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Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Flat Fee Future for Digital Music
The Register writes about a book by Professor William "Terry" Fisher - "Promises to Keep."
Firefox Advantages
Walter Mossberg writes about what he likes about the Firefox browser:
Software
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Yes, I strongly recommend Firefox for serious browsers. You will love it. ! Ajay Posted by AjayFirefox is unreliable too. While singing paens to the glory of Firefox, it should not be forgotten that it is just a software like any other. Recently, I lost a number of bookmarks assiduously stored over a number of months. Posted by kalindFirefox is unreliable too. While singing paens to the glory of Firefox, it should not be forgotten that it is just a software like any other. Recently, I lost a number of bookmarks assiduously stored over a number of months. Posted by kalindFirefox is unreliable too. While singing paens to the glory of Firefox, it should not be forgotten that it is just a software like any other. Recently, I lost a number of bookmarks assiduously stored over a number of months. Posted by kalind
Cellphones as Credit Cards
The New York Times writes:
Univa
InfoWorld writes about the launch of a new company by the creators of the Globus open source grid software: "The aim of the Globus Toolkit technology is to allow users to securely share computational power, databases and tools online across networks worldwide while maintaining local control."
Search Wars
Microsoft Monitor (Joe Wilcox) writes:
Greg Linden adds: "The threat is much larger than just Google. It's about the future of Windows as the dominant computing platform...Microsoft has been fighting this battle for many years. They worried about the rising power of handheld devices like Palm Pilots and cell phones, so they launched Windows CE. They worried about the additional functionality being built into game consoles, so they launched XBox. They worried about the rise of entertainment devices like TiVo and Replay, so they launched Windows Media Center. They worried about the threat from web-based applications, so they launched IE and MSN."
Search Engines
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Have a look at what kind of search possibilities Apple is going put in Mac OS 10.4 Tiger. Last night during his Keynote address at the opening of the 2005 MacWorld Expo in San Francisco, Steve Jobs gave a nice preview demo of "Spotlight"
TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Search Wars
I have picked what I think were the best blog posts and articles of 2004. With each, I have added a small commentary as to why I liked it. 1. Rich Skrenta on Google (April) This was perhaps the first post that made be think differently of Google. Until then, Google was a great search engine. This essay put Google’s platform into a wider context and made it clear that we were seeing was the shift in the computing platform from the desktop to the Internet. While competitors are targeting the individual applications Google has deployed, Google is building a massive, general purpose computing platform for web-scale programming. This computer is running the world's top search engine, a social networking service, a shopping price comparison engine, a new email service, and a local search/yellow pages engine. What will they do next with the world's biggest computer and most advanced operating system? 2. Charles Ferguson on the coming Google-Microsoft Wars in Technology Review (December) This article makes clear the enormous stakes in the search battle. The game has shifted over the year – search is no longer just a task we perform many times a day, but the functionality of search is becoming embedded into the core activities. As such, search is the next platform. Until now, competition in the search industry has been limited to the Web and has been conducted algorithm by algorithm, feature by feature, and site by site. This competition has resulted in a Google and Yahoo duopoly. If nothing were to change, the growth of Microsoft’s search business would only create a broader oligopoly, similar, perhaps, to those in other media markets. But the search industry will soon serve more than just a Web-based consumer market. It will also include an industrial market for enterprise software products and services, a mass market for personal productivity and communications software, and software and services for a sea of new consumer devices. Search tools will comb through not only Microsoft Office and PDF documents, but also e-mail, instant messages, music, and images; with the spread of voice recognition, Internet telephony, and broadband, it will also be possible to index and search telephone conversations, voice mail, and video files. All these new search products and services will have to work with each other and with many other systems. This, in turn, will require standards. In short, the search industry is ready for an architecture war. Tomorrow: KISS and Massputers Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Entrepreneur Q&A [January 21, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Simplicity [January 20, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Education [January 19, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Mobility and Memex [January 18, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Art and Artists [January 17, 2005]
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