Web Design - Publish.com
Publish.com Ziff-Davis Enterprise  
SEARCH · ONLINE MEDIA · MOBILE · WEB DESIGN · GRAPHICS TOOLS · PRINTING · PHOTO · TIPS · OPINIONS
Home arrow Web Design arrow Google's Next Move: Consumer Hardware?
Google's Next Move: Consumer Hardware?
By Ben Charny

Rate This Article:
Add This Article To:
News Analysis: Rumors of a Google-branded PC suggest that the search company may be about to begin a consumer hardware era.

After so many years of dealing almost exclusively in Internet-based services like search, sources say Google Inc. appears to be entering a new phase focused more on consumer electronics.

The Internet giant, based in Mountain View, Calif., is considering selling its own version of a wireless networking device for homes, according to two sources, and is reportedly in talks with giant retailer Wal-Mart Inc. to sell an inexpensive Google-branded personal computer.

Google already makes Google-branded hardware, mainly consisting of a line of search engines meant for businesses. Google-branded consumer devices, outside of promotional items like Lava lamps, are hard to find.

A quick trip through the Internet found just one Google-branded consumer electronic device: a PC memory stick with the Google logo, for sale in the United Kingdom.

But there's more to come, according to the rumor mill.

"Over time, Google could become more of a hardware company than anything else," Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. analysts said in a note to clients in mid-December.

Google watchers said they expect more evidence later this week of this supposed new push off the personal computer and into living rooms. Google is attending the gigantic International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which is one of the largest consumer electronics shows anywhere.

Read more here about the upcoming International CES (Consumer Electronics Show) event.

Rumors abound as to what Google plans to do at CES, and what co-founder Larry Page will say during a keynote address scheduled for Friday.

One of the juicier possibilities, which some commentators say they've already confirmed, involves the introduction of a mesh networking device some have dubbed the "Google cube."

It's a version of a home networking device that wirelessly shuttles digital videos, pictures, music and other kinds of content from personal computers to various home electronics.

Bear Stearns said it thinks the cube's price tag may be heavily subsidized by Google, so as to bring it low enough to be widely affordable.

Read more here about possible uses for Google cubes.

Google, a PC maker? According to the Los Angeles Times, a report Google has partly denied, the company has been in talks with Wal-Mart and other major retailers about selling an inexpensive personal computer.

A Google spokesperson, reached Tuesday, denied that the company had plans to sell a Google-branded personal computer.

"We have many PC partners who serve their markets exceedingly well and we see no need to enter that market; we would rather partner with great companies," a Google spokesperson wrote in an e-mail.

But it's hard to square Google's denial with its participation, announced in October, along with chip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Linux operating system specialist Red Hat Inc. and other tech luminaries, in the drive to create and sell a $100 PC to the developing world.

Production of the PC, which also features a manual crank for generating battery power, is due in late 2006. The companies participating say they intend to build 100 million to 200 million units by 2008.

A Google cell phone is also within the realm of possibility. Google was recently tapped to be the default search engine for a Web browser from Opera Software that's meant for use on cell phones and is due out this month.

Read more here about Google's new connection with Opera over mobile search.

It's a short hop from there to a "Google Phone" that comes fully loaded with cell phone versions of Google's services. If ESPN, the sports cable channel, can sell an ESPN phone, why not a Google phone?

Predominantly software-based companies that arguably approach Google's size have tried to make the leap to the hardware world, with mixed results.

One such is Internet company Yahoo Inc.; A cell phone that comes with many Yahoo features for the wireless device has failed to spark much interest.

But should the apparent new strategy prove successful, Google could become even more of a threat to Microsoft Corp. than it is already.

Save for creating its own operating system, Google has managed to all but match Microsoft's Internet offerings, feature for feature.

By moving into consumer electronics, Google would push beyond Microsoft in the hardware arena.

Microsoft has traditionally limited its own hardware devices to relatively few items, including its popular Xbox gaming system. It has done some experimental research in the mesh networking arena, but that has been the limit so far.

"At a minimum, [people] should take away from this that Google is not just a software/programming company any more," Bear Stearns recently advised its investor clientele.

Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest news, views and analysis on enterprise search technology.


Discuss Google's Next Move: Consumer Hardware?
 
I guess that to get the <a...
>>> Post your comment now!
 

 
 
>>> More Web Design Articles          >>> More By Ben Charny
 


Buyer's Guide
Explore hundreds of products in our Publish.com Buyer's Guide.
Web design
Content management
Graphics Software
Streaming Media
Video
Digital photography
Stock photography
Web development
View all >

ADVERTISEMENT


FREE ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE ESEMINARS AT ESEMINARSLIVE.COM
  • Dec 10, 4 p.m. ET
    Eliminate the Drawbacks of Traditional Backup/Replication for Linux
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by InMage
  • Dec 11, 1 p.m. ET
    Data Modeling and Metadata Management with PowerDesigner
    with Joel Shore. Sponsored by Sybase
  • Dec 12, 12 p.m. ET
    Closing the IT Business Gap: Monitoring the End-User Experience
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Compuware
  • Dec 12, 2 p.m. ET
    Enabling IT Consolidation
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Riverbed & VMWare
  • VTS
    Join us on Dec. 19 for Discovering Value in Stored Data & Reducing Business Risk. Join this interactive day-long event to learn how your enterprise can cost-effectively manage stored data while keeping it secure, compliant and accessible. Disorganized storage can prevent your enterprise from extracting the maximum value from information assets. Learn how to organize enterprise data so vital information assets can help your business thrive. Explore policies, strategies and tactics from creation through deletion. Attend live or on-demand with complimentary registration!
    FEATURED CONTENT
    IT LINK DISCUSSION - MIGRATION
    A Windows Vista® migration introduces new and unique challenges to any IT organization. It's important to understand early on whether your systems, hardware, applications and end users are ready for the transition.
    Join the discussion today!



    .NAME Charging For Whois
    Whois has always been a free service, but the .NAME registry is trying to change that.
    Read More >>

    Sponsored by Ziff Davis Enterprise Group

    NEW FROM ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE


    Delivering the latest technology news & reviews straight to your handheld device

    Now you can get the latest technology news & reviews from the trusted editors of eWEEK.com on your handheld device
    mobile.eWEEK.com

     


    RSS 2.0 Feed


    internet
    rss graphic Publish.com
    rss graphic Google Watch

    Video Interviews


    streaming video
    Designing Apps for Usability
    DevSource interviews usability pundit Dr. Jakob Nielsen on everything from the proper attitude for programmers to the importance of prototyping in design to the reasons why PDF, Flash and local search engines can hurt more than they help.
    ADVERTISEMENT