Category Archives:CompanyBytes

Jun. 05.

Google moving to paid ‘listings’

Image: http://8gramgorilla.com/

Google is moving to present paid ‘listings’ where it used to offer pure search results?  “Let’s just admit that Google is evil now,” writes Business Insider editor Owen Thomas in his delicious rant:

“It may be healthy for Google to get over the whole “don’t be evil” thing. It’s not like anyone was buying it.

Even Googlers.  Especially Googlers. (more…)

Tagged: , , , ,

Jun. 03.

We will not close the leadership gap until we close the professional ambition gap

CC BY 2.0 - World Economic Forum

 

An excerpt from Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s class day lecture at Harvard Business School last week:

We need to start talking about how women underestimate their abilities compared to men and how for women, but not men, success and likeability are negatively correlated. That means that as a woman is more successful in your workplaces, she will be less liked. This means that women need a different form of management and mentorship, a different form of sponsorship and encouragement than men. (more…)

Tagged: ,

May. 29.

2 Things the Apple Genius Bar Won’t Tell You

Does the Genius Bar tell the whole story?

If you spill liquid on your Macbook Air and it won’t turn on, the Apple Genius Bar will tell you the laptop should be replaced and the data irretrievable.  I’d expect an answer like this from a New Jersey used car salesman.  But from an Apple ‘Genius’?

Why does Apple say the laptop is dead?  I spoke with an Apple employee at the Palo Alto store last Thursday.  He said that if a laptop is damaged from liquid, Apple has an all-or-nothing policy: you pay (nearly) the price of a new machine to get a new logic board, keyboard and trackpad.  And because it costs the price of a new laptop to replace everything, Apple says you’re better off buying a new laptop.

Problem? If you spilled liquid on just the keyboard, it’s possible only the keyboard is damaged.  But the power button on the latest generation of Macbooks is integrated into the keyboard.  So it might be that the rest of the computer is fine, even though you can’t turn it on.  It turns out keyboards aren’t hard to replace for ~$250.  Much cheaper than a new laptop. (more…)

Tagged: , , , ,