Fülszöveg
.1 t
J
¦f
What does the world want? According to John Battelle, a company that answers that question—in all its shades of meaning—can unlock the most intractable riddles of business and arguably of human culture itself And for the past few years, that's exactly what Google has been doing.
Jumping into the game long after Yahoo, AltaVista, Excite, Lycos, and other pioneers, Google offered a radical new approach to search, redefined the idea of viral marketing, survived the dot-com crash, and pulled off the largest and most talked-about initial public offering in the history of Silicon Valley, j; But The Search offers much more than the inside
' i story of Google's triumph. It's also a big-picture book
¦ ^ about the past, present, and future of search technology
, \ and the enormous impact it's starting to have on market-
I ing, media, pop culture, dating, job hunting, international
j law, civil liberties, and just about every other sphere of
human interest.
'I More than...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
.1 t
J
¦f
What does the world want? According to John Battelle, a company that answers that question—in all its shades of meaning—can unlock the most intractable riddles of business and arguably of human culture itself And for the past few years, that's exactly what Google has been doing.
Jumping into the game long after Yahoo, AltaVista, Excite, Lycos, and other pioneers, Google offered a radical new approach to search, redefined the idea of viral marketing, survived the dot-com crash, and pulled off the largest and most talked-about initial public offering in the history of Silicon Valley, j; But The Search offers much more than the inside
' i story of Google's triumph. It's also a big-picture book
¦ ^ about the past, present, and future of search technology
, \ and the enormous impact it's starting to have on market-
I ing, media, pop culture, dating, job hunting, international
j law, civil liberties, and just about every other sphere of
human interest.
'I More than any of its rivals, Google has become the
: i gateway to instant knowledge. Hundreds of millions of
I i people use it to satisfy their wants, needs, fears, and obses-
h sions, creating an enormous artifact that Battelle calls
: the Database of Intentions. Somewhere in Google's
J archives, for instance, you can find the agonized research
»1 of a gay man with AIDS, the silent plotting of a would-be
bomb maker, and the anxiety of a woman checking out her blind date. Combined with the databases of thousands of other search-driven businesses, large and small, it all adds up to a gold mine of information that powerful
Vissza