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Tuesday, January 25, 2005
Paul Graham's Advice to High School Students
Paul Graham has this advice in his latest essay:
Screencast
Jon Udell has started screencasts - small movies available for broadcast over the Internet. His comment: "the possibilities of the screencast medium continue to fascinate me. Movies communicate so much more than the obligatory static screenshots you typically find on product websites. I've mostly done long-form screencasts so far. But today's exercise makes me realize that the short film -- which highlights one specific thing and takes no time at all to produce -- is a useful form as well."
Integration Brokers and SOA
Barry Briggs writes:
Enterprise Software
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I think Integration Brokers might still be there. The only thing is the nature of work they do might be different. Today they are struck at integrating protocols, API's, data formats - tomorrow they will get more mature and go into application specific semantics. There's a difference between the way a particular service is built and the way its being used. And this difference is inherent in almost every system. So even if we standardize building of services, each of these services will still be used in multiple ways. And Integration Brokers need to become more and more mature in order to serve each and every use of such a service.
Scalability of Feeds and Aggregators
The Shifted Librarian (Jenny) points to a post by Werner Vogel: "The increase in the number of feeds will leave many users frustrated, as there is a limit to the number feeds one can scan and read. Current numbers suggest that readers can handle 150-200 feeds without too much stress. But users will want to read more and more as new interesting feeds become available and they run into the limitations of the metaphor of current aggregator applications. The current central abstract of aggregators is that of a feed, and there is a limit to how many individual feeds one can actually handle. Aggregators will need to find ways in which the users can be subscribed to a select set of feeds because they want to read everything that comes from these feeds, but also subscribe to a much larger set of publishers for which the feed abstraction may not be the right metaphor. Aggregation, fusion and selection at the information item level instead of at the feed level seems to be a first abstractions to investigation." I am at about 175+ feeds currently.
Mobiles and Context
Russell Beattie writes:
Telecom
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mobile technolodgy is gaining to high in this techno world , there are many of cdma and gsm mobile phnes in the market , they are cheep and useful . i wish that new and nerwe technoilodgies comes to india
none Posted by heyaMy belief is internet has been just "copy pasted" on mobile devices but perhaps we are still missing that there is a difference between a PC and a mobile. I wrote a blog entry summarizing my view on the wireless data services of today. Link Posted by Sunil Goyal
TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: Mike on Microsoft (Part 2)
Mike doesn’t necessarily imply a thin client. “A local client needn’t have no storage. It could have storage, and even a local processor. Many people who are reading this are assuming the client would have to be some completely dumb terminal. I can almost guarantee this would not be so. Applications would simply not be responsive enough without some local storage and processing power, and this would be a very poor design, indeed. Remote application provision and administration absolutely do not preclude local processing and storage.” A later post by Mike adds: “The biggest reason I think some measure of ASP and centralized computing is inevitable for the vast majority is because the average user will never desire to, or in many cases even be able to learn, all the steps that the author of the post had to complete to clean and then secure that Windows machine.” John Zeratsky wrote in a post referenced by Mike: “Many assume Mike is talking about using so-called “dumb clients” (simple computers with little or no local memory or storage). I think he’s suggesting a more subtle shift away from the massively complex computers we run on our desks today. For years, I have been a proponent of moving the tools for creating, manipulating and collecting information online. Centralized (i.e. web-based) systems have advantages for all kinds of users, and needn’t result in the extreme scenario the commenters on Mike’s post call for. It’s not that everyone has missed the point. They’re just asking the wrong question. Distributed computing is already here. Most day-to-day tasks of average computer users are online. And it works.” Om Malik wrote about Mike’s post: “It is nice to finally meet a kindred soul. Mike in a well articulated essay points out that as broadband becomes more prevalent and bandwidth to the home increases, the operating systems and computers as we know of them today will become irrelevant. With Longhorn, Microsoft is trying to perpetuate the days of local computing, and I feel they are moving in the wrong direction. Like an off-balance fighter, the first time a company starts punching in the other direction, the momentum is likely to shift to the other fighter – in this case, cheaper, better-prepared applications such as Linux, Firefox, and other Open Source applications available for free… Broadband frees us from the tyranny of bloated operating systems and faster processors.” This was my initial response: I have written extensively about the opportunity to reinvent computing in a world where communications exists. This is one revolution which will begin not in the developed markets but in the emerging markets. It will also integrate computing and communications. Our Emergic vision is about making it happen, and bringing to the next billion users services built around a centralised ‘commPuting’ platform. - Tomorrow's World (Nov 2004) Tomorrow: Comments Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: What should Microsoft do? [February 4, 2005] TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: Utility Computing in Emerging Markets [February 3, 2005] TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: The Arguments Against Centralised Computing [February 2, 2005] TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: The Arguments For Centralised Computing [February 1, 2005] TECH TALK: Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing: Comments (Part 4) [January 31, 2005]
Tech Talk
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What part of Longhorn and/or Microsoft's strategy does not take into How about windows update over a slow/fast connection. Also, Microsoft See I would like to see equivalent idioms in the Open Source world or |