Updated: 4/4/2004; 9:53:37 PM.
Editor's Radio Weblog
        

Wednesday, January 28, 2004

Will Microsoft Office Have More Competition?. Chinese software maker Evermore Software is prepping to launch its latest release of its Microsoft-Office competitor at the Demo conference next month. [Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley]
7:47:33 PM    comment []

Interesting Twist: Google and WhoIs LookUps. Andy Beal points out in his blog that Google has been blocked from performing Whois lookups by Network Solutions. The "Whois" feature (which lets you find out who owns a web domain) was one of many added recently by Google in its continued quest to "make the world's information accessible." Alex S. at BizWeek pointed out in a piece blogged here that there's a business model behind this intent (I'll take disintermediation for $500, thank you very much). We had a back and forth about it in the comments as well. In any case, it's significant that Network Solutions is pushing back. Andy, who writes in large part to the SEO community, comments: There's some hypocrisy here. Google publicly chastises anyone who run ranking reports on the Google Index, claiming that it is a drain of their server resources. Yet they seem quite happy to launch a service that has the same impact on Network Solutions... As I think Andy implies, I'm not sure this has anything to do with drains on servers and bandwidth. I think it has a lot more to do with who owns the customer. Network Solutions knows Whois is a major draw for customers, they use that draw to convert Whois lookups into paying domain registrants. In this particular case, the argument that Google was, in effect, stealing their customers at the point of conversion holds some water. If I do a Whois lookup on Google and see a bunch of ads for registrars that... [John Battelle's Searchblog]
7:46:43 PM    comment []

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