Syntagma Digital
21st-Century Phi
Google Future

Google Gives Us Autoresponders in Gmail

Those little teams of developers at the Googleplex working on anything they please have come up with another spiffing wheeze: autoresponders in Gmail.

If, like me, you can never be bothered setting up the autoresponders at your Web host, this is a good alternative. Simple and (we hope) effective. Like everything else Googlish, it’s free.

To find out how to get started, go to How do I set up an automatic vacation response?

Typically, they don’t even call them autoresponders, which would put a lot of people off.

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Google Base is Walled Garden Claim

Temporally Relevant claims that GBase, Google’s attempt at classifieds, is in practice nothing but a walled garden. The content is protected from other search engines by the code:

http://base.google.com/robots.txt:
User-agent: *

Disallow: /base

“Your content that you’ve entrusted to them to ‘host and make searchable online’ is sitting squarely inside of Google Fort, armed with locked doors for their competition by blocking the very thing that made them a success, the open web.”

The website seems to have a point. Since the post is currently sitting in tech.memeorandum we may well get a response from Google.

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Review of The Search by John Battelle

We needed a book like this. A book about “search” rather than Google or any of the other search-pointed companies. Its arrival is timely and on cue, especially with MSN moving bigtime into the knowledge-finding business. The book is subtitled, “How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture.”

If the Web has superstars, John Battelle is one of them. Co-founding editor of Wired and Industry Standard, he is currently Chairman of the Web 2.0 conference and founder of Federated Media Publishing Inc. His entries in tech.memeorandum are inevitably weighed down with discussion links.

His book gives us a detailed history of search on the Internet, with Google always lurking in the background. When the company does come into the picture, everyone else fades away. Google is the only sexy name in search, and Battelle is aware of that.

The history of search as we know it is really the history of Google. And yet, the author brings out clearly the times when they hung on by their fingertips. He emphasizes too the debt they owed to other supporting businesses, notably GoTo.com (now Overture), whose Bill Gross came up with the non-CPM pay-per-click model that Google made its own through AdSense.

Google was not to be denied its place in the cultural history of our times. Once the model was up, and they had paid off Overture with hundreds of millions of dollars, the rise was inexorable and, if not quite exponential, it certainly looked like it.

The history of search is not yet over. As Robert Scoble has pointed out, there’s still a mighty lot to do. Whatever the future holds for Google, though, we owe them for what we have now, which, by any standards is remarkable enough.

And we owe John Battelle for writing this thoroughly readable and informative book on a subject most of us would have run from a few years ago.

Coming soon, a review of “The Google Story” by David Vise.

Check out the best price for The Search by John Battelle.

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Google Advertising Now?

I just spotted a Google ad over on Blog Herald. Unfortunately, as I refreshed my browser to allow popups on the site, the ad morphed into something else.

I can’t recall seeing Google advertise in such an explicit manner before. I believe they’re even taking out space on TV now.

Anyone else spotted this strange phenomenon?

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