombing has remained a persistent
problem, so much so that in January of this year Google announced that
it had tweaked its search algorithm to minimize the impact of Google
bombing.

Despite this, many Google bombs remain intact. As of now, the story
the liberal netroots Google bombed to paint Ryun in a negative light
in 2006 ― an unsubstantive hit piece from the Topeka paper on whether
or not Ryun merely forgot or actively lied about living on the same
Capitol Hill street as scandal-beleaguered Congressman Mark Foley ―
remains the sixth-ranked Google result for Jim Ryun.

Still, few Google bombs make it to the top result where they could
have the most impact. "When the average person uses Google they are
overwhelmingly likely to click on the very first link or the first
couple of links, even by the eighth link on a page at that point very
few people are clicking through to it," Beutler noted, citing studies
of how search engines are used. "I've seen Bowers announce with
enthusiasm that 'we've got this one link up to, like 45.'After the
first page it's almost completely worthless," he tells National Review
Online.

Regardless, the liberal blogosphere, and Bowers in particular (who did
not respond to a query for this piece), remain actively engaged in
Google bombing and seem to have few if any ethical qualms about the
lack of transparency. "If you look at Bowers writings on this, he
refers to this as SEO ― "Search Engine Optimization" ― but it's not.
They are really trying to game search engines," Beutler says. "It's
not making the pages better, it's not doing the organic things that
Google is supposed to do."

But even if Google bombing is ineffective more often than not, the
risk and effort are minimal compared to the potential reward. Bowers
claims somewhat hyperbolically that Google bombing is a "quick action
that can eventually be worth the equivalent of tens of millions of
dollars in national TV ads." However, for the time being, it still
appears to be paying off. As a result of a Bowers-instigated Google
bomb, a story noting that 9/11 hero Rudy Giuliani was the only
candidate not invited to speak to a recent Firefighters Union
Presidential candidate forum, is currently the #6 Google result, just
one link below the Time magazine story pronouncing him 2001's Man of
the Year. And Google bombing is sure to accelerate as the 2008
election progresses.

Meanwhile, this has many concerned about how this is just another
example of how Republicans are outmatched when it comes to tapping the
resources of the Internet for political gain.

"I think in 2006 the Democrats and their allies became very adept at
using the Internet as a very effective political tool in a sense to
offset what they felt was the unfair advantage of conservative talk
radio," says Drew Ryun. "I think we saw in 2006, if [the Democrats]
didn't perfect it they came close to it ― Jim Ryun wasn't the only
Republican that got dinged. I think the Republicans and the
conservatives have one of two options, let them keep winning or figure
out a more effective Internet strategy going into 2008. If there is
room to improve, the Left is going to find a way."

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2007年9月6日星期四

Australia A tour on despite blasts: PCB

The Australia A cricket team would continue with their tour as per the
schedule despite the twin blast that rocked the city of Rawalpindi on
Tuesday, Board officials said.

Shafqat Naghmi, chief executive of the Pakistan Cricket Board, said
the Australians had not expressed any concerns and were given a
detailed briefing on the security situation.

"These incidents are sad and shocking. They don't help our cause at
all. The last time they were here in 2005 also a blast took place in
Lahore but they stayed on. Even when their inspection team was here
last month a blast took place in Islamabad," Naghmi said.

He said the Board and ministry of interior were committed to providing
the best security arrangements for the touring players and officials.

"What helps is that this season Rawalpindi is hosting no international
match as its stadium is being renovated. But still when these blasts
take place it is not a good thing," he said.

South Africa is also due to tour Pakistan to play two Tests and five
one-day internationals from September 27 but they had their matches
shifted from Peshawar and Pindi.

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Google Applies For 'GPay' Mobile Payments Patent

Adding to its rapidly growing suite of mobile applications and
services, Google(GOOG) has applied for a patent for a mobile payments
service that would allow users to make payments at retail shops using
their mobile phones.

Using text messages, the system dubbed "GPay" would authenticate
payments, debit the purchaser's account, and credit the seller's
account.

Originally filed in February 2006, the application was made public by
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office last week.

Perceiving that future growth will come largely from advertising to
mobile users, Google has launched an ambitious series of initiatives
to accomplish in the mobile world what it has done in the online
universe. The company has been making many of its popular online
applications, including its leading search engine and its Google Maps
and Gmail services, available on mobile phones over the last couple of
years. Google has also signaled its intention to bid in the upcoming
FCC auction of valuable wireless spectrum in the 700-MHz band, and in
July it entered into a partnership with Sprint Nextel(S) to provide
users of the WiMax network the No. 3 U.S. carrier is building with Web
services including e-mail, chat, and social networking tools.

Described as "a computer-implemented method of effectuating an
electronic on-line payment," the system referred to in the patent
application is similar to existing mobile-payment services, including
the mobile version of PayPal. Such services have been available for
some time but have had little success breaking through with merchants
and with customers.

In June Verizon(VZ) Wireless, the No. 2 U.S. carrier, said it would
offer subscribers mobile-payment options through privately held
Obopay. Verizon called the service "the first mobile payment offering
for any major U.S. carrier." Three weeks later Obopay announced the
closing of a third round of venture funding, worth $29 million.

Google already has an online payment system called Google Checkout,
launched a year ago. In May it released the mobile version of Google
Checkout, which works only for online purchases.

The difference between existing mobile payment systems and GPay (the
term the application says would be used to initiating payment sessions
via text message) is, of course, that GPay is backed by Google. In
theory, Google could offer merchants a discount on (or elimination of)
transaction processing fees in exchange for advertising purchases by
the merchant -- making it a much more formidable competitor to other
novel forms of payment being brought to market by large financial
services companies such as Visa.

Still, the growing array of Google mobile initiatives doesn't have a
cohesive centerpiece until the long-rumored mobile device with the
Google brand -- already dubbed the GPhone and reportedly in
development by Taiwanese handset manufacturer HTC -- makes its
appearance.

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2007年9月4日星期二

Microsoft to battle Google with software delivered through the Internet

Microsoft this week will make available free software that connects
its Windows operating system to software delivered through the
Internet, Brian Hall, a Microsoft executive said.

The strategy is a major departure for a giant software firm that sells
packaged software that runs on the personal computer. Microsoft
designed the strategy to help shield its hundreds of millions of
software customers from competitors, from Salesforce.com to Google,
who already offer software applications over the Internet.

Microsoft's new Windows Live software includes an electronic mail
program, a photo-sharing application and a writing tool that is
designed for people who keep Web logs.

The new service is an indication that Microsoft plans to compete
head-on against its rival, Google, and others, and not just in the
search-engine business where it is at a significant disadvantage.
Instead, industry executives and analysts said, Microsoft would try to
outmaneuver its challengers by becoming the dominant digital curator
of all of a user's information, whether it is stored on a PC, a mobile
device or on the Internet.Millions of PC users already rely on Web
applications that either provide a service or store data. For
instance, Yahoo and Google have popular e-mail programs and
photo-sharing sites that are accessible through a Web browser. The
photos or the e-mail are stored on those companies' servers, a system
that the computer industry calls cloud computing. The data are
accessible from any PC anywhere.

Hundreds of companies in Silicon Valley are offering every imaginable
service ranging from writing tools to elaborate dating and networking
systems, all of which require only a Web browser and each potentially
undermining Microsoft's desktop monopoly. Google, the most visible
example, took cloud computing a step further last October and directly
challenged Microsoft by offering a suite of free word-processing and
spreadsheet software over a browser.

"To the extent that the industry is moving toward an on-demand
business model, it poses a threat to Microsoft," said Kenneth Wasch,
president of the Software and Information Industry Association and a
longtime Microsoft adversary.

Microsoft is a late entrant into a set of businesses that are largely
defined as Web 2.0, but the company is counting on its ability to
leverage its vast installed base of more than one billion
Windows-based personal computers. It plans to give away some of its
services, like photo-sharing and disk storage, while charging for
others like its computer security service and a series of
business-oriented services targeted at small and midsize
organizations.

"I think Microsoft is going beyond search to a more sophisticated set
of services," said Shane Robison, chief strategy and technology
officer at Hewlett-Packard. "It will be a race and who knows who will
get there first?"

Hall, general manager for Microsoft's Windows Live services said the
company was "taking the communications and sharing components and
creating a set of services that become what we believe is the one
suite of services and applications for personal and community use
across the PC, the Web and the phone." He said the software to be
released this week would be the first full release of Windows Live
that is intended to produce a "relatively seamless" experience between
the different services and applications.

Windows Live services also underscore Microsoft's desire to become the
manager for a user's data wherever they are located. Although they
will not be included in the initial test release, the company's
recently announced SkyDrive online data storage service that currently
gives test users 500 megabytes of free Internet storage and its
FolderShare service that makes it possible to synchronize between
multiple computers - including Apple's Macintosh - transparently are
being folded into Windows Live.

"When you think storage, think Windows Live," Bill Gates, the
Microsoft chairman, said this summer. Microsoft is moving to create an
experience that will divorce a user's information from the particular
device they are working with at any moment, he said.

Microsoft's new approach is in many ways a mirror image of the
strategy used during the 1990s in defeating Netscape Communications
when that start-up threatened Microsoft's desktop dominance.

Microsoft attempted to tie the Internet to Windows by bundling its
Internet Explorer Web browser as an integral part of its desktop
operating system. The company lost an antitrust lawsuit in 2000
brought by the U.S. Justice Department in response to this bundling
strategy.

Today that strategy has been flipped with the growing array of Web
services that are connected to Windows. But the new approach, which
Microsoft refers to as "software plus services" is once again
beginning to draw complaints of unfair competition from competitors.

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Google Earth enables views into the universe

Hamburg - A new function in Google Earth has opened up the cosmos to
internet viewers.

The new "sky" portion of the software allows users to view the starry
skies, navigating through the galaxies with the click of a mouse, says
Google spokesman Stefan Keuchel from the company's Hamburg offices.

Constellations, planets, and nebulae are all offered alongside
information about their position, size, and orbits.

The highest resolution images of space come from scientific
installations such as the Baltimore's Space Telescope Science
Institute (STScI), the company reports. Views normally reserved just
for astronauts are provided through 129 images of NASA/ESA's Hubble
Space Telescope.

Animations illustrate the course of the moon's phases and the position
of planets two months ahead of time. The various stages of the life of
a star are also depicted.

"Sky" is a component of Google Earth, which is used by roughly 250
million people worldwide. Google hopes for an active exchange among
users, its spokesman says.

It presumes that its views of space on home PCs will provide an
impulse for more people to get interested in the universe. "Sky" is
integrated into version 4.2 of Google Earth, which is available for
free download at http://earth.google.com. (dpa)

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Latest Google Earth has flight sim Easter Egg

Posted Sep 2nd 2007 9:30AM by Jason Clarke
Filed under: Fun, Games, Windows, Macintosh, Google, Freeware, Time-Wasters
Google Earth Flight Simulator
When we told you about the new Google Sky feature in the latest
version of Google Earth, what we didn't know is that this version
actually contains an Easter Egg, of sorts. It turns out that if you
press Ctrl-Alt-A on a PC, or Command-Option-A on a Mac (making sure
that the focus is not in a text field), you'll enable a flight
simulator. It's not particularly well hidden, and once you've
successfully flown one of the planes it actually shows up as an option
on the Tools menu in Google Earth, but still it's a pretty cool
feature.

In fact, it's one of those "why didn't we think of it?" types of
features. It seems obvious to use Google's satellite imagery and
on-the-fly (sorry for the pun) map loading technology in the context
of a flight sim.

So, what is the experience like? Better than you might expect. You get
the choice of flying either an F16 jet or an SR22 prop plane, with the
obvious speed difference. The controls are pretty delicate and
difficult to master, particularly on a keyboard. It appears that
Google Earth actually supports joystick input for the flight sim mode,
although we haven't had a chance to try it yet. Most of the world's
biggest airports are represented in the list of starting spots, but
you can also choose to start at the current position you were viewing
in Google Earth before invoking the flight sim mode.

Before taking to the sky, it is worth reading through the Flight
Simulator Keyboard Controls, but if all you want to do is get off the
ground, press Page Up repeatedly then press the Down Arrow key a few
time as the plane's velocity increases. This will effectively pull
back on the plane's joystick and vault you into the air. Good luck!

Tags: Flight Simulator, FlightSimulator, Google Earth, Google Earth
Flight Simulator, GoogleEarth, GoogleEarthFlightSimulator

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The Google Phone Is Coming

Psst, it's coming, pass it on
11:03AM Sunday Sep 02 2007 by KathrynV
tags: competition·business·wireless·rumor·Google
Rumors about a Google Phone circulated for months and then came to an
abrupt halt when it was determined that a "googlephone" could not
compete with an iPhone. But the rumors are back and this time Engadget
reports that their sources are "trustworthy". What they say is that
Google is soon to release a "mobile device platform" although they
aren't going to be providing the hardware. And reportedly the Gphone
was spotted in Boston. Of course, this just sparks a new round of
rumors, starting with the one that Google's move caused Microsoft to
look into possible acquisition of RIM, maker of the BlackBerry.

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2007年9月2日星期日

Google Desktop adds support for nine languages

Google Desktop for the Macintosh has added support for nine additional
languages in its most recent update. The announcement comes in a
posting on Google's Official Mac Blog.

Google Desktop for Mac, which remains available as a public beta test,
enables Mac users to search for content on their computers the same
way they use Google to search for content on the Internet. It also
searches GMail accounts and Web browser history. It can create cached
copies ― or snapshots ― of files and other items each time you view
them, to provide file version control.

Languages now supported by Google Desktop for the Mac include Chinese
(simplified), Chinese (traditional), Dutch, English (UK), French,
German, Italian, Japanese and Spanish.

According to the release notes, the new release of Google Desktop for
the Mac also adds a crash reporter, supports the ability to ignore
spam in Apple Mail and Microsoft Entourage, supports contact groups in
Address Book and Entourage, and splits its kernel extension into two
parts to avoid future reboots on Tiger. The software also has seen a
variety of bug fixes.

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Google News redirects wire search web traffic

Newspapers could see a drop in traffic redirected to their websites
from Google News after a redesign of the site that will mean newswire
stories carried by other publishers no longer show up in search
findings.

Agreements between Google and four news agencies will also allow
Google News to carry full stories on its own site for the first time,
rather than its current practice of carrying a headline and a few
snippets of text but sending readers to publishers' sites for the full
story.

Publishers that routinely carry wire stories on their sites could lose
traffic, affecting the prices they charge online advertisers � an
increasingly important source of revenue as print circulation declines
across most parts of the industry.
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Spanish Vuelta follows Tour, Giro with no defending champion

VIGO, Spain (AP) ― Just like the Tour de France and the Giro
d'Italia, the Spanish Vuelta will be without a defending champion at
Saturday's start line due to doping controversies.

Last year's winner Alexandre Vinokourov is absent after testing
positive for a blood transfusion during this year's Tour, handing a
tainted start to all three of cycling's most important races.

With 2006 Tour winner Floyd Landis still contesting his positive
testosterone sample and 2006 Giro winner Ivan Basso suspended for
"attempting doping," Vinokourov's absence at the 62nd edition of the
Spanish classic comes with little surprise.

"It's now been three years since we had a competition without any kind
of doping scandal, and for cycling it's very important to not have
another one if we can avoid it," UCI president Pat McQuaid said. "It's
very important that the Vuelta goes well without any doping
implications."

Two of the past three champions tested positive for doping, including
2005 winner Roberto Heras.

Of the 189 riders set to compete, last year's 1-2-3 are missing due to
doping scandals.

Runner-up Alejandro Valverde continues to be dogged by Operation
Puerto, a Spanish investigation that has implicated over 50 cyclists.
Vinokourov's Astana teammate, Andrej Kashechkin, also tested positive
for homologous blood doping in an unannounced control earlier this
month - a result that ultimately led to Astana being barred from the
competition.

Kashechkin's positive result was one of the more than 70 surprise
tests undertaken by organizers in August following a scandal-marred
Tour de France. Rasmussen was kicked out of this year's Tour while
leading the race by his Dutch team for allegedly lying about his
whereabouts to evade drug testers.

Vuelta organizers announced at least 80 surprise tests, with half of
those for the blood-booster EPO. Earlier Friday, all riders passed
routine drug tests.

"The controls are more than enough, they are even slightly excessive
which can be a shame for the riders, but with so much attention, it's
necessary," two-time Vuelta and 1988 Tour winner Pedro Delgado said.

Instead of opening with a time trial, Saturday's 153.4-kilometre first
stage around the Galician port city of Vigo sets up a tough first
week, with three of the first four stages ending with climbs.

It's been 24 years since riders were forced up the Lagos de Covadonga
- one of the event's toughest ascents, which ends the fourth stage.

The first of two individual time trials begins on Sept. 8 with a
lengthy 52.2-kilometre race against the clock, with riders then facing
two consecutive mountain finishes ending at the ski stations at Cerler
and Ordino-Arcalis before a first rest day on Sept. 11.

Former winner Dennis Menchov (2005), Cadel Evans, Damiano Cunego, and
Vladimir Karpets are some of the all-around climbers expected to be
among the leaders by then.

Fans will not get to see Tour de France winner Alberto Contador after
his Discovery Channel Team left the 24-year-old Spaniard off its
Vuelta roster to avoid exhaustion following his Tour win.

Instead, hopes for a 21st Spanish winner rest with 2006 Tour runner-up
Oscar Perreiro, Jose Angel Gomez Marchante and Carlos Sastre - who is
coming off back-to-back fourth place finishes at the Tour de France
and a runner-up place here in 2005.

Leading sprinters are also expected to compete for the yellow jersey
through the 21 stages, with Oscar Freire, Tom Boonen and Discovery
Channel's Janez Brajkovic and Allan Davis in the mix.

Alessandro Petacchi will also race after missing the Tour due to his
refusal to sign the UCI's anti-doping charter after the Italian
returned a "non-negative" test for an asthma drug at the Giro. His
case will be heard by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The 3,291.3-kilometre race ends in Madrid on Sept. 23.
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T&T school girls return from historic tour

THE first Trinidad and Tobago primary school girls cricket team to
embark on a goodwill tour faced a true baptism of fire, losing all
five matches during their week-long visit to Guyana last week.

The 14-member team, which returned home on Monday, were at a distinct
disadvantage, playing against a Guyana Under-15 squad comprised of
players from that country's secondary schools.

"We were really up against it in Guyana. Our girls, some come from the
primary school system, had to play against much older opponents who
were drawn from their secondary schools and who had already
represented their country," said Joyce Ishmael, manager of the T&T
squad.

Ishmael also pointed out that the matches, which were played on
concrete, were a new experience for them and that also put them at a
further disadvantage.

The 20-over matches were played on "the tarmac" at the National Park
in Georgetown.

Ishmael said the girls performed "creditably under the circumstances"
and that the experience would serve them well in the future.

The goodwill tour was the first ever by a primary schools girls
cricket team and served as a developmental project for the youngsters.

Despite the whitewash, several of the T&T players made their mark with
outstanding performances.

Vice-captain Rackael Bissoon and Darian Diaz were the most outstanding
players, while Sh'ayn Martyr, Rosalie Dolabaille and Candice Dookree,
all made valuable contributions.

In the first match played on August 21, T&T scored 103 all out, with
Dollabaille, 29, and Diaz, 15, the main contributors. Guyana romped
home with 106 for two.

Guyana made 162 for nine in the second match, with Diaz (three for
16), Dookree (two for 11) and Bissoon (two for 34) the best bowlers
for T&T. The local girls reached 104 for nine, with the batting held
together by Dolabaille, 19, Martyr, 17, and Diaz, 15 not out.

In the third match, Guyana scored 113 for seven. Bissoon (three for
13), Diaz (two for 11) and Martyr (two for 18) took the wickets for
T&T, who replied with 99 for seven. Main contributors for T&T were
Dolabaille, 27, Diaz, 24, Martyr, 21 and Dookree, 12 not out.

The fourth match was restricted to 10 overs, with T&T scoring 68 for
eight, as only Bissoon, 27, stood up to the Guyanese bowlers. Guyana
replied with 71 for four, with Martyr taking two for 15.

The final match saw Bissoon, 26, Dolabaille, 24, Benito, 13, and Diaz,
12, taking T&T to 105 for eight. Guyana won by a canter, scoring 109
for one.

The coach of the team was Tessa Dasent, with Brent Francis as their
trainer and the tour was facilitated by the T&T Cricket Board (TTCB)
through financing from the Sports Company of Trinidad & Tobago, the
Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Sport and league partner
Atlantic LNG.


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2007年9月1日星期六

Baidu Is Beating Back Google, Winning Fans Among Analysts

Aug. 31, 2007 (Investor's Business Daily delivered by Newstex) --

Baidu.com shows no signs of slowing -- or of losing ground to Google.

China's No. 1 Web search service continues to curry the favor of investors who sense another record quarter of profit and sales, bolstered by China's gradual acceptance of the Internet.

The fact that Baidu's BIDU stock has withstood the recent market correction to hover near 200 -- up from 100 in April -- and land atop IBD's (most recent) Top 100 stocks list is a testament to investor belief in the company and its potential, says C. Ming Zhao, an analyst with Susquehanna International Group, an investment bank.

"The Chinese search market is still in a very early stage, but it's growing very fast," he said. "Baidu, with its dominant market share, is getting the most benefit out of a very robust market."

Baidu shares doubled from March 2006 to late April, and they have more than doubled again to now trade above 200.

Baidu, like Google, makes most of its money by selling text-based ads placed near appropriate search results.

Google GOOG reigns as the top search site worldwide and in the U.S., far ahead of closest rivals Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO) YHOO and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) MSFT.

But China is a different story, says James Lee, an analyst for WR Hambrecht & Co.

"In Baidu, you're talking about a company with a 60% market share vs. a 20% share for Google, which is No. 2," Lee said. "That is quite a sizeable lead."

In the first quarter, Baidu captured 57% of all search ad revenue in the region vs. 18.7% for Google, says research firm eMarketer.

Mountain View, Calif.'s Google is still trying to gain an audience in China, a common problem for outsiders, says eMarketer analyst Ben Macklin.

"Google is suffering from what many Western firms suffer from: not accurately gauging what makes the Chinese Internet user or Internet company tick," said Macklin. "Few firms can simply translate their success from the West into China."

But the U.S. company is accelerating its efforts. On Thursday, the company expanded an agreement with China.com, a leading regional Internet service provider. Google is now providing its search services for China.com's Chinese portal and China search site. In July 2006, Google began providing Web search and ad services to China.com's Chinese and English sites.

Google's efforts should produce results at some point, Macklin says.

"There's little doubt Google, because of its sheer size and expertise, will eventually start to erode Baidu's dominant position," he said.

For the current quarter, analysts polled by Thomson Financial expect Baidu's revenue to more than double vs. the year-earlier quarter to $64.7 million, while per-share profit rises 50% to 62 cents. By revenue, Google is 100 times larger than Baidu. But China, the world's most populous nation, is fast becoming more important to most global companies.

"The opportunity for paid search in China is really endless at this point," Lee said. "We are really at the bottom of the first inning."

Zhao says most businesses in China are just starting to think about tapping into the Internet.

"Baidu had 120,000 active advertisers in the last quarter -- compared with the 20 million small and medium-size businesses that are out there (in China)," Zhao said. "The market is very tiny right now. But more and more advertisers are joining search marketing because they feel that this is an effective way to advertise their businesses."

By 2011, the number of Internet users in China is expected to reach 245.5 million, up from 133.5 million last year, says eMarketer. But that leaves a ton of growth for a country with 1.3 billion people.

And Baidu isn't just waiting around for advertisers and consumers to catch on. It's mulling new services, such as instant messaging, which it hopes brings more users -- and advertisers. In the past year, Baidu has moved into new areas such as music and movie download services and social networking.

Baidu says half of its online traffic last quarter was in services other than search. The company likely will add more services if it means consumers will stay on the site longer, Lee says.

"Services like instant messaging would increase their stickiness," he said. "They don't want to be just a search engine. They want people to stay and traffic the site."



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2007年8月31日星期五

Microsoft-Google Showdown Heats Up as Court Rule Ends (Update2)

Aug. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp. will soon be free of a U.S. court decree imposed for anti-competitive behavior, just in time for a showdown with Google Inc. and others seeking domination in the ever-changing software industry.

At stake are billions of dollars in advertising and software sales as technology companies mine the Internet for profit. The court order expires Nov. 12, ending restrictions on how the company treats Internet services and content as well as personal computer makers and software developers.

Once the decree expires, Microsoft's changes to Windows won't be supervised by a committee of technical experts getting complaints and advice from rivals. The company also won't have to charge the top 20 computer makers a uniform price for Windows subject to a volume discount.

``They will use whatever they can to exclude competitors'' as long as ``the rewards are there'' and ``the punishments are slight,'' said Harry First, a New York University law professor and former state antitrust enforcement chief.

That doesn't necessarily mean a bonanza for Microsoft shareholders, analysts said. ``Google is clearly a threat to the Microsoft core business,'' said Bill Whyman, of International Strategy and Investment, a Washington-based investment advice firm. ``The big challenge for Microsoft is to move from the PC to the Web.''

Google and companies such as Salesforce.com, which makes Web-based business software, have mounted well-financed challenges to Microsoft, which retains its Windows monopoly. The system powers 95 percent of personal computers.

Shares Since 2001

Microsoft shares have fallen 8 percent since the Redmond, Washington-based company settled the government's antitrust case in 2001 and have dropped 4.7 percent this year. Microsoft fell 14 cents to $28.45 at 4 p.m. New York time today in Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading.

The company will follow ``Windows Principles'' announced last year embodying the ``lion's share'' of the decree, Brad Smith, Microsoft general counsel, said in an interview. ``The regulators are not ceasing to be regulators, and they are not going to stop watching us,'' Smith said.

One provision was extended two more years because Microsoft was slow to implement it to the court's satisfaction. It requires the company to license interface information letting servers communicate with Windows-powered PCs.

European Union

Microsoft also faces constraints from the European Union. The EU's antitrust regulator fined the company $686 million in 2004 and ordered it to offer a version of Windows without a video and music player and share software data with competitors.

Microsoft appealed. A European Union court will rule Sept. 17. The company is also awaiting a decision on its appeal of a similar ruling by Korean authorities.

Under the 2001 accord, Microsoft agreed to give computer makers freedom to promote software on desktop computers that compete with Microsoft products, such as RealNetworks Inc.'s music player.

The settlement's ``overall effect seems to have been questionable at best,'' said Richard Blumenthal, attorney general of Connecticut, one of nine states that challenged the settlement. ``A weak decree has yielded few results and met with resistance at points.''

In the Marketplace

In a court filing today, Connecticut, California and four other states said they are prepared to discuss at a Sept. 11 hearing ``what, if any, changes the court might consider'' making to the remedy because the decree ``has had little or no discernible impact in the marketplace.''

Smith, the company general counsel, said the decree was designed to promote ``dynamic change by many new market entrants,'' not ``dictate who would get what market share.''

``Google itself was neither a company nor a name that anyone ever heard of'' during Microsoft's battles with antitrust enforcers, the lawyer said.

Thomas Barnett, the Justice Department's antitrust chief, said the decree stopped Microsoft from trying to maintain its monopoly by discouraging computer makers from promoting competing software. He said ``there are definite signs of competition,'' such as the sale by Dell Inc., the world's second-largest PC maker, of machines powered by Linux software instead of Windows.

Google, the world's largest Internet search provider, complained in June that Vista, the latest version of Windows, deliberately makes it difficult to use Google's program for searching a computer's contents. It asked that the court decree be extended. U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, overseeing the case, rejected the request by Mountain View, California-based Google.

Reconfiguring Vista

Microsoft said it wasn't obligated to make the changes sought by Google. It agreed to reconfigure Vista ``in the spirit of cooperation,'' it said.

``Microsoft would prefer to stay out of court,'' said Matt Rosoff, an analyst at Directions on Microsoft, an independent Kirkland, Washington, firm that tracks the company.

Each time a competing product gains popularity, Microsoft counters by tying ``its own product to the operating system,'' said Ken Wasch, president of the Software and Information Industry Association, a Washington-based trade group representing rivals such as Novell Inc. and Sun Microsystems Inc.

Microsoft says adding new functions benefits consumers. A federal appeals court in Washington that threw out a lower-court Microsoft breakup order said the benefits of bundling to consumers should be weighed against any harm to competition.

Illegal Restrictions

It upheld findings that Microsoft illegally restricted efforts by computer makers and Internet services to promote Netscape Communications Corp.'s Web browser, Navigator.

``Our business as we know it is at risk,'' Microsoft's Ray Ozzie wrote in a 2005 memo entitled ``Internet Services Disruption.''

The latest Internet threat is reminiscent of one Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates identified in a 1995 memo that became an exhibit in the antitrust case. Gates wrote that Netscape wanted to use Navigator to ``commoditize'' Microsoft's operating system.

``Microsoft is being successfully challenged today by companies like Google, Apple and Salesforce.com,'' Marc R. Benioff, Salesforce.com's chief executive officer, said in an e- mail. ``We all have to work together to transform the industry away from Microsoft's PC monopoly.''

Microsoft told the Federal Trade Commission Google's proposed $3.1 billion purchase of DoubleClick Inc., maker of software that manages online advertising, would harm Internet advertising competition.

That complaint ``tells you how threatened Microsoft feels by Google,'' Whyman said.

To contact the reporters on this story: James Rowley in Washington at jarowley@bloomberg.net ; Karen Gullo in San Francisco at kgullo@bloomberg.net .

Last Updated: August 30, 2007 16:14 EDT

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Google Increases Chinese Outposts

If Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is going to take a bite out of Baidu.com 's (Nasdaq: BIDU) search market dominance in China, it's going to do so with a little help from its friends already sitting on that side of the ocean.

Google and China.com parent CDC (Nasdaq: CHINA) are expanding last summer's partnership, providing Google's search and paid search services through more of China.com's websites.

Don't get too excited. Despite watching over a juicy domain like China.com, CDC is mostly an enterprise software specialist. In fact, its online portal and media services businesses accounted for just $2.1 million in revenues during the company's first fiscal quarter. Revenues actually fell by 30% in that segment over the past year, accounting for less than 3% of the $91.3 million in total revenue reported by CDC during the period. It's a steep cyberspace dip in a booming market that is going the other way, making this deal as important for CDC as it is for Google.

Ultimately, we're talking about one more trophy for Google's East-facing mantel. It acquired a stake in Tianya Club earlier this month to launch a pair of community-driven websites in China. It partnered with SINA (Nasdaq: SINA) to extend its paid search reach back in June. Two months before that, Google scored a minority stake in the Maxthon Web browser that has become a popular download in China.

Google's intentions are obvious. It is China's second most popular search engine, but it's a distant silver medalist. It realizes that it won't be able to gain ground on a local darling as a stand-alone outsider. Expect Google to try to nickel-and-dime its way into a more prominent position with even more deals like this in the future. After all, you can't take a bite out of the leader until you get a little closer.

However, it's not as if Baidu has been asleep at the wheel. It too has grown its offerings and inked expansive search deals with companies like MSN China, China Telecom (NYSE: CHA ) and China Netcom (NYSE: CN).

It's a race that no one wants to lose. That's the kind of race worth watching.

SINA is a pick in the Stock Advisor premium research service. Baidu.com has been recommended to Rule Breakers subscribers. You can watch the race from the front row with free trial subscription offers that will take you through the month of September.

Longtime Fool contributor Rick Munarriz is a fan of China's growth story, but he does not own shares in any of the companies in this story. He is part of the Rule Breakers newsletter research team, seeking out tomorrow's ultimate growth stocks a day early. The Fool has a disclosure policy.



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Mellencamp Plots Fall Tour, Next Studio Album

While he hunkers down in his Bloomington, Ind., studio with producer T Bone Burnett on his next album, John Mellencamp has confirmed a return to the road this fall. The 14-date tour will begin Oct. 26 in Terre Haute, Ind., and run through Nov. 15 in St. Louis.

According to his publicist, Mellencamp is likely to debut some of the new songs he's been working on with Burnett during the outing. The next album, which is as yet untitled, will be the follow-up to this year's "Freedom's Road."

Before the tour, Mellencamp will perform as part of the NFL kickoff telecast on Sept. 6 in Indianapolis, and will anchor the 2007 Farm Aid three days later at New York's Randall's Island.

Here are John Mellencamp's tour dates:

Oct. 26: Terre Haute, Ind. (Hulman Center)
Oct. 27: Champaign, Ill. (Assembly Hall)
Oct. 28: Louisville (Freedom Hall)
Oct. 30: Grand Rapids, Mich. (Van Andel Arena)
Nov. 1: Ft. Wayne, Ind. (Memorial Coliseum)
Nov. 2: Toledo, Ohio (Seagate Convention Centre)
Nov. 3: Indianapolis (Conseco Field House)
Nov. 6: Madison, Wisc. (Alliant Energy Center)
Nov. 7: Mankato, Minn. (Alltel Center)
Nov. 9: Des Moines, Iowa (Wells Fargo Arena)
Nov. 10: Sioux City, Iowa (Tyson Events Center)
Nov. 11: Omaha, Neb. (Qwest Center)
Nov. 14: Rockford, Ill. (Metrocentre)
Nov. 15: St. Louis (Scottrade Center)

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2007年8月29日星期三

Is Google getting ready to unlease the `gPhone'?

It has been a long, dry summer for technology bloggers - even those based far from California.

Since Apple's release of the iPhone on June 29, there has been precious little gadget news worth googling. Into the breach stepped Google itself, with its own hot story: not the iPhone but the "gPhone."

According to bloggers with some credibility, Google is developing mobile software around a Linux-based OS that could be unveiled in some form after Labor Day.

"From what we've heard Google isn't necessarily working on hardware of its own, but is definitely working ... to put the Gphone OS on upcoming devices," engadget wrote Tuesday.

Google issued a statement saying it would not comment on rumors. However, in May, Chief Executive Eric Schmidt told a group of reporters having lunch at the company's headquarters that Google was indeed developing all kinds of mobile phone software.

"We are working to make the mobile stack more powerful through a lot of initiatives," Schmidt said. "We have a lot of software that is getting added to phones and platforms."

Kevin Burden, senior manager for mobile devices at Telephia, a research firm, said a Google-branded phone could be a winner if consumers believed it was the best way to surf the Internet.

"They should get a lot of attention," he said.

So far Google has had mixed success integrating its software into existing phones. Outside the United States, Google search technology was adopted


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by Vodafone, China Mobile, NTT DoCoMo and KDDI in Japan, Bharti Airtel in India and T-Mobile in Europe.

Inside the United States, Google's search is incorporated into exactly one phone - Motorola's Moto Razr2 - though users can still access Google by going to a mobile Web page or downloading applications that include search, maps, email and YouTube.

Burden said Google needs to win over U.S. carriers in order to secure a deal with a manufacturer.

Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal reported that Google had shown a prototype of a phone with its mobile software to AT&T, T-Mobile USA, a unit of Deutsche Telekom, and Verizon Wireless, a joint venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group. Still, no deal appears to have been struck.

Verizon Wireless Chief Executive Lowell McAdam told the Wall Street Journal his company would not integrate Google's search software because Google wanted "a disproportionate share" of search-based advertising revenue.

"What this really boils down to is a battle for the mobile ad dollar," McAdam said. He did not comment specifically on any Google phones, the newspaper said.

U.S. carriers, in general, are wary of Google. After investing billions in wireless networks, they fear Google will find a way to siphon off revenues they feel are rightfully theirs.

The carriers have also criticized Google for its actions during debate over the rules for an auction of newly available wireless spectrum. They say Google tried to force its way onto their networks for free.

Schmidt has since indicated that Google will probably participate in the auction, with the possibility it would operate a wireless service itself.

Scott Cleland, president of Precursor, said he was struggling to find the logic behind the gPhone rumor. "Getting into the phone handset business or the wireless network business would radically change Google's business model," he said.

"These forays into communications are cost sinkholes that will inevitably drag down Google's margin. They will be spending like a drunken sailor."



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Firefox or IE? Strange answer to security question

A study by the non-profit Honeynet Project has come up with a strange answer to the Firefox versus Internet Explorer security question.

During the experiment, conducted in May 2007, the group compared three browsers ― Internet Explorer 6 SP2, Firefox 1.5.0 and Opera 8.0.0 ― to determine whether using an alternative browser would be an effective means to reduce the risk of malware attacks.

(Note: Firefox 1.5 is no longer supported and the latest version of Microsoft's Web browser is IE 7.0. Opera's newest iteration is 9.23)

The results:

Common perception about Internet Explorer and Firefox is that Firefox is safe and Internet Explorer is unsafe. However, a review of the remote code execution vulnerabilities (primary source: SecurityFocus) that were publicly disclosed for Firefox 1.5 and Internet Explorer SP2 reveals that, in fact, more were disclosed for Firefox 1.5 indicating more the opposite is true.

This image shows known remote code execution vulnerabilities per browser:

Vulnerabilities

However, when client honeypots with these browsers surfed to a list of about 30,000 known exploit servers, the URLs that resulted in a 0.5735% of successful compromises of Internet Explorer 6 SP2 did not cause a single successful attack on Firefox 1.5.0 or Opera 8.0.0.

[ GALLERY: How to use Internet Explorer securely ]

"Particularly the results on Firefox 1.5.0 are surprising, considering the number of remote code execution vulnerabilities that were publicly disclosed for this browser and the fact that Firefox is also a popular browser," the Honeynet Project said, speculating that perhaps Firefox was never a target of those exploits.

We can only speculate why Firefox wasn't targeted. We suspect that attacking Firefox is a more difficult task as it uses an automated and "immediate" update mechanism. Since Firefox is a standalone application that is not as integrated with the operating system as Internet Explorer, we suspect that users are more likely to have this update mechanism turned on. Firefox is truly a moving target. The success of an attack on a user of Internet Explorer 6 SP2 is likely to be higher than on a Firefox user, and therefore attackers target Internet Explorer 6 SP2.



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Google CFO's sudden exit sits well with Wall Street

Web search giant expected to attract top-line candidates for finance post
Not so in the case of Google Inc. Several analysts covering the Web search giant issued reports Wednesday that dismissed questions about the surprise retirement announcement of George Reyes, who became CFO in 2002 and oversaw the company's landmark IPO about two years later.
Google (GOOG:
google inc cl a
Last: 512.88+6.48 +1.28%
4:00pm 08/29/2007
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
GOOG
512.88, +6.48, +1.3%)
announced the move in a statement issued after the close of trading on Tuesday.
In early trading on Wednesday, Google's shares climbed $2.30 at $508.70. The stock is off about 9% since peaking last month near the $560 mark, but is up nearly 34% since this time last year.
The company said Reyes, 53, intends to retire. He plans to stay on during the search for a new CFO, a process Google hopes to complete by the end of the year.
"We view the departure as a non-event for shareholders, as we believe Mr. Reyes is stepping down for personal reasons," Brian Pitz, a Banc of America Securities analyst, wrote in a note to clients.
Ben Schachter of UBS sounded a similar note, adding that the move is "not indicative of any problems at Google, nor do we believe that investors should read through this announcement and assume anything about recent or near-term performance."
Both analysts have buy ratings on the stock.
Derek Brown of Cantor Fitzgerald said the company will not have "too much of a problem filling what has to be one of the more high-profile job vacancies in the Valley in some time."
Reyes endured a challenging tenure at Google, one of the most closely watched public companies, as it sought to differentiate the way it communicates with Wall Street and investors.
He hit a rough patch in February 2006, when he unexpectedly made public comments at an investor conference about the company's slowing growth rate, adding that it needed to "find other ways to monetize our business."
Immediately after the remarks were reported, Google's shares dropped 14%, and the company issued a clarification later that day.
But on balance Reyes oversaw remarkable growth at Google, which has enriched investors and company executives. As of the end of 2006, Reyes held unvested stock options worth an estimated benefit of $23.6 million, according to public filing in April.
Trip Chowdhry, an analyst with Global Equities Research, said Reyes is stepping away just as Google is transitioning into a more difficult period. While it once was able to quickly grab market share in the relatively new market of Internet search, Google is now going head-to-head with established players who have moved in on its turf, such as Microsoft Corp., Chowdhry said.
"Google is entering the mainstream, and competition is heating up," Chowdhry said, "this is not easy money moving forward." Chowdhry added that he expects more departures from Google's top executive ranks in the near future.
Also under Reyes's watch, Google set up a first-of-its-kind stock-option compensation program that allows employees to sell their options to the highest bidder on the open market. Unlike traditional options, which limit employees to selling their options at a set price, Google's plan lets employees with vested options seek bids for them in an online marketplace. End of Story
Dan Gallagher is MarketWatch's technology editor, based in San Francisco.

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