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Hail Google! Wall Street is crumbling and traditional media companies are struggling to survive. But Internet bellwether Google - the king of search - beat analysts' expectations today and posted solid earnings: $1.35 billion in revenue for the quarter. That's up 31% from a year...
That's because it starts with consumers, who will continue to use Google more than ever. In tough times, everyone looks for value, and what's more valuable than something you get for nothing? Google's search, maps, email and documents improve at an astounding rate, and the company continues to invest in making those products ever better, drawing in more users at home and work...
...company that's dominated the Internet by doing one simple thing well, Google has also managed to build a thriving side business in bells and whistles: its features offer everything from the ability to search inside books and videos to the ability to watch a kid fall off a bike from the privacy of your own home. So when I heard that Google had unveiled a new feature called Mail Goggles that is designed to stop you from sending embarrassing e-mails while drunk by requiring you to do math problems, my first thought was, That's the most ridiculous...
...been in two years. "Google is down 25% in the last month or so, but ... there is nothing wrong with Google structurally," says Sandler. "Every company exposed to advertising is having problems because budgets in general are contracting and no one is immune." Still, the Mountain View, Calif., search giant is on everyone's mind. "If I am wrong and Google misses, it will magnify a weakening market," says Jason Avilio, analyst at Kaufman Brothers. "If it does better it will help the market, but I would expect the status...
Irish emigration is nothing new, of course. From the millions who fled poverty and famine over the last century and a half to the many thousands who have regularly quit the country in search of work right up to the end of the 1980s, Ireland's best and brightest have a long history of leaving in search of opportunity and sunnier climates. But a decade and a half of red-hot growth all but wiped out large-scale emigration, and Ireland has instead found itself a destination for immigrants from Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe...