tech.memeorandum

Tech Web, page A1 … for 7:55 AM ET, February 18, 2006
Current Tech Page     Also:   Politics

Top Items:

Elatable:
Creators, Synthesizers, and Consumers  —  As Yahoo! has been gobbling up many social media sites over the past year (Flickr, upcoming, del.icio.us) I often get asked about how (or whether) we believe these communities will scale.  —  The question led me to draw the following pyramid on a nearby whiteboard:
RELATED ITEMS:
Daniel Gross / Slate:
Twilight of the Blogs  —  Are they over as a business?  —  As a cultural phenomenon, blogs are in their gangly adolescence.  Every day, thousands of people around the world launch their blogs on LiveJournal or the Iranian equivalent.  But as businesses, blogs may have peaked.
Mark Evans:
Have Blogs Peaked?  —  According to Slate, it's the beginning of the end for blogs.  Based the Sports Illustrated cover story theory - which implies that any person or team touted on the cover is doomed to fail - Slate's Daniel Gross concludes the fun and games are over within the blogosphere …
Carl Howe / The Blackfriars Blog:
Looking beyond the twilight of the blogs  —  [Graphic courtesy of Yahoo's Bradley Horowitz at Elatable.com]  —  Slate magazine today is running an article titled "Twilight of the Blogs", arguing that all the signs are in place to say that blogging is topping out from a business point of view.
Dan Gillmor / Center for Citizen Media:   The Blog Bubble? … It's obvious that there's been way more hype lately than is healthy.
Steve Rubel / Micro Persuasion:
Focus on the Trends, Not the Hype
Discussion: A View from the Isle
Tom Krazit / ZDNet:
DMCA axes sites discussing Mac OS for PCs … Apple Computer appears to have invoked the Digital Millenium Copyright Act to stop the dissemination of methods allowing Mac OS X to run on chips from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.  —  The chatter at the OSx86 Project was stifled Friday …
RELATED ITEMS:
Xeni Jardin / Boing Boing:
NBC nastygrams YouTube over "Lazy Sunday"  —  A source at YouTube informs BoingBoing that NBC recently sent the user-submitted video hosting site a nastygram over the Saturday Night Live "Lazy Sunday: Chronicles of Narnia" video.  —  That's right — NBC's lawyers are beating YouTube …
Jon Van / Chicago Tribune:
It's a Wi-Fi kind of town  —  Chicago seeks proposals for citywide Internet access  —  The City of Chicago wants to blanket its streets and neighborhoods with a wireless Internet signal, granting residents and visitors access to the Web wherever they are—on streets, in homes, offices and shopping malls.
Zoli Erdos / Zoli's Blog:
Web 2.0 in the Enterprise - Blogging the TIE Event  —  The Web 2.0 in the Enterprise panel discussion hosted by TIE was exciting.  In fact it wasn't really a panel discussion, rather a most interactive group event.  Jeff Clavier as moderator with Charlene Li, Ross Mayfield …
Wired News:
Here Comes a Google for Coders  —  For most people, open source is a synonym for free software.  But for programmers, open source is about sharing code, building on the work of others and not having to reinvent the wheel — at least, that's the ideal.  In practice, code reuse remains very low …
Erick Schonfeld / CNN:
Segway creator unveils his next act  —  Inventor Dean Kamen wants to put entrepreneurs to work bringing water and electricity to the world's poor.  —  San Francisco (Business 2.0) - Dean Kamen, the engineer who invented the Segway, is puzzling over a new equation these days.
Discussion: IP Democracy and Boing Boing
RELATED ITEM:
Jamais Cascio / WorldChanging:   Grameen Covers the Monopoly Board
Daniel Terdiman / CNET News.com:
Software pioneer Bricklin tackles wikis  —  update If ever someone was going to merge two technologies as disparate as wikis and spreadsheets, VisiCalc creator Dan Bricklin might well be the person for the job.  —  In 1979, Bricklin released VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet for personal computers.
stopscum.com:
Dale Begg-Smith & AdsCPM: A Spyware low life Criminal Distributor wins an Olympic Gold Medal for Australia  —  You can run but you can't hide.  If you fail to answer reporters questions in a candid and detailed manner, lots of folks will poke around and discover your checkered past.
Jayvee / Cell phone 9:
BenQ-Siemens Pandora (EF51)  —  I had a chance to grab a sneak peek into the upcoming line of phones from BenQ-Siemens.  Codenamed Pandora (in Asia), this phone is a prototype version of the new company's music phone.  I'm quite pleased with the way the new company is churning out sensible phones with attractive designs.
Discussion: Gizmodo and Engadget Mobile
Thomas Hawk / Thomas Hawk's Digital Connection:
Meet the New Boss, NOT the Same as the Old Boss — CEO Tom Rogers on the Future of TiVo  —  TiVo CEO Tom Rogers gave an exclusive interview to Bloomberg News earlier this week on Bloomberg's broadcast "Corner Office."  He talked about his own life personally as well as what TiVo …
Discussion: PVR Wire, HD Beat and Engadget
Adam Green / Darwinian Web:
Is there an optimal size for a reading list?  —  I was reading Jim Moore's blog for the first time, and I came across this recommendation in his instructions for new users of OPML reading lists: … I've seen this idea before and it's always puzzled me.  Amy Bellinger makes the same point:
Discussion: Anne 2.0 and BlogBridge
Jamais Cascio / WorldChanging:
Freedom to Connect  —  David Isenberg's name pops up occasionally here on WorldChanging, and for good reason.  He's one of the more forward-thinking telecom specialists around, and his work on whether to embed "intelligence" in a network or in the devices at the end (the latter is far better) …
Discussion: Smart Mobs and Weblogsky
Brian Krebs / Washington Post:
Invasion of the Computer Snatchers  —  If you think your computer is safe, think again  —  In the six hours between crashing into bed and rolling out of it, the 21-year-old hacker has broken into nearly 2,000 personal computers around the globe.  He slept while software he wrote scoured …
Nicole Wong / Official Google Blog:
Response to the DoJ motion  —  In August, Google was served with a subpoena from the U. S. Department of Justice demanding disclosure of two full months' worth of search queries that Google received from its users, as well as all the URLs in Google's index.  We objected to the subpoena …
Discussion: loose wire

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More Items:

Joel Makower / WorldChanging:
Xerox PARC Takes on Clean, Green Technology
Lifehacker:
NES emulator for your mobile phone
Discussion: Engadget Mobile and Kotaku
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An Analysis of Democratically Ordered Link Sites
Discussion: ben barren
Ina Fried / CNET News.com:
Newsmaker: Ending Microsoft's identity crisis
John Palfrey:
Statement Regarding the RSS 2.0 Specification
Discussion: Workbench and Scripting News
Regine / we make money not art:
The owl that takes control over innocent devices

Earlier Picks:

Jason Chervokas / TRICKSTER!:
Media Wants to be Free (But Not in the Way You Think)
Discussion: A VC and The River
Charlene Li / Charlene Li's Blog:
Forrester's Social Computing report
Joris Evers / CNET News.com:
Homeland Security official suggests outlawing rootkits
James Flanigan / New York Times:
Venture Capitalists Are Investing in Educational Reform
Discussion: SiliconBeat
Saul Hansell / New York Times:
Amazon Will Take On iPod With Its Own Music Player
Saritha Rai / New York Times:
India's Outsourcing Industry Is Facing a Labor Shortage
 
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