It is exactly this kind of zealous biasy that drives me to question my faith in Tom's Hardware reviews and statistics: something I've trusted for many years. I've been putting up with this growing problem for a rather long time, but now it's reaching new lows.
First of all, I feel Google is a wonderful resource, and though I have some anti-trust issues with them, I happily feed my Google habit daily. That said, I don't feel a guide on Google tips needs to depict an employee at the end with so much out of place... from political agenda to product placement, there could be very few ways to make it more offensive to the idea that Tom's Hardware should be trusted as a non-biased source of information.
Nevermind that this article is riddled with typographical errors -- I liked the common interest it was headed until this final page. Some of you may roll your eyes at this post, too (trust me when I say it's out of my normal practice to be vocal about my complaints of a website), but this has been a problem that's grown progressively worse.
Tom's Hardware needs to wake up and get back on the right path...