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Search lite: you may think Google is powerful today, but it's still only using 5% of its brain.


The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture By John Battelle John Linwood Battelle is a journalist as well as founder and chairman of Federated Media Publishing[1]. He has been a visiting professor of journalism at UC Berkeley and also maintains Searchblog, a weblog covering search, technology, and media[2].  Portfolio Cover, $25.95

What is Google if not opposition research for the rest of us (abuse) for The Rest Of Us - (From the Macintosh slogan "The computer for the rest of us") 1. Used to describe a spiffy product whose affordability shames other comparable products, or (more often) used sarcastically to describe spiffy but very overpriced products.

2.
? For years, we have dated, taken jobs, applied to schools, trusted sources, relied on friends, and done countless tasks requiring our time and effort without the aid of a reliable, fast, effective search engine to tell us if we are wasting our time and energies. It now takes fractions of a second to learn that Greenland is not really all that green and that the environmental policies of the Bush administration are not either.

John Battelle adds an important volume to the history of the Silicon Valley by documenting the development of Google. Like those before him, he has approached an obscure and intangible subject which affects the way nearly everyone lives, works, and loves. Battelle has done the long-term reporting required to give The Search the social and technological context of our time as well as a decent insight into Google founders (Wunderkinder Sergey Brin Sergey Brin (Russian: Сергей Михайлович Брин  and Larry Page For the music producer/manager, see .

Lawrence Edward "Larry" Page (born March 26 1973 in Lansing, Michigan) is an American entrepreneur who co-founded the Google internet search engine, now Google Inc., with Sergey Brin.
) and their motivations.

Battelle, who was the co-founder of Wired and former publisher of The Industry Standard magazines, is in a unique position to do this reporting. (Full disclosure: I know Battelle slightly.) He is personally passionate about where technology is taking us and how it is taking us there. And his passion was clearly what got him a book contract to write about something that most of us take for granted--the ability to type a few words into a small white box with a blinking cursor and expect to get relevant and interesting information. And to do this free, globally, and instantaneously.

We have seen this in-depth treatment of technologies in the past with the development of computing (e.g., The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder Tracy Kidder (born November 12, 1945 in New York City) is an American author and Vietnam War veteran. Kidder may be best known, especially within the computing community, for his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Soul of a New Machine ), gaming, software, the Internet ... the list is endless. The value of these books seems to be greater as historical documents and business case studies than as dynamic reads for the average electronics consumer.

This class of book will be good reading for those who want to know that "search" of any form is com posed of three specific functions: crawl, index, and serve. For search to work, it must "crawl" the web and find unique and connected data, it must then index that data in retrievable and presentable pre·sent·a·ble  
adj.
1. That can be given, displayed, or offered: presentable gifts; presentable attire.

2. Fit for introduction to others: presentable relatives.
 form, and it must serve that data in a simple, fast, and relevant fashion to he who seeks. To do this, Google has more than 175,000 computers, or as Battelle puts it, "more computers than existed on Earth in the 1970s!"

As with most new products there are "early adopters"--consumers who are fascinated by the technology and its promise and are willing to deal with the bugs, workarounds, and general imperfections--and there are "mass market" consumers--who expect the damn stuff to just work. They could not care less about the underlying code and hardware that makes it all function. For those who want to know no more about automobiles than where the key goes, this is not their book. For those who are interested in the electrical system, the internal combustion engine Internal combustion engine

A prime mover, the fuel for which is burned within the engine, as contrasted to a steam engine, for example, in which fuel is burned in a separate furnace.
, and the changes in land planning and social structures as a result of the automobile, this is the book to pick up. Oh, and if you happen to be one of the lucky ones who purchased Google stock at its IPO (Initial Public Offering) The first time a company offers shares of stock to the public. While not a computer term per se, many founders, employees and insiders of computer companies have found this acronym more exciting than any tech term they ever heard.  and have watched shares rocket from just over $100 to over $300, chances are you will enjoy reading about how smart and savvy you are. Battelle lets you know that Google is the holy grail of modern computing and that it has currently only reached about five percent of its potential.

The remaining 95 percent is made up of things that only futuristic Star Trek computers can do. The kind of computing power that understands natural language and instructions and is able to deliver the most individually relevant information that is spatially and temporally appropriate and is based on previous collected and analyzed patterns of thought and behavior. No longer will you have to type in Google-speak ("Hemingway Spain Wine" or "Rove WMD WMD

white muscle disease.
 Liar") to get a glimpse of an answer; as the technology evolves, it will have watched your every click, logged your every move, followed each of your queries, and developed its native sense of who you are, what you like, how you recreate, where you live, and when you are awake and it will do so with every little bit of technology that has a chip in it, whether your cell phone, your computer, your automobile (do you have On-Star?). As I write this, the thought of such ubiquitous computing and infinite knowledge of me becomes terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
. Yes, it is the type of technology that arouses DoD's former information awareness czar John Poindexter. Privacy becomes ever more vincible and the Google corporate value "Don't be Evil This article or section may be confusing or unclear for some readers.
Please [improve the article] or discuss this issue on the talk page.
" becomes more important, though more of a guideline than a regulable Reg´u`la`ble   

a. 1. Capable of being regulated.
 FCC (1) (Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC, www.fcc.gov) The U.S. government agency that regulates interstate and international communications including wire, cable, radio, TV and satellite. The FCC was created under the U.S.  standard.

Battelle refers to the search and Google as having come up with a "Database of Intentions," a phrase he has coined to summarize how Google's technology culls culls

the animals extracted from a herd or flock by culling.
 its worldwide usage to create a database of the "wants, needs, fears, and obsessions of humankind." Google has become the world's largest polling machine. While marketers use polling and consumer testing to see if "New Coke" is a better brand or political pollsters push to find out attitudes towards handguns, Google is able to summarize the real time concerns and interests of the mass of online mankind--whether Janet Jackson video footage, the latest Coldplay music release, or the next draft of the Iraqi constitution. It can collect this information and slice and dice Refers to rearranging data so that it can be viewed from different perspectives. The term is typically used with OLAP databases that present information to the user in the form of multidimensional cubes similar to a 3D spreadsheet. See OLAP.  it in myriad ways. Oops, there goes another flash of a smiling Poindexter.

While there are marketers and political operatives who are smacking smack·ing  
adj.
Brisk; vigorous; spanking: a smacking breeze.

Noun 1. smacking - the act of smacking something; a blow delivered with an open hand
slap, smack
 their chops at the potential of such voluntarily given information, there are also entire authoritarian political structures that live in fear of the their populace having absolute access to free, independent, and open information. Search appropriately looks at this issue in a chapter titled "Search, Privacy, Government, and Evil" and concludes with a study of Google in China. Battelle notes that Google, the company, understands the business opportunity of operating in China, but that what Google, the search engine, does is provide a direct path to information that government opponents can use and propagate. Falun Gong, for example, is something the Chinese government wants to block. How Google tries to finesse this and still stay true to its corporate value of "Don't Be Evil" is an interesting dilemma that corporate leaders are unable to solve adequately.

One bit of advice that Battelle delivers is worth excerpting for those who do not wish to read through the entire book. It is something that many of us already do; if not, here goes:

"It's a good idea to check your name on Google, early and often. Given that just about everyone else you meet will be doing it anyway, it's just smart to get a picture of who you are in the world according to the index. In the Google age, every new relationship begins with a Google search."

You have been warned.

Markos Kounalakis, The Washington Monthly's publisher, chronicled the development of the first PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM).  by Apple Computer in his book, Defying Gravity: The Making of Newton.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:On Political Books; The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture
Author:Kounalakis, Markos
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 1, 2005
Words:1238
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