
•  Co-founder Larry Page says search engine has been losing out to micro-blogging  site in battle to provide real-time information • Chief  executive hints that Google could go into partnership with Twitter Richard Wray - guardian.co.uk,   Tuesday  19 May 2009 20.26 BST Google's co-founder, Larry Page, admitted today  that the company has been losing out to Twitter in the race to meet web user's  demand for real-time information. Instead,  the search engine's chairman and chief executive, Eric Schmidt, hinted that it  could become a partner of the micro-blogging site. Twitter  has come from nowhere to become the third most visited social networking site  in the  Google's  search engine, in contrast, can take hours or even days to update. While this  is usually not a problem as accuracy of results is more important than speed of  updating, as the internet community comes to demand ever faster information  Twitter has left Google in its wake. "People  really want to do stuff real time and I think they [Twitter] have done a great  job about it," Page said in a closing address at Google's Zeitgeist  conference . "I think we have done a relatively poor job of creating  things that work on a per-second basis." He told  the audience about the impact of technology on the world and that he has been  asking his research teams to get faster. "Now I think they understand  that," he said. "I think we will do a better job of some of those  things." But he  admitted that there is a trade-off between making information instantly  available and ensuring its accuracy. The rise  of Twitter has sparked speculation that the cash-rich Google could buy the  business. Speaking after the event, Schmidt refused to comment on that  speculation but admitted "they have done a very good job of 'what am I  doing right now' – their tagline – it is very impressive." He  stressed that because of the way that Twitter is built, which allows any  developer to take its stream of real-time messages, or tweets, and build  applications around them, Google does not need to buy the business to get  involved in the indexing of real-time information generated by Twitterers. "There  is a presumption that somehow you cannot have multiple solutions that  co-exist," he said. "We can talk to them ... there is all sorts of  stuff we can do. We do not have to buy everybody to work with them, the whole  principle of the web is people can talk to each other." Earlier  in the day, Page was forced to defend Google's Street View service.  "Putting someone's house on Street View is not the same as putting it in a  newspaper," he said. "It's radically different." Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/may/19/google-twitter-partnership
  
  
 
 

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