Google falling

The inability to retain key employees is the first clear sign of company in decline, so this news has to be disturbing to Google shareholders:

Facebook hires away Google’s top chef

Is it “poaching” when a company steals a rival’s chef? At Google, executive chef Josef Desimone scrambled cruelty-free eggs by the truckload. Now Facebook has hired him to replace steam-heated trays of takeout with the kind of free food Googlers are used to. For engineers, Facebook is the new dreamland, and a company cafeteria is the kind of perk they’ve come to expect.

The end is near for the search monopoly.

7 thoughts on “Google falling”

  1. Hello Dear and Respected,
    I hope you are fine and carrying on the great work you have been doing for the Internet surfers. I am Ghazala Khan from The Pakistani Spectator (TPS), We at TPS throw a candid look on everything happening in and for Pakistan in the world. We are trying to contribute our humble share in the webosphere. Our aim is to foster peace, progress and harmony with passion.

    We at TPS are carrying out a new series of interviews with the notable passionate bloggers, writers, and webmasters. In that regard, we would like to interview you, if you don’t mind. Please send us your approval for your interview at my email address “ghazala.khi at gmail.com”, so that I could send you the Interview questions. We would be extremely grateful.

    regards.

    Ghazala Khan
    The Pakistani Spectator
    http://www.pakspectator.com

  2. And it just so happens that we have $20 MILLION DOLLARS that we need to smuggle out of the country and will give you half if you help us. But you must pay $10 thousand in bribes first.

  3. How come my message about the monopoly claim got deleted? If you the language was inappropriate at least have the guts to address the main point. How is google a monopoly?

    Mani

  4. Mani has been in a cave for the last five years. Google is a de facto monopoly. Most traffic monitoring services estimate Google’s share at around 63% of the search market. The nearest rival, Yahoo, is around 21%. Everyone else is in the single digit percentage or less. That does not appear to be a competitive market to me, especially if Yahoo partners with Google to avoid being taken over by Microsoft.

Leave a Reply to Richard Bennett Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *