Comments on: Still no cure for what ails Yahoo
Executives offer promises but no real plan to turn company around in the face of search titan Google.
Executives offer promises but no real plan to turn company around in the face of search titan Google.
December 31, 2009 5:30 PM PST
December 31, 2009 2:10 PM PST
December 31, 2009 11:39 AM PST
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It's time for Yahoo's Board to clean up this house before it topples over. Demand brilliant, ethical people build a better mouse-trap. Raise the standards: stop helping Chinese thugs and Yahoo Group-based pediophiles. Make it clear what is a natural search result from a paid listing. Dump the counter-productive "fee" on adding one's site into the Yahoo directory (is the benefit of a crappier directory really worth the small fees for those who will pay?).
In other words, it's time for Yahoo to either a) die (preferably sooner, rather than later -- with it's parts being sold off to anybody else), or b) grow up; become a mensch, and realize that inertia will only carry you so far.
Me, I'd like to see Yahoo's I/M and Flicr purchased by Google while maybe some other well-financed but pathetic site (ask.com maybe?) can purchase the search. But if Yahoo's Board -- and this one's gonna' have to come from the Boardroom; management is dug-in too deep to see clearly -- wants any hope it's pink-slip time for senior management.
We have had a very hard time getting our email to students who use Yahoo. I don't know how much money we have lost because Yahoo flushed email we sent to potential students.
When a technology company can't get their email to work, it is time for them to find a new business.
this company squandered its immense resources by not actually
creating a product to go along with one of the most recognizable
names in high tech. It probably did not help that they also
colloborated with the Chinese Communist government to hand over
email contents either.
The best thing they can do now is just sell the brand name and
shut down their worthless organization.
Google didn't give a toss about Microsoft and competed anyway. They just flew under the radar and then when the Redmond Beast turned around to kill them, it was too late. They were too big.
The future belongs to those who aim high. In the heart of Yahoo was fear. They had no faith.
Google even has the coloured balls to come up with Docs and Spreadsheets and then give it to the public for free.
You gotta love Google. The coloured balls actually have a meaning.
not "engineering/software phds"
How do u expect it to step into Ms game and compete.
When it comes to technological direction, yahoo will be at a loss.
With a revised team recently hired that thinks they are great technicians, there is common talk on the net about "everything they fix something, they screw something up". I find that is the truth. The thing that worries me most is their continuing 'cut-off' or close down of IM service when the IM is inactive for a certain period of time. It drives me crazy when I am expecting a contact (friend) to come on-line, or go off-line, and I never get the voice notice I set up, simply because one of the super-smart techies thinks I'm not active and has cut me off. This has cost me money!!!!!
Although, I must say GMail interface seem a lot "snappier".
Yahoo needs better integration between it's components ie. consistent look and feel. I think Google does this better.
I'd like to see an email "whitelist" feature as a little bit of spam still manages to get through the current spam filter.
Just my 2c.
Do a side by side search on yahoo and google and the relevance and timeliness of the results stands out.
I wish i had bought Yahoo stock when it was 23 cents a share, maybe ill have the opportunity again.
- I don't
- by krazyken44 July 20, 2007 9:24 AM PDT
- use Yahoo it's a weak flawed program. Tried it once and left.....
- Like this Reply to this comment
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