Google on the move
roundup Search giant isn't resting on its laurels. New hiring points to browser interest. Another area of growth: TV search. Images: Video thrilled the search engine star
The search giant isn't resting on its laurels. As competition heats up, a new hiring points to Google's interest in browsers, while a TV search prototype marks another area for growth.
January 25, 2005
January 25, 2005
Images: Video thrilled the search engine star
January 24, 2005
January 24, 2005
January 20, 2005
January 19, 2005
January 18, 2005
January 17, 2005
January 13, 2005
Top Firefox programmer heads to Google
update Company hires lead programmer of Firefox browser, the newest step in the search giant's encroachment on Microsoft's turf.January 25, 2005
Professor's Web posting at center of libel suit
Former student's paper, now taken off Oakland University's site, said a Michigan company "committed crimes," appeals court says.January 25, 2005
Google rolls out TV search prototype
The Web heavyweight has been quietly developing Google Video, an engine that lets people search the text of TV shows.Images: Video thrilled the search engine star
January 24, 2005
Study: Net users confused about search
Millions of Internet users are hooked on search--but they know little about how a search engine works or how results are presented.January 24, 2005
previous coverage
Trademark dispute goes against Google
A French court orders the search giant to stop using a resort chain's trademarks to trigger keyword ads.January 20, 2005
Google, Cisco fail to win patent reform bid
They couldn't persuade the Supreme Court to hear a case they say is key to preserving a "balanced" patent system.January 19, 2005
Aiming to outsmart search tricksters
Google wants to thwart people who use blogs and forums to manipulate rankings in search results.January 18, 2005
Google wants 'dark fiber'
Is the company planning to build a global fiber-optic network from scratch? If so, why?January 17, 2005
Yahoo, Microsoft gaining ground on Google
Consumer survey of search engines keeps Google in the No. 1 slot, but two big competitors are closing the gap.January 13, 2005