Thursday, July 7, 2011
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Google shut down the invite mechanism for its new Google+ social network after "insane demand," said Vic Gundotra, head of social efforts, on the company's website.
Google unveiled the service June 28 in a fresh attempt to compete with Facebook's site. Google+ looks similar to Facebook, with streaming updates of photos, messages, comments and other content from selected groups of friends.
Chief executive officer Larry Page is starting Google+ after missteps last year with the introduction of a social component to Gmail called Buzz. Google needs to fix the invitation glitch quickly if it wants to effectively challenge Facebook, the world's largest social network, said Josh Bernoff, an analyst with Forrester Research.
"The utility of a social environment depends on your ability to invite people to it," Bernoff said in an interview. "If you want to try this out but your friends are not on the system and cannot get on the system because of the blocking of the invitation, it's not a very good test."
The social network will initially be available to only a limited set of users, Google said when it introduced the new feature. The company said it has been testing Google+ internally and is now ready to gradually open up what it calls a "project" to the general public.
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Google+ On High Demand
Google shut down the invite mechanism for its new Google+ social network after "insane demand," said Vic Gundotra, head of social efforts, on the company's website.
Google unveiled the service June 28 in a fresh attempt to compete with Facebook's site. Google+ looks similar to Facebook, with streaming updates of photos, messages, comments and other content from selected groups of friends.
Chief executive officer Larry Page is starting Google+ after missteps last year with the introduction of a social component to Gmail called Buzz. Google needs to fix the invitation glitch quickly if it wants to effectively challenge Facebook, the world's largest social network, said Josh Bernoff, an analyst with Forrester Research.
"The utility of a social environment depends on your ability to invite people to it," Bernoff said in an interview. "If you want to try this out but your friends are not on the system and cannot get on the system because of the blocking of the invitation, it's not a very good test."
The social network will initially be available to only a limited set of users, Google said when it introduced the new feature. The company said it has been testing Google+ internally and is now ready to gradually open up what it calls a "project" to the general public.
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