Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Presentations at Google

I like to watch the videos with the recorded presentations at Google (I commented about it in a post before), where they call eminent persons for presentations at Google, and they record and publish the presentations on You Tube.


There are several presentations with different kind of people, like: Ian Ayres, Don Tapscott, Chris Anderson, Steve Wozniak, Daniel Goleman, Bob Woodward, Paul Krugman, Barack Obama, Noam Chomsky, Marshall Goldsmith, Henry Kissinger, Michael Lee Stallard, Daniel Pink, and others.

They separate by topic using tags, my favorites are authors@google and leading@google.

This is a good presentation by Michael Lee Stallard:

Monday, May 18, 2009

Wolfram Alpha: a revolutionary answer-engine


Wolfram Alpha, an answer-engine developed by the British mathematician and physicist Stephen Wolfram and his team from Wolfram Research, was launched last Friday. A lot of people are considering Wolfram Alpha a Google-killer, but it isn't. They have different proposals. Google is a search engine and Wolfram Alpha is a computational knowledge engine. Wolfram Alpha uses built-in models of fields of knowledge, with algorithms and growing amount of data to calculate its responses. Wolfram Alpha is built on Wolfram's earlier flagship product, Mathematica.

According the site of Wolfram Alpha:
"Making the world's knowledge computable - Today's WolframAlpha is the first step in an ambitious, long-term project to make all systematic knowledge immediately computable by anyone. You enter your question or calculation, and WolframAlpha uses its built-in algorithms and growing collection of data to compute the answer."


The Wolfram Alpha's Goal:
"WolframAlpha's long-term goal is to make all systematic knowledge immediately computable and accessible to everyone. We aim to collect and curate all objective data; implement every known model, method, and algorithm; and make it possible to compute whatever can be computed about anything. Our goal is to build on the achievements of science and other systematizations of knowledge to provide a single source that can be relied on by everyone for definitive answers to factual queries."

The Wolfram Alpha' Status:
"As of now, WolframAlpha contains 10+ trillion of pieces of data, 50,000+ types of algorithms and models, and linguistic capabilities for 1000+ domains. Built with Mathematica—which is itself the result of more than 20 years of development at Wolfram Research—WolframAlpha's core code base now exceeds 5 million lines of symbolic Mathematica code. Running on supercomputer-class compute clusters, WolframAlpha makes extensive use of the latest generation of web and parallel computing technologies, including webMathematica and gridMathematica."

Wolfram Alpha is really impressive and I think it can revolutionize the way how we use the web to find information.

Video tour of the Wolfram Alpha control room at the launch, recorded by Nova Spivack:



Nova Spivack also wrote a great article about Wolfram Alpha entitled Wolfram Alpha is Coming -- and It Could be as Important as Google (But It's Completely Different)

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Presentations at Google


I like so much the initiative of Google, where they call eminent persons for presentations at Google, and they record and publish the presentations on You Tube. There are several presentations with different kind of people, like: Daniel Goleman, Bob Woodward, Paul Krugman, Barack Obama, John McCain, Noam Chomsky, Marshall Goldsmith, Henry Kissinger, and others.

They separate using the tags: authors@google, leading@google, women@Google, candidates@Google (before the president election, they interviewed Barack Obama and John McCain)

In the Google Author Series (authors@google), I would highlight the presentations of the following authors:
- Ian Ayres
- Don Tapscott
- Chris Anderson
- Steve Wozniak



This is an excellent initiative, because sharing the videos, they enable the people watch good presentations with nice content.

Thank you, Google!

Friday, November 28, 2008

Management exercise


The Sascom voices, a blog of SAS, published a couple of weeks ago an interesting post called Management exercise -- DO try this at home, by Faye Merrideth, where she talks about executive coaching.

She recommended a management book, What Got You Here Won’t Get You There, written by Marshall Goldsmith. You also can see a video with Goldsmith's lecture to employees at Google. Both book and video are very nice.


About the Goldsmith’s book, she showed the list of twenty annoying habits that hold great people back from the top:

1. Winning too much: Goldsmith notes that the hypercompetitive need to best others "underlies nearly every other behavioral problem."

2. Adding too much value: This happens when you can't stop yourself from tinkering with your colleagues' or subordinates' already viable ideas. "It is extremely difficult," Goldsmith observes, "for successful people to listen to other people tell them something that they already know without communicating somehow that (a) 'we already knew that' and (b) 'we know a better way.'" The fallacy of this sort of behavior is that, while it may slightly improve an idea, it drastically reduces the other person's commitment to it.

3. Passing judgment: "It's not appropriate to pass judgment when we specifically ask people to voice their opinions ... even if you ask a question and agree with the answer." Goldsmith recommends "hiring" a friend to bill you $10 for each episode of needless judgment.

4. Making destructive comments: We are all tempted to be mean from time to time. But when we feel the urge to criticize, we should realize that gratuitous negative comments can harm our working relationships."The question is not, 'Is it true?' but rather, 'Is it worth it?'" This is another habit Goldsmith recommends breaking via monetary fines. Sound expensive?

5. Starting with "No," "But," or "However." Almost all of us do this, and most of us are totally unaware of it. But Goldsmith says if you watch out for it, "you'll see how people inflict these words on others to gain or consolidate power. You'll also see how intensely people resent it, consciously or not, and how it stifles rather than opens up discussion." This is another habit that may take fines to break.

6. Telling the world how smart we are: "This is another variation on our need to win."

7. Speaking when angry: See number four.

8. Negativity, or "Let me explain why that won't work": Goldsmith calls this "pure unadulterated negativity under the guise of being helpful."

9. Withholding information: This one is all about power. Goldsmith focuses on ways even the best-intentioned people do this all the time. "We do this when we are too busy to get back to someone with valuable information. We do this when we forget to include someone in our discussions or meetings. We do this when we delegate a task to our subordinates but don't take the time to show them exactly how we want the task done."

10. Failing to give recognition: "This is a sibling of withholding information."

11. Claiming credit we don't deserve: To catch ourselves doing this, Goldsmith recommends listing all the times we mentally congratulate ourselves in a given day, and then reviewing the list to see if we really deserved all the credit we gave ourselves.

12. Making excuses: We do this both bluntly (by blaming our failings on the traffic or something else outside ourselves) and subtly (with self-deprecating comments about our inherent tendency to be late or to lose our temper that send the message, "That's just the way I am").

13. Clinging to the past: "Understanding the past is perfectly admissible if your issue is accepting the past. But if your issue is changing the future, understanding will not take you there." Goldsmith notes that quite often we dwell on the past because it allows us to blame others for things that have gone wrong in our lives.

14. Playing favorites: This behavior creates suck-ups; rewarding suck-ups creates hollow leaders.

15. Refusing to express regret: "When you say, 'I'm sorry,' you turn people into your allies, even your partners."

16. Not listening: This behavior says, "I don't care about you," "I don't understand you," "You're wrong" and "You're wasting my time."

17. Failing to express gratitude: "Gratitude is not a limited resource, nor is it costly. It is abundant as air. We breathe it in but forget to exhale." Goldsmith advises breaking the habit of failing to say thank you by saying it -- to as many people as we can, over and over again.

18. Punishing the messenger: This habit is a nasty hybrid of 10, 11, 19, 4, 16, 17, with a strong dose of anger added in.

19. Passing the buck: "This is the behavioral flaw by which we judge our leaders -- as important a negative attribute as positive qualities such as brainpower and resourcefulness."

20. An excessive need to be "me": Making a "virtue of our flaws" because they express who we are amounts to misplaced loyalty -- and can be "one of the toughest obstacles to making positive long-term change in our behavior."

Friday, November 21, 2008

Interviews with Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google


Recently, I read and watched two interesting interviews with Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google.


The first is a video interview, for McKinsey Quaterly, where he talks about several subjects, divided in frames: Change competition, making money, the long tail, evolving management, the nature of innovation, and global standards. This interview was conducted by James Manyika, a director in McKinsey’s San Francisco office.

About innovation, he said: "Google's objective is to be a systematic innovator at scale. Scale means more than one. And innovator means things tha make you go, 'Wow'", and about the long tail, he said: "You can have a long tail strategy, but you better also have a head, 'cause that is where the revenue is".


The second interview, is for The New York Times, conducted by Miguel Helft. It is a Q&A Interview (it has a video too), where he talks about his plans for managing Google in a downturn, the unraveling of an advertising partnership with Yahoo, green energy and his support for President-elect Barack Obama.

I would like to highlight the below question, his answer is very interesting:
Q. Isn’t it less fun to run a company that has to watch its spending more carefully?
A. I think it is actually more fun. The reason is that it is very easy to be a successful executive in high-growth times. It is much more challenging, but in my view much more rewarding to be a leader in times where you have to make really hard choices.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Mobile BI


Colin White wrote an interesting post yesterday in his blog in B-Eye-Network, entitled Mobile BI: Do the Apple iPhone and Google G1 Have a Role to Play?

He did a question: “What role, if any, will these gadgets have in the business environment for applications such as mobile BI?", related with Apple iPhone and Google G1. He asked this question to two executives from BI industry.

John Schwartz, CEO of Business Objects, noted that mobile BI was seeing growth in both the US and Europe, but the device of choice for mobile BI was still the Blackberry, because its architecture was more suited to this type of processing. Business Objects has seen little demand for iPhone support.

Donald Cambell, CTO of Cognos, said IT is is still primarily supplying Blackberry’s for business use. He said the iPhone still doesn’t have the promised capability to run processes in the background, which limits its use for BI. He noted that the new Google G1 has an excellent development platform, and if the device is successful it could have a major impact on mobile business applications.

I think the market to mobile business applications in general, and particularly Mobile BI is growing quickly, and it has space for both Apple iPhone and Google G1, but Blackberry will still dominate the mobile business applications market (and mobile BI) for a long time, because it is a good gadget and is consolidated in the business marketplace. To change this, Google G1 will need to turn into a huge success and/or Apple will need to put in iPhone the capability to run processes in the background.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Google's 10th Birthday


Today is the Google's 10th Birthday, and they published a page especially to celebrate, where have a link to their Project 10100 (pronounced "Project 10 to the 100th", I wrote a previous post about that), and you can also see an interesting and interactive Google's timeline.

Congratulations, Google!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Google Wants to Help You Change the World


If you got an idea that could change the world and to help as many people as possible, Google wants to hear about it. To help celebrate its 10th birthday, Google launched the Project 10100 (pronounced "Project 10 to the 100th"), where it is soliciting fresh ideas that have impact on people's lives.

According Google: "These ideas can be big or small, technology-driven or brilliantly simple -- but they need to have impact. We know there are countless brilliant ideas that need funding and support to come to fruition."

Google is opening the project to anyone, not just laboratories or universities.

How you can participate:
- You need to send your idea by October 20th.
- Voting on ideas begins on January 27th: Google will post a selection of one hundred ideas and ask you, the public, to choose twenty semi-finalists. Then an advisory board will select up to five final ideas.
- Google is committing $10 million to implement these projects, and its goal is to help as many people as possible. So remember, money may provide a jumpstart, but the idea is the thing.

You need put your idea into one of the following categories and consider the evaluation criteria below:
- Community: How can we help connect people, build communities and protect unique cultures?
- Opportunity: How can we help people better provide for themselves and their families?
- Energy: How can we help move the world toward safe, clean, inexpensive energy?
- Environment: How can we help promote a cleaner and more sustainable global ecosystem?
- Health: How can we help individuals lead longer, healthier lives?
- Education: How can we help more people get more access to better education?
- Shelter: How can we help ensure that everyone has a safe place to live?
- Everything else: Sometimes the best ideas don't fit into any category at all.

This is an interesting initiative by Google, providing incentive to people research and develop new ideas.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Google Chrome and SOA


Google Chrome was launched a couple of days ago, and had much coverage by the media around the world, but I think the most interesting comments about Chrome has been done by SOA expert professionals, like David Linthicum and Joe McKendrick.


David Linthicum commented in his blog on InfoWorld, called Real World SOA, in two posts: Google Chrome and SOA and Google Chrome seems to be shining for SOA.

Below, are some comments from Linthicum about the Google Chrome:
"I view the browser as really the next platform, something that will allow you to access a multitude of rich Internet applications, services, and have them work and play well together, no matter if you're on a traditional desktop, phone, PDA, or a screen in your car. Chrome seems to be a much larger leap in that direction, built from the ground up to deal with Internet-delivered applications and Web services, abstracting you away from the native operating system.

So, what does this have to do with SOA? Everything. SOA, at its essence, is the use of services as a way to deal with architecture. We expose services that we have been dealing with for years (legacy), we create new services, and we leverage services in the cloud that we neither own nor host. Then, we're able to create business solutions by mixing and matching services into processes and/or applications, simply put.

Thus, having a browser that is built for the use of services, Internet delivered or internal, using better operating and security mechanisms, could revolutionize the way we look at SOA.

I've always said that most SOA going on out there is through the mixing and matching of external Web-delivered services externalized through mashups, really as a way to prove the concept and to sell SOA internally. Now we have a better platform (browser) to do that.

In other words, the presence of Chrome will drive much SOA in the short term; it looks like a much better tool for the job."

In the second post, Linthicum talks about the comments in his previous post and said: "Just to be clear. Chrome is not a savior for SOA/WOA. Its value is that it considers the use of Web delivered applications, and Web-delivered services, within the architecture of the browser. It's not an afterthought. This is a huge shift in thinking, and something that is desperately needed as we drive toward the use of services for applications and composites where the browser plays a key role. In essence, Chrome will become a valuable piece of the architectural puzzle, perhaps a missing piece."


Joe McKendrick commented in his blog on Zdnet, called Service Oriented, in a post called Analyst: Google Chrome ‘SOA ready’: "But to look at it from an enterprise perspective, Chrome may help lay the groundwork for a smoother path to service oriented architecture as well."

He also commented the David Linthicum's post: "Dave emphasizes that new Web-aware browsers and platforms such as Chrome help make a better case for SOA to the business. I agree, and we see the proof in the pudding with the mashup/Enterprise 2.0 phenomenon — everybody gets it right away. Chrome can only help."

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Google Chrome: a browser by Google


Google launched today Google Chrome, a new open source browser. According Google, the new browser is intended to create a better web experience for users around the world.

The browser was launched in over 100 countries and more than 40 different languages.

Google Chrome can be downloaded here.


The Wired also published today an interesting article entitled Inside Chrome: The Secret Project to Crush IE and Remake the Web.

This is more a good initiative provided by Google, and get to the established niche of browsers, dominated by Internet Explorer and Firefox.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Google launches Site Search


This week, Google launched a new service called Site Search, a new version of Google Custom Search Business Edition.

The Google's definition to Site Search is: Turn Your Visitors Into Customers.

According Google: "With Google Site Search, you can put a Google search box on your website and enable prospective visitors and customers to find information instantly."

The mainly features are:
- Increase visitor satisfaction and loyalty
- Showcase the most relevant products
- Increase website conversions and sales
- Reduce support costs by enhancing self-service online

Google Site Search has been integrated with Google Analytics, so the users can use metrics and search together.

It is more one good Google's tool to help leverage websites.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

BI by Google


Google is investing in Business Intelligence and integration with its products. In March this year, Google did a partnership with Panorama Software, to provide new capabilities to Google applications and Google Docs using Panorama Applications. Panorama has a Proactive BI Solution integrating analytics, reporting, dashboarding and scorecarding tools.


One month later, Panorama announced a new product, called "Enterprise Business Intelligence Solution for Google Apps - Cloud Computing Analytics for Business Productivity", creating a support for SQL Server Analysis Services using Google Docs. According Panorama: "By adding support for SQL Server™ Analysis Services, enterprise companies can now use Google Docs, the most powerful Software as a Service (SaaS) based spreadsheet in the world with its strong collaborative capabilities, to get more out of their enterprise data in new and flexible ways."

The Google's strategy is integration. The partnership with Panorama is important because BI is becoming operational, and the favorite operational tool is spreadsheet. How Microsoft domains the spreadsheet market with Excel, and many BI products use Excel as front-end, Google is integrating its Docs (mainly spreadsheet) with Panorama BI solutions.

Google also is researching new tools and how to integrate its tools, using the concepts of text analytics, web semantic, BI search, data mining, machine learning, artificial intelligence, and others.

For example, the Google Analytics is an interesting tool to measure and manage the traffic in websites. You can see how visitors interact with your site, the number of accesses, the time in each page, pages more visited, where your website was accessed (geographical origin), and more others features. You have graphic visualization and can do drill-down in many features, for example, you can see the accesses in the world, and drill-down to country, state and city.

The BI market is changing quickly and Google wants to seize the moment. It is very good for the market and users.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Pursuing the Next Level of Artificial Intelligence


Today, The New York Times published in its section of technology, a nice article about Artificial Intelligence, entitled Pursuing the Next Level of Artificial Intelligence.

It is about the work of Daphne Koller, a researcher at Stanford University, in the field of Artificial Intelligence.

I think Artificial Intelligence is one of the most fields of research nowadays, and its advance is amazing in the last years.

In Business Intelligence and Performance Management, the AI together its relationed fields of study, mainly Machine Learning and Data Mining, will leverage the predictive analysis.


In this article, you can notice the power of Google, when Daphne said that many of her graduate students have gone to work at Google, although she tries to persuade undergraduates to stay in academia; and also when she said: “My husband still berates me for not having jumped on the Google bandwagon at the beginning”.

After all, Peter Norvig, a famous research of AI, is Director of Research of Google.

For those interested in AI, Peter Norvig and Stuart Russell wrote a very good book: Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach (2nd Edition)