nytimes.com — Gates, described Google in an interview late last year as a worthy adversary, a company to test MS's mettle."This is hypercompetition, make no mistake,".The rivalry between the companies is growing more combative, and with good reason: the outcome is likely to shape the future of competition in computing and the way people use information
May 2, 2006 View in Crawl 4
firesMay 2, 2006
I don't see how this can be beneficial to google, ubuntu will never be allowed to ship with proprietary content.
vibeMay 2, 2006
"THE HEAT IS ON!!" - Glenn Frey
threegsMay 2, 2006
And he, [Microsoft] woke up and thought, "I'll get loose and go free, as always." He did not know that the Lord [Market] had left him. --Paraphrased from the Book of Judges 16:20
cjmemayMay 2, 2006
what a crappy voice over.
mgleason007May 2, 2006
Not only will it need to run on Windows, but Windows with IE, Firefox, Opera, OSX with Safari, Firefox, etc, Linux with Firefox, Konqueror, etc. I don't see how the "evil empire" (by which I assume you mean MS) wins. Google needs to be compatible first, then start to move in on other's market share. It is very likely Google will sponsor some sort of Open Source OS and attempt to make it a MS competitor.
jer2eydevil88May 2, 2006
Have we forgotten Yahoo? They offer widgets now...<a class="user" href="http://widgets.yahoo.com">http://widgets.yahoo.com</a> - although I would have prefered they kept calling it Konfabulator but hey they aren't the smartest of the web 2.0 companies..
Closed AccountMay 12, 2006
My first comment