It's been a busy week in the tech world, but the newsroom highlight of the week had more to do with what was not said. Our own Elinor Mills was dispatched to interview Google CEO Eric Schmidt in Orlando, but the big questions went unanswered.
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
About Outside the Lines
Dan Farber is the editor in chief of CNET News. He has covered technology for more than two decades, and he previously served as editor in chief of ZDNet, PC Week and MacWeek. Outside the Lines explores the intersection of business and technology.
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Ho long did you think it would take Goog to become as regal as Apple or (as Siebel was0 in its approach to letting the press ask Eric, Larry or Sergei questions?
My experience Google PR was always over bearing in its control of questions.
I think it's time reporters began getting tough with GooG execs and started asking difficult questions in settings where the execs can't flee. or be controlled by hyper vigilant PR people,
That's an approach that always worked for me.
Good piece Dan and congrats on the well-deserved and long overdue promotion.
Best,
Jim Forbes
DF
Your "article" might be slightly better written than Elinor's but it's still the same dead horse... just different packaging.
Putinesque?
Please.
I really hope everybody that reads this actually reads Elinor's piece... it definitely provides insight into why anybody would be quick to say to say to her: "Please, please... just stop... please... and get out... please... for the love of god... please?"
Mayhap she used too many emoticons during the "interview".
: (
Yes, I'm even including my own comment in my critique.
From your article: "In any case, the context of the event shouldn't exclude Schmidt from responding to the basic questions that are [on?] the minds of Google watchers, reporters, bloggers, investors and employees."
Mm.
Perhaps the question isn't "Why is Schmidt stonewalling the press?", but rather: "Are we actually qualified to call ourselves 'the press'?"
Quality writing: we *all* need a bit more if we want to claim credentials, eh?
But I digress....
for disclosure, I'm not a Google fan but I am an advocate for good journalism. this was weeeeaaaaak.
respectfully submitted.
We thought it was newsworthy to tell this story...and it wasn't a matter of getting a scoop. It was being able to ask questions, to have a conversation. If we had know that Schmidt wasn't going to answer questions outside of Google Health, we would have spent time working on other things.
DF
Michael Krigsman
http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures
2) reporters need to ask questions on point. endless questions about anything can be annoying. there's no 4th amendment right to ask anyone questions.
- by keeef091 January 16, 2009 3:33 AM PST
- Dr. Eric Schmidt has very many mafia friends, some of whom produce p_rn, even child p_rn from captive women and children, which is how Google got sued for profiteering from deliberatly promoted child p_rnography & why they withheld the identities of child p_rn distributors from police. http://endmafia.com
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