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Tuesday, March 6, 2007
Snack Culture
Wired writes:
Mobile Platform
C. Enrique Ortiz writes:
Ning 2.0
TechCrunch reviews the new release: "Ning can be used to create a fully functional and customized social network in minutes (click on image to right for larger view)...The first step after naming and describing the new application is drag and drop desired modules- such as text boxes, RSS feeds photos, forums, blogs and videos - into the application in the area you want them. Adding the “members” module, for example, shows a list of the networks most popular members within that module."
iReader and Vector-based Searching
Robert Cringely writes:
Ray Ozzie on Web Office
SeattlePI.com has excerpts of comments made by Microsoft's Ray Ozzie: "As far back as pre-bubble there was a company called desktop.com, but ever since that era, technologists have been trying to test themselves and see how much of the Office experience we could take up into a browser and make it usable in some form. And in that realm, yes, there's Google Docs & Spreadsheets, there's ThinkFree, Zoho, there are a variety of different instances of people taking the tools and kind of replicating them up into a Web environment. ... In the pure Web model, the trade-offs are fairly substantial. You have to be online in order to use them. Depending on whose version it is, there are different feature/function trade-offs. But the way I approach it and the way I view the services opportunity related to productivity is really about more than just taking what's on the PC and putting it up on the Web. I think there are high-level scenarios that if you consider you've got software on PCs, services in the cloud and devices, mobile devices, as the power that you can work with, and you try to envision the value of productivity, and what you're trying to offer, you end up with a different result."
TECH TALK: Envisioning Tomorrow’s World: Teleputer, Ubinet and M-Web
The Teleputer is a term coined by George Gilder. Think of it as a device which marries a mobile phone and a computer, or more specifically, a network computer. As I see it, the teleputer is a device which is a mobile phone which can also double as a multimedia network computer. It can be connected to a docking station which connects to a full-size keyboard, monitor and mouse. We will carry the teleputer with us when we are on the move. It has its own small keypad and display. It has good data connectivity and an in-built browser. Perhaps, future versions of the teleputers will also have excellent voice recognition and, like Nintendo's Wii, even understand gestures. When we want a bigger display and keyboard, we will dock the teleputer to connect to servers on which the information and applications are stored. The Ubinet is a ubiqutious network of connectivity. It will be an envelope that allows access from anywhere. It will be wireless and broadband. The early versions can be seen in technologies like 3G, WiMax and mesh wireless. Tomorrow's networks will have far greater speeds. The Ubinet is what will make network computing on the teleputer a reality – with performance that we are used to seeing on today's desktop computers. The M-Web is the Internet that is My, Mobile and Magical. It includes a computing grid that will take care of all the storage and processing. Personalisation will create a magical experience as the teleputer will know where we are and get from the M-Web contextual information. The M-Web will be mobile friendly because that is how the predominant access will happen. The M-Web will have some key differences from today's Web. Tomorrow: The Present and Future Webs Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Envisioning Tomorrow’s World: Computer, Mobile and the Internet [March 5, 2007]
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