Monday, June 3, 2002
Google and Directories

Dave Winer: The Googlish way to do Directories: "Now, instead of having two or three all-encompassing directories, anyone with an outliner and some server space can compete to be the authority on any subject."

Microsoft into Enterprise Software

An extremely good analysis of Microsoft's enterprise software strategy in InfoWorld. One analyst termed it as "ERP for the Masses".

Emergic Update

Blogstreet: We've added 50 more blogs for a total of 200, instead of adding 150 to take the total to 300. Hope to make up the deficit this week. Have also begun work on extracting blogrolls -- writing small programs ("proglets") to process the links and get the info necessary to identify the clusters.

Digital Dashboard: On the Outliner, we have completed Edit-Share-Delete of outlines. Now working on making the text-to-OPML conversion and the outline presentations as web services. This gives us some exposure to XML and SOAP. We also want to them use the outlining service within Blogstreet and some other applications. Blogs will probably wait till later this week or next week.

Thin Client-Thick Server: We've cracked the Auto Identification of the Network card and Display card problem. Have a 2-floppy solution which gets this info from the client and ships it to the server. By mid-week, we will also be done with the user interface to add new clients and machines. Have moved 7 users to TC. Next step is to move the other Linux users (6 people) to TC also. Finally, next week work on the migration of the Windows users. On Windows, the problems we will have to address: migration of Mail and Address Book, Bookmarks and Cookies, and then the documents.

Enterprise Software: Explored a few options last week on what to do going ahead. Took a look at Business Rules also. The approach we are now looking at is to (a) understand Sash as a scripting environment for Mozilla and then write out an app (b) understand J2EE, XML (c) identify what database backend to use. We will then use these components to write out a prototype for accounting or sales. Have also met with some clients to get feedback on their needs.

Messaging: Steady Progress last week. Channel buildout is happening. This month, we need to work on making a brochure and sales kit.

Previous Week's Update

South Korea Tech

A WSJ article on South Korea using the World Cup to showcase its high-tech prowess mentions some impressive stats: "It surpassed Japan in producing computer memory chips in the late 1990s, and is now the world's No. 1 producer. It is also the leading manufacturer of flat-panel display screens. A total of 54% of Korean households have broadband Internet access, compared with just 13% in the U.S. and 6.3% in Japan, according to the Ministry of Information and Communication. Its information-technology industry now accounts for more than a quarter of export volume."

Germany embraces Linux

WSJ: Germany, IBM Strike Linux Deal At Expense of Microsoft Windows:


Under the arrangement, German federal, state and local government offices would be entitled to steep discounts on IBM hardware that runs Linux. In many cases, the software would replace more expensive, proprietary software such as Windows and Unix. Financial details of the agreement weren't disclosed.

Governments world-wide have been promoting a shift from proprietary software such as Windows to open-source products such as Linux. They argue this not only saves money, but reduces their reliance on a single corporate software provider and helps avoid compatibility problems when people use non-Microsoft products such as Web-browsing software Netscape and Opera.


One of the first instances I have come across of a government taking the lead with respect to Linux. Expect more such initiatives soon -- for emerging markets, it is a no-brainer.

TECH TALK: The New Quit India Movement

My Tech Talks on “Rethinking Enterprise Software” will continue tomorrow. Today, however, I want to write on something that has been bothering me about the reporting that has been going on in Western media about the sub-continent. “12 million people may be killed in nuclear exchange”, “American and British citizens asked to leave India and Pakistan”, “US makes plans to evacuate its citizens in India” scream the headlines. The exodus is beginning. The only people that seemed to be concerned about a nuclear war are the ones who won’t even be impacted. The ones living in the cauldron go about living their life as normally as life in India (or for that matter, Pakistan) can be.

This is not to say that there is no danger of confrontation. Or that cross-border terrorism isn’t an issue. Thousands of innocent lives have been lost in Kashmir over the past decade. A million soldiers eyeballing each other across the border is not a joke. When revenge becomes the primary motive for fighting, reason and rationality can easily take a backseat. India and Pakistan have little to gain from a war except that the politicians and generals can consolidate power.

So far, India has been remarkably patient. A person I was speaking to had a very interesting point to make: India will not start the war. Historically, India has always been a defender, never an offender. But, patience has its limits and another incident in Kashmir or Delhi may just push matters over the brink. India’s strategy has succeeded to the extent that suddenly the world has woken up to what was happening in South Asia and every major leader has an opinion on the matter. The Empire of today (US) is also sending its emissaries to the region after the Empire of yesterday (Britain) failed in its efforts.

Take a look at daily life in India. There is no panic. There is plenty of discussion, yes. Life is as normal as it has been. No one’s stockpiling rations, no one’s packing bags to Quit India -- not even the ones who have the choice of living anywhere in the world. Life, business, entertainment, the daily struggles – they all go on. By living in India or Pakistan, we all accept certain risks. The risk of extinction through nuclear war is certainly not any more at this point than it has been in the past.

Amidst all this, what has gone off the boil is the hysteria that is being created outside the region. South Asia is not a war zone. Every country has the right to fear for the safety of its citizens and protect them. Asking their citizens to leave is going too far. India and Pakistan did not ask their citizens to Quit US after 9/11.

For a world that anyway watches the sub-continent through blinkered eyes, this sensationalising of the situation should have been expected. So, also, the reporting in the media which makes Indian and Pakistani leaders to be madmen with their fingers on the nuclear trigger. Let’s not forget that the only nation in the history of civilisation to have used nuclear weapons remains the US. It is fashionable for the world, especially the Western media, to exaggerate matters beyond what the ground realities are, especially in emerging markets far far away from their lands.

South Asia may not still be as tightly integrated into the global economic world, so a few thousand foreigners leaving may not make much of a difference. But over time, the loss of business confidence will do more harm to the region than any good which comes from getting attention. This is what Vajpayee and Musharraf need to realise. The game today is improving quality of life and living standards for our people. The sooner we get to that, the better.

I am not a journalist, I am an entrepreneur. I believe that emerging markets like India have a great opportunity in the coming years to use new technologies to make their countries Great, like they once were. India’s and Pakistan’s future lies in using our skills in technology not in flaming the Kashmir Valley, but in fanning the next Silicon Valley. The coming discontinuities in technology driven by innovations like Web Services, Weblogs and WiFi offer an opportunity to leapfrog. [I wrote a Tech Talk series on India’s Next Decade recently.]

Let us wage a war not on each other’s people, but on poverty and corruption. Let us fight not to gain land, but to increase our exports. Let us battle not for the bottom but for the top of the economic pyramid. The world of tomorrow has plenty of opportunities to create wealth for our people. Let us apply our intelligence to not outwit each other in games of war strategy but in games of technology monopoly.

The emerging markets of the world offer a market of 4 billion – people like the ones that live in India and Pakistan. Our people hold the answers to creating the next huge markets, not building graveyards. Let us use this Quit India (and Pakistan) movement to our advantage. The solutions to our problems are not going to come by looking Westward, but looking Eastward and Inward. It is time to show the world that “Hum Kisise Kum Nahin”.

Tomorrow: Rethinking Enterprise Software (continued)

Me
Entrepreneur, Mumbai, India, Emergic, Netcore, Internet, IndiaWorld, Sify, IIT-Bombay, ColumbiaUniv ... More [Write to Me]

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The Intelligent Enterprise: Integrating CRM, SCM and EIP (Jan 2001)

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15 Years as an Entrepreneur (Nov 2006)
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Revolution on the Roads (Apr 2006)
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Peter Drucker: Management's Newton (Nov 2005)
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Building a Better India (Sep 2005)
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