RWW: “It would mark a sea-change on the internet. No longer would our dominant use of the web be seeking out web-pages built by HTML web-masters! Now we would all be publishing tiny little updates that perhaps only our friends and family care about. We’d be subscribing, more than we ever did by RSS, to syndicated updates from organizations of interest, large and small. It would be (perhaps will be) a very different era and, to be frank, it’s going to be harder to monetize. There will be privacy battles. There will be new platforms for innovation. – It’s a pretty big deal. Things will really change if current trends continue and social networking rises to the top. That’s not as clear as this traffic analyst firm argues that it is, but it could happen. And that’s a big reason why Google and Facebook are rivals.”
Gerrit Eicker 10:20 on 22. January 2010 Permalink |
RWW: “It would mark a sea-change on the internet. No longer would our dominant use of the web be seeking out web-pages built by HTML web-masters! Now we would all be publishing tiny little updates that perhaps only our friends and family care about. We’d be subscribing, more than we ever did by RSS, to syndicated updates from organizations of interest, large and small. It would be (perhaps will be) a very different era and, to be frank, it’s going to be harder to monetize. There will be privacy battles. There will be new platforms for innovation. – It’s a pretty big deal. Things will really change if current trends continue and social networking rises to the top. That’s not as clear as this traffic analyst firm argues that it is, but it could happen. And that’s a big reason why Google and Facebook are rivals.”
Facebook: 175M Daily Logins « Wir sprechen Online. 08:27 on 3. February 2010 Permalink |
[…] 175M Daily Logins Sandberg, COO of Facebook, said that half of its 350M registered users log in on a daily basis; http://j.mp/ccLeIz […]
Facebook to Oust Google Search? « Wir sprechen Online. 17:59 on 16. February 2010 Permalink |
[…] to Oust Google Search? SEL: The importance of search and SEM is not going away or likely going to be eroded by Facebook; http://j.mp/95Y17s […]
Facebook vs. Google: Advertising Duel « Wir sprechen Online. 06:48 on 22. January 2011 Permalink |
[…] Facebook targets and obtains those advertisers who made Google a success: small businesses; http://eicker.at/AdvertisingDuel […]