Google (web) Analytics is now free for websites that have less than 5-million page views.
Urchin Goes Free, Becomes Google Analytics
Google has removed the fees from its web analytics package, which should be a welcome bonus to AdWords users who may have shied away from it previously.
Google Stock Brushing Against $400
Investors could be partying like it’s 1999 again if GOOG manages to clamber over the $400 per share barrier, hitting a price that even the height of the dot-com era would have seen as excessive.
Google The Next Commerce Giant
Analyst Safa Rashtchy at Piper Jaffray thinks we’re in the midst of E-commerce 3.0, where Google stands ready to become the next great online commercial power.
No Free Google Analytics Lunch
Just like your mother told you, if it’s too good to be true, it probably isn’t true. Google offered free analytics today, setting off some buzz.
How Not To Kill Your Wife With Google
Not to provide a how-to guide for researching the right way to kill your wife or anything, or rather, a how-not-to, but this guy’s just made a whole bunch of mistakes. Mistake # 1: Being openly Pagan in a small southern town. Mistake #2: Googling all the information about how to kill your wife on your own computers. Mistake #3: Not clearing out your cache. Mistake #4: Defending yourself in court.
Google Analytics To Alter Google Algorithm?
The big news today is that Google has made Urchin free and renamed it Google Analytics. This could be a serious blow to competitors such as WebTrends, although I doubt Google will initially offer a free package that competes on an enterprise level.
The Google Algorithm: 400 Million Variables
A century ago (well, ok, 1999) an article on Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s new company described the nascent Google as a search engine that (gasp) just searches.
Scoble Deletes Anti-Google Post
Microsoft’s Chief Blogger Robert Scoble pulled a anti-Google post from his blog yesterday. I’m reprinting it here (thanks to the Bloglines cache) for you to peruse…
Google Details Mountain View WiFi Plans
The proposal from Google to the leadership of its home city of Mountain View would place 300 transmitters on lightpoles to make the city one big wireless hotspot.