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Preface xi
Part 1 Different Planets
Chapter 1 Messing with the Magic 3
Part 2 The Google Story
Chapter 2 Starting in a Garage 27
Chapter 3 Buzz but Few Dollars (1999-2000) 46
Chapter 4 Prepping the Google Rocket (2001-2002) 66
Chapter 5 Innocence or Arrogance? (2002-2003) 94
Chapter 6 Google Goes Public (2004) 105
Chapter 7 The New Evil Empire? (2004-2005) 121
Part 3 Google Versus the Bears
Chapter 8 Chasing the Fox (2005-2006) 143
Chapter 9 War on Multiple Fronts (2007) 169
Chapter 10 Waking the Government Bear 186
Chapter 11 Google Enters Adolescence (2007-2008) 199
Chapter 12 Is "Old" Media Drowning? (2008) 228
Chapter 13 Compete or Collaborate? 242
Chapter 14 Happy Birthday (2008-2009) 262
Part 4 Googled
Chapter 15 Googled 281
Chapter 16 Where Is the Wave Taking Old Media? 296
Chapter 17 Where Is the Wave Taking Google? 322
Afterword 337
25 Business Maxims 345
Acknowledgments 371
Notes 373
Index 407
This book effectively combines a biography of sorts that focuses on Google as a company, and on its impact on media specifically and the world more generally. Throughout its pages, Auletta offers readers stories from inside the company, and these stories effectively illustrate the culture of Google. In addition, Mr. Auletta effectively captures the personalities of the founders and other leaders of this company, which provides valuable insight in how Google has come to be the corporate powerhouse that it is. Auletta's book is a critical look at Google's rise of power, its business practices, and its powerful ambitions. It is a must read for anyone who wants to experience a portrait of a truly "disruptive" company that is still making waves in the world of modern media.
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Posted January 14, 2012
Is this the best book evef?
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Posted January 7, 2012
This is the worst book ever
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Posted December 27, 2011
I didnt like it after i picked it up
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Posted December 26, 2011
I dont like the nook
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Posted December 24, 2011
Hii
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Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I have read several books about Google over the years, and this one is certainly the best written of them all. This is not surprising - Ken Auletta is a writer, journalist and media critic for The New Yorker. His writing is of an exceptionally high quality and a pleasure to read. The book is also very well researched, with first-hand accounts from many of the key players at Google and other companies that prominently feature in this story. Many of the stories about Google's early years have been written about before in other books and articles, but there are also a substantial number of new, untold accounts. In particular, we get a better idea of who were the important early investors in Google and the order in which they supported the fledgling company. Several not-so-famous high-level operatives are profiled who had a substantial influence on Google's development. However, even though these profiles are not the typical puff-pieces that have come to dominate the popular business press, they are not all that critical and candid either. From the point of view of writing an interesting story this is somewhat to be expected. The triumvirate that runs Google despite their incredible business success is composed of three very geeky individuals that don't necessarily have the most exciting personalities. On the other hand certain other highly visible members of the Google hierarchy perform rather obscure functions in the company that are hard to get too excited about from the outsider's point of view. None of the books about Google that have come out so far provide us with the intriguing stories of what is really going on inside Google - clashing personalities, conflicting projects, dazzling new ideas, development dead ends, etc. This is particularly noticeable when comparing books about Google to books about some other prominent technology companies - Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, etc. Apple in particular, even though infamous for the level of secrecy, has enjoyed a spate of recent books and articles that reveal much more about its product development and internal affairs than any one of the books about Google that are out there.
There are a couple more weaknesses of this book from the point of view of content. Google is a company that prides itself above all on its technology, and yet you will find very little in terms of technological details in this book. Even if you are not someone who is intrigued by technology, it would be important to read about some more prominent technological aspects of Google, at least in order to put Google's success in context. Most technology companies don't succeed, and this is particularly true of search engines, and it would be important to understand what are the technical advantages that Google has that keep it so well ahead of all of its competitors.
The other big problem that I had with this book is that it provides an inordinate amount of space to other companies and business developments in recent years. In particular, Auletta seems to be very fascinated with the media business and the rapid changes that have been happening to it in recent few years. For instance, the newspaper industry is going through what could be the greatest evolution in its history, and this book tries to give this change a perspective. Google and other internet companies are the key players in this transformation, and it is important to understand how newspapers and Google are influencing each other. However, Auletta doesn'
Anonymous
Posted October 20, 2010
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0 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 2, 2010
i really enjoyed reading this book, its very helpful for an economics class. It tells allot about how the company got started and some of the obstacles it had to face while getting to be at the point where it is now, the book contains allot of good information that not many people know, when i read the first chapter i was hooked and couldn't stop reading, it's absolutely amazingly well written.! :]
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Posted April 11, 2010
I Also Recommend:
Ken Auletta has written a phenomenal book about Google. From the founding to the lawsuits as publishers screamed against Google Books, Ken Auletta has told it all. This thrilling yet informative book starts out with the two co-founders, Larry and Sergey meeting at Stanford. The two immediately bonded and went on to found one of the most successful companies ever to walk the planet. Auletta goes on to tell the tale of the corporation. As is often stated in Auletta's book, "The internet makes information available. Google makes information accessible. He makes a compelling and innovative story which tells the tale of the company that revolutionized the world of search. Google.
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Posted February 20, 2010
Mr. Auletta's reputation and seat at the New Yorker give him unprecedented access to his subjects. His skill as an interviewer generates answers that permit him insights missing elsewhere in the oft trod ground of the growing Google empire. The rapid development of Google and the unusual personalities and relationship between its two founders are the driving force of 3/4 of the book. In Part 4 that carries the title of the book GOOGLED, the author marshals his years of media reporting and writes with nuance as he looks into the next chapters of our increasingly Googled world. There is more than imagination at work here. There are the educated insights of a reporter challenged by his subject.
Peter M. Herford 20 Feb 2010
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Overview
"The fullest account yet of the rise of one of the most profitable, most powerful, and oddest businesses the world has ever seen."-San Francisco Chronicle
Just eleven years old, Google has profoundly transformed the way we live and work-we've all been Googled. Esteemed media writer Ken Auletta uses the story of Google's rise to explore the future of media at large. This book is based on the most extensive cooperation ever granted a journalist, including access to closed-door meetings and interviews with industry legends, including Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Marc Andreessen, and media guru "Coach" ...