Nicholas G. Carr has published on his weblog “Rough Type” an interesting article “Google eyes” on Google’s latest move, entering the more “conventional” internet advertising market and thus start competing with Yahoo’s and Microsoft’s MSN advertising services in this larger and more competitive market of advertising for things people do not know yet that they want to buy.
More on Google’s latest move can be found at The New York Times’s webpage.
Nicholas Carr is a former executive editor of the Harvard Business Review and an acclaimed business writer and speaker whose work centers on strategy, innovation, and technology. His 2004 book Does IT Matter? Information Technology and the Corrosion of Competitive Advantage, published by Harvard Business School Press, set off a worldwide debate about the role of computers in business.
Carr has been a speaker at MIT, Harvard, Wharton, the University of Sydney, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas as well as at many industry, corporate, and professional events throughout the Americas, Europe, and Asia. His ideas have been featured in The Economist, Newsweek, Business Week, Fortune, Forbes, USA Today, Washington Post, New York Times, and CIO, among many other publications. He has also appeared as a business commentator on CNN, CNBC, CNBC-Asia, and Tech TV. He holds a B.A. from Dartmouth College and an M.A. from Harvard University.
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