| Russians more likely to say Yo Yandex than Go Google |
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| by Davey Winder | |
| Sunday, 29 June 2008 | |
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Page 2 of 3 Again, BusinessWeek suggests that the Russian search
market that can expect to deliver some truly serious growth. After all,
the online business is only just starting to take off in Russia. There
are not many areas where you can still get in on the ground floor of an
Internet revolution.Certainly, despite the rise of Yandex in Russia, you should not be buying nails for the Google coffin just yet. The first Google office in Russia only opened in 2006 and in that short time has managed to claw a search market share of 34 percent. Up from just 5 percent in 2005. By providing a truly localised version of the Google product, including a search algorithm that has been specifically tweaked to deal with that Russian language problem, it has shown that it is taking the fight against Yandex very seriously indeed. Russian versions of YouTube and Google Maps just help to confirm its Eastern European intent. Wikipedia suggests that Yandex is an acronym derived from 'Yet Another iNDEXer' and describes how a backwards R in Russian means the same as I in English, which somehow makes this a bilingual pun on the word index. I have to admit that I really do not get this myself. So what is the bigger picture as far as Russian search is concerned? Read on to find out... CONTINUED |
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