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Thursday, August 26, 2004
Sharing Business Ideas
Steve Neiderhauser points to a comment by Guy Kawasaki: "The only thing worse than a paranoid entrepreneur is a paranoid entrepreneur who talks to his dog. There is much more to gain, feedback, connections, opened doors by freely discussing your idea than there is to lose. If simply discussing your idea makes it indefensible, you don't have much of an idea in the first place." I couldn't agree more.
Google and Software-as-a-Service
Steve Gillmor looks ahead to what we can we expect from the likes of Google and Microsoft:
The Indian PC
Vivek Ravindran has an interesting perspective:
Emerging Markets
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All the points made are fallable. If we are talking about a housewife, then there are other tools that beat the PC black and blue For PC's to be sold as commodities, it is not the household that determines this but the infrastructure. Sadly, that is nowhere near. Even in Scotland. http://sriks6711.blogspot.com Posted by SrikantI agree with Srikant. The issue is deeper than one of merely marketing, and the analogy with the microwave is an oversimplification. The technologies and gadgets that have "made it" have the following things in common - A computer fails on all of these counts, no matter what the computer industry would have us believe. No amount of rebranding it will change that. Try telling a housewife (continuing the stereotype in the article) to work on a computer while juggling her kitchen duties and handling a raucous baby that keeps toying with the mouse. Both Srikant and Chanakya have missed the point of my perspective which describes things not as they are but the way we would like them to be.... "1) Communication - what we want to have is for a housewife to connect to the internet, have a IP telephoney service or IM. Is this easier than calling someone by telephone/mobile?" Again, try to look at the way things should become - if the PC were an appliance that can be turned on why would this be a deterrent? 2) For the school to provide all these reports one has to imagine what it shoud do. Everything has to digital and teachers should themselves find time to type comments for every pupil in their already overloaded time-table. Is this practical? The best thing here is to drop by at a school "For PC's to be sold as commodities, it is not the household that determines this but the infrastructure. Sadly, that is nowhere near. Even in Scotland." What specific infrastructure are you talking about? If you draw a parallel to Television, TV sales grew after cable TV became more ubiquitous - again it is the content that drives usage - infrastructure is only the means; not the end. Both Srikant and Chanakya have missed the point of my perspective which describes things not as they are but the way we would like them to be.... "1) Communication - what we want to have is for a housewife to connect to the internet, have a IP telephoney service or IM. Is this easier than calling someone by telephone/mobile?" Again, try to look at the way things should become - if the PC were an appliance that can be turned on why would this be a deterrent? 2) For the school to provide all these reports one has to imagine what it shoud do. Everything has to digital and teachers should themselves find time to type comments for every pupil in their already overloaded time-table. Is this practical? The best thing here is to drop by at a school "For PC's to be sold as commodities, it is not the household that determines this but the infrastructure. Sadly, that is nowhere near. Even in Scotland." What specific infrastructure are you talking about? If you draw a parallel to Television, TV sales grew after cable TV became more ubiquitous - again it is the content that drives usage - infrastructure is only the means; not the end.
Videophoning goes Mass Market
WSJ writes that videocalling is finally hitting the mainstream:
In a related story, NYTimes writes: "Linksys and Netgear plan to announce that they are selling equipment designed specifically for use by Vonage, a start-up company that has become a pioneer in providing so-called Internet telephony. The announcements underscore the continued growth of Vonage, which is based in Edison, N.J. More generally, the development underscores the idea that Internet calling is slowly beginning to creep out of the fringes and into the mainstream, according to Michael Wolf, an analyst with In-Stat/MDR, a market research firm. Mr. Wolf noted that Internet calling was used by only a small fraction of people in the United States, compared with the hundreds of millions who rely on traditional phone service. But he expects the number of users to grow from around 600,000 at the end of this year to 1.5 million at the end of 2005."
Internet2
News.com offers a glimpse into the applications of tomorrow by looking at the next-generation network that connects many US universities:
TECH TALK: From Employee to Entrepreneur: Two Good Books
“The Power of Impossible Thinking” by Yoram (Jerry) Wind and Colin Crook is subtitled “Transform the business of your life and the life of your business.” As it turns out, entrepreneurship involves both! The authors explain “how your mental models stand between you and reality, distorting all your perceptions ... and how they create both limits and opportunities.” Here is what the authors have to say:
More than specific ideas, it is mental models that we need to develop. Another book, “Seeing What's Next” by Clay Christensen, Scott Anthony and Erik Roth, provides insights on using theories of innovation to predict industry change. The books builds on Christensen's previous two books – 'The Innovator's Dilemma” and “The Innovator's Solution.” Using case studies from telecom, education, aviation, semiconductors and healthcare, the authors argue that “even those without proprietary information can use these theories to develop powerful insights into how the future will unfold in a given industry and to make wiser choices based on those insights.” The authors write about the importance of theory: “The only way to look into the future is to use [the right] theories, because conclusive data is only available about the past...The best way to make accurate sense of the present, and the best way to look into the future, is through the lens of theory. Good theory provides a robust way to understand important developments, even when data is limited. And theory is even more helpful when there is an abundance of data. This is the critical challenge of the Information Age. With more information, it is harder to discern what information really matters. Theory helps block out the noise to amplify the signal...Using theory allows us to see the future more clearly and act more confidently to shape our destiny.” Read the two books together. Answer the questions that the authors ask. Start building models and maps about the industry in which we want to operate in. And then follow Alan Kay's advice: “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” Tomorrow: Next Steps
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I hold some agricultural land in my village and have the desire to utilise the land for some cultivation related activity. I would like to grow some cash crop on this land.
I was also thinking in terms of a food processing unit integrated with the production of the raw materials.
Kindly advice how to go about it.
Thanks & Regards
Sanmoy Das
Posted by Sanmoy