technology

The iPhone Agony and the Ecstasy

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I eventually got my iPhone activated, yet 2 days later the number hasn’t processed, and ATT won’t accept anything other than a ‘fax’ (yup no sms or email can be sent to a sodding phone company), to get my international plan up and running because I have had less than 3 addresses in the US. Then I had to get a replacement iPhone because the speaker was broken. As Dave Winer would say – Oy! — And you know what? Despite the fact that ATT continue to behave like the kind of company that has a 200 yard wide dinosaur-extinction-type asteroid thingy headed for it. Its actually worth it, The iPhone is the kind of superior intelligence that can only emerge as the dinosaur’s fade. A truly innovative and disruptive piece of technology. The kind of product that will aid the fall of companies like ATT as iTunes did to…

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Facebook: honeymoon over.

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Here here! Jason has an excellent post about Facebook as the new AOL. Its a comparison that people don’t want to admit to being accurate, because AOL is everything that is considered unfashionable amongst the web’s key influencers, whilst Facebook is quite the thing. I must admit this short lived enthusiasm mirrors my own feelings. A couple of months ago I was breathless about it, largely because of its minimalist design. And now I find it pretty amateur and useless, despite its slick appearance. In short, there is something about Facebook that doesn’t feel like its a step forward in the development of the web. Facebook is the new AOL (kottke.org)

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Microsoft’s Live Search Is No Longer Live

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Microsoft’s Live Search Is No Longer Live ResearchBuzz has found this hilarious gem. Apparently Microsoft couldn’t create a way (huh, as RB suggests – what about captchas after repeated queries?) to stop data mining of their advanced live search – so they killed it. Live Search’s Statement

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If I were a VC this is a startup I would back

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If I were a VC this is a startup I would back. If the money in a gold rush is made from selling picks and shovels, then Openfount are selling stainless steel Web 2.0 tools for the price of plastic ones. They have built value-added products upon Amazon’s excellent S3 storage and EC2 pay as you go grid computing. The most interesting is the distributed file system product. They give you a disk image to load onto S3. From that you can instantiate as many clustered machines as you want and have them share the same disk, with infinite capacity. Simple and elegant. Stuff that used to cost six figures for a grand or so. Enabling web 2.0 where the metal hits the meat | openfount

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The Day Web 2.0 Died

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The Day Web 2.0 Died. Google release a completely obvious but great new product – saveable personal maps. On the same day, Techcrunch review an enterpise mashup service, Rearden Commerce, with $100M of funding. This wouldn’t appear so ironic, (since they currently and sensibly have their feet firmly in the ‘stupid money’ enterprise camp), if it weren’t for the fact that they are announcing a move into the consumer space. Talk about a day to pick for that announcement. To add insult to injury, Rearden have an hilariously meaningless ‘long tail’ graph and are apparently going after the services market: “services are roughly 60% of the worldwide economy.” Oh yeah, are Rearden gonna run the Bosnian police force (like Computer Sciences Corporation) and hook up tourists with Bangkok Ladymen? Going after the ‘services market’ with a mashups startup is like going after the global arms trade market with a paintball…

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Most Entertaining Alexa Numbers Ever

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Alexa currently shows a 90,000 % increase for Macrumorslive. Taking its rank from 1,264,571 to 3,023. That kind of fluctuation makes a halloween costume store look like a year round business. It also shows quite how big the cult of Jobs has become. Related Info for: macrumorslive.com/

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Web 2.0 is an aftermarket for Google

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Dave says: “Web 2.0 is nothing more than an aftermarket for Google.” Amen. Dave predicts that we’ll know when the web 2.0 bubble bursts when Google’s stock crashes. This will happen when the ad market stutters again. Google is the infrastructure that routes ad revenue to many startups, but the crash comes when the ad market stops growing at the same pace. My guess is that this will be half way through next year when consumer spending drops triggered by the real estate market crash. Imagine what all those business plans look like with their eCPMs halved.

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Andy Kessler – the Internet is a series of pipes

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If the most stupid thing ever said about the Internet was Ted Stevens’ infamous “the Internet is a series of Tubes” speech, Andy Kessler’s pieces about the Internet as a series of pipes must rank amongst the most intelligent. If you can create a ‘virtual pipe’ between the service and the customer, where the the customer cannot exit, and you can hold on to it, and broaden your base – you win. But there are all sorts of pipes, and nothing special about the material the pipe is made of, what matters is where is links to and from, in the multi dimensional phase space that defines a market. Unlike the days of mainframe and frame relay, there is nothing special about the technology of the pipe itself – there are lots of pipes, a road network rather than a railroad system, and you can try building them anywhere. In…

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Self updating software

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I’m currently looking at a project based on self replicating content. Closest thing out there is Jeremy Rushton’s awesome TiddlyWiki, however it seems that PHP can self-write with no problems. [PHP] Self-overwriting Scripts – GameDev.Net Discussion Forums

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