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Eric Schmidt: Google Ceo Eric Schmidt
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Looks like Google CEO Eric Schmidt is lecturing AOLers, now that Google owns a piece. AOL Senior VP Sree Kotay was there, and while he says it was mostly back-patting over the new deal, there was this illuminating exchange:
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Though he didn't specify what kind of "things" they were doing together, Google CEO Eric Schmidt admitted that Google and Apple have been working together on lots of new projects. "We have similar goals, similar competitors." So does this mean the two giants are working on a tablet-style computer? It's still anyone's guess, though his vague-tastic comment sure does leave the door open to many possibilities.
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Google and Dell have agreed to a first in a series of deals to preinstall Web and desktop search software on the PC maker's computers, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said Thursday. Under the deal, millions of Dell PCs will be loaded with the Google toolbar for Web and PC search, along with a co-branded home page, before they're shipped to consumers.
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Google CEO Eric Schmidt sat down with former NBCer John Seigenthaler for a terrific session that just wrapped up here at NAB-RTNDA. Schmidt said YouTube is “very close” to launching “Claim Your Content” (CYC) tools that will identify copyrighted content via audio and video fingerprinting. And he said YouTube is working on a video advertising network that will involve pre-rolls and post-rolls. Lots more in the session including:
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Google CEO Eric Schmidt talks to Pat Mitchell of the Paley Center for Media during the World Economic Forum in June. Schmidt talks about Google’s efforts to expand into newspaper advertising, radio and TV advertising and other areas, and discusses what he sees as the company’s successes and failures — including the first trial of newspaper advertising and the difficulty of striking partnerships with big media companies like Viacom.
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In yesterday's Financial Times, Google CEO Eric Schmidt articulated an Antonio Gramsci like manifesto in favor of the "democratisation of information". In "Let More Of The World Access The Web", Schmidt seeks to empower African schoolchildren to challenge the dominant elites by accessing information on the Internet:
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