June 15, 2009

Google vs. Bing: The fear stops here

Bing's debut has been more successful than nearly anyone expected, but it's a long way from causing Google to tremble in its boots -- despite what some tabloid newspapers might claim

It isn't quite up to the New York Post's gold standard -- "Headless Man Found in Topless Bar" -- but the Post's "Fear Grips Google" story over the weekend certainly got some attention, if only for its over-the-top headline.

According to "insider sources" the Post conveniently declines to describe, let alone identify...

Sergey Brin is so rattled by the launch of Microsoft's rival search engine that he has assembled a team of top engineers to work on urgent upgrades to his Web service, The Post has learned.

[ Earlier, InfoWorld's Robert X. Cringely asked: "Is Bing worth a fling?" Find out what he decided. | Stay up to date on Robert X. Cringely's musings and observations with InfoWorld's Notes from the Underground newsletter. ]

Well, duh. If Google weren't paying attention to Bing, it wouldn't be Google. But "rattled"? Please. When you own 60 to 80 percent of the search market, depending on who's counting, I don't think a 2 point percentage gain by a distant-third-place competitor is worth pulling the covers up over your head at night.

(Though I have to admit that Hannibal Lecterish graphic the Post ran of Ballmer is kind of frightening. He looks like he's about to bite Larry Page on the face. I'm gripped with fear just looking at it.)

SearchEngineLand's Greg Sterling has a somewhat less adrenaline-fueled take on what's likely happening over at the Googleplex:

Bing is probably better than Google anticipated and early indications are favorable in terms of user adoption; however not on any scale to threaten Google's position. I wouldn't be surprised if Google is taking Bing seriously and trying to carefully assess its algorithm.

My take: This is Rupert Murdoch's way of jabbing his poison pen into Google, which newspaper publishers have loudly (though somewhat inaccurately) blamed for the demise of their industry. Or maybe he sees it as a competitor to MySpace, or maybe it's just cuz Al Gore is on their board, and we all know how Rupe feels about green pinkos (or is that pink greenos?). In any case, it's a hit piece, and it's not the first one the Murdochians have aimed at Google.

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DeepWater 15-Jun-09 9:18am
1 reply
The New Your Post's purpose for being is to line the bottom of bird cages. Downside is that since it is already pre-populated with crap it does not hold as much as other newspapers and has to be changed more often.
MAS 15-Jun-09 9:29am
1 reply
Kudos to DeepWater for capturing the true essence of the NY Post!
llarzelere 15-Jun-09 10:25am
The sad fact is that the NY Post still has the opportunity to be a profitable newspaper, unlike so many others across the nation.
Carl Street 15-Jun-09 9:49am
Cringe, the word on the Google Campus in Mt. View is that their top execs have instituted a crash program to see how throwing tantrums and kicking office furniture can insulate them from competition. Obviously they have been researching the techniques of the Ballmer School of Management -- AKA B.S. of Management...:)
BlueWater 15-Jun-09 9:57am

"When you own 60 to 80 percent of the [search] market, depending on who's counting, I don't think a 2 point percentage gain by a distant-third-place competitor is worth pulling the covers up over your head at night."

I wonder if that's pretty much verbatim what GM said in around 1962....

ewelch 15-Jun-09 10:05am
Of all the newspapers in this country that are folding, this one should be next in line.
SaaSguy 15-Jun-09 10:25am
Ridicule of over the top news reporting, while apparently fun for you, shouldn't be confused with truth either. Is "the fear stops here" any less extreme? When MS exceeds expectations somebody better look out.
CompUser 15-Jun-09 11:24am
1 reply
"When you own 60 to 80 percent of the [search] market, depending on who's counting, I don't think a 2 point percentage gain by a distant-third-place competitor is worth pulling the covers up over your head at night." "I wonder if that's pretty much verbatim what GM said in around 1962...." Or Bill Gates when Google was first launched.
Carl Street 16-Jun-09 9:25pm
Actually, it is what CP/M thought when MS DOS was launched -- just another BDOS Error... :)
zonerman 15-Jun-09 11:40am
This article made me laugh out loud ...no really. I find it amazing how one such article got so much attention, while Microsoft has had to deal with Dooms Day scenario articles since well...forever. Kind of sound like all those Windows, Exchange, Sharepoint, Halo 3 killers out there. You know Linux and Firefox ect. Seems to me there are constant such articles about MS's doom with their 80-90 % markets shares (depending on product). Touche then?
MikeM 16-Jun-09 6:11am
1 reply
Don't get too carried away by the Post's popularity or circulation. I remember in the late 90s the number one 'news' paper in the US rotated between tabloids like the Enquirer or National Star. If you take the total of web pages and figure what percentage is unmitigated carp, you will probably end up with the same percentage as if you took all the newspapers in America and analyzed them. Note that it is easier to layoff an editor or two reporters than it is to drop the daily horoscope. (I see continued idiocy in your future ;-)
Carl Street 16-Jun-09 9:23pm
Something fishy about that unmitigated carp remark...

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