The love for Yahoo! Inc. is back! In my opinion, what's so great about Yahoo! Inc. that makes Microsoft Cooperation wants that company so badly. Yahoo itself is a place filled with advertisements - in Yahoo! Search, Yahoo! Mail, etc. I don't see the point of having annoying advertisements all over their services. Look at Google for example, it's doing good, practically everyone loves its search engine. It's not filled with annoying advertisements - not in Google Search, iGoogle, Google Mail, Google Talks, Blogger, etc. Practically every services in Google is not filled with those pests.
At least Microsoft doesn't have that many advertisements though. Microsoft should, in my opinion, consider pursuing Google instead of Yahoo although they are competitors. Stupidly enough, probably feeling rich, Microsoft is willing to buy Yahoo at the price of 50 Billion dollars when Yahoo is currently priced at 30+ billion dollars. A question that might be circulating everyone's mind, is Microsoft taking over the entire technology World? Probably in the future Apple's Mac might be leading, since their product is, to be honest, better than Windows. Windows is forever buggy, making the system lag and sometimes hang. Mac doesn't lag that much. It doesn't even hang unless you are intelligent enough to corrupt the entire system files.
Anyway, back to the topic, does anyone think that Microsoft-Yahoo is a good fit? Or MSYahoo? or something similar? NBC universal has been bought over by Microsoft, renaming it to MSNBC, this sounds better, it's as though a product of MSN.
Read this news anyway,
NEW YORK - Speculation about a  possible Microsoft-Yahoo tie-up met with skepticism Friday from analysts who  believe services from the two companies have too much in common.
 Yahoo shares surged following  published reports Friday that Microsoft Corp. is resuming its pursuit of Yahoo  Inc. in an attempt to better compete with Web search and advertising leader  Google Inc. (MSNBC.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)
 The New York Post reported that  Microsoft has asked Yahoo to enter formal negotiations for an acquisition that  could be worth $50 billion. Yahoo’s market capitalization was about $38 billion  on Thursday.
 Both companies declined comment on  the reports, each of which cited unidentified people familiar with the  situation.
 The Wall Street Journal said  executives of the two companies are looking at a merger or some other kind of  matchup and said the talks appear to be in the early stages. It said the  companies explored the idea of combining last year but the talks led  nowhere.
 David Hallerman, a senior analyst  at the research group eMarketer, said he saw many cultural problems and few  strategic benefits with a Microsoft-Yahoo combination.
 “There’s too much overlap between  Microsoft and Yahoo, and to try to merge the company cultures of two large  companies like that in general is hard,” Hallerman said.
 Hallerman said Microsoft would be  better off buying an ad network to beef up its own operations, the same way Time  Warner Inc.’s AOL has seen its advertising revenue grow following the  acquisition of Advertising.com’s technology and sales force.
 Yahoo, meanwhile, could lose the  flexibility it needs to compete if it were to be one division within a larger  company like Microsoft, he said.
 Industry analyst Matt Rosoff with  Directions on Microsoft in Kirkland, Wash., said a huge takeover is unlikely,  noting that Yahoo would duplicate services Microsoft’s MSN already provides,  such as instant messaging and e-mail.
 It is possible, Rosoff added, that  Microsoft and Yahoo might be talking about a deal involving only online search  advertising.
 Hallerman said he could see at  most a spin-off of Microsoft’s MSN online division to be run by Yahoo.
 Microsoft is feeling increasing  pressure to compete with Google, which plans to beef up its portfolio with a  $3.1 billion purchase of online advertising company DoubleClick Inc.
 Microsoft currently trails both  Yahoo and Google in the lucrative and growing business of Web search, even as  Google increases its development of Web-based software that directly competes  with Microsoft’s lucrative Office suite.
 Microsoft and Yahoo each  considered buying a stake in AOL in late 2005, but Google ultimately won a  search advertising deal and agreed to pay $1 billion for a 5 percent stake in  AOL.
 The Post story said Microsoft and  Yahoo have held informal talks over the years and said Microsoft’s latest  approach to Yahoo signals increased urgency.
 Earlier this week, Yahoo said it  would buy 80 percent of advertising exchange Right Media for $680 million,  increasing its stake in that company to full control.
 © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights  reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or  redistributed.