« Google to Keynote SES China | Main | iOffer Pokes Fun at eBay »
March 10, 2006
Daily SearchCast, March 10, 2006: Google Buys Writely Browser Word Processor; The Richest People In Search; Search Engines Are Bad For Your Wedding Gift Registry & More!
Today's search podcast covers Google buying the Writely browser-based word processor, Orkut's woes continue; Google to help power Firefox anti-phishing tools; is someone drafting your search ad; more on the Ashley Cole Gay results at Google; finding library books via Google Book Search; the richest people in search; why search engines might cause your wedding gifts to go astray and more!
Tune-in by listening to this MP3 file, listening via WebmasterRadio at 11:30am Eastern and repeated at 2pm Eastern Tuesday through Friday, via our Odeo channel or through iTunes via this link (or use alternative iTunes instructions explained here) or though our Yahoo Podcasts channel. Below are links with more information about the stories that were discussed.
-
Google Buys
Writely, A Browser Based Word Processor
-
Brazil Asks Google To Help Orkut To Stop Organizing Organized Crime
-
Google to
Protect Firefox with Phishing Shield?
-
Google Removing
Ads from Mobile Content?
-
'Drafting' and
'Hijacking' in Paid Search
-
We Sell Ferrari Driving Experiences, But Google Won't Let Us Say That
-
Google "Ashley
Cole Gay" Results Suggestion Prompts Questions From His Solicitor
-
Google Book Search Adds Find it in a Library for Some Books
- Google
Partners with Oxford, Harvard & Others to Digitize Libraries
-
Searching for Library Books with RedLightGreen
-
AccessMyLibrary.com Puts Library-Only Content On The Web
- More
Sources For Ebooks & Electronic Text
- More
Online Book Resources
- The Library
Card Catalog 2005: More than Just Basic Book Info
-
Google to Partner with Wikipedia
-
Divining the Future of Search
-
Don't Overlook SEO for Your Podcasts
-
Yahoo's Yang Says It's More Important To Be In China Than Risk Of Not
Participating
-
Richest People in Search
- Didn't Get That Wedding Gift? Blame The Search Engines!
Posted by Danny Sullivan at March 10, 2006 4:00 PM




