Yahoo! founders Jerry
Yang and David Filo
received stupid advice
from their investment
bank advisers and blew
their chance to close the
deal with Microsoft as of
this Sunday morning.
Neither Yang nor Filo are
experts on how to sell a
company in a
multi-billion dollar
deal. They have relied on
their investment bankers
and advisers since the
negotiations started with
Microsoft. The difference
between the offered price
of $33 and the asking
price of $40 per share is
roughly $1.4b per share,
so it's not small
potatoes.
Apple's taken some heat
lately for their decision
to push Safari to anybody
who runs their Apple
Software Update utility.
I didn't want Safari, but
unless I opt out of it
I'll get it. Now Sun and
Google are doing the same
thing with the Google
Toolbar. It isn't enough
that they allow you to
opt-out.
Now, what Google
announced is really
exciting! I'm not
kidding. It's even better
than I hoped. Yes, it's
only Python, but IBM's
PC-DOS was only BASIC and
Pascal when it first came
out, and it didn't
matter. Yeah, I preferred
C, but I coded in Pascal
because that's what you
had to do to get an app
running. What you're
going to see here that
you've never seen before
is shrinkwrap net apps
that scale that can be
deployed by civillians.
That's a mouthful, but
that's what's coming.
Why? Because here is a
standardized platform
that can be stamped out
in the billions of units.
Maybe Google can't do it,
but the perception is
that they can. Who is
willing to stand up and
say Google hasn't nailed
scaling? What PCs did in
the 80s, Google is doing
now. PCs took the black
magic out of owning a
computer.
The NY Times had a story
yesterday,
much-written-about in the
blogosphere, that said
that bloggers were
working themselves to
death. This was one
article about blogging I
was glad to be left out
of, even so, it could
have been about me, a
number of years ago, when
my lifestyle almost did
kill me.
I met Jonas Jacobi and
John Fallows just after
Thanksgiving as they
pitched their product for
inclusion at DEMO. Having
helped launch the first
Web server at DEMO more
than 10 years ago, I
understood immediately
the importance of what
they are providing in
this technology. On the
spot, I invited them to
come to the conference.
Where, John asked, would
DEMO 08 be held? Palm
Desert, I answered.
'That's great. Our
families will love it
there.'
Key opinion-formers in
the field of
infrastructure and
pioneers of
virtualization
technologies of all types
have already begun
submitting speaking
proposals to
Virtualization Conference
& Expo 2008 East, being
held in New York City,
23-24 June, 2008. Topics
covered will range from
Server Virtualization,
Application
Virtualization, Desktop
Virtualization, Network
Virtualization, I/O
Virtualization and
Storage Virtualization,
to Virtual Machine
Automation, Physical to
Virtual (P2V) Migration,
Management Applications,
Tools and Utilities, and
Virtualization Scripts
and Procedures.
The defining
characteristic of any RIA
is that it has a stateful
client that is (or should
be) platform and browser
independent. Thin-client
web applications grew
from the need to provide
applications with more
reach, easy access to
server side data, and to
alleviate the pain of
having to install and
configure thick client
software. Thin-client web
applications remain a
great way to accomplish
these goals. However,
with the advent of these
new RIA platforms,
developers now have all
the reach of a
traditional thin-client
web application with many
of the useful
characteristics of
thick-client
applications, such as the
ability to maintain state
on the client.
Microsoft is opening up
its ad-supported
'software-plus-services'
Office Live Workspace
answer to Google Apps to
public beta for feedback,
it says, starting with
those who pre-registered
for the thing. The way it
works Office users can
post Word, PowerPoint,
Excel and PDFD files to
an online collaborative
workspace on Microsoft's
servers directly from
their Office programs
with a click of a mouse
and share their work or
simply access it from
someplace other than
their PC. It's supposed
to be a saner approach
than sending a document
off to collaborators on a
version-uncontrolled
e-mail round robin. Five
versions are preserved.
In keeping with the
longstanding SYS-CON
tradition of being at the
very forefront of
software development with
all its online and
offline resources,
SYS-CON Media & Events
jointly today announced a
double whammy, launching
both 'Open Web
Developer's Journal' (htt
p://openweb.sys-con.com)
and 'Open Web Developer
Summit' (http://openweb.s
ys-con.com) - to be held
for the first time in New
York City April 21-22,
2008.
My seven-year-old
daughter thinks that
there is a knowledge
genie that her teacher
'Googles' for answers.
While cute, the anecdote
also exemplifies how much
Google's obsession with
simplicity has helped
build brand awareness,
making their name
literally synonymous with
search. I can foresee
generations X and Y being
followed by generation S
- one that will rely on
search to accomplish
almost any task.
Sure, Oracle has its
award-winning Fusion
Middleware SOA-driven
tools to integrate these
sources. And Oracle
already has a roadmap
that ultimately
merges/migrates its
acquired customers into
the Oracle fold. But what
does an organization do
while its waiting for the
Fusion-driven SOA effort
to reach critical mass
before users can get the
answers they need? Just
wait? And should we tell
this same organization to
wait for the ERP
migration to be completed
before it tries to launch
new information-driven
initiatives? Of course
not. As the kissin'
cousin of databases and
applications and the next
door neighbor of SOAs and
portals, mashups are the
nimble-and-quick
complement to these
larger efforts. Mash and
publish, growth and
innovation continues.
I asked what she did for
a living. She said she
was a software engineer
working with SOA. I did
not think about my plane
ride much until I arrived
in San Francisco to
attend the SOA World
Conference & Expo this
past Monday and Tuesday.
The first day of the
conference as I walked
into the hotel, guess who
I saw? My friend who I
met on the Turkish
Airlines flight from
Istanbul. What a small
world, isn't it? Her
company was one of the
sponsors of the event.
To take advantage of the
OpenSocial implementation
in Orkut sandbox, you
have to create a Google
Gadget with the
OpenSocial feature, post
the gadget on the
Internet, and then add
the URL of the gadget as
an application. As I
looked into the Google
gadget API to build this,
I found something
interesting, the Google
Gadget framework exposes
the function
_IG_FetchContent() that
can be used to
asynchronously fetch the
text at any URL.
Less than 24 hours after
the launch of OpenSocial,
not only was it running
live in Plaxo, but there
were already several
first-class gadgets from
top developers like
RockYou and Slide. 'This
is just the beginning -
there's so much more to
do to truly open up the
social web,' wrote
Plaxo's Joseph Smarr, in
his personal blog on web
development, tech, and
life.
One of the Google folks
working on OpenSocial
sent me a message via
Facebook asking what I
thought about the
technical details of the
recent announcements.
Since my day job is
working on social
networking platforms for
Web properties at
Microsoft and I'm deeply
interested in RESTful
protocols, this is
something I definitely
have some thoughts about.
Below is what started off
as a private message but
ended up being long
enough to be its own
article.
There are 50 million
Facebook users who don't
know what OpenSocial APIs
are...and don't care.
There are about 5,000
tech bloggers and
developers who think it
is a revolution that will
'Checkmate' Facebook and
leave them with no moves.
TechMeme has over 100
stories saying that
OpenSocial is awesome and
Facebook is dead. MySpace
joins Google on
OpenSocial initiative.
OK, surely that settles
it, Facebook is toast.
Nope, not in my opinion.
Have you played with
Google's Desktop tool?
This is basically a strip
on the side of your
screen that lets you
house small applications,
called Gadgets. The tool
is available for Windows,
Linux and Mac so no
matter your vice there is
a flavour for you. There
is a wide variety of
Gadgets available,
ranging from the usual
news tickers and clocks
right through to games
and even being able to
vote if a girl is hot or
not!
Imho, Google has a long
way to go to build the
base of users and
developers connected
using the new protocol
that is the subject of
all this chest-thumping.
Do they exist in any
tangible form? How much
of a moving target are
they? It's like
proclaiming the new
owners of A-Rod's
contract as the winners
of the 2008 World Series.
Only in tech, a
persistently immature
industry, could such an
idea be aired seriously
(assuming Mike is
actually serious). I hope
that the Facebook people,
many of whom have never
been in the middle of a
tech PR war, don't
overreact. Me, I've been
around this block so many
times and it's boring.
Let's see some software
then I'll let you know if
this means anything. But
Google is keeping people
like me far away, which
suggests that there may
actually be no 'there'
there.
You know, despite all the
modern Smartphones, and
my new Treo 750v, I still
always have a hankering
to go back to my Palm
Treo 650. The ease of
use is still just
fantastic compared to
just about anything I've
ever used...the apps are
great, really functional.
Yes, it has its
problems, its not WiFi,
the camera is..well its
dodgy as we know
What comes after Google?
Where will the Web, the
Internet, the whole nexus
of telecommunications,
i-Technology, and the
quest for a better world,
take us?
Like so many of the ideas
that tumble out of the
Googleplex into the
public domain, Google
Trends is irresistible.
Jeremy Geelan puts the
application, newly taken
out of beta and now
available to all
cyberspace from the
Google main page, through
its paces by taking it
out for a giddy spin
around the i-Technology
world. The results are
surprising...
May. 12, 2006 09:15 AM Reads: 25,065 Replies: 7
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