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Google

Google Announces Motorola-Made Nexus 6 and HTC-Made Nexus 9 201

An anonymous reader writes In addition to Android 5.0 Lollipop, Google today also announced the first devices running the new version of its mobile operating system: the Nexus 6 and the Nexus 9. The former is a phablet built by Motorola, and the latter is a tablet built by HTC. The Nexus 6 is going up for pre-order on October 29, starting at $649. The Nexus 9 meanwhile is going up for pre-order this Friday (October 17), and you'll also be able to get it in stores on November 3.

Comment Re:Again? (Score 1) 96

I'm failing to see the problem. That is how competition is supposed to work: doing something better than someone else.

Except that Google Places was not better. Google utilized its (well-deserved) virtual monopoly in search to promote its own service above everyone else. Plus the services was integrated into Google Maps. Even then it took at least a year before they got everything working right.

Did Google threaten anyone, or did Google just provided a better service/experience?

I doubt they threatened anyone. They did *not*, however, provide a better experience. In fact, their review services were pretty unreliable which is one of the main reasons why they bought Zagat. They've been using their search monopoly to promote their service and, when the service failed to deliver, they used their cash reserves to buy similar companies to better the experience. Nothing wrong with the latter but the former (placing Google Places results over everything else even if the quality of the result is questionable) does strike me as being anti-competitive.

Did Google conspire with other companies to put Yelp out of business?

No they didn't and I fail to see where I claimed that. Google tends not to conspire. It just buys whatever it can't reproduce. Remember, before they bought Zagat they tried to buy Yelp themselves.

Did Google somehow leverage a monopoly position in search to gain a monopoly position in reviewing stuff?

Yes they did. I don't understand the reason for saying "somehow", however. Look up any local restaurant, for example. Google not only places its service above all other results but it also takes up the entire sidebar to give you information about the restaurant. It utilizes its own monopoly to market its other services. This is the same case for Google Flights which places itself above all organic search results (as opposed to sponsored search results).

As far as I know, Google is just a better competitor.

They are a lot better now. It took a few years, however, and during the entire time they've been promoting their service on their search results pages over all other services - not because of quality but because it's a Google service.

Comment Again? (Score 1) 96

The problem with that sentiment is that Google's rivals aren't other search engines. Their rivals are any business whose model Google finds favorable, then copies copies, and then promotes it using its own search engine. For example, let's say you want to fly to Toronto from NYC. If you google "nyc to toronto", one of the first and biggest search results is from Google Flights showing you a wide range of flights and prices. In this case, Google's rivals are Orbitz, Expedia, Travelocity, etc. Same thing goes for review services. No matter what one thinks of Yelp, they were one of the first few place review services around. Then Google tried to buy them and, when that failed, copied their business model and turned it into Google Places which held top place in any location search.
Power

Capturing Solar Power With Antennae 190

necro81 writes "Researchers at the University of Missouri and the Idaho National Laboratory have demonstrated a new method of capturing solar power. Rather than using semiconductors to capture photons of sunlight, they fabricated small coiled antennae (several um square) that resonate with the wave nature of light. The antennae are tuned towards midrange infrared light (5-10 um), which is abundant on our cozy-warm Earth — even at night. They also demonstrated a way to imprint these coils on a substrate, like how CDs or vinyl records are produced, but could be scaled to roll-to-roll mass production. The usual caveat applies: it may be 5-10 years until this could hit the market."

Comment Spiders in space... (Score 5, Interesting) 507

Hypothetically let us say that the spider somehow ended up outside the space shuttle. The question is what would happen to a spider if we left it floating in space for a week or two? Considering that they're cold blooded and their circulatory system is rather basic and non-pressurized (since all the organs bathe in a pool of copper based blood) will the spider die? And, if so, from what?

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