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The Search: How Google & Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business & Transformed Our Culture (Unabridged)
 
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The Search: How Google & Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business & Transformed Our Culture (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by John Battelle (Author, Narrator)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 10 hours and 4 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Audible, Inc.
  • Audible Release Date: 21 Dec 2005
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ6JIG
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Product Description

What does the world want? According to John Battelle, a company that answers that question can unlock the most intractable riddles of both business and culture. And for the past few years, that's exactly what Google has been doing.

Jumping into the game long after Yahoo, Alta Vista, Excite, Lycos, and other pioneers, Google offered a radical new approach to search, redefined the idea of viral marketing, survived the dotcom crash, and pulled off the largest and most talked about initial public offering in the history of Silicon Valley.

But The Search offers much more than the inside story of Google's triumph. It's also a big-picture book about the past, present, and future of search technology, and the enormous impact it is starting to have on marketing, media, pop culture, dating, job hunting, international law, civil liberties, and just about every other sphere of human interest.

More than any of its rivals, Google has become the gateway to instant knowledge. Hundreds of millions of people use it to satisfy their wants, needs, fears, and obsessions, creating an enormous artifact that Battelle calls "the Database of Intentions". Combined with the databases of thousands of other search-driven businesses, large and small, it all adds up to a goldmine of information that powerful organizations (including the government) will want to get their hands on.

No one is better qualified to explain this entire phenomenon than Battelle, who co-founded Wired and founded The Industry Standard. Perhaps more than any other journalist, he has devoted his career to finding the holy grail of technology. And he has finally found it in search.

For anyone who wants to understand how Google really succeeded, The Search is an eye-opening and indispensable read.

©2005 John Battelle; (P)2005 Audible, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I found this a really interesting book. It’s not a ‘history of Google’ story (look at ‘The Google Story’ by David Vise, if that’s what you’re after); although Google’s evolution features throughout. It’s a ‘history of search’ story, which provides insights into Yahoo, Alta Vista, Google and the other main players. It’s also an essay on what ‘search’ could be, how it could change everything and what we should expect in future.

The highlights for me were:
The realisation that the ‘database of intentions’ (Battelle’s term for the as yet unrecorded database of all our collective searches) would be an incredible archive of the developed world’s interests at any point in time.

How TV advertising could become a function of the programmes you watch.

How cool mobile search would be (scan a barcode into a PDA to see if another local retailer has he item you’re after for less).

The positives and negatives of everything recorded about us being searchable, and the implications for privacy (like ‘reverse directory lookup’ – type in a phone number and Google returns a name and address).

The prospect of all our stuff being searchable (eg our kids having indexed digital photo albums instead of cardboard ones gathering dust).

The reasons behind Google acquiring other little companies that can help it produce things like Google Earth and Google Print.

The reason other traditionally non-search internet players (such as Amazon with its A9 search engine) are taking an interest in search.

The amazing possibilities of ‘perfect search’….

So don’t be left behind – buy your copy now.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
When a brilliant journalist writes about a contemporary and lava hot topic like Search-simply consider that Google which epitomizes Search experienced the phenomenal growth of 0 to $3 billion in the short time span of five years 2000-2004 -the result is a riveting book.

There are similarities and parallels between the founders of Google and the founder of Microsoft. In both instances they are dropouts of elite universities in order to found companies and pursue their vision. In the case of Bill Gates the founder of Microsoft, the epiphany was the power of software. In the case of Larry Page and Sergey Brin the founders of Google, the driving insight was the power of Search.

The object of Search is to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful.

The author's treatment is balanced in that while he shows that the present Search is already enormous and its future virtually unlimited he also points to its ominous consequences such as the infringement on privacy.

To show what the future for Search reserves, a comparison with Micrososft would suffice:

The audacious goal of Bill Gates and Micropsoft was of a computer on every desk, and Microsoft products running on every computer. A goal achieved within twenty years and in the process rendering Bill Gates fabulously rich and Microsoft a stellar world company.

Let us consider Google's audacious goal:to organize information and make it accessible. Forget about a computer on every desk. The entire world needs to become computerized. Anything of value will be in Google's index. We have to visualize the merging of the physical world with the World Wide Web.

Microsoft's success was driving a computer to every desk with Windows on every computer. The next step in the evolution of the computer was the connection of every computer to every other-the Internet. But what comes after that?

According to the cognoscenti, the web is in the process of becoming the next great computing platform-the successor to Microsoft Windows, owned by no one but used by everyone. The web is also in the process of connecting to everything, just name it. The companies best positioned to deliver hugely scaled services over the web platform are best positioned to win. And when it comes to hugely scaled services nothing beats Search.

Google's mission of organizing information and making it accessible sets the company up to deliver nothing short of every possible service that might live on top of a computing platform:the Google grid.

We can conceive in our digital future Google as phone company; as cable provider; as university; as eBay, Amazon, Microsoft, Expedia, and Yahoo all folded in one. Fascinating, beguiling and awe inspiring!
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
John Battelle has a long history in the web's short evolution. He is currently deeply involved in the Web 2.0 technologies and strategies and therefore has a great understanding of the past,present and the future of the web. This book very much reflects that fact by covering the past, present and future of search. Google may rule the roost today but let us not forget in the past so did Alta Vista.

The delicious irony is that today Google has delivered on Microsoft's stated vision of "information at your fingertips" first but this is only the first round of a very long battle in the war to win consumers.

If you want to understand what comes next ... I recommend you read this book.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
An interesting book but ...
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. It was well written and provided enough information to keep me glued to it. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Dr. Bojan Tunguz
An excellent companion volume
A story, written from further on the outside than 'The Google Story' about the early stages of google development. Read more
Published on 12 Aug 2008 by Bruce Murphy
A Google-focused useful insight into the world of search
John Battelle has written an unputdownable page turner with a wealth of first-hand knowledge about the world of internet searching. Read more
Published on 9 July 2008 by Oscar Del Santo
Simple search, complicated industry
Receive the search query and give back the results - it's that simple. There can't be more to this industry, right? Very wrong. Read more
Published on 26 Mar 2007 by Mr. A. Hussain
A 'must read' for Human Resources Executives
Companies pay millions to Futurists to tell them how consumer behaviours are likely to change. At the core of much of this, of course, is the internet. Read more
Published on 24 Nov 2006 by Christopher A. J. Lamb
Good Introduction to Search Engine Technology and Potential
You probably use search engines to find information. If you already understand how one search engine varies from the next, this book will be much too simple and limited for you. Read more
Published on 12 Jan 2006 by Donald Mitchell
Why Google rules
The idea of making billions of dollars on a business based on searching online indexes is inconceivable, except when you consider how the Internet has changed the business world. Read more
Published on 29 Nov 2005 by Rolf Dobelli
Great for everything it contains
Nice uncomplicated approach to the topic. Really good intro on the early years...yes search engines did exist before Google. Read more
Published on 25 Sep 2005 by Edward Cowell
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