Google Starts Shared Storage Service

Discussion in 'Search Engine Optimization' started by funforums, Aug 11, 2007.

  1. #1
    Google Starts Shared Storage Service
    David A. Utter | Staff Writer

    Google users can boost their available storage for Gmail and
    Picasa Web Albums to as much as 250GB for an annual fee.

    Hours after Microsoft opened its Windows Live SkyDrive online
    storage product beta to all comers, Google followed up with the
    announcement of its Shared Storage service.

    Unlike SkyDrive, Google Shared Storage orients toward expanding
    the capacity for the Gmail and Picasa Web Album services. The
    service doles out storage to the product that needs it under
    someone's Google account.

    Google's Ryan Aquino posted some basics about the service at the
    official Google blog. He noted that the entry level price of $20
    per year for 6GB of storage was $5 less than what had previously
    been charged for extra Picasa Web Album storage.

    Gmail currently offers about 2.8GB of free storage, a figure that
    has been gradually increasing over time. Picasa's free storage
    tops out at 1GB, a figure that an active photographer with lots
    of high-resolution images can fill pretty fast.

    Storage purchased under Google's plan will be used by whichever
    service needs it. The storage can't be allocated to just one
    service, though it's easy enough to open a new Google account,
    activate Gmail or Picasa Web Albums, and purchase storage to be
    used only by that service.

    Search, Mickey D's, Or Coke, Branding Is Powerful
    Jason Lee Miller | Staff Writer

    Here's a challenge for you: raise a child unexposed to branding.
    Good luck with it. This article isn't about parenting, though,
    it's about the power of the brand. A recent study revealed
    preschoolers think even milk and carrots wrapped up with
    McDonald's golden arches tastes better.

    I have a love-hate relationship with McDonald's. I dig their food
    - fast, cheap, addictive. Addictive is the operative word because
    no company is better at hooking you at a young age. One of the
    earliest symbols recognized by children are the arches and
    toddlers will identify them as McDonald's before they identify
    them as the letter "M."

    McDonald's means something to them. Something very special.

    Worse, Mickey D's sort of cheats with carefully engineered smells
    that trigger pleasure sensors in the brain, colors immediately
    associated with fatty goodness, reported low levels of butane in
    the nuggets as preservatives (source on that is Digg.com, so take
    it for what it's worth), magical clowns and playgrounds on the
    premises, and seats crafted to be comfortable for something like
    exactly 14 minutes - enough time for you to eat and get the hell
    out of there.

    But I've digressed. Like I said, this is an article about the power
    of branding.

    Recently, a study on search engines showed that though search
    results presented to participants were the same, and even though
    the participants on the whole preferred Google in their daily lives,
    the majority of them selected Yahoo as the best search engine in
    the study, effectively choosing a logo over reality.

    This seemed to prove my point that branding does indeed have an
    effect in online marketing, and a effect on the ROI, though many
    have argued that presence cannot compare to clicks and conversions
    - a word of caution, though, like a 401(k) branding payoff is not
    immediate. It is about getting your brand ingrained into the
    collective psyche, just like McDonald's has (woefully) blisteringly
    and effectively done over the past 40 years.

    Coke has a similar dominance in taste tests, even though when the
    brand was absent, participants exhibited no preference.

    In this study, as reported by MercuryNews (careful, they're nosy
    in San Jose; surprising they don't ask for a DNA sample on the
    registration page), kids between 3 and 5 years old were given
    identical food samples, hamburgers, French fries, chicken nuggets,
    carrots, and milk. Forty-four percent preferred McDonald's wrapped
    carrots.

    At home, my stepson doesn't allow me to buy generic Captain Crunch.
    Won't it, swears there's a difference. As this study illustrates
    though, a strong brand can altar even the taste buds.

    Technology and Marketing Law Blog's Eric Goldman relays a similar
    story, except this one involves Dora the Explorer:

    "We had our own recent first-hand experience with the power
    of brands over kids. We normally don't shop in the "traditional"
    grocery stores like Safeway; the vast bulk of our grocery dollars
    go to Trader Joe's or the farmers' markets."

    "However, on a recent vacation, we stopped into a traditional
    grocery store (the Save Mart in Angels Camp), and my 2-year-old
    daughter Dina went absolutely bonkers."

    "She's a fan of Dora the Explorer, and it turns out that there
    are an amazing number of Dora-branded products available in the
    traditional grocery store--we as parents had blissfully ignored
    these products, but they shone like bright beacons to our otherwise
    unexposed/inexperienced daughter."

    "Through some disciplined parenting, we escaped with a single
    Dora-branded pack of yogurt...and a vow never to go back to
    traditional groceries!"

    I've seen the same thing happen with Disney-branded food.

    Ah, well, selling is what has created this country of ours, and
    it's doubtful that will change. So the moral of the story, among
    several, for the online marketer's purposes, branding is a
    powerful, powerful agent for the seller. Just look at what the
    big boys have done with it.

    If you think this information is good for you, Please add reps, Thank you! :)
     
    funforums, Aug 11, 2007 IP
  2. citruscommerce

    citruscommerce Peon

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    #2
    Nice little article. thanks!
     
    citruscommerce, Aug 11, 2007 IP
  3. oseymour

    oseymour Well-Known Member

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    #3
    If they have a utility that allows me to upload files to this storage I would happily ditch .mac for it
     
    oseymour, Aug 11, 2007 IP