3 Results for Bing

As Microsoft Powers Yahoo!'s Search, Whither Yahoo!'s Open Efforts?

Back when Microsoft was actively pursuing an acquisition of Yahoo!, only to withdraw its bid, many observers felt that the withdrawal was good news for Yahoo!'s many open source and open initiatives. But we made the point back then that the game might just have begun. From Yahoo!'s open strategy for developers, to its Yahoo! User Interface Library (YUI), to the company's reliance on Hadoop for advanced fast queries, Yahoo! has always been a strong supporter of open standards. Yahoo!'s entire site runs on FreeBSD--a free operating system descended from AT&T Unix.

Microsoft still isn't acquiring Yahoo!, but it has struck a far-reaching search deal with the company. What are the implications for Yahoo!'s many open source and open standards initiatives?



Powerset, Leveraging Open Source Hadoop, Powers Microsoft's Bing

Last summer, we reported on Microsoft's acquisition (reportedly for $100 million) of Powerset, which specializes in semantic search based on the open source, cluster-based software framework Hadoop. This acquisition of an open source-centric search company was more strategic than many people realize. Hadoop also underlies Yahoo!'s search engine with its ability to search large data sets quickly, and the acquisition of Powerset may have played a key part in how Microsoft decided to give up its effort to acquire Yahoo!

Of course, Microsoft's big search engine news of the week is Bing, which I've found to have both strengths and weaknesses. Surprisingly, as The Register reports, ?Powerset's technology plays only a small part in how Bing works, but what it does in Bing is open source-driven, and interesting.



CherryPal's Bing Netbook to Explore New Territory

A few days ago we reported on efforts from Freescale, Asus and others to take netbooks--many of them running Linux--down to the $200 range. CherryPal may be approaching that price with its new Intel Atom-based Bing netbook (shown) that runs either Linux or Windows XP. The price is undisclosed until it ships in March, but this week only CherryPal is offering it and its C114 green nettop system in tandem for $400, as LinuxDevices reports. The price for the combo, given the C114's normal $250 price, imply that CherryPal is exploring how low portable computer prices can go.