Google Jet Had a Light On...wait it was Big ol' Jet Airliner

A secret informant has alerted me to some more news on Google. Don't ask who, because I can’t reveal my source. I’d rather go to jail and bunk in the New York Times cell block before I…Okay, so it’s this guy I know and he has a subscription to Wall Street Journal online.

But anyway, seems the dynamic duo have bought themselves a plane—like Travolta style. They haven’t bought a house, but they buy jet airplanes. The Journal's Kevin Delaney, Lynn Lunsford and Mark Maremont report:

Wide-Flying Moguls:
Google Duo's New Jet
Is a Boeing 767-200

On the road, Sergey Brin and Larry Page have owned environmentally friendly hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius. In the air, they apparently prefer something roomier.

Google Inc.'s two billionaire founders, both 32 years old, will soon be cruising the skies in a Boeing 767 wide-body airliner.

Had to Share




White-Shirt Guy: Stop dancing
Black-Shirt Guy: I won't
White-Shirt Guy: You know I can't take it, you know I can't take it. Stop dancing!
Black-Shirt Guy: No. I will not.
White-Shirt Guy: You are a bad man.

A wise man once said, I'll be back. Turns out he isn't that wise and I'm in fact, back

Well sorry for the delay on the posts, I'm sure many of you missed me. I want to thank all my fans for writing in and declaring your support and anticipation of the next post. Okay, okay it was just one note and, thanks mom. On to the news.

Google used to be so cute...now they're just plan aggressive
ComputerWorld is reporting that Google is seeking clients of enterprise search rivals by Offering trade-in to draw new customers to its Search Appliance.

Organizations that rip out their enterprise search systems and replace them with a Search Appliance by the end of the year will receive a free Google Mini, a simpler and less expensive version of the Search Appliance, Google said yesterday.

The Google Search Appliance, first introduced in 2002, is designed to index information stored in a variety of server-based data repositories, such as intranets, public Web sites, relational databases, enterprise business applications, content management software and legacy systems.

The Google Mini is designed for small and midsize organizations that want to make the information in their intranets or public Web sites searchable.

So, there’s an interesting small-medium business and enterprise story here. Google is moving into the Enterprise arena, but keeping it real by helping out the little guy. Because you know Google cares about the little guy.

Also, eWeek is reporting on Google’s desire to patent something called Automat technology. Why eWeek is reporting on a company wanting to patent something is curious. I actually want to patent a device that changes baby diapers but you don’t see eWeek covering that….Anyway, this Automat seems to be a major piece of its online retailing and advertising strategy. The eBay killer might be on its way to market and I have a feeling another dirty diaper is headed my way.

So this could actually be a Google Blog
Don’t want to keep talking about Google, but how could you not. New material in the battle between Microsoft and Google coming from InformationWeek

The Microsoft-Google rivalry certainly isn't news, but technology guru Ray Ozzie's comments were the most specific to date on the threat Microsoft sees in the search leader. Bill Gates also had much to say about competitive threats in another memo.

An email from Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and a related memo from Ray Ozzie, one of the software giant's three chief technology officers, have been leaked onto the Web. The documents are kicking off intense interest in the company's apparent internal discussions about missed opportunities in the wake of Google's success.
The Ozzie memo, and Gates's email, can be found on Dave Winer's blog.

"While we continue to make good progress on many fronts, a set of very strong and determined competitors is laser-focused on Internet services and service-enabled software," Ozzie wrote in the memo directed at Microsoft's executive staff. He then singled out several rivals, Google in particular.

"Google is obviously the most visible here, although given the hype level it is difficult to ascertain which of their myriad initiatives are simply adjuncts intended to drive scale for their advertising business, or which might ultimately grow to substantively challenge our offerings," he continued. "We knew search would be important, but through Google’s focus they’ve gained a tremendously strong position."

Links to the Dave Winer’s blog here and the InformationWeek story, here.

Earnings Watch
Dell—The world's No. 1 personal-computer maker (DELL: 29.02, -0.07, -0.2%) expects to earn 25 cents a share on $13.9 billion in revenue. Excluding $450 million in charges the company will take to account for restructuring efforts and defective product parts, Dell estimates it will earn 39 cents a share.

Cisco— Cisco fell 1.6% to $17.47 after Chief Executive John Chambers forecast late Wednesday that sales in the fiscal second quarter ending in January will rise 8% to 9%. Wall Street analysts were expecting sales to rise 11% to $6.73 billion.


RIM could be singing the Blackberry Blues soon
So if it wasn’t bad enough that the govment wants to shut down the popular CrackBerry, RIM is facing tougher and cheaper competition from wireless vendors.

Around 1 percent of the world's 650 million corporate e-mail accounts are plugged into hardware and software that forwards incoming messages to a mobile device. More than half of those, about 3.65 million, use RIM's BlackBerry.

Oil Watch: My car has been so dirty these days because I can’t afford the good ole’ Chevron Wash/antenna ripper offer/dent creater/starch maker. But boy did it shine.

Chevron CEO attacks energy policy
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. energy policy's focus on the environment and new fuel specifications historically has hurt efforts to increase the nation's refining capacity, Chevron Corp.'s chief executive said on Wednesday.

"From a U.S. energy policy perspective, the focus has been on environmental and fuels investments, not on investments that add to production capacity," Chevron CEO Dave O'Reilly said before a Senate hearing on energy prices.

O'Reilly also said U.S. energy policies had hurt the development of domestic energy resources.

A maze of regulatory and administrative barriers at the federal level, for example, prevented Chevron from developing a natural gas field off the Florida coast, O'Reilly said.

As a result, consumers in Florida receive gas from Angola that is shipped across the Atlantic Ocean, he said.

"This is clearly not an efficient and economic use of resources for the United States, or the rest of the world for that matter," O'Reilly said. "Yet it is the direct result of our historical energy policies."

"Most of those 650 million will be mobilised within three years," said Scott Cooper, vice president for mobility solutions at Nokia's Enterprise Solutions group.

The reason for his optimism is that Nokia, like Microsoft, will practically give away wireless access to business e-mail.

So, lots of players will jump in the market, although don’t know why they waited so long, and pending government regulation should make this an interesting event to watch.

That Guy has been that Busy

And now, I'm off. I'm making like Willie and will be on the road again.