Thanks to the practical nature of modern life, a lot of important conversations now happen through Instant Messaging programs, such as Yahoo Messenger,
read more | digg story
I will be posting yahoo insider news daily so keep visiting daily if you are interested in yahoo's affairs. You can also post comments as per your wish :-)
Thanks to the practical nature of modern life, a lot of important conversations now happen through Instant Messaging programs, such as Yahoo Messenger,
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 2:11 AM 1 comments
Google's own product - 'Google Trends' says that Yahoo is more popular than Google since a long time. Even though the graph of Google has been steadily climbing, it has never beaten Yahoo. Should we or shouldn't we believe you Google?
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 2:05 AM 0 comments
In an unprecedented move, Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited and Yahoo! Canada today unveiled a global and industry-first feature on www.ford.ca.
More...
Posted by The Boss at 1:58 AM 0 comments
Social networking site MySpace said Thursday it will soon enable users to quickly share profile data with Web sites operated by Yahoo Inc., eBay Inc. and others.
MySpace aims to save its users keystrokes and allow them to export their photos, videos and lists of friends.
"There's this concept that social networks are walled gardens," said Amit Kapur, MySpace's chief operating officer. "We're taking those walls down."Posted by The Boss at 1:57 AM 0 comments
As reported on ComputerWorld.
A group of civic leaders is calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate any potential deal between Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc.
The civic groups, comprised of rural organizations, civil rights leaders, technologists, business advocates and concerned citizens, sent a letter to the DOJ today urging it to investigate the proposed alliance, saying it “threatens to concentrate power on the Internet.” They said such a partnership between the two largest search and advertising companies would give Google control over approximately 90% of the search market.
A DOJ spokeswoman said because there is no deal between Google and Yahoo, the department has no comment.
According to published reports, the DOJ has been looking into the antitrust implications of a partnership between Google and Yahoo. Last month, the two companies were engaged in a test whereby Yahoo delivered relevant Web advertising from Google alongside its own search results. However, there has been no news regarding a continuation of that test.
Neither Google nor Yahoo could be reached for comment.
The civic groups have expressed concern that Google “has already exhibited a pattern of violating privacy, engaging in anticompetitive conduct, and using its monopoly power in the search market to drive Internet users to its affiliated services and its viewpoints on policy matters.”
The groups, which include the Black Leadership Forum Inc., the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement and the League of Rural Voters, said there will come a day when no one will be able to get any information without Google’s permission.
Gary Flowers, executive director and CEO of the Black Leadership Forum, said the effect of large corporate mergers on the black community is hardly ever positive.
He said any proposed Google-Yahoo partnership is no different because doing away with competition would increase prices and limit new Internet business opportunities for members of the black community.
Other spokespersons for minority groups said a deal between Google and Yahoo would not be good for consumers.
“Privacy is a basic [tenet] of American law and culture. Google’s Gmail invasions of consumer privacy are the kind of worrisome behavior that you expect when there is no competition in the Internet’s gateway,” said Gabriela Lemus, executive director of the Labor Council, in a statement. The statement charged that Gmail service has repeatedly violated consumer privacy by scanning the actual text of individual customer e-mails in order to extract information for its advertising.
“We urge you to open an investigation into the current market concentration in online search and to oppose any combinations that would result in undue market concentration,” the groups said in the letter.
[via ComputerWorld]
Posted by The Boss at 1:54 AM 0 comments
After Microsoft failed to make a love connection with Yahoo, we got a clearer picture of Yahoo as a company that didn't even want to be in the dating game.
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 1:52 AM 0 comments
Last year, Yahoo! Search launched Search Assist to help users find what they're looking for quickly and easily by providing query suggestions and related concepts in real-time. Today, Yahoo! Search is embracing the Mac community and offering similar search assistance features with the acquisition of Inquisitor software, a Safari browser plug-in.
Inquisitor 3, a search technology that auto-completes queries and delivers results right in Safari Web browser, is similar to Yahoo!'s existing Search Assist technology. Simply type in your query and websites will appear immediately, as well as suggestions for refining your search. Just as with Search Assist, the goal with Inquisitor is to help users find exactly the site they're looking for as quickly as possible.
The new version of Inquisitor removes affiliate ad links, simplifies the search provider selection interaction and refines the preferences user interface. Additionally, the new version provides quick access to Yahoo! Search however, existing users may still utilize their current default search engine or a different search engine entirely, such as a vertical alternative like Amazon or Flickr, if they prefer.
While search interface design has remained fairly utilitarian over the years, David Watanabe, founder and developer of Inquisitor, has done a fantastic job designing a simple and elegant UI. David and our team of macphiles will continue to innovate on both form and function for Inquisitor.
Mac users have been using the Inquisitor plug-in already and they seem to like it. It's a free download, so whether you're familiar with it or just trying it out for the first time with Yahoo! Search, let us know what you think in the comments below.
Ariel Seidman
Director of Product Management
Yahoo! Search
Posted by The Boss at 1:51 AM 0 comments
Microsoft Corp. will focus on growing its own advertising and Internet search business after it withdrew its takeover offer for Yahoo Inc., Chairman Bill Gates said Friday.
Microsoft has not presented an alternative strategy to compete with its dominant rival in the Internet business, Google Inc., since withdrawing a $47.5 billion bid for Yahoo Inc. last weekend.
Posted by The Boss at 1:51 AM 0 comments
Yahoo has launched Glue Pages Beta in Yahoo India. Glue Pages are specialized pages that contain an enhanced visual search result page, for select search queries. The search results that trigger the special "Glue Pages" run across searches in health, sports, entertainment, travel, technology, and finance categories.
The Glue Pages combine classic search results on the left hand column with more visual information related to your query in the middle and right section of the page. The results contain images, videos, articles and more. For example a search on diabetes returns standard search results on the left, in the middle we have WebMD results, followed by HowStuffWorks.com results, then results from Yahoo Groups, Yahoo Answers, Yahoo News, and even Google Blog Search.
Article source: SearchEngineLand.com [1]. Fair use under educational and information purpose.
Posted by The Boss at 1:49 AM 0 comments
Google has expressed interest in extending an advertising partnership with fellow search engine Yahoo.
The comments from Google co-founder Sergey Brin and chief executive Eric Schmidt were made before the firm's annual general meeting on Thursday.
Google and Yahoo recently shared advertising for two weeks, but some analysts said the trial was more about stopping a Microsoft bid for Yahoo.
Microsoft ended its interest in buying Yahoo last weekend.
'Shared values'
"We have been talking to Yahoo and we are very excited to be working with them," said Mr Brin before the AGM.
"We share a lot of values with them."
Mr Schmidt said the two week trial with Yahoo had been "successful".
"That's a good basis to talk to Yahoo some more," he said.
Human rights
As expected, Google defeated two contentious shareholder proposals at the AGM.
However, Mr Brin decided to abstain on both votes.
The first wanted the company to create a special committee on human rights, while the second asked Google to increase its opposition to censorship demands from countries such as China that wish to limit their citizens' internet access.
While both votes were defeated, a breakdown of the vote has yet to be released.Posted by The Boss at 1:48 AM 0 comments
During a speech in Milan Apr. 23, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said he's prepared to walk away from the company's takeover offer for Yahoo!, which has rebuffed the advances. Not so fast, Microsoft. Quarterly results reported the following day reinforce why Microsoft (MSFT) could use the growth Yahoo (YHOO) would provide.
Microsoft posted an 11% drop in profit and flat sales for the quarter ended Mar. 31. Microsoft relied on overseas operations and sales from smaller divisions to offset weakness in its flagship PC products. "It wasn't a spectacular quarter by any means," says Brent Thill, director of software research at Citigroup (C).
Sales had been unusually high a year earlier, when Microsoft booked $1.6 billion in revenue from previously sold coupons for its new Windows Vista operating system and a new version of its Office productivity suite. Fiscal third-quarter profit fell to $4.41 billion, or 47¢ a share, from $4.93 billion, or 50¢ a share. Revenue was little changed at $14.45 billion, according to results released after the close of trading on Apr. 24. Analysts had expected per-share earnings of 44¢ on sales of $14.49 billion.
Excluding the benefit from the coupons, third-quarter sales would have risen 14%, Microsoft said. And the results would have been even worse if not for a 68% increase in sales in the company's Xbox division, a strong performance from the group that makes corporate server software, and the strength of Microsoft's international business, which accounts for 60% of sales.
Equally troublesome, Microsoft said this quarter's per-share profit would be 45¢ to 48¢, compared with a Wall Street consensus estimate of 48¢, says Charles Di Bona, a senior equity analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. The earnings follow two quarters of strong gains in sales and profits.
Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell, during an Apr. 24 conference call with investors, said Microsoft's diverse range of markets and products have kept its business healthy amid a weakening U.S. economy. Still, the results raised concern about the company's ability to continue weathering the slump, especially in light of rising competition from Google (GOOG), which controls the market for ads pegged to online searches, and is encroaching into Microsoft's markets with online software for e-mail, productivity, and other applications. What's more, investors took the results as a sign Microsoft isn't selling copies of Windows Vista as fast as the PC market is growing, and sold Microsoft shares in extended trading. The stock fell $1.58, or about 5%, after closing the day up 35¢, or about 1%, at 31.80.
Microsoft went public with a $31-a-share takeover bid for Yahoo Feb. 1 to try to close the gap with Google. But it has been unable to negotiate a deal and has threatened to take its appeal directly to shareholders if Yahoo doesn't capitulate by Apr. 26. Citigroup's Thill says Microsoft could raise its offer by $1 or $2 per share to close the deal, but adds Yahoo is holding out for perhaps $5 to $10 more. Even a combined Microsoft and Yahoo would be hard-pressed to eclipse Google in the online ad market, he says: "There's still a runaway train they're trying to catch. And they are two little trains trying to hook up."
Posted by The Boss at 7:10 AM 0 comments
CNET Networks, News.com's parent company, on Thursday announced a three-year strategic partnership with Yahoo under which CNET will be a third-party content provider of technology news and reviews.
The partnership also allows for Yahoo to sell display ads on CNET properties and for CNET to sell ads alongside the content it provides on Yahoo sites.
"Working together, we have the ability to build more robust content environments and more comprehensive programs for our marketing partners," CNET CEO Neil Ashe said in a press release.
The announcement was made as CNET reported its quarterly earnings, a net loss of $6.1 million, or 4 cents per share, compared with a net loss of $9.1 million, or 6 cents per share, in the year-ago period. Reuters said the per-share loss was in line with Wall Street estimates, but net revenue of $91.4 million fell short of analysts' average expectation for $93.4 million.
CNET has also been in the news of late because the hedge fund Jana Partners is trying to take control of its board.
Posted by The Boss at 7:06 AM 0 comments
Yahoo is swinging the doors of its Web platforms wide open to let outside developers create applications across its network of sites, as well as radically stitching together its online services under the social profile concept.
The idea is to let the hundreds of millions of people who use its Web mail, instant messaging, calendar, photo management and other online services replicate the social experience that social networks like MySpace and Facebook have made so popular.
This means that Yahoo users will have a profile under which their Yahoo services will fall, and which users will be able to customize by adding applications. This profile will also simplify the map of connections between Yahoo users so that they can find each other and interact more easily and efficiently.
If Yahoo is able to bring this vision to reality, it could pose a major threat to the appeal of MySpace, Facebook and other social networks, and give Yahoo the boost it has been seeking for years among Web users.
"It is rewiring Yahoo from the inside out, across all of our properties, to fundamentally open up those Web services and provide a consistent development model, a consistent deployment and consumer experience as well," said Ari Balogh, Yahoo's chief technology officer, during a keynote at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco on Thursday.
While Yahoo has had open APIs (application programming interfaces) for a variety of its services for years, Balogh said this initiative will take those efforts to much greater lengths, and it will include streamlining the development process so that it's uniform for developers across Yahoo platforms, he said. "It includes opening it up in a way we have never done before. It's about making the entire Yahoo experience more social," he said.
The process is already ongoing, as Yahoo on Thursday announced the opening up in beta of its Search Monkey development environment, which lets external developers customize Yahoo search results to make them, in theory, more relevant and richer with information. Yahoo had announced its intention to do this in February.
Yahoo expects to hit more significant milestones in its opening-up process throughout the year, he said.
With this vision, Yahoo seems to be finally tossing out the window its failed and misguided attempts to compete against MySpace and Facebook by creating a straight-ahead social networking site, like its disappointing Yahoo 360.
Instead, Yahoo is going to attempt to harness its users worldwide, which have some 10 billion latent social relationships already established amongst themselves via their Yahoo Messenger contact lists, Yahoo Mail address books and the like.
By unifying all Yahoo user profiles, Yahoo will create its own consistent social graph for the benefit of both consumers and developers, he said. From the social graph, Yahoo will be able to establish relevant connections among users, as well as event streams of what people are doing online, which are popular on Facebook and via FriendFeed.
"We don't think of social as a destination. We think of social as a dimension. It infuses every element of the consumer's experience on the Web," Balogh said.
Yahoo will also take care of making sure that people are in control of the applications they opt to add and thus share data with, as well as making sure that data is kept safe.
Posted by The Boss at 6:49 AM 0 comments
The U.S. Justice Department is investigating possible antitrust implications of Google's two-week test with Yahoo to combine some of their Web search and advertising business, a source informed about the matter told Reuters on Wednesday.
Google and Yahoo separately told Reuters they had informed the Justice Department about their test before it was launched.
In the test, which ends this week, Yahoo uses Google's advertising system to show ads to Yahoo users based on their searches.
The Justice Department is concerned the test may violate antitrust law, the source said, adding that authorities "have initiated an investigation" of it.
The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said some of the government's concern focused on a telephone call from Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt to Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang to offer help in thwarting Microsoft's bid worth around $44 billion.
The test was one of a series of efforts by Yahoo to fend off Microsoft's unwelcome bid.
A second source said the Justice Department was concerned about a longer-term deal between Google and Yahoo, and had an initial inquiry underway into the matter.
A Justice Department spokeswoman would only say that the department was "aware of the collaboration."Posted by The Boss at 6:48 AM 0 comments
With a strong earnings statement in its favor, Yahoo Inc (NASDAQ:YHOO) could be less vulnerable to a buyout by Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT) at a price that Yahoo, and the company’s the Board of Directors, considers to be unacceptably low.
"Yahoo’s chief executive, Jerry Yang, said that the company’s solid performance reaffirmed the board’s conviction that Microsoft’s unsolicited takeover offer undervalues Yahoo," The New York Times reported on Wednesday.
But Yang still left the door open for a new buyout deal with Microsoft:
"Still Mr. Yang said Yahoo remained open to ‘any and all’ alternatives, including a deal with Microsoft," The Times article added.
Yahoo’s comments indicate that the company’s Directors could be close to striking a deal with Microsoft.
NewsVisual created an IntellectSpace Knowledge Map in order to illustrate the business connections of Yahoo’s Board of Directors as a method for assessing their knowledge of business and for determining whether they can make a wise decision on how to resolve the buyout issue with Microsoft.
The Knowledge Map shows that Chairman Roy Bostock also serves on the board of Morgan Stanley and is also the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Northwest Airlines Corp.
The following Yahoo Directors also have strong board room experience:
Director Eirc Hippeau is also a Director for Starwood Hotels and Resorts Inc; Director Robert Kotick is also the CEO/Chairman of Activision Inc; CEO/Co-Founder Jerry Yang also sits on the board of Cisco Systems Inc and Alibaba Inc; and Director Edward Kozel also serves on the board of Network Appliance Inc.
Click here for a fuller and an interactive version of this IntellectSpace Knowledge Map.
Posted by The Boss at 6:47 AM 0 comments
ahoo has added a feature to it's Traffic Quality Reports. This feature answers an old problem and question advertisers had, "What if my competitor clicks the hell out of my advertisement?". This is a big problem and the techniques competitors are using to charge you for invalid clicks is getting more and more savvy.
To view the "Click Filter Report", go to your "reports tab" and click on "Click Filter" in the Reports Navigator section on the left side of your screen.
Yahoo allows you to see the exact clicks they deem were from an invalid source.Yahoo says that advertisers will not be charged for these clicks and they offered 3 reasons why they have added this incredibly helpful feature: The biggest reason is to offer transparency, which is something every business and government office/entity should offer to the public. The other reasons are they wanted the end user to have more tools at their disposal and they are competing with AdWords. This is a great addition and I'm sure others will follow in their footsteps.
nycseoconsultant.blogspot.com
Posted by The Boss at 6:12 AM 0 comments
Yahoo! Search Marketing (YSM) no longer has a $0.10 minimum bid according to the Yahoo! Search Marketing Blog. Minimum bids for keywords are based on quality and keyword value. Quality means they reward ads that get clicked on more relative to competitors with lower minimum bids. My experience with AdWords has been that this doesn’t matter a lick. Ads that get clicked on a lot are ranked higher and have low minimum bids but it doesn’t matter because you have advertisers lower than you for the keywords you’re bidding on. Then once you lower the bid to the minimum, the minimum starts going up again. This shouldn’t happen because the system is supposed to normalize for position, but from my experience, it does. I’m guessing Yahoo! will be the same.
The important factor is keyword value. AdWords made a lot of “long tail” terms more expensive by setting minimum bids higher – YSM might do the same. It might also affect some high traffic terms; the whole thing is sort of a mystery there. So for example, if I search “irs” on Yahoo!, I see more than 10 advertisers. On Google, I see one. This is probably because of minimum bids.
When you start thinking about broad matching (or advanced match), you start realizing how complicated the whole system is. It’s easy to look at a broad or advanced matched keyword phrase and forget that represents a whole lot of queries. AdWords claims that the keyword variations your broad matched term shows for don’t affect your minimum bid for that term. If your ad doesn’t get clicked enough (not sure how they define “enough”), it stops showing for a variation. YSM doesn’t go into enough depth about their system to figure out how it works. If you have an advanced match term that showed for a lot of different queries, it seems possible that it’ll stop showing for as many advanced matches. If they figure an advanced match query has high value, and you’re bidding your minimum bid on a term that has lower value, it seems possible that it’d stop showing for the higher value advanced match query. So there’s something to look out for, but YSM doesn’t mention anything about it, so I doubt it’ll be a big deal.
Minimum bids just work to push advertisers bids up. If the bottom advertiser now has to pay $0.30 to keep his/her ad active, and decides to do it, the next advertiser will have to pay more as well if they want to keep their position. Now that it’s more expensive to keep that lower position, they might decide that it’s more profitable to move up in the rankings and to get more clicks at a slightly more expensive price. Minimum bids put pressure on advertisers to bid closer to what a term is actually worth for them, closing in on their margins.
Posted by The Boss at 6:09 AM 0 comments
Essentially, Microsoft stated that it will not be raising its bid to aquire Yahoo, even though the company came through with decent earnings. Good. Great. Super. Now all we need are the Yahoo shareholders to reject this offer.
Yahoo’s board of directors is recommending that this hostile takeover is rejected. Normally, I think board of directors are full of it, but I do agree with this opinion.
Microsoft would ruin Yahoo. It’s not really because they would want to ruin them, I’m sure they have some great ideas that make complete business sense. The problem is that Microsoft has already become too big. The entire company can easily be compared to the disaster that is Vista. Vista, for those fortunate enough to not be aware of, is Microsoft’s newest operating system. It is slow, bloated, frustrating and seemingly has a split personality.
A merged Microsoft/Yahoo offering would be equally bloated, frustrating and definitely possessing a split personality. The thought of Microsoft’s marketing team frothing at the mouth over the cross marketing potential of the world’s #1 website makes my stomach turn. For Yahoo! shareholders, it should make yours too.
Posted by The Boss at 6:07 AM 0 comments
Yahoo! is now displaying pictures from Facebook profiles next to search results just the way Google shows image thumbnails in search pages.
To see if your Facebook picture shows up in Yahoo, either search for your own name in quotes and scan through the search page or, a better option, try the following query on Yahoo!
site:facebook.com "Your Name" - check this live example for Michael Parekh.
The thumbnail images are served directly from Facebook servers and not cached by Yahoo! - that’s good thinking because if you update your profile picture on Facebook, it will immediately show up in Yahoo! search pages.
Posted by The Boss at 4:37 AM 0 comments
I’ve been a rather harsh critic of Yahoo’s quarterly earnings calls. In January, I called the effort by Jerry Yang and Sue Decker to justify the company’s weak performance a “droning, jargon-filled” explication of a “vision-goes-here strategy.” Two days later, a letter from Redmond arrived with an offer that Yahoo is still working hard to refuse.
Today, Yahoo’s call might not have been a model for inspiration, and there was a lot to roll your eyes at as executives praised financial results that trailed far behind those of Google on most every metric.
Still, I was impressed, especially by the section where Ms. Decker, the company’s president, outlined Yahoo’s strategy. It is still arranged around two buzzwords: being a “starting point” for Internet users and being a “must buy” for advertisers. But what Ms. Decker said that Yahoo plans to do within those strategies was much more sharply defined, and plausible.
I suspect the process of spending $13 million worth of time with investment bankers and consultants (not to mention nights dreaming of the damage that could be done by the barbarians from the north) helps sharpen the thinking.
I’m not so much reacting to any revelations, but a clarity of explanation that I would hope could help rally both employees and customers. A few tidbits:
The “Starting Point” idea, as Ms. Decker explained it, implies two breaks from Yahoo’s past. First, instead of spreading the peanut butter of its efforts across hundreds of sites, it will devote the bulk of its resources to the handful of sections that get the most traffic: the home page, search, news, e-mail and a few others.
Second, the measure of success becomes how often users visit, not how long they stay. That encourages the company’s product designers to be more liberal in linking to other sites and opening Yahoo’s interface to a variety of outside applications and partnerships. You can see some of that in Yahoo Buzz, its Digg-like news site, which often provides links to other sites on Yahoo’s home page.
“When we think of ourselves as a starting point, rather than a destination, all of us become more focused on simplifying users’ lives,” she said.
This openness, of course, is a response to the power of Google; not just search, but Google News and iGoogle, all of which are a model of starting points with little effort to link to Google properties.
Ms. Decker articulated Yahoo’s approach to weaving social features throughout its site.
“We are not trying to be another social network,” she said. “Rather, by linking users’ favorite destinations and content, with their friends’ families and communities, we can deliver better relevance on a scale that no one else has achieved.”
Yahoo has been talking about variations of this strategy since the fall, and yet we still haven’t really seen any significant result.
As for Yahoo’s advertising strategy, Ms. Decker started referring to the company’s focus on “premium partners,” by which she meant newspapers and other media companies, like Forbes, with whom the company is aligning. She didn’t say as much, but this seems like a sensible way to contrast Yahoo’s advertising network with those of Google and AOL, both of which work with the broadest range of publishers, big and small.
Many traditional media companies worry that the rise of advertising networks is undercutting their prices and turning their precious advertising space into a commodity to be traded like pork bellies. There may well be an opportunity for Yahoo to define itself as the ad network that is especially friendly to mainstream media.
Of course, Yahoo is not in reality keeping the online ad world limited to the old country club set. It owns the Blue Lithium ad network, and the Right Media exchange, which is the most active pork-belly pit for cheap online ads.
But at least Yahoo can say to publishers that it feels their pain. The rise of cheap “non-guaranteed” advertising space has dragged down Yahoo’s revenue, Ms. Decker said.
I wonder if there is a bit of a conflict between these two strategies. Can Yahoo really be the most open starting point for Web users if it also wants to help bolster old-guard companies. You can already see that in the new Yahoo Buzz. Unlike Digg, where users submit stories for other people to vote on, Buzz offers its users the chance to express opinions about stories from a handpicked list of about 100 publishers.
It’s true that limiting its starting point to sites with which it has business deals will “simplify users’ lives,” although I’m not so sure that sort of simplification will win a lot of converts from Google.
But Yahoo clearly will benefit, because Ms. Decker is simplifying and clarifying her description of what she wants the company to do.
Posted by The Boss at 4:22 AM 0 comments
SKHIRAT, Morocco - Microsoft Corp. will hold firm on its $43.2 billion offer for Yahoo Inc., regardless of whether Yahoo's quarterly results impress or disappoint investors, CEO Steve Ballmer said today.
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 2:28 PM 0 comments
Yahoo on Tuesday afternoon set the groundwork for its resistance to Microsoft's proposed takeover by posting its fiscal results for the first quarter of 2008. The search engine firm beat analyst expectations, earning 11c per share versus an expected 9c and boosting its profit versus 2007.
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 2:10 PM 0 comments
Cute looking logos from both Google and Yahoo! When I first saw these logo's I was a bit confused. The World Enviornment day falls on June 5 so the Green logos got me wondering. Then I figured out -- its for the International Earth Day. The first ever Earth Day was celebrated on April 22, 1970 per Encylopedia Britannica (reg required). (Yep, I got my free access to Britannica Webshare just today, more about that a bit later). Britannica Webshare states that the original meeting: was designed as an “environmental teach-in” that would educate participants in the importance of environmental conservation. The two largest gatherings occurred in Washington, D.C., where 10,000 people assembled at the Washington Monument, and in New York City, where a portion of Fifth Avenue was closed to traffic in observance of the event. Across the United States, 20 million people participated, many of them at schools, colleges, and universities. The event was instrumental in gaining support for the series of environmental legislation that passed through the U.S. Congress in the 1970s, including the Clean Air Act (1970) and the Endangered Species Act (1973). Google's logo is interesting -- the L is replaced completely by a Tree. I like the recycle symbolism in Yahoo!'s design. More on the Fonts used in Google's Logo -- designed by Ruth Kedar.
thebizofcoding.com
Posted by The Boss at 11:02 AM 0 comments
News Corp's Rupert Murdoch left the door open on Monday to a joint bid with Microsoft Corp to buy Yahoo Inc, a day ahead of Yahoo's quarterly financial report.
In response to a reporter's question about his interest in pursuing a bid with Microsoft for Yahoo, he said "Depends on the deal."
Murdoch also repeated earlier remarks about not having the financial fire power to top Microsoft's bid. "I certainly can't afford to bid against Microsoft (for Yahoo)," he told attendees at a speech he gave at the Atlantic Council, an international affairs group.
The 77-year-old media mogul said Google is gaining influence in the advertising world. "Is Google really going to get control of the advertising world, and should Microsoft be supported in their attempt to try and stop that?" he asked.
Yahoo is expected to report its first quarter results on Tuesday. Strong results could force Microsoft to raise its estimated $43 billion offer, some analysts have said.
Separately, sources have said Yahoo is pursuing a deal to merge with Time Warner Inc's AOL Internet division. Yahoo is also set to complete tests this week with Google Inc on whether Google should run a piece of Yahoo's Web search ad sales.
Yahoo faces a Saturday deadline to respond to Microsoft, after which Microsoft has said it would launch a proxy battle to unseat Yahoo's board.
Posted by The Boss at 10:47 AM 0 comments
"Free is Good" is the slogan of Yahoo's Reuse Groups, launched just in time for Earth Day. Born of the Yahoo Green portal, the new program taps the power of Yahoo Groups to create a mostly volunteer-run exchange of used products. Instead of throwing out things like furniture, books, dishes, bikes, electronics, and other domestic goods, Yahoo urges all web users to join a local reuse group and give these items away for free to other people in their community. The Internet search giant says that its reuse network has already grown to over 5,000 groups worldwide, ranging from smaller 500-member web clusters to massive super-groups with over 12,000 affiliates. The membership is free and requires nothing more than a Yahoo ID with an email box. To learn more, join, or find a Yahoo Reuse Group near you, go here.
goodcleantech.com
Posted by The Boss at 10:44 AM 0 comments
Yahoo! Web Hosting Features | |
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Free domain name | Included |
24-hour toll-free customer support | Included |
Disk Space | Unlimited |
Data Transfer | Unlimited |
Email addresses | 1,000 |
Easy-to-use site design tools | Included |
Support for third-party design tools | Included |
Advanced scripting and database tools | Included |
User-friendly control panel | Included |
Exclusive online marketing discounts | Included |
Posted by The Boss at 10:42 AM 0 comments
Yahoo Messenger 9.0 considered the last suceeder to the long awaited Yahoo Messenger Vista Version has won this year’s About.com Best IM Award.
Here are the word from About.com about Yahoo Messenger 9.0 :-
For what its worth, Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 delivers a pretty smooth experience from start to finish. The recent addition of access to contacts on Windows Live Messenger (formerly MSN Messenger) makes Yahoo! pretty strong competition for the AIM/ICQ client and other standalone single protocol clients; in fact, if I were the others, I would take a page from the Yahoo! book about what is right with their client, including the strong deliverance of experience-making features, such as Yahoo’ new in-line media player, new voice call features and a wide-range of new personalization options.
The other winners were :-
Most Improved IM - Digsby
Best Mac Instant Messenger - Adium
Best Third-Party Instant Messenger - Digsby
Best IM Feature - Digsby
Developers of the Year - dotSyntax, LLC for Digsby
Here is how Readers Voted :-
Posted by The Boss at 10:22 AM 0 comments
Its a pain to download Yahoo Messenger Via the installer in case you get disconnected from the internet as there is no “resume support”. So all you can do is restart the installer again which again downloads the whole thing. Untill Now!
This cool trick which allows you to download the yahoo messenger exe directly skipping the boring installer. All you need to do is add a “Y”
For example -
http://us.dl1.yimg.com/download.yahoo.com/dl/msgr8/us/msgr8us.exe
Then add a ‘y’ before the exe name. So, now it’ll look like -
http://us.dl1.yimg.com/download.yahoo.com/dl/msgr8/us/ymsgr8us.exe
Now you can use this link with any Download Managers and see the resume support also
In case you want to download Yahoo Messenger Version 9 , use this
http://us.dl1.yimg.com/download.yahoo.com/dl/msgr9/us/ymsgr9us.exe
You need to make msgr8 to msgr9 and msgr8us to ymsgr9us
Posted by The Boss at 1:42 PM 0 comments
You’re advertising segment gets a standing ovation from me for putting the ‘F’ in OMFG. Yes, if you don’t know what OMFG stands for and I don’t yet know if Yahoo! TV does or not, it stands for “Oh My Fucking God”. Well, sprawled all over Yahoo! TV features the Gossip Girl ad shown to the right and variations thereof featuring two people kissing with the single word “OMFG” in big caps on it. There’s also a banner across the top. It looks juvenille, almost fan-art-esque. And this web designer thoroughly approves. Keep reading for screenshots.
Now not only does a full screen advertising campaign, that apparently has become all the rage lately, turn a decent design that was Yahoo! TV into a well… a slut but it gets the attention for anyone who knows what those letters mean. Maybe the reason they didn’t use the full meaning instead of the abbreviation was that it would have cost too much. lol. I love the internet.
Posted by The Boss at 1:35 PM 0 comments
Based on various news reports that say Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT) has hired a lobbying firm to help it win over regulatory approval for it, the long awaited buyout deal of Yahoo Inc (NASDAQ:YHOO) could be imminent.
"The software company, bracing for a regulatory squabble in its takeover bid, recently hired Bryan Cave Strategies to lobby the federal government on the proposed multibillion-dollar deal," The Mercury News reported in an online article last Friday.
Despite the two technology companies’ combative public statements, it’s highly probable that behind-the-scenes talks among the two companies’ Directors were ongoing.
NewsVisual created an IntellectSpace Knowledge Map that demonstrates the likelihood of strong personal connections among the members of the two companies’ Board of Directors.
The first connection runs through the investment-banking firm Morgan Stanley. Microsoft Director Charles H Noski and Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock would certainly be acquainted with one another since they both currently serve on Morgan Stanley’s board.
Given Bostock’s influence within Yahoo, it’s highly probably that Microsoft would rely on Noski as a back channel for keeping the buyout negotiations open.
The Knowledge Map also illustrates another potential axis of connection between the Yahoo and Microsoft board rooms that lies through Stanford University.
Although it’s unlikely that they were classmates because of their age disparities, Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang, 37, could have a personal connection to Microsoft Directors Reed Hastings, 46, and David F Marquardt, 58, through Stanford’s alumni organization or one of the University’s other social networks.
Anyone of these personal connections that the Map depicts could serve as a conduit for keeping the talks between Yahoo and Microsoft on life support.
Posted by The Boss at 1:29 PM 0 comments
Yahoo! Mail users have a new reason to celebrate. Because even though you might not notice it, Yahoo has added a few little upgrades to their ever-reliable email service called Yahoo Mail Classic. This is different from the all-new Yahoo Mail Plus, by the way, and just serves as a minor update to an old platform that apparently a lot of users still find very useful.
The new Yahoo Mail Plus has some new features, including an Auto-save to Draft option which does just that - saves your emails to draft as you write them. And then the draft copy gets automatically erased once you send that message - just like in Gmail, right? It's also easier to download attachments now, as one-click download is now enabled for attachments in Yahoo Mail Classic. This update isn't just about new features, though, because some old features were also removed. Like Today’s tip, your Avatar's display, keyboard shortcuts and attachment previews. For these, I guess you'll have to make do with upgrading to Yahoo Mail Plus, which is a pretty neat service in itself as well, so you're really in a win-win situation with this. And now is the part where you go and brag about this to your Gmail using friends knowing they've had these features years ago.
wildaboutgadgets.com
Posted by The Boss at 1:19 PM 0 comments
Posted by The Boss at 1:14 PM 0 comments
Microsoft has previously gave Yahoo! until April 26th for the friendly takeover. It’s has already been a few weeks and now Yahoo! has roughly 7 days to reply to Microsoft’s unsolicited offer of $31 a share.
Times has recently published an article saying that Microsoft is really eager to take over Yahoo! that it has hired “lobbyists to help it convince regulators to let the deal — hostile if it has to be — go through.”
In the meantime, Yahoo! is exploring options of an alliance with Google Inc, hoping to that it’d “lead to a long-term partnership” and…a combination with online operations of Time Warner Inc.’s AOL.
Posted by The Boss at 1:11 PM 0 comments
Analysts say Yahoo’s first-quarter earnings results could be the Web portal’s last hope to remain an independent company or wrangle a higher bid from suitor Microsoft. Yahoo remains defiant. The company has twice rejected Microsoft’s bid to buy the company for $31 a share. The value of the deal, $44.6 billion when announced on Feb. 1, has slid to about $42 billion because of a drop in Microsoft’s share price. Revenue minus traffic acquisition costs — money it pays to Web site partners that carry its ads — should hit $1.32 billion, say analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. Yahoo says it expects between $1.28 billion and $1.38 billion for the first quarter. money.cnn.com
Posted by The Boss at 7:22 AM 0 comments
Awhile back I heard a rumour that Yahoo! had a “Gears-like” project that was cancelled. I thought this was a shame, as having Yahoo! pushing the browser would be a great thing, and I wished that we could all join forces and push together.
It turns out the rumour is true, and even better, the project has survived.
After 3 years of hiding out in the campuses of Yahoo! it’s good to finally have something external to show for it. Most exciting is the release of BrowserPlus, a software and software distribution framework that allows device developers (desktop, mobile, etc.) to seamlessly bridge the browser programming environment (DHTML, JS) to any component they can dream up (VoIP, image manipulation, data caching, etc.). Some time ago we created a platform team to focus on device software at Yahoo! and this is what has emerged amidst the quickly shifting strategy of the mothership. The 1.0 release of BrowserPlus is intended only for use by Yahoo! sites to enhance customer experiences; however, in the coming months, developers might expect the ability to use components on their own sites.
In the meantime, you can hack the framework on your own system after you’ve installed it to start experimenting. You can experience BrowserPlus currently through the PhotoDropper module on Mash, though direct installs are available for mac or pc
There isn’t a lot of information out there, but hopefully we will here more soon. It currently doesn’t seem to be open source, but I would love to reach out to the team, and Yahoo! in general. I consider Yahoo! a proponent of the Open Web, and would love to see us work together in a way that pushes the browser platform forward from the point of view of Web developers (as compared to browser vendors).
It would be great to take the PhotoDropper, and make the generic kick arse file uploader (input type="file" multiple="true"
) that I have wanted for a long time.
Posted by The Boss at 7:20 AM 0 comments
AN FRANCISCO: Google Inc's top executive said that the company was excited to be testing out a partnership to run at least some of rival Yahoo Inc's Web search advertising sales.
But Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt stopped short of characterising how far negotiations with Yahoo had gone or how likely they were to lead to an actual business partnership.
Instead, Schimdt had nothing but kind words to say about Yahoo -- Google's erstwhile rival recently turned potential business partner -- during a conference call with investors following the company's first-quarter results.
"It's nice working with Yahoo and we like them very much," Schmidt said of Google's feelings towards its crosstown rival.
He declined to comment further on its ties to Yahoo, which has been seeking to find alternative partners to strengthen its hand in negotiations with Google archrival Microsoft Corp on the software giant's takeover offer for Yahoo.
(Reporting by Eric Auchard; Editing by Braden Reddall)
infotech.indiatimes.com
Posted by The Boss at 1:16 AM 0 comments
Did Yahoo just raise its prices for search ads? Yesterday, Yahoo made a significant change to its advertising bidding system by removing the minimum bid for sponsored search keywords. The minimum bid used to be $0.10 per keyword. Now, the minimum bid will be set more dynamically based on two factors: the quality of the advertiser and the value of the keyword.
In theory, advertisers whose ads are clicked on more often will be rewarded with lower minimum bid requirements. But the past popularity of a keyword also goes into the equation, so a keyword that has been bid up in the past could also result in a higher minimum bid. So minimum bids have now become dynamic, and no single advertiser really knows what they are until they put in their bid for a specific keyword.
Already some search advertisers are complaining that their minimum bids have gone up 2X to 4X overnight. At this point, that is just anecdotal evidence. We will have to wait until the end of this quarter to see if the change has had any material impact on Yahoo’s revenues.
What is curious about this move is that it suggests that many keywords on Yahoo get bought at the minimum price, without any real competitive bidding going on. After all, if at least two advertisers are bidding for a keyword that means the minimum bid is no longer an issue. So it makes you wonder how effective Yahoo ad auction system is as a market. For a market to exist, there needs to be at least two bidders.
Conversely, the advertisers with the highest click through rates will now be in a position to buy up keywords below the point where lesser advertisers even hit their minimum bid. And that is not really a market either. For instance, if TechCrunch is awarded a minimum bid of $0.06 for the term “startup” and a Silicon Valley law firm needs to pay $0.15 for the same term (I am just making these up), TechCrunch could buy up the term all day at $0.06 if the law firm does not bid its $0.15. In that scenario, there would be even less competition than if everyone had the same minimum bid. But maybe Yahoo does not care so much about creating a market as it does about improving the quality of the ads on Yahoo search.
Any Yahoo advertisers out there seeing their prices go up? Any seeing their prices go down? Is this a good move for Yahoo ora bad one? Please share in comments.
Posted by The Boss at 2:05 PM 0 comments
A page you might have never visited, describes the things that the Yahoo! doesn't value as an Internet Corporation.
http://docs.yahoo.com/info/values/page2.html
Posted by The Boss at 1:45 PM 0 comments
“Yahoo! has just recently given its throne to Google,” this could be quoted if these two largest companies is in the field of royalties. But, the thought is true. Awhile aback, in speaking of surfing the internet, it’s always Yahoo!, nut now it has been taken place by Google. It thus proves this adage, “Popularity is just a temporary thing in this world.”
Posted by The Boss at 12:49 AM 0 comments
Microsoft is already hiring lobbyists in order to speed up approval of a Yahoo acquisition, the lobby group in question has disclosed. Bryan Cave Strategies says it has bee
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 12:34 AM 0 comments
Microsoft may find it has some leeway in increasing its Yahoo bid by 10 percent without spooking its investors, one Wall Street analyst notes in a research report released yesterday.
Brent Thill, an analyst at Citigroup Global Markets, surmises in his research report that Microsoft's share price already reflects a possible 10 percent increase for its initial stock-cash buyout offer of Yahoo for US$31 a share.
"We think Microsoft's stock embeds a potential 10 percent increase in the bid price; anything greater may create additional pressure on the shares," Thill says in the report. "We continue to believe a US$34 offer would be a reasonable, valuation-supported base case for Yahoo."
Since Microsoft announced its unsolicited buyout bid on 1 February, its share price has fallen 11 percent, while the Nasdaq has dipped only two percent.
Microsoft investors, Thill notes, apparently are focused only on the Yahoo transaction and are ignoring strong underlying fundamentals of the Redmond giant, as it gears up to report its fiscal third quarter next Thursday.
Wall Street expects Microsoft to post third-quarter earnings of 44 cents per share on revenue of nearly US$14.5 billion, according to Thomson Financial.
But Thill expects the software giant to beat Wall Street's estimates for both earnings and revenues for the quarter. He anticipates that Microsoft will earn 45 cents a share on revenue of $14.6 billion.
Some of the issues driving this bullish assessment include a continuation of a strong product cycle and reduction in piracy -- two things that aided its performance in the previous two quarters, as well as seasonally stronger PC shipments and upbeat forecasts from IBM and Intel on worldwide demand.
The latter hardware forecasts are expected to help drive software sales for Microsoft.
Microsoft's attempt to acquire Yahoo is expensive, but there could be a significant other expense for the software maker: retention bonuses.
Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer publicly discussed these payments to keep Yahoo employees from leaving, saying that "we intend to offer significant retention packages to your engineers, key leaders, and employees across all disciplines." But The New York Times on Wednesday dug out a number that puts the retention bonus factor into perspective.
Specifically, the paper said Microsoft's acquisition of Tellme Networks, a deal valued at about US$800 million, was supplemented by a further US$100 million to retain employees.
There are major cultural and technology differences between Yahoo and Microsoft that would complicate integration and make retention bonuses more necessary. But Tellme Networks chief executive Mike McCue said Ballmer had become sensitive to at least one technology aspect of integration.
When McCue asked whether Tellme would have to move its software from Sun Microsystems' Solaris version of Unix to Windows, Ballmer replied, "No, no, we've learned our lesson," McCue recounted to the Times. That could be a reference to the long and arduous transition of Hotmail from FreeBSD Unix to Windows after Microsoft acquired the e-mail service.
That could be music to Yahoo ears, since the company uses open source software extensively rather than Microsoft's products.
Posted by The Boss at 12:31 AM 0 comments
Flickr, Yahoo's photo sharing service, has rolled out a new website dedicated to Flickr's popular API tools. The new site, Code.Flickr, offers developers a place to review API information, discuss tools in the forums and of course rant about the future of Flickr development.
code.flickr.com
Posted by The Boss at 12:28 AM 0 comments
With Steve Ballmer's "three weeks or we're going hostile" deadline rapidly approaching, time is running out for Tech Ticker's parent to find a legitimate alternative to Microsoft's unsolicited embrace. The Wall Street Journal reports that Yahoo's "limited test" of outsourcing search to Google is going so well, the companies are discussing a full partnership.
Such a move -- or even discussion -- might face regulatory scrutiny, but could prove to be a "brilliant 11th-hour countermove by Yahoo [that] will force Microsoft to pay more for Yahoo than it otherwise would have," writes Henry Blodget.
But there's another alternative for Yahoo that, while often rumored in the past, hasn't come up much during the current saga: Merge with eBay.
James Altucher, managing director of Formula Capital, believes Microsoft will ultimately get its way, albeit by raising the cash portion of its bid. But the author and columnist also believes a Yahoo-eBay combination would be a true win-win for both companies. Yahoo's China properties would be key to the deal, and a combination with eBay is something Alibaba might view more favorably than the Microsoft tie-up, Altucher says.
Posted by The Boss at 12:22 AM 0 comments
After the release of Apple iPhone in July 2007, the yahoo team of developers get there code out for the new gizmo. They created the famous yahoo pipes interface for the Apple iPhone. The interface was as slick and intriutive as the iPhone itself. With the use of iPhone custom ringtones you can make a mush up at iphone.pipes.yahoo.com. The yahoo pipes is also integrated with the apple iPhones built in mapping application. So one can put any of the geo Pipe results on the Apple iPhone just be tapping the :MAP: button.
So you can check the restroom locator with your customise yahoo pipes Apps. Some other featured pipes that work well while mobile include Live Traffic Results and for the shopping geeks the Price watcher . So get the first hand experience of yahoos filters on your iPhone with iphoneapp.
With the Apple iPhone upgradation to the new version iPhone 1.1.3, 2008 and the iPhone price getting slashed to the new Price, it is evident that the technology of iPhone is getting cheaper with its sales figure growing. In the recent development Apple iPhone is also set its target in the Asian regions like India, China, Philipines, Korea and Japan.
Posted by The Boss at 12:15 AM 0 comments
Surprising as it may sound, marketers should probably be rooting for a Microsoft-Yahoo link-up.
On many levels, of course, any merger of such a scale can seem an unappetizing prospect that's as much about delivering short-term gains for banks, corporate lawyers and major shareholders as it is about pioneering digital marketing solutions or looking after the individual services that consumers, publishers and advertisers have come to rely on.
In that regard, while they're technology companies as much as media players, Microhoo is worryingly reminiscent of the creation of a number of media conglomerates over the last two decades. While those conglomerates' heft has given them leverage in the media-selling and buying equation, they've delivered sporadically, at best, on the promised synergies or product improvement audiences and advertisers might have hoped for.
But by now it's clear Yahoo's unlikely to remain independent, which leaves advertisers, agencies, publishers and consumers wondering which of the proposed combinations works best for them. And realistically, the Microsoft-Yahoo merger has the most upside because it has the potential to be a viable competitor to Google. As significantly, it has the least downside, as it better preserves competition in search and display.
It's also looking like the scenario most likely to happen, but as last week showed, there are other options to consider. Here's how those proposed so far break down.
Scenario 1: First proposed Feb. 1, Microsoft would absorb all of Yahoo to create a stronger No. 2 search player. Additionally, Microsoft would benefit from the third-party network Yahoo is aggressively building; it has deals with companies such as Comcast, eBay and more than 600 newspapers. This scale helps offset any display-ad power Google has amassed through its DoubleClick acquisition.
Microsoft believes eventually there will be two players, itself and Google, offering a full online advertising platform for online-ad buyers and sellers -- everything from ad serving to exchanges to display selling to search. And while a duopoly can sound a bit scary, it is better than a monopoly, as Brian McAndrews, head of Microsoft's Advertiser and Publisher Solutions division, pointed out.
As Ad Age has said before, the challenges for this merger lie in the integration of two enormous and complex organizations. Already difficult, the proposed union got markedly more so when Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer injected some animosity with a sternly worded, clearly impatient letter last week, giving Yahoo a three-week deadline (effective April 26) to get a deal done or face a hostile takeover. He said Yahoo had already lost value since the original bid and suggested that having to go hostile could lower the bid. In the end, though, it'll pay for Microsoft to pony up now that Yahoo has proved it has other options.
Scenario 2: Should Microsoft not want to go it alone, it can always count on Rupert Murdoch for help. While originally he explored a deal with Yahoo to help it thwart the Microsoft takeover, last week reports surfaced that have him helping Microsoft. A three-way deal could kick in MySpace for a stake in the combined entity. There's also the possibility News Corp. could absorb Yahoo's content properties, leaving Microsoft with the search and technology assets it most covets, although this is less likely as News Corp.'s major incentive in participating is to unload MySpace, which many believe has hit its high-water mark. But consider that MySpace is chock-full of low-value inventory, and Yahoo and Microsoft already have that through e-mail traffic -- they don't need more.
Regardless of all that, the biggest issue is that an additional player complicates matters, both in the dealmaking and the post-deal integration, and history is not on the side of M&A menages a trois. Plus, Microsoft doesn't need News Corp.'s help to buy Yahoo.
Scenario 3: But other parties are also stepping up to wrap their arms around Yahoo. Time Warner and Yahoo have been talking and are very serious about a deal that would have Time Warner contributing AOL plus cash in exchange for a 20% stake in a combined entity, according to The Wall Street Journal. Yahoo would woo shareholders by promising to buy back some of its stock (with the cash from AOL) at a price higher than what Microsoft is offering. And partnering with Google on search could help sweeten the deal.
But who really wins in this merger? Time Warner -- it gets to unload its nine-year Achilles' heel, AOL. And Google -- Yahoo would likely have to strike some sort of business relationship with the search giant to better monetize its search traffic.
A trial has already begun. Last week, Yahoo announced it would begin testing Google search ads on up to 3% of the search results on Yahoo-owned sites. A small test is one thing; more comprehensive plans would most certainly face regulatory scrutiny.
And for advertisers, having search so highly concentrated in a single system is a bad thing. If the test were successful and Yahoo struck a deal to outsource its search to Google, "that would give Google an effective monopoly over search, which wouldn't be healthy for marketers or the overall internet economy," said Bryan Wiener, CEO of New York-based agency 360i. With this idea, he said, "It seems like Yahoo's running away from Microsoft into a potentially more dangerous bear hug."
adage.com
Posted by The Boss at 12:08 AM 0 comments
After positive initial results using Google's search advertisement, Yahoo is closer to outsourcing it to Google.
read more | digg story
Posted by The Boss at 4:36 AM 0 comments
Last week, Flickr.com announced its new video feature, allowing Flickr Pro users to upload videos and share them online alongside their photos.
As a result, Yahoo IM support for Flickr videos to the inline media player in Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta. If you share a Flickr video link or a friend shares one with you, you can watch the video right in the IM window.
Unlike conventional video sharing services like Yahoo! Video or Youtube, Flickr videos are designed to be “long photos” that capture slices of life. To encourage this, Flickr has limited the length of uploaded videos to 90 seconds. While that may seem like a really short video, it’s ideal for sharing those clips you capture on your digital camera or mobile phone (which often go unshared). Check out a couple of the uploaded videos from the early beta testers:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fraying/2391084921/
Video Sharing is now adopted by Photo Sharing Websites - Do you think Flickr will give challenge to Youtube ?Posted by The Boss at 1:27 AM 0 comments
Yahoo Search Marketing, the pay-per-click arm of Yahoo advertising, is making changes that more closely resemble the Google AdWords pricing philosophy. Yahoo has required minimum bids on both the sponsored search and the content match networks be a minimum of $.10 per click. Starting soon, Yahoo will move to more of an AdWords quality score rating system that will impact the minimum bids required on the sponsored search network.Content match bids will remain fixed at a minimum bid of $.10, but the Yahoo sponsored search minimum bids will fluctuate based on a number of factors. A unique twist on the pricing structure will gauge the value of any particular keyword bid based on the number of bidders and the actual amounts of the bids on the keyword. This could result in either an increase or a decrease on the minimum bid required to keep your keywords active.
Yahoo is also implementing an ad and keyword quality score which will determine the relevance of your keywords to your ad and landing page, not unlike Google Adwords. Unlike AdWords, however, Yahoo says the minimum bids will not be influenced by ad conversion rates.
As an example of how the new sponsored search bid pricing will work, if you are bidding on a highly competitive keyword, all things being equal, you will be required to increase your bid amount in order to keep your ad active in your campaign. The implementation of an ad quality score puts Yahoo on par with AdWords ad optimization requirements, and I would think it would make running campaigns on Google and Yahoo easier to implement and compare.
Will this change result in higher advertising costs for advertising on Yahoo? I would venture to say probably not. If you maintained lower bids on a keyword, chances are your CTR was equally as low. With the new pricing structure, if the keyword is competitive, your minimum bid may rise, but CTR across all advertisers should remain constant. If your keywords, ad text and landing page are optimized as they should be, you may actually end up paying less than before for an equal or higher CTR.
In reality, we all knew this change would come at some point. As Google leads, Yahoo follows. My only problem with this change is Yahoo’s reluctance to lower the content match minimum bids. I would venture to say that 90% of campaigns generate a higher CTR and conversion on the sponsored search listings, so why require advertisers to potentially pay more for clicks in the content network? My guess would be changes to the content match pricing structure will be coming in the near future as Yahoo seeks to make up for lost market share. Time will tell.
Posted by The Boss at 1:22 AM 0 comments
Sandeep Aggarwal (pictured) leaves no stone unturned in his analysis of Microsoft Corp.'s [MSFT] pursuit of Yahoo! Inc. [YHOO] in a research report he put out Wednesday for Collins Stewart. Aggarwal, who was previously the Internet analyst at Oppenheimer, assigns a 90%-plus probability to Microsoft acquiring Yahoo! and that it is "very likely" that the price will be higher than the $31 a share cash-and-stock offer Microsoft originally made Feb. 1.
A la David Letterman, Aggarwal publishes a Top 10 questions list relating to the deal. We won't go through all 10 of them (a couple are actually answered in the above paragraph), but some of the more relevant ones. Foremost, Aggarwal believes that Microsoft will likely pay $33.50 per share in cash and stock for Yahoo!, or 10% more than its current offer. He writes that he does not think Microsoft is willing to pay "materially higher" than its original offer, especially considering the economic outlook and its current share price. He assigns less than a 10% chance the deal gets done above $33.50.
Aggarwal assigns a 55% probability to a deal getting done amicably (that means a 45% chance of a hostile deal, for those among the math-challenged). Depending on which of those scenarios comes to fruition, he would expect a resolution by the end of April or mid-May (in an amicable deal), or in the case of an unfriendly deal, he predicted Microsoft would start a proxy war by the end of April with the hopes of getting its candidates on Yahoo!'s board by July. In both scenarios Aggarwal expects regulatory approvals to take up to three quarters.
As for potential alternatives, Aggarwal writes that Yahoo! has "explored and largely exhausted most of them if not all." He discounts a partnership with Google Inc. [GOOG] because of regulatory and operational challenges, and argues that the company was unable to garner the magnitude of support it expected from investors to pursue a higher valuation from Microsoft.
Aggarwal also tackles Yahoo!'s first-quarter report April 22, writing that at best the company will have an in-line quarter while raising guidance for the remainder of the year. He notes concern about Yahoo!'s exposure to the financial services sector through its Yahoo! Finance site and could suffer as online budgets are slashed by mortgage, credit card and other companies impacted by the credit crunch.
Finally, Aggarwal looks at potential synergies of a potential Microsoft-Yahoo! merger and concludes the combo would have cost synergies of a robust $1.3 billion. He places a buy rating on Yahoo!'s stock with a price target of $33.50. - David Shabelman
Posted by The Boss at 1:14 AM 0 comments
An Internet retailer that used a pay-per-click advertising service operated by Yahoo is suing the Internet giant for more than $1 million, claiming it was overcharged by thousands of dollars as a result of click fraud that Yahoo did little to prevent. Bigreds.com, which sells collectibles online, said it paid Yahoo's Search Marketing unit, formerly known as Overture Services, more than $900,000 between 2002 and 2006. The fees were based on the number of clicks that Bigreds ads received on sites affiliated with Yahoo and Overture. Bigreds claims that many of the clicks were not from legitimate buyers but from affiliate Web site operators who received commissions from Overture and Yahoo based on the number of clicks their sites generated for advertisers. "These clicks were not actual traffic, but were fraudulent clicks," Bigreds claims in court papers filed earlier this month in U.S. District Court in New York. "Affiliates of Overture used software programs, employed people, and/or directed people other than actual customers to click on plaintiffs links from keyword search results," the complaint states. Yahoo acquired Overture, which launched in 1998 as GoTo.com, in 2003. Bigreds claims Yahoo in 2006 acknowledged the bad-click problem, but offered a refund of only $17,000. Bigreds also alleges that Yahoo's Overture unit had technology and information at its disposal that it could have used to prevent click fraud but did not take steps to do so. "Overture was able to tell what was bad, who conducted the bad click, where it came from, what keyword was involved and generally had superior technology and access to records in its dominion that enabled Overture to determine what persons or entities or affiliates were involved," the suit claims. Bigreds is seeking more than $1 million in damages and penalties. Yahoo has yet to file a formal response to the allegations. Click fraud is one of the multi-billion dollar search marketing industry's dark secrets. Virtually all major players, including Yahoo, Microsoft and Google, have been forced to acknowledge the problem. Critics argue that search engines have little incentive to police the practice because much of their revenue is generated by ad clicks. Yahoo in 2005 paid $4.5 million to settle a click fraud class action lawsuit. Google paid $90 million to settle a similar suit in 2006.
informationweek.com
Posted by The Boss at 1:12 AM 0 comments
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - New industry data out on Tuesday showed Yahoo Inc may have started gaining share in the Web search ad market against Google Inc even as Google's share of search audience inched up.
One study by RBC Capital using data on ad-buying trends from Web search marketing firm SearchIgnite shows Yahoo outpacing Google in spending on search advertising, ad viewership and click-through rates during the first quarter.
Meanwhile, a report from research firm comScore showed Google gaining share against Yahoo in the overall Web search market in March, but gave no insight into how Google was doing converting Web searchers into ad viewers.
Yahoo's first-quarter share of search spending by selected advertisers rose to 23 percent of the market, up from historic levels of 18 percent to 19 percent, SearchIgnite said.
Google's dominant search advertising share dipped to 71.1 percent from 74.9 percent the previous quarter, it said.
"Yahoo increased its share of wallet meaningfully for the first time in several quarters," RBC analyst Ross Sandler said in a note to investors, referring to the SearchIgnite data.
Shares of Yahoo gained 36 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $28.16. Google dipped $1.15 to $450.51.
Google is set to report quarterly results on Thursday as investors debate whether the company's explosive growth in search advertising has begun being hobbled by a slowing economy. Yahoo reports quarterly results next Tuesday.Posted by The Boss at 11:49 PM 1 comments
Almost every one of us has an account with both Yahoo and Google. And you probably use both Yahoo Messenger and Google Talk to stay in touch with buddies. Unlike Yahoo ,Google offers the web-based version of Google Talk . But you can also get web IM for Yahoo using services like Meebo, or ebuddy . These services though don't provide any online space to store your yahoo chat log( Yahoo chat log while using Yahoo Messenger is stored locally. Hence you can't access your yahoo chat log when you login from another computer). So, there is no way you can access it while on the move. But don't loose your heart.... Google comes to your rescue again.
With Google Talk, conversations are archived and stored in the same manner as emails. This allows users to search within their chat logs easily. It would be great if I can transport all my Yahoo contacts to Google Talk so that all my Yahoo buddies are also visible in Gmail chat window. This way I can chat with Yahoo buddies while still in Gmail and therefore, all Yahoo chat log can be stored in Gmail and my purpose of accessing chat logs from anywhere is fulfilled. Now the billion dollar question : How could it be possible to transfer Yahoo contacts to Google Talk. Here is a nice tutorial which will guide you through this process.
The set up process requires cross platform Jabber client Psi and is a one time set up process( i.e. you can uninstall Psi after you have transferred the contacts). The similar process applies to your MSN/AIM contacts.
Posted by The Boss at 11:39 PM 2 comments
This is showing up at the bottom of emails sent from Yahoo! accounts. Does anyone know what it means?
0000-00-00 and 9999-99-99
It is on some of my emails. I can only presume it is a form of protest about today being tax day in the USA...April 15th.
The form of the numbers fits to Social Security Numbers.
Posted by The Boss at 9:55 AM 1 comments
Hi there, a bit of news for you who follow the Yahoo! IndexTools integration steps. But first, THANK YOU very much for all the positive feedback I received in blog comments, separate blog posts, emails, phone calls etc. I truly appreciate that.
Summary:
Yahoo! currently intends to provide the IndexTools Web Analytics service FREE of charge to clients and partners who accept the standard Yahoo! agreement.
Today we will communicate that we’ll require our partners and clients to accept a new standard Yahoo! agreement and that Yahoo! (we) currently intends to provide the service FREE of charge to clients and partners who accept the Yahoo! Agreement. It is however important to note that our clients and partners must accept this agreement to continue using the service.
I think this is a fair tradeoff for an Enterprise class Web Analytics system?
Further to this, it should be noted that Yahoo! (I should probably teach myself to say - we - at some point) does not intend to add any new partnerships or direct clients in the short to midterm, while we prepare for the next rollout wave. This means that our current partners and clients will be in a unique position to either provide a service or use a service to which the rest of the market will not have ready or immediate access.
Very exciting isn’t it? .. :-)
For those of you who know me or heard me evangelize IndexTools as essentially 80% of the functionality of Omniture for a fraction of the cost – have to get used to the NEW NEW; 80% of the functionality of Omniture for FREE! ;-) he he...
visualrevenue.com
Posted by The Boss at 9:51 AM 1 comments
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