Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 22nd Jan 2013 22:21 UTC
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In the whole of the Google press release not a single word on Android finances, no costs, no revenues no loss figures (Google does not make a profit on Android).
I doubt investors and analysts are only looking at the press release.* Maybe you should read the stuff they read (that they seem to be happy with) before imagining some kind of corporate soap opera.
* It's a PRESS RELEASE.
RE[3]: Notable difference
by Tony Swash on Wed 23rd Jan 2013 14:52
in reply to "RE[2]: Notable difference"
I doubt investors and analysts are only looking at the press release.* Maybe you should read the stuff they read (that they seem to be happy with) before imagining some kind of corporate soap opera.
* It's a PRESS RELEASE.
* It's a PRESS RELEASE.
Are you suggesting that the missing data is actually available outside of Google? If so I would really appreciate a pointer to where I can find it as I am very interested in those figures.




Member since:
2009-08-22
As ever with Google (and most of the other big tech companies) it's the silences and gaps that are very interesting.
In the whole of the Google press release not a single word on Android finances, no costs, no revenues no loss figures (Google does not make a profit on Android).
No breakdown of the figures for mobile finances. What did Google earn from which mobile markets? How much did they earn from iOS and Android (almost certainly more from iOS)? They are not saying.
Considering the endless claims that Google+ is a core strategic project for the company, and given Facebook's recent debut of Graph Search, it's interesting that Google once again had nothing to say about usage or performance of Google+.
They did confirm that the key metric of average cost-per-click, which includes clicks related to ads served on Google sites and the sites of Google's Network members, decreased approximately 6% over the fourth quarter of 2011.