The Good God Google

By MATHIEU BALEZ

Tuesday, April 19, 2005 Updated at 8:58 AM EST

http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20050322.gtflgooglemar22/
BNStory/Technology/

Front Lines is a guest viewpoint section offering perspectives on current
issues and events from people working on the front lines of Canada's
technology industry. Mathieu Balez is vice-president and co-founder of
Syllogix Inc., a management science consultancy based in Montreal.

Google Inc., Silicon Valley's latest garage-to-riches story, is
metamorphosing before our collective eyes into the single most important
company on the planet, if it hasn't claimed that title already.

And if you haven't been following its (near) weekly parade of new Web-based
software tools, then it's time you took notice: The Internet ... nay, the
entire computing experience ... nay, the fundamental way in which we access
and interact with information, is soon to become radically different.

Whether it be under Google's benevolent technological hegemony or within its
sinister monopolistic grasp, however, remains somewhat unclear.

It was not so long ago that looking up any piece of information, from random
trivialities to important scholarly research, was a time-consuming and
onerous task. These days, thanks to the magic and ubiquity of high-speed
Internet connections, this task has been rendered almost routine � due in no
small part to the algorithmic search fundamentals laid by Sergey Brin and
Larry Page (Google's PhD dropout/now billionaire founders).

Thanks to the sheer size of its Web content index and to PageRank (the name
they gave the mathematics used to intelligently evaluate the relevance of
search results), as well as to the simplicity of their interface and the
wickedly fast speed with which it returned shockingly accurate results �
Google had found, with its Web Search technology, just the right mix of
innovative features needed to propel it to the top of the Search space in
the late 90s. It's a title the company has yet to relinquish.

Yet, in the fickle domain of the World Wide Web, eyeballs and interest can
ebb and flow with devastating lack of loyalty toward superior technology
(remember Netscape? ICQ? Altavista?). This, combined with the herd of
cut-throat competitors and the more-recent phenomenon of profit-hungry
shareholders, means Google cannot afford but to out-innovate its adversaries
and lead the charge toward a brave new computing landscape.

Google's self-proclaimed mission is simple, almost child-like, to
paraphrase. "To organize all the world's information." Sweeping it is
however in vision, and if the company succeeds in achieving this noble
quest, all of humankind will reap the rewards for years to come (if not,
more speculatively, until the end of days, given the potential immortality
of digital bits). Imagine the entire history of human thought and experience
indexed, catalogued, and not only made eternal, but proffered to society
with the tools needed to decipher and access it in the most intuitive and
efficient ways possible � now that's something to shoot for.

But how to get from here to there?

Although it may seem that Google is already well-along the path toward such
an information-rich Utopia, the truth is that the current state of affairs
is only a first foray into the world of information retrieval. Today's
smartest search algorithms still only read words as text strings, failing to
make much sense (at least in the way a human would) of the ones and zeroes
churning through their distributed server clusters. This lack of semantic
connection is something being worked upon by the founder of the Web himself
(Sir Tim Breners-Lee, at MIT) in a radical re-design of how the Web is
structured and an update of the communication protocols that hold it all
together.

A standards-based change may however be unnecessary if semantic awareness
could be achieved by sufficiently ingenious mathematical models that could,
say, use statistical techniques and artificial intelligence-based
meta-crawling to extract meaning from otherwise cold and static textual
characters. You can bet your lunch money that Google has this in the works
on its lab bench, somewhere deep within the Googleplex.

Yet the extraction of meaning from the existing Web is but one facet of the
much larger goal. After all, Google never said it would limit its
information-organization expedition to only the World Wide Web.

So where are they going? The best way to divine the path ahead is by
examining some of the more important technologies Google has recently
released, and the acquisitions it has made.

The company has released two desktop tools: one for searching and organizing
images, the other to search for files of all kinds. This points to Google's
increasing interest in gaining some kind of presence (if not entire
ownership) over the desktop, at least in the short term.

It has purchased a satellite imagery company (Keyhole), added local search
functionality to the standard Web search, and created Google Maps � a jazzy
new Web-based application that allows you to interactively use maps to get
directions and find places (like a slicker, more intuitive version of
MapQuest). This signals Google's intent to leverage geographical data to
increase the revenue-generating potential of AdWords. Months (maybe weeks)
from now Google will combine Maps with Keyhole and Local Search to provide a
truly amazing (if not a little scary) way to locate destinations and be
presented with relevant ads.

It has purchased Blogger, a popular Web logging service, and created Orkut,
a social-networking site that allows users to link networks of friends. This
points to Google's interest in knowing more about who its users are. The
sterility and static nature of the Web search experience has thus far
frustrated Google by not providing a great sense of who its user are and
what they like, in an individualized way. (Conversely, its publication of
the Zeitgeist bears witness to their knowledge of societal interests in a
broader sense.)

To make further inroads into the average user's mind, the company recently
released a personalized version of Google search whereby you can customize
how you'd like search results delivered, based on your varied interests.
Soon Google may know everything about you, and exploit that information to
help merchants sell you pertinent goods - through AdWords of course.

It has created Google News � a Web-based software application that
automatically gathers and presents breaking current-events, from a wide
array of media outlets. If Google views this as more than just a nifty idea,
this could place it on a collision course with the entire mass-media
superstructure.

The company created Google Scholar, a tool to quickly search databases of
academic journals, and approached some leading colleges with offers to scan
and index all their public domain tomes. This highlights Google's progress
in its quest to provide instant access to all recorded human knowledge, but
raises questions about the future of bricks and mortar libraries and, more
widely, about the library model itself and the role Google will play in such
a future. (Surely not relevant ads in library books?)

It has released a free, Web-based email service called GMail, arguably the
first real salvo fired across its competitor's bows, showcasing its ability
to change the rules of the game. By offering 1 gigabyte of free storage, an
innovative interface and integration with its trademark search, this
software is more than simply a good piece of technology, but hints strongly
at a new network-centric application paradigm that Google may unveil more
widely, to try and unseat its chief rival, Microsoft (more on this later).

The company is increasing the ease with which web-programmers can access its
services. Google recently released a new application programming interface
(API) so that developers could interact directly with AdSense, and will
surely continue to open up such interfaces. By doing so, Google aims to
become the de facto standard method of conducting all manners of business on
the Web.

There Google's service called Froogle which helps consumers find, rank and
compare on-line product purchases. How long before Google is leveraging this
information against the personal information it's gathered on your shopping
preferences and then cross-referencing this to its database of advertisers?
Not long.

This whirlwind of hot new tech is but a sampling of the stuff Google has
brought public in recent months. Even more interesting are some of the
rumours swirling about upcoming technologies Google has under wraps. If
anything, some prognostication will make evident the bald genius and
uncompromising aptitude with which Google might pursue its goals.

First of all, Google has been noted to be purchasing large quantities of
'dark' fibre-optic capacity, on the cheap (much excess capacity was laid
during those heady days of irrational exuberance) to increase its
proprietary network bandwidth. To what end? Some of the most far-out rumours
say that Google is developing a Skype-esque software that will allow
high-quality voice communications over the Internet, costing virtually
nothing to the consumer. If Google is making a play into the telecom arena,
it would be a relatively late-comer in an arena that is widely populated.

Granted, having its own network capacity would allow the company to offer
quality-of-service guarantees that some of its competitors could not, but
there may be more here than meets the eye. Imagine for a moment what it
might do with all those flashing bits lighting up its optical cables. What
if the company recorded, and kept on its servers, a record of every
telephone conversation ever made? (Ignore, for the nonce, the plethora of
privacy concerns that jump out of the page). Now imagine it had technology
that made those digitally-recorded voice calls completely searchable, as you
would today search a past MSN Messenger conversation. What we're talking
about here is the eventual creation of a perfect digital record of your
entire memory, at your fingertips and searchable, all emblazoned with the
Google logo and, certainly, some pertinent and unobtrusive advertisement.
Scary? Maybe a little.

It is also most likely developing a Google-branded version of Firefox � the
up-and-coming Web-browser. There is no dearth of well-supported evidence on
the Web pointing to this fact. Having its own browser out there grants
Google the opportunity to package all of its services in one tidy delivery
channel. It also further encroaches upon Microsoft's territory.

Most significantly however, it will be the opening move on the chessboard of
next-generation desktop computing. I believe Google is vying to dethrone
Microsoft as the potentate of PC dominance by pulling the rug out from
underneath its feet, by changing the very rules of the operating system game
itself. Not unlike its e-mail and mapping software, which are entirely
Web-based, Google will release an operating system that will be completely
networked and centralized on its servers. You will literally no longer need
any software running on your local computer (except the Google Web-browser
of course, and a network connection). The computing experience will involve
booting your computer, logging into the net, and having access to all your
programs (and most of your data) which will reside happily in the ether �
all protected and secure, we will be assured, by the good god Google.

Google will realize the vision originally put forth by Sun Microsystems
(which failed to really give it any meaning) � The Network is the Computer.
The reason this model is so powerful is that it greatly simplifies software
distribution � when there's a problem or an upgrade, only one copy of the
software must be patched and everyone benefits from the update. Users will
likely benefit from a more stable computing experience (if we ignore, for
the moment, network congestion issues), since the OS will be configured and
optimized for high-performance on massively parallel servers.

This paradigm also does away with software piracy, since any paid
applications would now become subscription-based and thus impossible to hack
(barring password theft). This means a huge opportunity for most software
companies and a huge downer for the warez community.

It may also spell a sunshiney future for open source software, which Google
smiles upon (its servers are powered by Linux). Recall that in its rapid
rise to prominence, Google has amassed one of the largest networks of
hardware on the planet. Leap forward a few years, when processing power and
network bandwidth are essentially infinite, and you have the perfect
pre-conditions for a completely virtualized operating system and application
server environment.

Why does Google want to be there? Because it leaves Microsoft out in the
cold. Microsoft has structured its company around Windows � its flagship
operating system that is necessarily PC-centric. To do away with the need
for local software (and thus a local OS to manage its orchestration), Google
would catch the Seattle giant flat-footed and hopelessly behind. Sure
Microsoft has been touting its .NET application model for some time, but
that model still relies heavily on the user running a local copy of Windows.
Google, by one-upping Microsoft in the internet programming game, would now
control the medium by which software is distributed and sold, and no doubt
leverage it to dish relevant and unobtrusive advertisements.

Now, Microsoft may very well be playing this smart and developing its own
network-based OS as a pre-emptive move, but that would be undermining its
core Windows product and be incongruent with the company's historical
'wait-and-see' copycat approach. Unfortunately, I think this is one instance
in which being slow to respond might cost Bill Gates & co. the farm.

So it's 2010. Google owns the telecom market. They've become the primary
media source. They own the virtual desktop market. Where else could they be?
Home entertainment of course.

Google currently sells a network search appliance to companies large enough
to have network equipment, which allows those firms to use Google technology
to search their Intranets and the like. Imagine a miniaturized version of
such an appliance integrated into your home entertainment unit that recorded
all the video coming down your pipeline (or, more likely, tagged the video
source which it would already have indexed), thus rendering it entirely
searchable with Google-patented video-recognition algorithms. The software
would instantly recognize the images and environments contained in the video
stream, allowing it to respond to your queries and, not surprisingly, place
unobtrusive and directly pertinent advertisement nearby. This is further
augmentation of the perfect, searchable digital memory record I made
reference to in regards to its potential play into the telecom market.

When you consider the fountain of new products Google has released since it
has gone public, and take into account the jaw-dropping possibilities for
where it may be going, it is not hard to imagine that eventually the
Googleplex will have a stranglehold over all the information we produce and
consume on a daily basis.

It will then, of course, give it back to us on the silver platters of
searchability and accessibility.

Such informational dominance, rightfully, raises an eyebrow or two of
concern. Indeed, Google's current interest in taking over Wikipedia (a
Web-based, open-source, community-editable encyclopedia) has many people
nervous over its motives. Why does it want control of such a data source?
Once having achieved global supremacy of the information market, would
Google then turn around and start charging consumers a fee to access the
informational manna they crave so dearly? Or perhaps it will stop just short
of that, and instead use its information ownership and clout to simply, but
effectively, box-out Microsoft, leaving the Windows-wielding behemoth to
dine on the not-so-skimpy crumbs of the video game and console market.

Can Google get there? Can it really defeat Microsoft by becoming the One
True Information source? Time will tell, surely, but the company is
certainly positioning itself in a very forward-thinking attack formation.
There is no question it has challenges to resolve, the least of which is not
click-fraud, which presently threatens its primary revenue stream. And it
willl also need to figure out how to further penetrate corporate markets in
order to continue to satisfy market (i.e. shareholder) pressures.

Moreover, it will be incumbent upon Google to allay the community's fear
with respect to the security, privacy and integrity of the mounds of data
for which it will become gatekeepers. And, invariably, it will face
increased viral and network intruder attacks as their prominence grows,
meaning the company will be engaged into an ongoing white-hat/black-hat
hacker war.

Encouragingly, Google has been hiring talent like nobody's business, and has
laid the technological foundations for a future that is so awe-inspiring
that it borders on frightening genius. If Sergey and Larry stick to their
corporate mantra � Don't be evil � and are able to stem degeneration into
the typically corrupt corporate ethos, who knows, they may just succeed in
assuming the fair and honourable dominion over the world's information they
so naively set out to achieve eight years ago in their garage.



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