Posts tagged: yahoo

Yahoo is Trying to Become a Part of Social Web

By visionwebsters | February 27, 2010

Yahoo participated in the fray of integrating social networking with search results. Due to the alliance of Bing and Yahoo, Bing is responsible for all of the back-end work of actually crawling and indexing the Web, while Yahoo handles a unique front-end. The company does not plan to convolve the tent as well as be inferior online search to Google and Bing in the near future.

The company is going to overtake its competitors such as Google and Bing in the race for incorporating real-time search results brought from social networking.

One should say that Google search results as well as the integration of Twitter real-time updates showed the values of social networking for online search. Still the standard catalog of Web sites indexed for online search hold its position, although social networking supplements an immediacy element that is necessary for the society in order to make instant updates on breaking news.

Yahoo has made an approach concerning integration of Twitter in its search results. The company offers only two tweets and also adds two YouTube links that are taken from Twitter updates. It helps cut down on the information overload but unfortunately it cuts too far.

It should be mention that Yahoo is the party, but still the company is lucky because the party is in the process of development.

Popularity: 13% [?]

Gartner Predicts Modest Overall Growth in IT Spending

By visionwebsters | January 21, 2010

Gartner has revised its outlook for worldwide IT spending this year, predicting the industry as a whole will see 4.6 percent growth to $3.4 trillion, up from its previous prediction of 3.3 percent growth, according to its latest figures released Thursday.

That figure contrasts with 2009, when spending fell 4.6 percent. Gartner revised its forecast upward to account for an expected weakening of the U.S. dollar.

Spending is also expected to increase due to the increasing confidence of CEOs and CFOs as economic conditions gradually improve, said Richard Gordon, a research vice president with Gartner, in avideo.

Emerging markets will see the strongest gains. Gartner predicts that spending will increase 9.3 percent in Latin America, 7.7 percent in the Middle East and Africa and 7 percent in the Asia-Pacific region.

Due to the recession, the U.S. is expected to post only 2.5 percent growth, with Japan just 1.8 percent. In a bright spot outside of emerging markets, Gartner expects Western Europe to come in at 5.2 percent growth.

On the consumer side, confidence appears to be more fragile, Gordon said. “We think consumers are a bit nervous about job prospects,” Gordon said.

The recovery from the recession will take between 12 to 18 months. The availability of credit should increase, which will help increase spending, and companies may look to make more hardware investments during the second half of this year, Gordon said.

Popularity: 23% [?]

Yahoo to bring Facebook, Twitter on Yahoo mail

By visionwebsters | January 19, 2010

Trying to make Yahoo Mail more interactive, give users a social experience and stay with the people they care about most, Yahoo plans to integrate with Facebook and Twitter by 2010 end.

Silicon India on Monday, quoted the Senior Vice President, Consumer Products, Yahoo, Bryan Lamkin, as saying that, “With the integration of Yahoo and Facebook, we can enable users to share meaningful content with their friends.”

Yahoo’s Facebook Connect integration will give consumers richer experiences on Yahoo!, including in Yahoo! Mail and on properties like Yahoo News, Yahoo Sports, and Yahoo Finance.

It would allow them to connect with Facebook friends on Yahoo, view a feed of their friends’ related activity on Yahoo, and share content – such as photos from Flickr or comments on news stories, with all of their friends on Facebook, Yahoo said, adding that the content that consumers share with Facebook friends would then create a loop that drives visitors back to Yahoo.

It is being speculated that the partnership will not only help Yahoo users, but would also allow Facebook users to access their stream and update their status from the Yahoo homepage, provides ‘Share on Facebook’ options across the Yahoo network, and allow Facebook to access Yahoo Contacts.

People who use Yahoo and Facebook, according to Yahoo, would soon be able to share updates across both networks, creating a richer and more relevant social experience by connecting the broad range of Yahoo content and services with their friends on Facebook.

Yahoo is also trying to make mail more secure, safe and personal by blocking 300 billion spam messages every month.

Popularity: 7% [?]

Google Squared gets more data, better filters

By visionwebsters | October 12, 2009

Google has released a few enhancements to Google Squared, its attempt to build spreadsheets out of search results.

Google Squared is a Google Labs project first unveiled in May at its Searchology event and set loose on the world a month later. The idea is to take the search results for a given query, such as “U.S. presidents” or “European countries,” and present the results as a table with facts and dates helpfully sorted for easier research.

The company announced on Friday “a number of improvements to the amount and quality of information you can find with Google Squared, as well as new tools to sort and export the data,” it said in a blog post. For example, Google Squared can now return 120 facts organized in rows and columns, as opposed to just 30 at launch. The filters have gotten better as well, which was a definite problem with the first batch of Google Squared results.

It’s still not ready for prime time, however: according to Google Squared, the Milwaukee Brewers play home games in both Milwaukee and San Diego. It had no idea what city is home to Yankee Stadium–let alone which New York borough–and it also seemed to miss the grand opening this year of a new Yankee Stadium to replace The House That Ruth Built.

Google said Squared is an experiment in “understanding structured data from across the Web to build new tools for organizing and presenting information.” Despite plans to offload its back-end search technology, Yahoo is trying to keep its name in the game as a search company by conducting much of the same research.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Yahoo GeoCities Dies This Month

By visionwebsters | October 8, 2009

If you happen to be one of the early adopters of the Internet, chances are high that you might have come across at least one whacky Geocities’ hosted website. The once dominant, free web hosting service was home to the first websites of a host of users – who later became techies and moved on to other platforms.

In fact, even before the term “blogging” was coined, Geocities was the place to be back in the 90’s if you needed a place to voice your opinion – in your own maverick style, of course! Geocities pages was the MySpace of the 90’s with the a plethora of absolutely whacky user web sites complete with an overdose of primary colours and glittering text hosted on it.

Originally created by David Bohnett and John Rezner back in 1994, Geocities was bought by Internet giant Yahoo in the late 90’s in an astronomical $2 billion dollar deal. That was in 1999.

Fast forward to 2009 and almost 10 years after the buyout, Yahoo seems to have had enough and is on the verge of shutting down Geocities. It was in April 2009 that the first signs of Geocities breathing its last came to fore. Yahoo just gave its users a hint that the service will be shut down and that people might want to “relocate” their stuff to other locations – preferably Yahoo’s own hosting service. While they had not given a last date back then, three months later, Yahoo has finalized Oct. 26 as the day when one of Internet’s most used, and loved website goes offline. Forever.

To state that Geocities is a part of the world wide web history would be an understatement. As CNET writer Don Reisinge said that the closure of Geocities is definitely marks the ‘end of an era’ – and we can’t help but agree. But life goes on! So long old, friend!

Popularity: 12% [?]

Yahoo intensifies its advertisement in India

By visionwebsters | October 7, 2009

Yahoo has intensified its effort to regain its lost glory as a search engine against the giant Google. The company has come with a strategic advertisement plan to increase its popularity in developing countries like India, Brazil and China.

According to a recent survey in fast emerging countries, Google is way ahead of Yahoo and MSN, and also the gap will widen in near future.

Yahoo in its advertisement process in India has bought the front page of the leading newspaper Times of India. Now, the front page of TOI will be fully dedicated to Yahoo. The full page advertisement is quite attractive and unique. It will surely have an impact on the readers mind.

The catching tagline of the advertisement is “The internet is under new management”. The bottom line is “A homepage that lets you add whatever you love, an inbox that knows what you like (and don’t) and a freedom to access it from your mobile. Say hello to the new yahoo! take charge today at yahoo.in. “Its You “..which signifies Yahoo!!”

Moreover, the star network is also advertising Yahoo strongly.

As a consequence of efforts made by Yahoo in recent times, the search engine is being used by 26 million out of 35 million internet users in India.

Popularity: 9% [?]

Facebook’s Plan To Trounce Orkut In India May Be Working

By visionwebsters | October 1, 2009

With the growing market of internet users in the country, India has become a battlefield for social networks. Google-owned Orkut has long been the most popular social network in India, with Facebook fighting to catch up. But Facebook has been upping the ante over the past few months, and according to August’s ComScore numbers, the plan may be working. In August, Orkut’s unique visitors in India dipped by 800,000 within a month, from 16 million visitors in July to 15.2 million visitors in August. On the other hand, Facebook grew its unique visitors in India by 700,000, from 7.5 million visitors in July to 8.2 million visitors in August.

This the largest drop in unique visitors Orkut has seen in India over the past year, while Facebook has been steadily growing each month. In fact, Facebook’s audience in India is up 228 percent from a year ago, compared to a 35 percent annual gain for Orkut.

There are a couple of key factors that could be attributed to Orkut’s recent drop in visitors. First, in India, Facebook has been pushing out an aggressive campaign on its social network to get users to import their friends from Orkut with a special Orkut import tool. It basically lets them find friends on other social networks, like Orkut, who are also on Facebook and makes it easy to send a friend requests to those contacts. The purpose of the tool is to make it easy for users to quickly find new friends and establish their social presence on Facebook. The social network offers this in the U.S. for Gmail, AIM and other contact platforms. But this new tool in India is for Orkut specifically. Facebook users are also seeing is the Orkut contact importer in Brazil, Orkut’s home base and stronghold where Facebook is clawing for market share.

Another reason for Facebook’s growth in India could be the recent launch of Facebook Lite. India was one of the original target markets for the lightweight version of the social network, since it is particularly useful in developing countries where high speed Internet connections are sparse or non-existent.

Facebook has been eying India’s huge market and steadily adding features that help the social network establish its reach in the growing country. For example, Facebook launched availability for several Indian languages including Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, Telugu, Tamil and Malayalam, in May of this year.

It’s plainly obvious that Facebook is growing fast in India and could quite possibly overtake Orkut in the next few months. Meanwhile, other social networks are dropping like flies in the race; with Yahoo shutting down SpotM and MySpace considering layoffs in India because of the its lack of traction among users.

Popularity: 13% [?]

Yahoo Set to Give Competition to Twitter

By visionwebsters | September 2, 2009

Yahoo has quietly announced Yahoo Meme microblogging service in English after its soft launch in Spanish and Portuguese. Similar to few microblogging services like Tumblr, Twitter, Pownce and others, Meme is currently in an invite-only mode. Once the account is created after receiving invitation, users get a blank blog for micro-sharing text, images, music, videos or mash up of all these things.

The Registration process is very simple and it also gives a Meme URL based on Username like http://meme.yahoo.com/Username. That s just like Twitter and Facebook offers Username URLs.

Meme’s setting panel has minimal options like Meme title, 100 character Description, avatar/photo and notifications. Along with that, Meme also offers page layout customization with Themes. On the Meme page, users can post text, photos, videos and all together for sharing with other users. Just like Twitter and Tumblr users do, Meme users can search for other users using the Find option on the top of the page and Follow them to receive their Meme updates.

Meme users can have threaded conversations in the Comment option under every meme post. Also, users can repost the Memes of other users just like Tumblr offers Reblog . At this stage, the Meme service looks very basic and lacks bunch of other features that other competing services into micro-sharing offer. Just like Twitter Trends, Meme has a Popular option that shows Memes posted by users recently.

Below are few screenshots of Yahoo! Meme service from Paul Papadimitriou that gives a sneak preview of the Meme interface.

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Google guns for MS Office with billboard campaign

By visionwebsters | August 3, 2009

Mountain View plans to slap Google Apps adverts on billboards in major US cities from today in its latest attempt to woo businesses away from Microsoft’s Office suite.

The search giant, which has been stretching its tentacles into more and more areas comfortably occupied by Redmond, will promote its $50 per worker, per annum Google Apps suite in New York, San Francisco, Chicago and Boston.

Google shies away from advertising its core search product, so it’s uncharacteristic to see the firm punting its other services.

However, in many ways it’s also a savvy biz move given the hot potato contest that’s been taking place at the rival MS and Google camps in recent weeks.

One big announcement (Microsoft’s Bing search deal with Yahoo!) has followed after another (Google Chrome OS) as the two tech titans continue to clash heads.

Of course, behind the scenes Google is desperate to be taken seriously in the corporate world, where customers remain reluctant to switch from Microsoft’s desktop Office suite in favour of a cloudier option such as Google Apps.

Microsoft latest Office suite – 2010 – is due next year. Google may be hoping to steal a march on its veteran rival, but it’s worth remembering that Microsoft has been doing this sort of thing for years, and has no compunction of pouring millions into flashy advertising – something the whizz kids at Google have never had to consider.

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Yahoo deals with Microsoft and Gives Up on Search

By visionwebsters | July 29, 2009

In a very long awaited pairing aiming to compete with Google, Yahoo will handle ad sales while Microsoft gets the real deal, data on who’s doing what online.

Ever since when Microsoft made its official bid of $45 billion for Yahoo in early part of 2008, it was clear that the software masters were serious about competing with its rival, Google in the lucrative Internet Search business. And now, after almost a year of more talks after Yahoo had denied that bid, it’s become clear that Microsoft has finally been able to achieve its goal. Is the reports about the deal between the two are proved, Microsoft will emerge as the clear No. 2 player in search business.

In short this deal, Yahoo is almost signaling its departure from a industry in which it once dominated the headlines. Yahoo will now scrap its own efforts of taking on Google in search and instead will rely on Microsoft’s recent debutant “Bing” according to the “The Wall Street Journal” and BoomTown blog. The ads that are placed next to those search results would now be served by a Microsoft technology called AdCenter, and not by Yahoo’s ad platform “Panama” says another report from Advertising Age. Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz “is essentially giving up on search,” says Danny Sullivan, editor of Search Engine Land.

Yahoo’s sales team will most likely continue to sell the search ads that appear both on Yahoo sites and on Bing. And the company that sells an ad—in this case, Yahoo—may get as much as 80% of the resulting revenue. But Microsoft would nevertheless attain a reward that’s even more valuable in the long run. The data on computer users’ online search and buying habits would ultimately reside on Microsoft’s computers, thereby improving its ability to automatically serve up the most relevant ads. “If Microsoft is running the underlying ad technology, it doesn’t matter who is selling the ads,” Sullivan says. “In the end, Microsoft will hold all the cards.”

He adds that most advertisers place ads by filling out online forms, with no involvement from salespeople. Maintaining control of sales makes the deal “sound rosier for Yahoo than it really is, because in the end Yahoo won’t have the technology needed to compete.”

Microsoft however, wins in other different ways. The deal gives a big boost to Bing. The combined search market share of “Yahoo” and “Microsoft” would approach 30%. That’s still far below Google’s 65%, but analysts say it may provide enough of a critical mass at least to stave off further Google advances and help the enlarged search engine gain some ground. At a minimum, the deal doubles as a kind of insurance policy for Microsoft, in case all of the positive buzz about the Bing search engine doesn’t translate into actual market share. By adding Yahoo’s 20% market share, Bing assures its place as the only search engine provider other than Google with size that really matters.

So what’s in it for Bartz? For starters, Yahoo can slice millions of dollars in technology development costs, while continuing to bring in or even grow its search ad revenue. That’s because its salespeople will sell not only ads running on Yahoo sites, but also on Bing. The recently appointed CEO also buys time to hone Yahoo’s strategy and improve other moneymakers, such as placing banner-style display ads that appear on Yahoo’s highly trafficked portal and e-mail pages. And by continuing to sell search ads, she maintains relationships with key advertisers rather than let Microsoft walk away with them. “Yahoo doesn’t want to look like they’ve sold off their crown jewel for short-term gain,” Sullivan says. “This creates the illusion that they have more control of the situation than they probably do.”

It’s an illusion that will likely work with Yahoo’s long-suffering shareholders. Indeed, the deal will probably be welcomed by investors in both companies, since it lets each play to its respective strengths. Yahoo is most successful as a media company—and that includes selling advertising.

Microsoft, on the other hand, is a technology powerhouse, with vast software development capabilities and the cash to build the billion-dollar data centers needed to run search engines and ad platforms. The roles represent a stark reversal from half a decade ago, when Microsoft used both Yahoo’s search technology and its search-ad system. “It’s good for both of the companies,” says Sandeep Agarwal, an analyst with Collins Stewart (CLST.L).

An Antitrust O.K. Is Needed

It’s not yet clear whether the final terms have won approval by both companies, and it could be delayed beyond the expected today’s (July 29, 2009) announcement date. But the reports indicate that negotiations, which recently heated up after more than a year of on-again, off-again talks, are essentially complete. Yahoo and Microsoft declined to comment.

The arrangement will also have to get a nod from antitrust officials. It probably will, given both companies’ relatively small market share next to Google’s, and advertisers generally are likely to be in favor of the deal since it bolsters a competitor to the market leader. But Google no doubt will raise objections, which could at least slow down the approval of the deal.

Moreover, the complexity of the deal means it will take the two companies longer to integrate operations than if Yahoo simply outsourced search and search ads to Microsoft, as Microsoft originally proposed. “It’s certainly a deal with a bunch of moving pieces,” says Tim Cadogan, CEO of the online ad technology and services firm OpenX and a former Yahoo ad sales and search executive.

But if and when those pieces fall into place, it will become abundantly clear which party gained the upper hand in the arrangement, and which one has a fighting chance against Google. We will have to just wait and watch now.

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