If You Give Google A Cookie

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

If You Give Google A Cookie
If You Give Google A Cookie If you give Google a cookie it will probably want to store your search behavior and given the scope of its publishing network…. Something tells me this story does not end happily. Though this story has been developing for months, the New York Times article on Friday seems to have sparked a deeper look and the issue of privacy has come in to play. And so it should at this stage. What really needs to be discussed is the establishing of what is allowed to be collected; how it is collected, stored and shared; what would be needed to opt in or out; and consequences of breaches of any limits set. (Read the full post about ‘If You Give Google A Cookie’…)

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Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Bill Slawski, of SEO by The Sea, has uncovered another patent filing. This time Yahoo is applying for a patent for meal search technology. Bill’s article gives a much better interpretation than I ever could and should be read.

The interesting parts include technology that ties photo recognition to meals and ingredients and places to buy either the meal or the ingredients to make them.

The details Bill gives shows the scope of what is planned and it definitely covers a lot of work for some of the Yahoo programmers in the near future.

With thinking outside the usual search box, Yahoo may have come across the best way to meet Google in the search arena.

(Read the full post about ‘Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent’…)

Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Bill Slawski, of SEO by The Sea, has uncovered another patent filing. This time Yahoo is applying for a patent for meal search technology. Bill’s article gives a much better interpretation than I ever could and should be read.

The interesting parts include technology that ties photo recognition to meals and ingredients and places to buy either the meal or the ingredients to make them.

The details Bill gives shows the scope of what is planned and it definitely covers a lot of work for some of the Yahoo programmers in the near future.

With thinking outside the usual search box, Yahoo may have come across the best way to meet Google in the search arena.

(Read the full post about ‘Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent’…)

Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent

Bill Slawski, of SEO by The Sea, has uncovered another patent filing. This time Yahoo is applying for a patent for meal search technology. Bill’s article gives a much better interpretation than I ever could and should be read.

The interesting parts include technology that ties photo recognition to meals and ingredients and places to buy either the meal or the ingredients to make them.

The details Bill gives shows the scope of what is planned and it definitely covers a lot of work for some of the Yahoo programmers in the near future.

With thinking outside the usual search box, Yahoo may have come across the best way to meet Google in the search arena.

(Read the full post about ‘Yahoo Registers Meal Search Patent’…)

Who Needs IPv6?

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

On Monday June 30th, the U.S. Government mandate for IPv6 readiness comes into effect. Years ago, when I first became aware of the mandate, I thought that this would be the day that IPv6 would finally come to the American mainstream.

I was wrong.

Despite a government mandate that companies that do business with the U.S. government upgrade to IPv6, there has been no mad rush by American enterprises or the vendors that support them for IPv6.

The doom and gloom prediction of IP address exhaustion, which drove the mandate to upgrade to the IPv6 protocol (define) still persists. But right now, most enterprises in United States have little need to move to IPv6.

(Read the full post about ‘Who Needs IPv6?’…)

Ballmer: And Then There Was One

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

This is Bill Gates’ last official day as a Microsoft employee, though as the company’s largest shareholder, he remains the company’s chairman. To underline his exit, Gates gave an emotional goodbye speech to employees Friday morning that was Webcast across the globe.

However, his departure leaves more than one burning question.

Despite all of the years of careful planning for this day and what comes after, can the management team that’s left to run the company keep it moving forwards – and some would say, continue innovating — instead of drifting into oblivion the way so many other tech firms have failed after the founder has left?

(Read the full post about ‘Ballmer: And Then There Was One’…)

Juniper, Cisco Fight for Carrier Cash

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

In the fight for the billions at stake in the carrier router marketplace, Cisco and Juniper Networks are going toe-to-toe.

This week, that meant both claiming success in deals with Comcast — and going so far as to each announce separate engagements with U.S. cable giant within hours of each other.

Juniper said Comcast would be purchasing new high-end routers, while Cisco announced that Comcast was testing out new, 100-Gigabit Ethernet (100GbE) capabilities on its routers.

The one-upmanship comes as carriers like Comcast are ramping up their networks to meet increasing user demands, creating a market for networking equipment vendors worth more than $11 billion dollars.

(Read the full post about ‘Juniper, Cisco Fight for Carrier Cash’…)

Preparing for the Worst: Tech CEOs’ Successors

Autor admin | 28.06.2008 | Category SEO

Preparing for the Worst: Tech CEOs’ Successors
Every company plans for an orderly transfer of power, but there are times when that transfer has to be done on a more urgent schedule. Whether it’s Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ health scare, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison’s tendency for an adrenaline rush or Broadcom CEO Henry Nicholas being busted for allegedly selling drugs, the fear always seem to loom that a time might come when a chief executive leaves the company minus the good-bye party and an orderly transfer of power. As a result, it seems logical that companies ought to have a well thought-out line of succession to minimize disruption if unexpectedly facing the loss of a leader. What we’ve found, however, is that firms have varying degrees of preparedness, while others’ lines of successions might be unexpected. (Read the full post about ‘Preparing for the Worst: Tech CEOs’ Successors’…)


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