• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Google PC might hit Walmart

mzkhadir

Diamond Member
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-predict1jan01,0,3503327.story

Industry Feeling Presence of the 800-Pound Google
By Sallie Hofmeister, Times Staff Writer


Just five years ago, Microsoft Corp. was considered the Big Bad Wolf of the media business.

Armed with a stockpile of cash and the Windows operating system that dominates office computing, Bill Gates' company was expected to huff and puff its way into America's living rooms as well, with video game consoles, home networking systems and TV set-top boxes.

But today, there's a different wolf at the door. Although Microsoft is still flush with $40 billion in cash, it is Google Inc. that the media industry fears most. So intense is Google-fueled paranoia, in fact, that industry watchers believe the Internet search giant could drive profound changes in the media, entertainment and technology landscape in 2006.

Already, old media are investing heavily in new-media ventures. Newspapers like this one are defending their bread-and-butter income ? classified advertising ? by stepping up their Web offerings. Media conglomerates such as News Corp. are buying Web properties like MySpace.com that connect them to young audiences, who are forsaking television and radio in favor of the Internet.

This year, new media could return the favor by investing in old media ? the folks who know the most about producing entertainment content.

Here are some predictions for the media industry for 2006, based on interviews with industry analysts, executives and investors, along with a little intuition.


Cheap PCs, anyone?

Google will unveil its own low-price personal computer or other device that connects to the Internet.

Sources say Google has been in negotiations with Wal-Mart Stores Inc., among other retailers, to sell a Google PC. The machine would run an operating system created by Google, not Microsoft's Windows, which is one reason it would be so cheap ? perhaps as little as a couple of hundred dollars.

Bear Stearns analysts speculated in a research report last month that consumers would soon see something called "Google Cubes" ? a small hardware box that could allow users to move songs, videos and other digital files between their computers and TV sets.

Larry Page, Google's co-founder and president of products, will give a keynote address Friday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Analysts suspect that Page will use the opportunity either to show off a Google computing device or announce a partnership with a big retailer to sell such a machine.

And that's not the only Google theory out there. Content producers wonder whether Google's push into video search will unravel the economics that make Hollywood hum. If viewers can find and legally download an episode of "Seinfeld" through Google, will that cut into cable and network television's profits?

And what if Google, after equipping cities, starting with San Francisco, with Wi-Fi wireless technology, starts to offer pay-TV service for free?

Still, to date, the company's $123-billion stock market value is based almost entirely on its dominance of one business: global text searches on the Web. Some investors worry that Page and co-founder Sergey Brin could be done in by their penchant for seeing themselves as do-gooders rather than profiteers. But those naysayers are in the minority. Most industry executives and Wall Street analysts believe that Google's search engine business is robust enough to give the young billionaires two or three years of wiggle room to build nifty services first and worry about making money on them later.


For the one person that really cares, this story is from slashdot.
 
That will sell best in the south of the border markets...oh, walmart is the south of the border markets. I almost forgot. 😉
 
Internet Appliances have already come and flopped. People want Windows.

And Google cubes better have a whole lot on MCE or the zillions of other appliances and software that already do HTPC/digitalhome stuff for them to be attractive. Talk about late to the bandwagon on that one.
 
Originally posted by: MisterJackson
Originally posted by: Jon855
Don't hijack Slashdot's story... BTW u suck at quoting...

Well aren't we a chipper b1tch this morning.....Respect your elders n00b!

At the moment I'm seeing two threads which were hijacked from Slashdot and quoted the whole article pretty much long after the slashdot have it up which means it's 10 days old... 🙂 yes I'm a little cranny this morning... ATOT reserves the rights to me🙂
 
Originally posted by: StrangerGuy
Where is the GoogleOS?

according to slashdot:

"According to latimes.com Google is set to launch the Google PC which will run Google's own operating system"
 
Originally posted by: Jon855
Originally posted by: MisterJackson
Originally posted by: Jon855
Don't hijack Slashdot's story... BTW u suck at quoting...

Well aren't we a chipper b1tch this morning.....Respect your elders n00b!

At the moment I'm seeing two threads which were hijacked from Slashdot and quoted the whole article pretty much long after the slashdot have it up which means it's 10 days old... 🙂 yes I'm a little cranny this morning... ATOT reserves the rights to me🙂
Actually, if you click on that little blue string of text at the beginning of the OP's post (we call them thar links), you'll see he's hijacked his article from the LA Times, which is where the slashdot poster also hijacked it from. noob.
 
This isn't news. Walmart had already been selling Lindows-based PCs for years at cut-throat prices. Basically was a total flop. Too many people complaining and returning the systems because it couldn't run every off the shelf windows program, and especially games. This so-called google PC will be even worse in that regard, but in this case will only tarnish Google's name -- they're going downhill fast.


 
Originally posted by: vegetation
This isn't news. Walmart had already been selling Lindows-based PCs for years at cut-throat prices. Basically was a total flop. Too many people complaining and returning the systems because it couldn't run every off the shelf windows program, and especially games. This so-called google PC will be even worse in that regard, but in this case will only tarnish Google's name -- they're going downhill fast.
<larry david>BINGOOO!</larry david>
 
Originally posted by: mzkhadir
The machine would run an operating system created by Google, not Microsoft's Windows, which is one reason it would be so cheap ? perhaps as little as a couple of hundred dollars.

I've been saying this for awhile - a new OS would be Google's next big project.

But I'm very dissapointed that their vendor of choice is WalMart. :|
 
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
That will sell best in the south of the border markets...oh, walmart is the south of the border markets. I almost forgot. 😉

Only where I live.😉
 
I hope Google realises that users want user-friendliness and compatibility from an OS. Eyecandy and speed are a close third.
 
"Couple hundred dollars..."

You can get a Dell for that. In order for it to be considered dirt cheap, it's have to be sub-$200 and be fully functional so you could add to it if you wanted.
 
Back
Top