It's a potent recipe -- take Gizmo5's open standards-based online calling system. Add to it the new ability to route calls on Google's massive network of cheap fiber. Toss in Google Voice's free phone number, which will ring your mobile phone, your home phone and your Gizmo5 client on your laptop.That's two straight Google acquisitions I love. Two weeks ago, Google announced that it bought AdMob, a mobile display advertising company that would help Google advertise on smartphones. But Google clearly isn't satisfied to merely advertise on your phone. It wants to run your phone. The new Droid smartphones run on Google's open-source operating system. Combine that will Google Talk and Google Voice apps and you've cornered the market on web-based calling, and advertising.
Then layer on deluxe phone services like free SMS, voicemail transcription, customized call routing, free conference calls and voicemails sent as recordings to your e-mail account, and you have a phone service that competes with Skype, landlines and the Internet telephone offerings from Vonage and cable companies.
Yes, I'm way ahead of myself. But hey, we're projecting Internet technology. Isn't that the point?










Correction: That Google "wants to run your phone" makes it the next Verizon or Sprint. Google will not become the next AT&T until it "wants to make the simple act of placing a local call as difficult and frustrating as nailing jello to the wall"