Google's Love For Small Businesses 318
bariswheel writes "The Fearless Frog is at it again: In his latest post, Cringely aims to slap some sense into Microsoft, Apple, and IBM altogether. From the article: 'What counts is that for Microsoft the platform is the PC while for Google the platform is the Internet and nobody can hope to control the Internet -- not Microsoft OR Google. Google is making a ton of money from people [small/medium sized businesses] who never were even in business before. This is not only a fundamental change in how advertising is done; it is a fundamental change in how BUSINESS is done.'"
old ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
So what's antiquated about making a product and selling it? Sure it's been done for a 1000s of years but that doesn't mean it's outdated... people will be doing exactly the same in the next 1000 years
Re:old ways... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:old ways... (Score:2, Interesting)
Given so many companies seem to be incapable of doing it, a great deal, apparently.
Well, both use one product to support another (Score:2, Interesting)
Both also like bundling, ms bundles various stuff they want to push in with their OS, apple bundles together hardware, an OS and a platform for 3rd party programs(though you can't blame them for not encouraging a wine type API for other platforms, and they probably don't even resist it as much as ms).
Re:Well, both use one product to support another (Score:2, Insightful)
I see many distros of linux being sold in many computer stores (and pre-installed on machines). Just because Microsoft is the most popular at this time, doesn't make them a monopoly. Nothing is stopping you from creating an OS and selling it.
The same thing with apple. There are 100s of companies out there selling mp3 players (
Re:Well, both use one product to support another (Score:5, Insightful)
And there are things stopping others from selling products in markets which ms has a monopoly in, ms abusing it's monopoly, which they have been convicted of.
Google is approaching a monopoly. (Score:2, Insightful)
Suppose that Google had 95% of the search market. Then, if Google either denies advertising space to a small company or lowers its page ranking (so that the company appears at the bottom of a list of 666 other businesses selling the same product), then the company could be hurt irrevocably. There is no viable way for the company to use an alternative
Re:Google is approaching a monopoly. (Score:4, Insightful)
What do you mean by "make money" anyway? "Acquire money, in return for work"? I got news for you, not all people are like that. Some don't want to accquire money. And some don't want to do anything in return for getting money, and that can just as well apply to corporations. **cough**sco**cough**
If we didn't have pro free market legislation, google would not have gotten where it is today, microsoft or some company allied with it would have taken the market or at least a significant chunk of it by any dirty trick it could use.
Re:Well, both use one product to support another (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Well, both use one product to support another (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that both the US Government and the EU would disagree with you about Microsoft not being a monopoly.
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
I personally think we'd all be better off if everybody would do a little less selling and a little more making. Okay, a lot less and a lot more.
Re:old ways... (Score:3, Insightful)
I thought the world economy has been more about services than products for decades now. Software businesses are waking up to this fact, after some time of distortion (mostly due to Microsoft) in which they wanted to sell copies of bits as products. I don't really mind this, as I can save tons of money by servin
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm fine with services too -- some people need them. I don't, usually. You can even think of them as a product. The problem is, instead of trying to build the best widget or offer the best service, almost everybody seems to be intent on making something that's just good enough and then differentiate themselves through marketing.
So I end up paying not only for a mediocre product but for the marketing as well. Marketing has a negative value to me (it uses my time and annoys me) so it actually detracts from the product, yet in many cases I have no alternatives to paying positive cash for it.
Marketing vs. Advertising (Score:4, Informative)
Without marketing, you would have no product (or service). At all.
And yes, the kind of advertisement we have these days also annoys me. And yes, I too think they spend too much money on it.
Re:old ways... (Score:2)
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
Better watch out... one of these days those far off lands are going to realize that they hold all the cards.
Re:old ways... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:old ways... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Scary thought for a business plan... (Score:2)
Don't tell the RIAA.
Re:old ways... (Score:2)
I do not recognize software as a product, not without coersive laws and terms of agreement making it so. At best, software is a service. At best.
Re:old ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
Since buying a piece of $350 software from a company that screwed me pretty hard (refusing to let me move it to a new machine without buying and using a *^%^%* dongle---a rule that was -not- in any contract I agreed to when I bought the product---and in theory, not allowing me to sell the product to anyone else), I now read licensing agreements and will never as long as I live buy any software from that particular company again. They know who they are (as do the folks on every audio recording message board on which I regularly post).
That said, the very fact that I feel like I have to read multi-page agreements from top to bottom to keep from getting utterly screwed over by greedy companies is a pretty sure sign that government intervention in the software industry is desperately needed. As long as software licenses can violate the right of first sale and other basic consumer rights, commercial software is not a product, it's a service at best, a screw job at worst, and a wonderful reason to support FLOSS on the whole.
Not that all software companies behave like children, mind you, and one would hope that eventually the free market would destroy the ones that do... but that doesn't help the innocent people who get screwed in the process. :-)
Re:old ways... (Score:4, Insightful)
Did you even read the article? Neither Microsoft nor Apple are merely in the business of making products and selling them. They make platforms that they dominate. Every other MP3 player company was just making products; Apple is up to something different.
Obsession with small business (Score:2, Interesting)
I understand they're "living the american dream" and all that, but how much is that worth us as a society? It seems to me that people have just automatically assumed that larger businesses are bad (by associating the
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Insightful)
Walk into any big corporation and you find a bunch of uptight, miserable people who hate their jobs; don't care whether the customer is happy, and generally feel powerless to effect positive change on any grand scale within their operation.
There are obviously exceptions. Companies like Whole Foods treat their employees right, but these corporations are very atypical. Walk into a Wal-Mart and see if any employee there really gives a crap whether you find what you're looking for.
The bigger they are, the harder they fall. It's also a fallacy that smaller companies don't employee more people. There are millions and millions of Americans working for small companies or self-employed. They are an intregal part of the workforce in the country.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Insightful)
Except that you can't be a crappy manager at a small business, and stay in business long.
Big businesses depend on economies of scale that don't exist in small businesses... there isn't ROOM for an incompetent boob in a three-man operation.
You get to three-hundred, and, "Well, Johnson may be a bullying misogynist, but at least he shows up for work."
You get to three-thousand, and Johnson's bullying misogyny is percieved as "leadership".
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know why I'm surprised that this got modded up, but you really need to get out some. Are some people with MBAs worthless know-nothings? Of course. As are some people with every certification or degree known to man. It doesn't impugn the value of that education.
More and more, Slashdot seems to be sliding towards the groupthink that "People who are interested in business are bad." You know what? You can be a dynamite engineer with a fantastic development group and a kick-ass product. But if your salesforce can't sell, your management can't keep the company focused, your CFO can't get the financials straight (including making good decisions regarding cash flows and investments to make sure that you, the kick-ass engineer, gets paid every month), your product doesn't mean shit. Because it will never see the market.
Exactly, Are you just a Cog, or a Human? (Score:5, Insightful)
People in town know me, and I know them. The people who run the other small bussinesses in town all know me, and I know them.
With a relatively small number of customers, I have to treat them right, or we'd be out of bussiness really really fast.
When I do treat the customer right, I know that they'll tell their friends... and I also know that the other small bussinesses in town will stear people my way, just like I send bussiness their way.
Occasionally, I'll get customers who are complete assholes. Over a certain level of assholeness, and they're not worth my time or trouble... and I make certain to send them off to some large corporate store so I can concentrate on the customers who actually respond to being treated well.
The customers I want, I treat like gold.
Now, take your typical corporate environment. The workers could give a fark about their customers, because almost none of the workers in a corporate environment have a direct stake in how well the bussiness does overall (beyond making sure that it doesn't go belly up).
Your typical corporate employee treats the customers at a certain minimum level of service, because he'll be fired if he doesn't.
So, EVERYONE who goes to do bussiness with the corporate places gets treated in a "lowest common denominator" sort of way. They're not quite treated as badly as garbage that blew in off the street, but they're never treated like the "good" customers that I treat like gold.
Everyone in the corporate places, employees and customers alike, gets treated as just another cog in a big machine.
So, if you spend your money at big corporate places, you're in effect voting with your dollars to be treated just slightly better than assholes get treated. But, if you spend your money at small bussinesses and act like a decent human being, then you'll be treated much better.
Every dollar you spend at Wallmart or Blockbuster, is a dollar that you're "voting" with, to be treated as a disposable nothing who gets the bare minimum of courtesy... and nothing else.
I guess if you're a complete asshole, then you'd come out ahead in that bargain
Re:Exactly, Are you just a Cog, or a Human? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Exactly, Are you just a Cog, or a Human? (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:4, Interesting)
Small business is just that -- small. Most small businesses are too small to pay a decent wage and provide decent benefits. They rarely hire full-time employees and don't always treat their employees well. Have you seen gas station employeees or Burger King employees that were happy with their jobs? Burger King or McDonald's is a perfect example of a small business. Most of those restaurants are owned and operated by a small, local franchisee. I doubt any of their employees are particularly happy.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
For a real exmaple, go check out an office park, or go to some banks' sckyscraper and check out all the offices. Most of the people working there are fairly satisfied with thier jobs.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:3, Informative)
Huh? Are you serious?
Those have to be the absolute worst examples of small businesses because, well, they're not small businesses. They are local outlets of huge corporations. Pay scales, work rules and benefits are not determined by the local franchise owner. They are dictated by the corporation.
A perfect example of a small business would be a small construction contractor, a small, privately operated, tax accounting office or a family-run
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Sheesh, what planet are you living on? Generally speaking, small business are much more desperate for business than large companies, hence rules are bent much more in my experience.
One company I worked for had a full-blown pathological liar in charge. Oh, the stories I could tell of that guy.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Are you a farmer ? Do you want to become a farmer ? My father was a farmer, now retired, and even though it's not bad living, it's very low pay, lots of dangerous, manual hard work, and dealing all the times with fellow farmers who are not always the most friendly people. I decided very early on, at the age of about 8 when I was first put to work at the family farm on Sundays and subsequently for about a month of every summer holidays of my entire childhood that I'd rather not be a farme
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2, Troll)
Do you have anything backing up your argument other than "uhh, there's a lot of small businesses so,
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:3, Interesting)
Small and medium sized enterprises (Score:5, Interesting)
Show me a large company and I will show you an organisation with huge inbuilt inefficiencies and vast inertia. In the long term it is going to die or split up. That's part of the business cycle. To drive the business cycle, you need new dynamic startups and a regime in which, when they become medium sized, they can still grow. You need strength in depth, like the German Mittelstand. Some will be winners and turn into large companies. But if you only have large companies, in the long run there is nowhere but down. Small companies cannot monopolise their markets, so they have to do something well to survive.
I am surprised myself, but I find myself agreeing with Cringely - over the long term. Until recently it has taken a very big enterprise to build cheap computers, phones, or volume software. The problem is that these things are now commoditised to such a degree that they do not command a premium. It's like the transition from a world in which iron was a scarce commodity and the man who could afford a steel sword could be a military leader, to a world in which iron was a cheap building material and the emphasis moved to poeple who could think of new things to do with it. That this transition is happening over a couple of decades rather than a couple of millenia is a sign of some sort of progress.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Insightful)
That is only an issue because of the dismal state of healthcare in this country. That is a serious problem that needs to be addressed on its own. Most industrialized "first world" countries provide healthcare for their citizens; don't blame the small businessman for the failings of government.
It seems to me that people have just automatically assumed that larger businesses are bad (by associating them with some bad actors among the super-big actors) and that smaller business are somehow intrinsically "good,"...
It's not a matter of "good" or "bad". The problem with large businesses is that they have a disproportionate amount influence on our lives. They own congress and rig the laws and tax code to favor them. They coldly lay off workers without remorse. They are large institutions who are beholden to no one but their shareholders. They do these things, not because they are "evil", but because they can. Any business, small or large, will do what it can to make money, it's just that some of the things large businesses are capable of are pretty nasty.
Small businesses are a part of the community, and have a human face. They're "one of us". Despite their relative inefficiancy, it is no surprise that people have a warmer opinion of them than their larger counterparts.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure beats letting the market determine who recieves care. Here, the rich get vanity surgery and specialists for everything, while the poor are treated only in the emergency room. From a humanitarian standpoint, our system is a failure.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:4, Insightful)
We don't have free-market health care in the United States. Heck, we are literally a stone throw away at implementing socialized medicine in the United States. The high cost of health care is due to the cartelization and licensing of doctors and medicine, as well as government regulations. In fact, the US government spends more per capita on health care than even Cuba (communism's current trademark) does. Read here to see what the AMA has done to health care, as well as this article [fff.org], which describes how the United States's health care is anything but free-market.
I agree that our health care situation is bad, but the last thing that we need is socialized medicine. We need to move away from socialism. Socialism is a mistake of the 20th century, and it is best that we finally use free-market ideas.
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:3, Insightful)
While we do have some government interference in food prices, primarily in the form of food stamps and farm subsidies, for the most part, grocery stores operate according to market forces. It's a system that works. The US poor are better fed than in any other time in history. The problems we have with malnutrition for some segments of the
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
you mean like former small businesses that do things like have 2 employees that build computers in a parents garage? (aapl) or a small business of a college kid building commodity pc's in his dorm room? (dell) or
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
innovation, creative power (Score:2)
One thing that small businesses can do that large ones cannot is innovate. Now, you may think to yourself that most of the new innovative te
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2, Insightful)
That's now an oxymoron if you ask me.
How many "big corporations" are really successful? You can't name one big corporation that isn't either playing "voodoo accounting" to pretend they're successful, or has a shitload of oppressed employees they're taking advantage of. 99.9% of the "big successful corporations" are a half-inch away from completely imploding upon themselves. Have you had your head und
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
Both have their downsides, that's why some of us live in countries with strong social welfare
Re:Obsession with small business (Score:2)
The shortsightedness of America (Score:5, Insightful)
Not just local governments and small businesses (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, if you're in Pennsylvania and take Interstate 81 south you'll suddenly see a number of major corporate buildings in all fields - manufacturing, financial, consulting - across the Mason-Dixon before you even get a chance to cross the border. This is because various states also have different ways of handling corporations. As a Pennsylvanian, I ca
Visual studio, anyone? (Score:2, Interesting)
Visual Studio 2005 Express was originally thought to be priced $50 a copy, then Microsoft made it free (as in beer) for anyone who downloads it before November 2006. The express editions have pretty much anything that you get in the real thing, except Microsoft's analog for CVS and a few other enterprise things. Express is a great product for anyone who wants to have fun with coding or ev
Not "Vista"... (Score:2)
No, he suggests that Microsoft sell a new OS that's actually usable on existing computers and doesn't have the legacy bloat and security problems of Windows... for $50.
Maybe they could bring back Windows CE?
Re:Not "Vista"... (Score:2)
Visual Studio Express to remain free (Score:2)
Visual Studio Express and all components will remain free. Visual Studio Express [microsoft.com]
This is becoming a very large and very rich site for the hobbyist programmer, including many starter kits and tutorials.
Re:Visual studio, anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
Never mind that... (Score:3, Insightful)
For the sake of argument, let's put aside the total absence of numbers in that paragraph... But, if one company is going to be credited with "making a ton of money from people who never were even in business before", surely it's E-Bay!
Right, sure (Score:2)
Been around for how long? Ever since someone invented the newspaper and realised that a load of penny ads still pays for all the costs just as good as full page ads with the advantage you can stick those tiny classified ads anywhere you got a spare space.
Nothing new here.
Re:Right, sure (Score:2)
What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:5, Insightful)
It surely is. That was obvious in 2000 when they came out with "Pocket PC", their most successful spin on the handheld, and "Stinger", their fialed attempt to get into the cellphone market.
The Pocket PC meant the end of the Windows CE micro-notebooks and the Windows-CE-based tablets. They were pushing Windows NT as the new tablet... the problem is that while Windows CE felt like a spin on Windows 95, and the Pocket PC felt like a Palm on steroids, the Tablet PC was just an overpriced notebook.
Luckily for Microsoft, Palm had no idea what their product was, and has been trying to turn Palm OS into Pocket PC... and failing, big time. If Palm was smart they'd be selling black-and-white 68000-based Palms for $30-$50 in every grocery store in the USA, and they'd still own the business... because Microsoft couldn't do that. But, no...
But, anyway... Microsoft's platform is Windows. If you're not Windows... even if you look like Windows, Microsoft just wants to make you an annex to the Windows desktop. And if you don't even look like Windows, Microsoft doesn't want you to be a platform. That's why they completely redid the XBox, people were turning it into a platform.
But what's Apple's "platform"? It's not the Mac, and it's not Mac OS, or Mac OS X, because their "handheld/..." is the iPod, and it's nothing like a Mac. It's not even tied in to the Mac. Apple's platform is, near as I can tell, "whatever they can make money selling". That's not something they can control like Microsoft can control Windows. Microsoft isn't Apple's proxy, but what is?
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
Sold like..a lead balloon. Was one of the major factors in Palm's implosion.
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:3, Insightful)
You mean "Palm m100"?
No, I don't mean a $150 68000 device with 2M running palmOS 3.5 in 2000, when it was the replacement for the Palm IIIe and contemporary with the Visor and the original Clie.
I mean they should have maintained the PalmOS 4 68000 based line and let the price drop and the capacity increase as the cost of memory and chips fell. They didn't have to enhance it and come out with a PalmOS 4.3, 4.4, 4.5, just keep making the black-and-whote DragonBall-EZ based Palms with 8M RAM a
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
The iPod is the most popular MP3 player even among people who use Windows.
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:3, Funny)
I'm a programmer and a techno-geek, and that puppy ain't designed for me.
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
Actually, if you know anything about Apple the iPod is exactly like the Mac. It's a one stop solution (From the OS to the H
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
Did you read the article?
It's a different OS (two different OSes) with a different user interface and different applications base. It's not a "platform" in the sense that Windows is a "Platform".
Apple doesn't own "it's a one stop solution". They don't control "it's a one-stop solution". "It's a one stop solution" for Apple is like "the Internet" for Google.
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
AAC is just another name for MPEG4 encoding of music. That's an open standard.
The only thing closed is the DRM, but DRM has to be closed, because DRM depends on obfuscation to work. DRM involves giving someone an encrypted message, the decryption keys for the message, and an implementation of the decryption algorithm, and keeping them from reading the message except when you want them to.
To quote Douglas Adams, "This is of course imposs
Re:What does cringely see as Apple's "platform"? (Score:2)
It's not a platform in the sense that Cringely is using the term.
Big verses Small (Score:5, Interesting)
When I worked at big companies, there always was an illogical hierarchy that insured good ideas would get buried behind the ambitions of politically-motivated managers. People used internal memos to talk in lieu of face-to-face conversations. We had way too many meetings that didn't get a goddam thing done. And half the staff's specialization involved blaming others for things that went wrong. Normally accountability and responsibility go hand-in-hand, but not in big companies. And things constantly broke down and got lost in the cracks. When I was young, this was huge hit to my idealism and I had to make a decision: Did I want to live my life this way and end up being programmed to accept mediocrity as the status quo? Or did I want to find an environment where the people were truly appreciated and weren't constantly living in fear that some corporate boss would cut their job without even introducing himself?
I would never go back.
word? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:word? (Score:2)
A need for both (Score:4, Insightful)
While it is wonderful that ebay and Google are offering large scale exposure and nation wide distrabution to small businesses, let's not demonize all giant corporations. Some things are better done on a huge scale. Think Boeing and FedEx. While other things are best done on a small,even personal,scale. Like fine dining or health care. The real hope for America is finding the appropirate scale for different industries, instead of business success being defined as becoming a huge market-dominating multinational, success can become about a balanced harmonious place in the economy and community.
Certainly Agree With Him in Parts (Score:3, Insightful)
Google funds its activities and development through advertising and spin-offs based on that from the services they provide, provided by their development. Small businesses and individuals have got several times the chance of using Google Calendar or Google Groupware than they have of using Exchange. That's what makes them a bit dangerous to Microsoft. Even then though, Microsoft still makes its money through licensing. There's no real way of getting around that.
Ditto with open source software, and that's why it will not be brought to the masses by Red Hat or especially Novell. They charge license fees in all but name. If someone can find a way of taking open source software, and finds a business model that allows them to fund their development whilst giving it away for free, it's bye, bye Microsoft, Novell and a few other companies who make their livings from pure software licensing. Seriously. IBM are a little bit different in that they do more than just that, so they have a chance. There I disagree. But, if you're a pure software licensing company you better hope damn hard that you're providing an adequate service to your custoners and you're in a specific well defined market.
You mean like IBM and Apple? (Score:2)
You mean like IBM and Apple do?
Re:You mean like IBM and Apple? (Score:2)
No, that's not what IBM and Apple do.
Re:You mean like IBM and Apple? (Score:2)
IBM???Apple??? (Score:2, Insightful)
Um, IBM makes its money through enterprise-level applications and services, with some hardward. Apple plays the hardware/music/software game. You may as well "slap some sense" into Boston Market, Sears, and Starbucks for not joining Google's model.
Please stop... (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft's business model is in transition (Score:5, Insightful)
Meanwhile they'll still be selling desktop software of course, but this area will start to decline in profitability. Windows and Office are their cash cows and the software-as-service stuff is their new direction which will eat cash for a number of years.
As far as Cringely's suggestion that MS offers a lean and mean, high performance, secure version of Windows, fully compatible with XP applications and peripherals, that could be sold for $49 without major loss of revenue and internal disruption, well, would that it were that easy. That's Cringely's advantage of being a blogger.
Our savior Google? (Score:3, Informative)
No offense to Google - I'm a regular user - but I'm not pinning the entire nation's future to this one tech company. That's absurd hyperbole. Something that we know to expect from Cringely (and Dvorak, et al.)
Google loves small businesses (Score:5, Funny)
[Yeah, it's an old one, but do I get bonus points for spelling 'ketchup' correctly?]
microsoft pushing into the small business arena (Score:3, Interesting)
They have retail management [microsoft.com] and point of sale software [microsoft.com] for small businesses. Plus many offerings for business accounting, like SBA [microsoft.com]. They actually have some pretty cool offerings in this area, compared to the competition anyway.
N3w Bus1n3s6 m0d31 !!! (Score:2)
Click here and sign up for our maillist and you will get Fr33 m0ny!!
Great quote from the article... (Score:3, Funny)
File this one under "Apple" (Score:3, Funny)
Note: we're also lacking the monthly story about AIDS finally being cured.
my only problem with Google and small biz (Score:4, Insightful)
This is monopoly Microsoft could only dream of.
Re:New Rules (Score:2)
Truth hurts?
Re:New Rules (Score:3, Insightful)
You would have to relocate the main offices all somewhere such as Detroit(or somewhere in the Midwest/Rust Belt), and remove the exclusionism in their culture - the most obvious example of it is the Stanford Nexus II [orkut.com] product.
Only when you have removed the culture of excluding on a whim, is when you can start believing that what intelligence that exists at Google is doing something Not Evil. Anything else is a corporate "Animal House" with
Re:OneNigger Suite of Collaborative Trolling Utili (Score:3, Funny)
WTF, sir. WTF indeed.