30/06/2011

Google+: The new Facebook rival?

Screenshot of Google+  
Google+ for now has a limited release

Unlike the launch for Google Buzz, Google+, the company's most aggressive attack on Facebook's domination in the world of social networking, was unveiled with little fanfare and little fuss.
Back in early 2010 the fourth estate came out in force to hear all about Buzz, the search giant's big social play at the time.
Proof that the company thought so highly of this product was evidenced by the fact that Google co-founder Sergey Brin took part in the press conference.
Buzz had all the right ingredients of a socially engineered product but failed because of serious stumbles around privacy.
Earlier this year Google reached a settlement with the US Federal Trade Commission to resolve concerns the company violated its own privacy policies through Buzz.
This time around for Google+ which was code named Emerald Sea, there was no press conference, no big press reveal and no execs trumpeting its arrival.
The emergence of Google+ was more or less heralded with a simple blog post by Vic Gundotra, senior vice president of engineering at Google and the man who has been in stealth mode for over a year leading the company's social play.
 
New features
But make no mistake, the lack of ceremony surrounding the arrival of Google+ does not take away from the fact that this is Google's most serious and concerted effort to try to nail social.
It is also its most ambitious attempt to answer Facebook without copying what it does. To simply do that would have been a recipe for disaster.
At the core of Google+ is a feature called Circles which is aimed at making it easier to organise friends, family members and others into smaller, easier to manage and more intimate groups as opposed to everyone you know.
The product will also draw on Gmail to work out who you might like to invite into the circle.
With more than 500 million users Facebook is a growing threat to Google, its bottom line and how users will continue to search. Right now Google can lay claim to over 65% of the search market in the US according to research firm comScore.
But as users rely more and more on friends and their social graph for recommendations, Facebook is in the right place to cash in.
 
Old rivals
The reasoning goes that who would you trust for a recommendation for a hairdresser/restaurant/gym more? Your friends on Facebook or Google's search engine?
Facebook dominates the world of social networking
The fact that Google and Facebook don't play nice in the sandbox adds to the drama of the situation. Remember earlier this year that Facebook was caught using a PR firm to plant unflattering stories about Google.

Proof of the enmity between these two technology giants is clear in Mr Gundotra's blog post when he refers to social networking as being "sloppy, scary and insensitive" and maintains that the "problem is that today's online services turn friendship into fast food - wrapping everyone in 'friend' paper."
Ouch!
Remember all that information that Facebook's 500m users are sharing is locked behind Facebook's wall out of the reach of Google's spiders and search smarts.
Over the last couple of years Facebook has grown into a social networking behemoth.
In May 180 million people visited Google sites including YouTube compared to 157.2 million on Facebook, according to comScore.

When it comes to user engagement Facebook is in the clear lead.
Users looked at 103 billion pages and spent an average of 375 minutes on the site compared to Google's 46.3 billion pages where users spent 231 minutes.
These are figures that advertisers pay close attention to.
Earlier this year, Google's then CEO and now chairman Eric Schmidt admitted he "screwed up" in the area of social networking.
"I clearly knew I had to do something and I failed to do it," he said.
Since co-founder Larry Page resumed the role of CEO back in April he put the company on notice and told employees that future bonuses would be tied to the success of Google's social strategy.
In a memo that he sent out at the time, Mr Page said "we all have a stake in the success of this effort".
Google is playing it canny by only releasing the product via invite to a limited set of users before being gradually opened up to the general public.
That way they can react quickly to feedback and implement changes quickly without upsetting a lot of users.
Analysts are divided about how successful Google+ will be but Charlene Li of the Altimeter Group said Facebook has to be worried nonetheless.
"The biggest risk group inside Facebook are people like me who are marginal users, in their 40's and someone who does not have all their friends on Facebook. Facebook is a toss up for me. My entire social graph isn't using Facebook so that is up for grabs and if Google+ does a good job for people like me, that is where I will go.
"It will be an interesting battle ahead. And for Google to be successful it doesn't have to beat Facebook, it just needs to get enough people in these circles to spend time there to make a dent on what Facebook does."
The ironic thing about the timing of the launch Google+ is that is enters stage left as a former darling of the social networking world watches the curtain slowly come down on its present.
Later today it is expected that MySpace will announce a number of lay offs along with the news that it will be sold for around $30m, a far cry from the $580m that Rupert Murdoch paid in 2005 for what was then the world's biggest social network.
For now that title belongs to Facebook.

MySpace sold by Murdoch's News Corp

 

News Corporation has sold its ailing social networking site MySpace to online advertising firm Specific Media.

News Corp paid $580m for MySpace in 2005, but users and advertisers left the site for rival social sites like Facebook and Twitter.
The sale terms were not disclosed, but there were unconfirmed reports that price paid was as low as $35m.


Pop star and actor Justin Timberlake will take a stake in the business, Specific Media said.
He will play "a major role in developing the creative direction and strategy for the company moving forward," the company said.
Specific Media was founded in 1999 by three brothers - Tim, Chris and Russell Vanderhook - and is based in Irvine, California.

MySpace was a leading social networking site when it was bought by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
But the business was eclipsed by rivals, and despite attempts to revive MySpace's fortunes the site has been a financial millstone.
The Reuters news agency cited a News Corp-owned blogging site as reporting that MySpace was sold for $35m.

Specific Media said: "We look forward to combining our platforms to drive the next generation of digital innovation."

Losses News Corp's chief operating officer Chase Carey said in November that the losses at MySpace were "unsustainable".
Although News Corp does not publish specific results for MySpace in its accounts, the "other" segment, which includes the social network, reported a second quarter operating loss of $156m - $31m worse than a year earlier.

According to tracking firm comScore, MySpace had 21.8 million unique monthly US visitors in August 2005 compared with Facebook's 8.3 million.
By May 2011, Facebook's monthly US visitors had risen to 157.2 million compared with MySpace's 34.9 million, comScore said. Facebook has nearly 700 million members worldwide.

Obama geeft Marchionne gelijk als het gaat om auto’s op gas


Italië heeft heeft met 2800 distributiepunten voor LPG (en aardgas/groengas) een groot netwerk in vergelijking met andere landen. Volgend jaar zullen dat er zo’n 3000 zijn, waarvan de meerderheid te vinden is langs de snelwegen op het schiereiland. Dit heeft onder andere te maken met het beleid van Italië’s grootste autobouwer, om hoog in te zetten op deze vorm van brandstof. Fiat heeft momenteel dan ook een record aanbod aan Natural Power en Bifuel modellen.

Bovendien is een van de grooste producenten van gasinstallaties, Landi Renzo, ook een bedrijf uit Italië. Al deze initiatieven vinden nu ook hun weg naar het immense Amerika. Fiat werkt daar momenteel hard aan de realisatie van een auto met extra lage uitstoot en sluit contracten met de overheid om te investeren in de uitbreiding van deze industrie. Terwijl concurrent GM flink inzet op elektrisch aangedreven oplossingen, gooit Chrysler het samen met Fiat over een heel andere boeg.

Dat elektrisch rijden een minder grote prioriteit heeft bij Fiat, is iets waar de CEO in slobbertrui overigens nooit een geheim van heeft gemaakt. Marchionne zegt dat hij het prima vindt dat bedrijven als GM en Renault-Nissan veel investeren in oplossingen met batterijen, maar of hij dit verstandig vindt is een tweede. De CEO van Fiat-Chrysler noemt het zelf namelijk voorlopig nog een enigszins doodlopende weg, al heeft hij vandaag nog laten weten dat Fiat en Chrysler ook zullen blijven werken aan hybride en volledig elektrische oplossingen.

Nederland mikt sinds Balkenende ook op elektrisch rijden, maar het lijkt erop dat de collega’s in Washington met de Italiaanse CEO mee zullen gaan. President Obama noemt de potentie van het rijden op gas enorm. Vooral aardgas/groengas wordt hier door Obama als de brandstof van de toekomst aangewezen. Enorme natuurlijke reserves in eigen land vormen daarvoor de sleutel. Barack Obama pro-aardgas koers valt voorlopig in goede aarde, ook in het Amerikaanse Congres.

Vanaf 2015 moeten alle overheidsauto’s bovendien op alternatieve brandstof rijden. Vriend en vijand begint dus verlangt dus naar het snel terugdrijven van het afhankelijk zijn van olie. Het begint een dure hobby te worden voor de Amerikanen en gas is daarop het meest ideale antwoord. De president van Amerika heeft recentelijk dan ook nog zijn steun betuigd aan Marchionne voor de ingeslagen weg van Fiat en Chrysler wat betreft deze vorm van brandstoftechniek.
Tegen 2017 moet een groot deel van Amerika op gas rijden zegt het Witte Huis.

Alfa Romeo Giulietta met TCT transmissie

Giulietta TCT

Op de autosalon van Parijs vorig jaar oktober, heb je reeds de Giulietta met dual dry clutch systeem kunnen zien. 
Afgelopen februari zou deze automaat dan eindelijk in de showroom verschijnen, maar een ramp in Japan gooide roet in het eten. 

Nu is het dan eindelijk zover; De TCT is nu na de MiTo 1.4 135 pk ook eindelijk leverbaar op de Giulietta en maakt z’n debuut alvast bij de Italiaanse dealers. 
Deze optie stond al lang in alle folders bij de 1.4 MultiAir en 2.0 JTDm met 170 pk. Tussen haakjes stond er de tekst; ‘vanaf het derde kwartaal 2011 leverbaar’

Of dat voor de Nederlandse markt nog steeds geldt moet nog blijken, maar ga er maar vanuit. 

De transmissie kost 1600 euro euro extra en is standaard uitgerust met een sequentiële schakeloptie aan het stuur (flippers), zoals we die al kennen van de Delta. 
Of het het wachten waard was laten we je zo snel mogelijk weten in een van onze aanstaande rij-impressies.