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Thursday, April 3, 2008
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TOP NEWS
Microsoft-Yahoo Ad Network Still Isn't Google
Hackers Infiltrate Google Searches
Google Docs 'Geared' Up To Work Offline
Has Google Peaked?

BELOW THE FOLD
April Fooled by Google and Virgin?
Information Builders Releases WebFOCUS For Google Maps
Google Has A Privacy Policy That Doesn't Offer Privacy


EDITOR'S NOTE:
Google's CIO Will Be Hard to Replace
Tom Claburn Google employs plenty of impressive people. But Douglas Merrill, Google's CIO, is the only Googler I've met that I've mentioned to my kids as an example of accomplishment in the face of adversity.

Merrill is leaving Google to join EMI.

Born in Hanover, New Hampshire and raised in Conway, Arkansas, Merrill was deaf from age three to six due to an infection in his auditory nerve. When I interviewed him in 2006, he apologized for his accent, vaguely southern and Canadian, that latter flavor the product of a Canadian voice coach.

Merrill happens to be dyslexic. "Some things that are easy for some people are pretty hard for me," he said at the time. "It's very hard for me to read. It's very hard for me to do math. It's very hard for me to remember what people look like in pictures."

You'd never know it from his resume. He graduated from the University of Tulsa having majored in social and political organization. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton in Psychology. He joined RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, CA as an information scientist, studying the use of technology and computer simulations in schools, and military communication. He taught classes in South East Asia in information security and subsequently joined Price Waterhouse and became leader of its West Coast security practices. He later joined Charles Schwab as SVP of information security. He joined Google in late 2003 at the age of 33.

Not bad for a hacker. "Arkansas was an interesting place to grow up," Merrill explained. "At the time, there was a pretty active white supremacist faction there. And they were beginning to use bulletin boards -- remember the old dial up things? And I'm pretty anti- that...particular perspective. So one of the things I found that really interested me is it turns out that it's not actually all that hard to crash those bulletin boards and make them unavailable."

Crashing Klan bulletin boards got Merrill interested in technology and developed into what he sees as one of the themes of his life: how technology actually works and how people use technology.

In 2006, Merrill had The Clash's London Calling as his mobile ringtone. Music, he says, is one of his two passions. It will be interesting to see whether he can translate that passion into a way to save the ailing music industry.

Google will have to work hard to continue to attract individuals like Merrill as it matures. To be sure, Google still has plenty of top talent. But the tide that was coming into Google is now going out, and the sand is shifting beneath the company's feet.

- Tom Claburn
Editor, Grok On Google

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  TOP NEWS

Microsoft-Yahoo Ad Network Still Isn't Google
As Microsoft continues its enthusiastic pursuit of Yahoo , one of the supposed prizes of that acquisition is the Yahoo advertising network. Steve Ballmer says that catching Google is his goal, so a strong competitor to Google's ad network is critical. But is that really what they are getting?

Hackers Infiltrate Google Searches
GoogleIn the past few weeks, hackers have taken advantage of Web pages that incorrectly use JavaScript to infect thousands of sites. The altered sites show up in a Google search, and when clicked on, redirect the user to a malicious program that aims to steal information.

Google Docs 'Geared' Up To Work Offline
Google is planning to launch Gears support for Google Docs. Google Gears is a free, open-source multi-platform JavaScript application programming interface (API) that allows Web applications to work offline. For end-users, Gears takes the form of a browser plug-in for Internet Explorer or Firefox.

Has Google Peaked?
Well that was fast -- in August 2004 Google Inc. went public at $80 a share and the stock climbed as high as $742 in November 2007, an 828% rise. But since then it's lost 37% of its value and some executives have bailed. Now with the news that Google's VP of Engineering, Douglas Merrill, just bolted for a position as president digital at record company, EMI, concerns are being raised if Google's best days are behind it.

 

  BELOW THE FOLD

April Fooled by Google and Virgin?

Information Builders Releases WebFOCUS For Google Maps

Google Has A Privacy Policy That Doesn't Offer Privacy

Google Mashup: Video Ads, Privacy, Online Safety

  Grok On Google Marketplace (Sponsored Links)
 

Grok On Google: Tracking The Agent Of Change

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Grok on Google: Tracking The Agent Of Change