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Friday, March 25, 2005
India and GE
WSJ writes about GE's role in India's outsourcing boom:
Community Blogging
Stephen Downes posts his "talk from the Northern Voice conference, February 19, 2005, Vancouver. An analysis of community as it emerges in blogging: how it is formed, how it should reshape the blogosphere, and how it can be implemented (quite easily) technologically. And along the way, deflating a few pet concepts of the blogerati, such as the value of the long tail and the utility of tagging."
BlogStreet
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This was a great and, I thougt, under-appreciated presentation. A contingent of insta-critics were a little too eager to throw tomatoes at Downes' ideas rather than to see that they were simply more forward-thinking than the Internet is ready for. Stephen's comments on context have influenced the way I use tags since Northern Voice and I appreciate that a lot. Posted by ToddI agree with Todd. Downes raised the second-order problems associated with folksonomy, and the audience was just getting used to the first-order benefits. Engineering/designing now to compensate for these problems will give legs to all these systems. Posted by Phil Wolff
Our New World
Doc Searls writes: "The networked market where we live now is one in which the demand side also has the power to supply. With its long-tail, what we used to call consumers become the largest source of producers. We've been seeing this for years with free software and open source, and are now seeing it with blogging and podcasting. This new market condition, with its abundance of producing consumers, is one where relationships will matter as much as authority (a factor Google highlights with PageRank), attention (a factor Steve Gillmor, David Sifry and others will bring to the fore with attention.xml), syndication and enclosure (both of which Dave Winer has been driving with RSS), and identity (which a whole gaggle of folks are driving)."
Beyond Client/Server
Always-On Network quotes Network World president and editorial director John Gallant:
Mobile Phones Future
Always-On has some forward-looking statements:
Telecom
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I agree with what Mr. Wendell says. Mobile Phones as being form of delivering entertainment content is good, might be a billion dollar market, but ultimately the real use will come when each one of us start using mobile phones even for the basic services. Services on mobile phones have to become simple and seamless, perhaps more simpler than whats existing today on the Internet and the PC platform. Posted by Sunil GoyalOnline Deals, Coupons with cash back and donation to charity Shan's blog Deals, Coupons at one place Posted by Shan
Tim Bray Interview
ACM Queue has an interview with Tim Bray, who "founded a visualization software company called Antarctica Systems. He joined Sun Microsystems in 2004 as director of Web technologies." Tim talks about what he's currently doing:
Software
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Very nice pose indeed !! Samsung recently announced 1GB storage phones. NTT-DoCoMo is talking of 4G networks while the rest of the world is coming to terms with the commercial issues of a 3G rollout. I think probably once a certain limit is reached as to what you can package/stuff into a phone, next they will start of talking about plug and play components. If SD Cards can be plugged in anywhere (PDA,card readers, phones,cameras etc) what stops the manufacturers from making mis-and-match components. Some day perhaps, there will be morphable phones wherein the phone can be transformed into a device you have a current need of. For example, display unit can be separate, network unit(radio et al) can be separate, UI components ( number pad, game pad key unit, Media player unit) can be different. Then you have a user who for his phone requirement will attach the lcd, radio and numeric pad together to make a phone. While commuting, he could use the lcd, detach the numeric pad, replace the game key pad and make it into a game console. Detach the radio unit if you do not want to be disturbed but continue to use for PDA functions. Connect LCD, and media keypad and lo you have a media center device to play music and movies. Who knows, some years down it may indeed become real. But as mentioned earlier, many a thing have been good innovations but failed pretty badly. A case in point here , the Sony minidisc, many of Xerox innovations, and many others testify. So lets see :-) Posted by Krishna
TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Information Dashboards
As we have discussed, Search is an excellent interface for the Reference Web. What then is the interface for the Incremental Web? Today’s RSS Aggregators are a good start but their limitations become all too apparent as the list of subscriptions grows. The challenge is to manage this flow of events through the subscriptions. There are projects like AttentionXML which promise to provide a solution to this problem. My belief is that we will need to fundamentally rethink of the interface itself and not just the underlying technology. This is because we consume different information sources differently. For example, on my aggregator, I may have maybe 20 “A-List” feeds – feeds which I want to see with all the new items outlined – somewhat like Samachar. I may then have another 100-200 “B-List” feeds which I want to see on-demand or via a “river of news” style aggregator. Other feeds may be single-item feeds – the closing stock market index, or the cricket scores, or the weather. In addition, I may have subscribed to a number of “tags” from a multitude of different sources. In essence, as RSS becomes the de facto standard for syndicating information, how the information is consumed will need to be controlled by the user. This is where the Information Dashboard will come in. It will need to give the user the flexibility to package collections of RSS feeds for viewing for different experiences – these could be based on the device I am using (I may want a smaller subset of feeds on the mobile), or time of the day (I may want a different view in the evening as compared to the morning). Going ahead, Search will evolve along many dimensions – personalised search, vertical search, local search, and more. But the real reason for search is because there is so much information. Once subscriptions start becoming popular, there will be a need for a new interface for this Web which is built around our lives – combining the Incremental, Archived and Community Webs. This is where the next innovation in computing will happen. This is the future of Search – not directly in the field of search, but in addressing the root of the problem of information overload. This is where Information Dashboards will thrive – built around events, subscriptions, tags and discovery, built with cutting-edge software innovations, available to us on the devices of our choice, and focused around optimizing our Attention. The idea by itself may not be revolutionary. But, like search, the difference will be in how it is executed – and most importantly, the User Interface. Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Memex [April 8, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Information Marketplaces [April 7, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: The Wider View [April 6, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: MyToday [April 5, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: RSS to OPML [April 4, 2005]
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Interesting observation, Rajesh.
Posted by sudhirThe (flood)gate-opener theory has been around for a while I guess. What GE did in BPO, Texas Instruments is rumoured to have done in software for Banglore. Likewise, when last yr sometime it was announced that CALPERS - the world's largest pension fund - might be looking at India for investments, another gate-opener opportunity knocked.
Any ideas anybody on bio-tech gate-openers?
Interesting article from WSJ though the $17 billion would be a drop in the bucket for the global/US IT ... making me think that the pie is much bigger than people imagine
- Mohan
Posted by MohanA bit of self promotion; check out the link to my forthcoming book on offshoring:
http://www.offshoringmanagement.com