Larry Page, Founder & CEO, Google

with Larry Page
in Technology
on Monday, May 21, 2012 * * * * *

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  • Comments 15
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    1. charliesheep  04/11/2013 05:53 PM Report

      AT GOGGLE THEY; LOOK AT THE HOMELESS OUT THEIR "WINDOWS' [ NOT MICROSOFT] AT THOSE THEY FIRED [ROMNEY] BUT HAVEN'T FOUND THAT THEY ARE RELAVANT TO "PROCESS" ENOUGH; SO, THAT THEY [GOGGLE] PROVIDE--ANY-- RETURN PATHWAY, BACK TO THAT COMMUNITY-THRU A-WORK OR FOUNDATION THAT GIVES--THOSE SQUATER'S SUPPORT! I.E. TO PROVIDE; OTHERWISE TO , THE SAME PEOPLE [NERDS] WHO WERE UNEMPLOYABLE IN "BLUE' COLLAR WORLD THEY DID OBVIATE! HMMM! LET THEM EAT EACH OTHER-IS THEIR--APOPLECTIC VEIW!

    2. Seattle  12/05/2012 03:31 AM Report

      best moment, 33:45

      what does 15% look like?! - Charlie Rose

      (big smile with a deep breath) ... - Larry Page

    3. SharkswithfrikingLazers  07/31/2012 01:16 AM Report

      "Data Reciprocity" is the Larry loop.

      Google would starve without data. Much of my information comes from Google sorting the data.

      Facebook has teamed with Microsoft for data sharing as Bill Gates told us.

      Larry mentioned data reciprocity three times.

      Google in Hong Kong is blocked by China's firewall and the firewall slows the data to a crawl.

      The data will set you free Charlie (or in China imprison you).

      It's the data. It's the speed of the data. It's tailoring the service to your data.

      DATA!

    4. finalfantasytown  05/27/2012 10:57 PM Report

      The first prophecy is plague to the people who had luck to witness the event.

    5. finalfantasytown  05/27/2012 10:49 PM Report

      witnessing the birth of Apollo and Apollo temple in Troy.

    6. RuslanaDemille  05/27/2012 09:50 PM Report

      ...very much enjoyed watching this delightfully cordial video conference daintily introducing personable magnitude of charismatic Mr.Larry Page, with his incredibly persuasive flavorful eloquence, deliciously accumulating plentiful colloquial impact, provocatively amplified by hearty passion so lusciously infused with elucidating sexual torridity ...each ardent phrase of pleasant video conversation originating ambiance of luxuriously permeating luminous magnetizing influx, marveling this sizzling gathering with dynamic intoxicating radiance...Mr. Page's thriving capacity to harbor splendidly resonating gravity of affectionate attention is certainly his autographic personal manifesto...well, with great admiration, the collar of singularly unbuttoned elegant shirt kept breathtakingly insist on electrifying erotic excitement...greatly enjoyed this exuberant video...thank you...

    7. SharkswithfrikingLazers  05/23/2012 02:43 AM Report

      Charlie, didn't we recently hear that the folks at Huffington Post worked hard to figure out Google search and that is one reason an "aggregator" was sold for $315M.

      Being able to break to the top of the results of a Google search appears to be quite lucrative.

    8. SharkswithfrikingLazers  05/23/2012 02:12 AM Report

      Yes, something will shake things up.

      We are told that 'everyone in the world will have a mobile device connected to the internet—always on, instantly on, much better experience.'

      I predict more anxiety and mental illness.

    9. SharkswithfrikingLazers  05/23/2012 02:08 AM Report

      We are told, 'YouTube is incredibly exciting. Bought it for $1.4B. People should be watching an hour a day instead of 8 minutes a day. $100 million in professional content coming up for YouTube. Able to skip ads.'

      Yes, YouTube is incredibly exciting. I love it and have learned a wealth of information on my journey of the mind.

      I have also laughed and cried.

      What Google needs to do is give me a way to beam what I am watching on YouTube over my television while a commercial is playing. Then you will get more time per day and a bigger audience. I need to be able to share with a room full of people. Then I can have YouTube parties and we will have an alternative to football/sports during major holidays.

    10. SharkswithfrikingLazers  05/23/2012 01:59 AM Report

      Charlie, it is not universities, it is STANFORD UNIVERSITY:

      Over the years, Stanford has perfected the art of helping its students and professors start businesses and share in the spoils of their work through favorable licensing deals.

      As a result, generation after generation—HP to Cisco (CSCO) to Sun Microsystems to Yahoo (YHOO) to Google (GOOG), Instagram, and Palantir—have emerged from the university.

      http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-04-27/in-defense-of-stanford-university

      Get thee to Stanford or send friend Friedman.

    11. RichinDE  05/23/2012 01:36 AM Report

      I have a very strong feeling that Google is working on universal artificial intelligence. I have thought that for a long time. I wish someone would confront them ask Larry, Sergey, and/or Eric to come out and tell us where they stand on AI.

    12. anne4444  05/22/2012 04:54 PM Report

      The advanced technologies beyond our imagination or any possibilities will be there soon in our near future, if we can eliminate all suffering in human lives, homeless, foodless, jobless, or even useless…

      If we have the compassion, we will not over-populate earth and kill animals (we share the genes with many animals and they are our ancestors) to sustain our lives. If we have the compassion, we will not gain pleasure at cost of others.

      ============================================================

      This 3-dimensional physical world does not exist in reality. We use this physical world to gain information into our souls. The soul works more than just a complex computer, having the capabilities of saving information, generating behaviors/thoughts/senses, having the will to survive, giving birth and etc…

      The Sun, the gravitation force and our senses make this physical world to be so real to us, therefore we have never noticed that we are all enslaved ourselves for our limitation.

      ===============================================================

      Here are 12 dimensions in the universe:3 physical dimensions, 3 non-physical dimensions, time, universe expansion, possibility, parallel dimension, merging/separation and duplication.

      The highest physical l being in our universe is a nine dimensional intelligent being. After that, we can only see non-physical spiritual beings.

      The 48 dimensional intelligent beings are purely high vibrating frequency of “female” energy filled with information; they have no form, no face and no gender as we defined, but they can transform themselves into anything and go into any physical bodies. They created us and our universe.

      ==============================================================

      New understanding of eight senses or eight consciousnesses:

      5 senses: sight, hearing, taste, touch and smell by eye, ear, tongue, skin and nose.

      6 sense: intuition and compassion by the invisible soul inside our body

      7 sense: invisible and immortal “data cable” transferring information between 6 sense and 8 sense during sleeping.

      8 sense: our united non-separable soul kept together within mother earth. Invisible and immortal.

      ===============================================================

      When we look into the sky, we are all humble by the creation.

      There are total 48 dimensions in our universe. 36 dimensions are inaccessible to us. Our souls can access 12 dimensions (12 strand soul DNA) while this material world with plant earth limits us to only 3 dimensions with Double Helix DNA.

      Knowledge is limitless, so does intelligent being.

      Our soul has no difference; we are united as one. Our differences in body, senses, sex, intelligence, power and wealth, is only the trap in the darkness which prevent us to unite our other half soul into the lightness.

      LIGHTNESS INTO THE SPACE AS SPACE- BEING. IT IS OUR FUTURE.

    13. Ellen_Dibble  05/22/2012 02:12 PM Report

      It was interesting to hear about the Google culture and values, especially when we had the additional clips from three others for comparison. The person I know who is a Google person might as well be "cut from the same piece of cloth" as Larry Paige, same use of eye contact for instance, same use of voice for instance, same way of navigating a conversation. I saw certainly the same assured values, the same passion for the work. I can't say I followed whatever it was about mutual transparency with Facebook, but I was a lot more interested in the way the give-and-take was happening, a feeling that this same "piece of cloth" is one I happen to know real well -- and trust completely, by the way.

    14. easyrevolver  05/22/2012 02:00 PM Report

      What a fantastic interview. Thanks to everyone who makes this programming possible, truly.

      Thank you.

    15. REMant  05/22/2012 11:44 AM Report

      Mobile devices require services. Google provides services, not hardware or programs. But they needed a uniform O/S for the mobile devices, and some version of Unix (Linux) was the only option. Chrome may have surpassed M$' Internet Explorer, but has only 1/3 of the mkt. My first experience with it was so bad, I've never given it a second try. And I wouldn't have appreciated the tracking anyway. I use Opera, sometimes Firefox if something just doesn't want to work with it. You can in fact say I've pretty much de-Googled myself.

      I've used Bing now for quite a while, and it's been getting better and better, tho I miss the quick views they appear to have ditched, but there are times when Google turns up things Bing doesn't find at all. I probably should use Dogpile, which searches both and Yahoo! too. I wouldn't use Gmail, nor have a Google account any longer. Altho I appreciate the ability to search books (when it works) I think they've made a complete mess of Google Books, and am happy to see Internet Archive doing very well without them, and I wish they'd never uploaded their old books to it, messing up the catalog. I avoid downloading their copies since I found one short several pages, and I detest not being able to find out from the description or file name which volume of which printing of something is which. If these guys HAD completed college I'd hope they'd have spent enough time in a library to know how it operates. I still have an old version of Google Earth (since I ditched their updater), but I use Mapquest. I despise YouTube and the rest of those video sites, much, if not most, of whose content seems to me to violate the DMCA. Google News also seems to attempt to bypass copyright. I would never dare use any of its cloud applications. Most of these things were acquisitions and developed by others. And there's no doubt the co intends to compete across the IT spectrum, tho it still gets 99% of its revenue from ads.

      Network neutrality, is, of course, in Google's interest. But I think the patronage of giant cos in general reflects a disturbingly un-entrepreneurial, herd-like mentality in the public, particularly when their products are not the best available. Google may believe it is organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful, but it seems to me to also exhibit and old-fashioned corporatism still alive and well on the Left Coast along with its social ideals. If it didn't it wouldn't be in its financial position.

      There are, BTW, still many other search engines besides Google, tho it has about 85% of the world mkt. They don't get business because they haven't got the ad and investor support and don't get that because they haven't got the users, in a vicious circle, but one encouraged by Google's modus operandi. There have always been two approaches to finding things on the web, keyword search and indexing. The latter being both difficult and labor-intensive, searching has has been basically it, but search engines are left with the task of trying to provide the most relevant results. Google basically related websites to keyword, and to each other, while Yahoo!, for instance, went the indexing route (Dmoz still does). The rise of "content mills" aimed at exploiting Google's methodology, and dissatisfaction with its policy of using users own search history to narrow relevance, have given competitors like DuckDuckGo and Blekko an opportunity to go in other directions, but they are up against what amounts to the Google monopoly.