Google is on the move, and I'm not just talking about its stratospheric stock price. (Let see, I have $600 to burn. I can a pretty nice desktop, a kick**s digital camera, or one share of Google Inc.) The Future of All Online Commerce has opened new offices in San Francisco, a stone's throw from InfoWorld.com HQ (and if we had any stones, we'd throw some). No Segways have been sited careening throu Google is on the move, and I’m not just talking about its stratospheric stock price. (Let see, I have $600 to burn. I can a pretty nice desktop, a kick**s digital camera, or one share of Google Inc.)The Future of All Online Commerce has opened new offices in San Francisco, a stone’s throw from InfoWorld.com HQ (and if we had any stones, we’d throw some). No Segways have been sited careening through the halls but, yes, a gourmet chef is on hand. Inside sources tell me Google prepares food for its staffers at the AT&T ballpark down the street, then trucks the comestibles over to Spear Street, where hot plates stand at the ready. (I hear the food is personally delivered by Barry Bonds, who then hangs around to see if anyone wants a foot massage, though these rumors have yet to be confirmed.) But it’s not all chicken cordon bleu and haricots verts on the Google front. A California court has reinstated an age discrimination case brought by Brian Reid, the company’s old former director of engineering. Reid was already on the downward slope of his first century when Google hired him in 2002.Reid claims he was fired in 2004 after being repeatedly called “slow, fuzzy, lethargic, and sluggish” by his boss, 15 years his junior. Hey, that’s me on a good day. Fortunately, I have job security. You’ve heard of working for peanuts? At InfoWorld they mean that literally. Nobody else would work this cheap.Got hot news of the technical type? Lay it on me direct or post it below. Cool swag awaits the lucky few to be quoted herein. Software DevelopmentSmall and Medium Business