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Selasa, 04 Agustus 2009

Bing Terus Gerogoti Google

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NEW YORK - Selama bulan Juli, mesin pencarian Microsoft terus menggeliat. Dalam satu bulan, Bing telah menambah pangsa pasarnya sebesar 1 persen lagi.

Bing kini telah menguasai sekira 9,41 persen pangsa pasar mesin pencarian di Amerika pada Juli kemarin. Angka ini meningkat lebih dari 1 persen dibanding pangsa pada bulan Juni yang hanya mencapai 8,23 persen. Jika peningkatan ini terus berlanjut, bukan tidak mungkin jika pasar Google akan terus tergerus.

Buktinya, jika Bing mengalami peningkatan satu persen maka Google Search pun mengalami penurunan dalam jumlah yang sama. Ini artinya, Bing akan terus menggerogoti Microsoft. Menurut data StatCounter, pangsa Google kini menurut menjadi 77,54 persen dari pangsa bulan lalu yang mencapai 78,48 persen.

Sedangkan Yahoo, boleh jadi tidak akan terlalu khawatir. Selain dikarenakan penguasaan pasarnya yang masih stabil, berada di 20,36 persen, Yahoo juga mendapat dukungan Microsoft dalam kerja sama yang telah disepakati selama 10 tahun.

Dalam kerja sama tersebut, Bing akan menjadi bagian dari situs pencarian Yahoo selama 10 tahun ke depan, lengkap dengan layanan iklan internet di Yahoo.

Selain pangsa pasar di Amerika, Google juga diperkirakan mengalami penurunan pangsa pasar secara global. Pada bulan Juni pangsa pasar global Google masih mencapai 89,90 persen. Sedangkan Juli kemarin, jumlahnya menurun menjadi 89,23 persen saja. (Choi)

Sumber : Okezone.com
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Apple Bungkam Suara Konsumen iPod

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LIVERPOOL - Apple mencoba membungkam suara konsumen yang merasa dirugikan karena iPod miliknya terbakar. Ketika mendapatkan laporan tersebut Apple bersedia mengganti penuh kerugian konsumen tapi memaksa konsumen tersebut agar tidak mempublikasikan kasus terbakarnya iPod.

Ken Stanbrough, warga Liverpool, Inggris mendapat tekanan dari Apple agar menjaga kerahasiaan kasus terbakarnya iPod. Demikian dilansir Times , Selasa (4/8/2009).

Kisah tersebut berawal ketika Ken, meminta ganti rugi karena iPod milik anaknya, Ellie Stanbrough yang baru dibelinya sebulan lalu. "iPod tersebut awalnya berdesis dan saya merasakan tangan saya panas, lalu saya melemparnya ke luar rumah dan tak sampai 30 detik, iPod itupun meledak dengan asap mengepul di sekitarnya," ujar Ken.

Setelah kejadian itu, iapun segera menghubungi Apple dan tempat ia membeli iPod,Argos untuk meminta ganti rugi pengembalian uang. Ken yang membeli handset tersebut seharga 162 Poundsterling itupun mengaku bahwa pihak Apple sebenarnya telah mengirimkan surat kepadanya, bahwa perusahaan asal Amerika Serikat itu bersedia mengganti rugi dan bertanggung jawab atas kasus tersebut.

Tapi, Ken mengatakan, dalam surat yang diterimanya Apple menuntut agar Ken tetap menjaga kerahasiaan terbakarnya iPod ini. "Surat tersebut sungguh sangat memprihatinkan dan sangat menggangu, saya pun menolak untuk menandatanganinya," ujar Ken.

Menurut Ken, dirinya hanya menuntut ganti rugi dan tidak menanyakan kompensasi lainnya.

Sebenarnya kasus terbakarnya iPod itu telah terjadi berulang kali namun, Apple diperkirakan telah membungkam konsumennya sehingga tidak diketahui publik.

Baterei iPod dan produk Apple lainnya telah menjadi perhatian sejak tahun 2006. Ketika itu, Appple menarik hampir sejuta Baterai lithium ion miliknya karena dinilai mudah terbakar dan membahayakan konsumen.

Apple terus didesak oleh sejumlah lembaga konsumen di AS dan di luar AS karena jumlah pengguna iPod diperkirakan terus meningkat. Hingga September 2008, diperkirakan iPod terjual sekira 173 juta di seluruh dunia. (Choi)

Sumber : Okezone.com
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Google launches rare ad campaign to sell more apps

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SAN FRANCISCO - Google Inc. is so well known that it has become a synonym for search, making advertising unnecessary. Getting businesses to buy Google's online suite of office applications requires a little more elbow grease and marketing muscle.

In a rare commercial campaign, Google is leasing billboards along major highways in New York, San Francisco, Chicago and Boston this month to promote a bundle of business applications that sells for $50 per worker annually. A different message will be displayed each weekday through August, starting with Monday morning's commute.

Google has been peddling its "apps" package since 2007, but only recently realized it needed a more aggressive sales pitch.

"People don't necessarily think of Google when it comes to how we can help companies," said Michael Lock, director of sales and operations for Google's enterprise division in North America.

For now, Google doesn't plan to advertise its business applications in other offline media like magazines, newspapers, television or radio, said Andy Berndt, managing director of the company's creative labs.

The billboard campaign underscores just how determined Google is to lure corporate customers away from Microsoft Corp.'s e-mail service and industry-leading applications for word processing, spreadsheets and scheduling. To a lesser degree, Google also is targeting IBM Corp.

Google has been escalating its attack against Microsoft just as its search engine is under assault.

Hoping to narrow Google's commanding lead in the online ad market, Microsoft last week forged a search partnership with Yahoo Inc. in a deal that still requires regulatory approval. Microsoft also upgraded its search engine in June and renamed it Bing — a change that is being trumpeted in a $100 million marketing campaign.

By contrast, Google has rarely bought advertising to promote its search engine since its inception nearly 11 years ago.

The Mountain View, Calif.-based company instead has relied primarily on word-of-mouth and free media exposure to establish the search engine as the Internet's most powerful tool. The strategy has worked well, with the advertising connected to its search engine generating $10.7 billion in revenue during the first half of this year.

Software licensing, including Google's sales of business applications, and revenue from other non-advertising sales accounted for just $365 million in revenue during the same period.

Google says about 1.75 million businesses, schools and government agencies use its online applications, but most of them rely on a free version that isn't as powerful as the subscription package. That's a small fraction of how many companies license Microsoft's software.

Selling applications available over Internet connections has proven difficult because many companies still prefer to install the programs on their own computers for security reasons.

The resistance has been easing, though, as the 19-month-old recession ramps up the pressure to lower costs. That is making more companies willing to experiment with online applications, a concept known as "cloud computing."

Google evidently believes its message is catching on. The company hopes to increase its business sales force by about 25 percent by hiring about 100 workers at a time Google's overall payroll has been shrinking. Google ended June with nearly 400 fewer workers than it had in March. (Choi)

Sumber : Yahoo.com
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Intel boosts Facebook users power for research

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SAN FRANCISCO - Intel unveiled a software program that lets Facebook users devote spare computer processing power to researching diseases or climate change.

The world's largest computer chip company teamed with nonprofit group GridRepublic to create a "Progress Thru Processors" application based on the popular online social networking service's operating platform.

The application enables Facebook users to allot idle computing power to work on projects for Rosetta@home, Climateprediction.net or Africa@home.

Rosetta@home uses donated computing power to seek cures for cancer, HIV/AIDS, Alzheimer's and other diseases.

Climateprediction.net seeks to enhance understanding of climate change by predicting and testing weather models.

Africa@home is focused on finding effective ways to combat malaria by studying simulation models of disease transmission and the potential impact of new drugs and vaccines.

"The social and scientific utility of volunteer computing is a function of the number of participants; the more people we sign up, the greater the good we can collectively do," said GridRepublic executive director Matt Blumberg.

He said the relationships "will help bring large numbers of new people into volunteer computing, enabling research and discovery which would otherwise be impossible."

In July, Facebook reported that it passed the 250-million-member mark.

Volunteers taking part in Progress Thru Processors essentially provide researchers with an online pool of computing power that can be used to work on complex tasks that would be daunting for a single machine.

"Small contributions made by individuals can collectively have a far-reaching impact on our world," said Deborah Conrad, Intel vice president and general manager of corporate marketing.

"By simply running an application on your computer, which uses very little incremental resources, you can expand computing resources to researchers working to make the world a better place."

A beta, or test, version of the application was launched online at facebook.com/progressthruprocessors.

The application is designed to run unnoticed as a background process on computers, according to Intel. (Choi)

Sumber : Yahoo.com
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Microsoft sees size as search answer in Yahoo deal

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REDMOND - Microsoft is hoping that a long-term partnership with rival Yahoo will give it the size and insight it needs to bring in more traffic, more advertisers and ultimately more revenue.

By handling Yahoo Inc.'s searches along with its own, Microsoft Corp. can learn more quickly what works and what doesn't. A smarter search engine might draw more Internet users, and more advertisers could follow, driving up prices.

Size, though, may wind up being far from the magic bullet that Microsoft is counting on in forging a 10-year partnership to power all Yahoo searches.

Search leader Google Inc. has had a head start in technical development, and Microsoft already has had plenty of search queries to analyze — yet it remains stuck at No. 3. Adding more data might not make a difference.

"They have lots of scale. They have lots of traffic. Even being the third-place player, they have huge amounts of data to understand their own relevancy," said Danny Sullivan, editor of the search news site Searchengineland.com. "I just don't know why they keep putting that argument out."

The deal still needs regulatory review on such issues as whether it will promote or hinder competition and how the two companies will share the personal data collected in searches.

If approved, Microsoft's technology will process Yahoo's searches behind the scenes. The only nod to Microsoft will appear — with credit placed at the bottom of the page — when a user gets results from a Web search.

In exchange, Microsoft will keep 12 percent of the ad revenue those searches generate. That's a better deal for Yahoo than most agreements of this sort, though the terms go up for review halfway through the deal.

Microsoft has yet to turn a profit on its search and advertising business despite having invested billions.

The software maker's stockholders so far have been guardedly positive about the deal, perhaps because it did not require a $9 billion upfront payment to Yahoo, a condition of a similar deal proposed last year. If Microsoft can't use this partnership to improve its search finances, though, they will eventually run out of patience.

Microsoft expects to spend up to $700 million to get the arrangement up and running, something that could take two years to fully deploy worldwide. It may spend up to $200 million within the next 12 months alone.

But the company believes it's worth it.

With the partnership, Microsoft will funnel Yahoo's nearly 3 billion monthly Web searches. Add that to the 1 billion Microsoft gets on its own, and the software maker will quadruple the queries it processes, allowing its search engine to gain even more insight into how to improve the experience.

Every move a search user makes is fed back into the system, so when the next person comes along with a similar problem, the search engine is a little bit smarter about solving it. For example, if five people in a row click on the fifth link on the results page for "Seattle Space Needle," the search engine — a sophisticated computer program — might try moving that link up to the top.

When search results give people what they're looking for right away, they're more likely to come back. It's a case of the sum totaling more than its parts: The deal is about more than simply combining search traffic from the two sites.

More people doing more searching on Microsoft-powered sites should then attract more companies wanting to peddle their products through short text ads next to search results. Some may not have bothered advertising on Microsoft and Yahoo separately, because as separate sites their audiences were too small to make up for the hassle of recreating Google search ad campaigns on a second and even a third system. Those advertisers may be enticed by the convenience and reach of this partnership, or by the idea of having a solid second place to spend their ad dollars to keep Google in check.

A bigger number of ads in the hopper gives Microsoft's technology a better chance of plucking out one that entices someone to click. The more times Microsoft watches someone click an ad — or not — the better its formula becomes for making the right match.

And because search ads are sold auction-style, more advertisers vying for those spots should drive up prices, ultimately helping Microsoft eke out a bit more from every ad it sells.

Right now, Microsoft estimates that Google gets 7 cents in ad revenue for every search, while Yahoo gets 4.3 cents and Microsoft gets 3.9 cents, according to a PowerPoint slide Microsoft mistakenly posted online.

Once Microsoft is handling Yahoo's searches, Microsoft predicts revenue per search for both companies will rise to 5 cents. Subtracting the commission Microsoft will pay Yahoo, Microsoft expects to start making a "decent" return of $400 million.

"The number of searchers is a vital driver of success," said Tim Cadogan, CEO of online advertising company OpenX and a former senior vice president in Yahoo's advertising division. "Being able to get nearly 30 percent catapults Microsoft from a tougher position to a more viable place from which they can build."

And build it must. Google gets about two-thirds of U.S. search queries, according to comScore Inc. Yahoo handled about a fifth of U.S. searches in June, and Microsoft fielded less than half of that. The partnership would bring the two companies' combined share to nearly 30 percent, still less than half of Google's total.

Staying a distant second to Google will leave Microsoft perpetually playing catch-up while Google keeps getting better. In other words, there are almost never enough data.

And that assumes size is all that's holding Microsoft back, a premise that Gartner analyst Andrew Frank described as "an overly simplistic view of Google's accomplishments."

Google had a head start on Microsoft and Yahoo in fine-tuning its search advertising system based on what works and what doesn't, making note of everything from the number of ads on a search results page to their exact size, placement, spacing and color.

When someone does a Web search, Google does more than simply spit out an ad that matches the keyword. Google weighs many factors to figure out how likely a user will click on an ad. An oft-clicked ad on a common search might be shown first, even if it brings in less revenue than a less popular but more lucrative one.

Microsoft has smart computer scientists working full-time on the same puzzle, but Google's lead is formidable, and Microsoft's devotion to search pales compared with cash cows like Office and Windows.

Ultimately, the Redmond, Wash.-based software maker may have to settle for something less tangible.

Google has been making incursions onto Microsoft's home turf, the software that makes computers run and helps people get their work done. By stepping up its game in search, Microsoft may ultimately force Google to focus on its core search engine rather than its fledgling software business, including a recently announced Chrome operating system that could challenge Windows. (Choi)

Sumber : Yahoo.com
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Acer rambah Bisnis Ponsel Pintar

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Jakarta - Acer tampaknya tidak cukup puas sebagai pemimpin dipasar netbok, pabrikan asal Taiwan ini ingin juga memiliki pangsa pasar baru didunia ponsel pintar.

Perkembangan para pengguna ponsel pintar dewasa ini, tampaknya sudah cukup berhasil membuat Acer untuk ikut meramaikan bisnis tersebut. Tercatat sekuranganya 15% pertumbuhan para pengguna ponsel pintar selama kurun waktu 5 tahun terakhir.

Dengan menggaet pengembang ponsel asal Taiwan, E-Ten, Acer telah mempersiapkan beberapa varian produknya yang siap meramaikan industri ponsel pintar.

Sebut saja beberapa produknya yang sudah menyambangi Indonesia, Acer M900, Acer F900, Acer X960 dan Acer DX900. Keempat produk tersebut masing-masing menawarkan fitur dan design yang diklaim mampu memenuhi kebutuhan akan hiburan dan konektifitas.

Walaupun Indonesia telah dibanjiri beragam ponsel pintar, namun Acer tetep optimis bahwa produknya bakal mendapat tempat bagi para pengguna ponsel pintar.

"Kami yakin dengan design dan fitur yang kami tawarkan, ponsel ini dapat menarik perhatian para pengguna ponsel pintar." (Choi)

Sumber : Detikinet.com
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Microsoft Batalkan Windows 7 E

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Jakarta - Windows 7 E, yang rencananya bakal menjadi versi Windows 7 khusus untuk Eropa, akhirnya dibatalkan. Alternatif lain diajukan Microsoft untuk meniadakan IE 8.

Pengumuman itu disampaikan dalam blog Microsoft on The Issues, blog resmi Microsoft seputar isu legal dan kebijakan. "Saya senang untuk melaporkan bahwa pada Oktober kami akan mengedarkan versi Windows 7 yang sama di Eropa dengan versi yang beredar di seluruh dunia," tulis Dave Heiner, Vice President & Deputy General Counsel Microsoft.

Salah satu alasan pembatalan Windows 7 E, ujar Heiner, adalah keberatan dari manufaktur komputer. Beberapa rekanan Microsoft disebut tak mau mengendarkan komputer dengan Windows 7 E jika kemudian hari harus menggantinya dengan versi lain.

Windows 7 E rencananya adalah Windows 7 yang akan beredar khusus di wilayah Uni Eropa. Sistem operasi ini akan meniadakan Internet Explorer 8 dari dalamnya demi memenuhi kekhawatiran soal monopoli.

Pada Juli 2009, Microsoft mengajukan solusi lain, daripada mengedarkan sistem operasi tanpa browser maka Microsoft akan menambahkan 'kartu suara'. Maksudnya, Microsoft akan menambahkan sebuah tampilan untuk memilih browser yang akan dipasang.

Ars Technica melaporkan 'kartu suara browser' ini akan hadir dalam bentuk update. Bukan hanya pada Windows 7, 'kartu suara' ini juga akan ditambahkan ke Windows XP dan Vista. (Choi)

Sumber : Detikinet.com
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