March 29, 2007

Intertwingling indeed

The RedMonk sez "All I can see is, business information travels fast, and in interesting ways. Communities are where information flows. [..]  Intertwingling indeed"

This is indeed a blend of old (Blog /RSS) and new (Twitters) methods  that  communities  consume and share  information.  The interesting  part is that people are getting real world information, in virtual worlds first, e.g. Second Life.

These emergent technologies are surely going to change the way we consume and digest information. Like do trackbacks really matter now ??

March 22, 2007

Chindia ?

First time I am running across a term "Chindia" - A combo of China and India in the  landscape of economies termonlogy. I pulled this term because there is  some heavy food shortage in the coming months due to weather conditions  This will impact inflation.

next gen Leadership

The great leaders of the future will absolutely know technology. Not from a geeky perspective, but from a practical business approach.
...
I'm talking about developing the strategy, recruiting and developing the people to implement strategy, developing the culture and communicating all of the above. Those are the four things a CEO does.
...
The point I'm making is that what gets an executive into technology is not a love for the technology. That's the exception. It's understanding what technology can do to achieve personal or business goals. Any CEO who is goodwill grasp what technology can do to enable their business strategy, achieve their productivity goals, their cost savings, enable their movement into new markets. They'll absolutely use it.

Via : An interview of Cisco's John Chambers by USA Today:

March 14, 2007

Twitter RSS feed + Webclips

"wTwitterTwitter Where art thou ?

I was playing with Twitter and was wondering how to add friends and track traffic. I got feedup of trying to figure it out.. actually I was lazy and I just picked up the RSS on the Twiter User and plugged it into my sidebar for webclips.. BINGO.. upto date from the users without even touching the platform , IM , Web app.

Test Subject : RedMonk, AnilDash, SteveRubel, Mish Andy

I may have to reverse my earlier thought process

update : I just consumed the public RSS and now my sideabar looks like the "Googleplex Real time Display of search terms "--!!

March 13, 2007

"massive intentional copyright infringement." ?

"massive intentional copyright infringement." ??

"Viacom Inc. said on Tuesday that it was suing Google Inc. and its Internet video-sharing site YouTube for more than $1 billion over unauthorized use of its programming online.

The lawsuit, the biggest challenge to date to Google's ambitions to make YouTube into a major vehicle for advertising and entertainment, accuses the Web search leader and its unit of "massive intentional copyright infringement."

WTF does that mean ??  Its basically a deal gone sour and Viacom is now playing sour grapes and wants to sucker it to Google !! Forrester reported some time ago that recent negotiations with YouTube to arrive on a “fair” way to receive compensation for its intellectual property did not progress and the demand was the only way to prevent further losses.

March 08, 2007

DemoCamp Value (?)

David Crow our good old T-Dot trouble maker has once again raised a very valid question. What is the value to the Audience in a DemoCamp.

"I’m sick of product pitches. [..] I am interested in their design process, technology lessons learned, new techniques and tools that improved development, etc."

I kinda agreed with Dave Statement and continued to  following the conversations happening on his post. Here's a couple of comments that worth considering;

Rob Hyndman : Is there value in showcasing to people who aren’t?  Media, VCs, potential strategic partners, and the like?

John Kopanas  : I MCed DemoCampMontreal and felt the local did not really create, for me, the right ambience.

Ryan : Another option would be to reserve a spot for a theoretical presentation by a prof or other luminary that would address larger issues that are (or should be) relevant to this community.

Derek : To keep the quality of the demos high and on interesting topics, you could let the community vote and pick the demos they want to see from a list of proposed presentations.

Mark Kuznicki : The authentic sense of wow comes from a show of acrobatic ingenuity, the dramatic stories of challenges overcome.

Thomas Purves : I still prefer the idea to let the community vote on presentations digg style in advance of the event.

Kieran Huggins : reformat it to more of a BarCamp format where we have several (or all) demos going concurrent and for longer periods of time.

I have been to a couple of these camps. At times participated in sleuth mode, just stand at the back and listen. Other times, hang around and chit chat over beers. I have seen some incredible stuff happening and great interaction with the tech community at these events. However, after  nearly 1 year of  democamp's, there is a tone of discord begining to araise.

I normally   do my own diggin in terms of what demo's are slotted. If there none that really interest me, I just don't go to the event. I really think that demo's should be left to the side and not included.
Rather just "A talk"  on technology by somebody - a good solid 30 minutes spill. If ppt needs to be used so be it. Another thing that I would like to see, is an open floor for questions from the audience to the audience. At times, its easier to get the ears of 100-150 peeps with simple open questions.  Create a discussion, at the event. There is no such thing as a silly question. Just give a 45 min slot and pass the mike around.. people raise their hand to ask the question. Let the audience respond. If the discussion becomes to heated. A Mod cuts in and a gong gets hit !! yeah, we dont need a Jerry Springer show happening correct ?? Or Just have the audience throw in their questions into a hat and then they get pulled out read out to the particpants. This may ensure anon mode of raising issues/ questioning too !! 

Q: Why don't more people contribute?

A: They either (a) want to withhold value that they may cash in later or, (b) they are not sure if they will get credit for their contribution. One of the most important things you can do if you manage community-based ecosystems is to highlight and thank those who particpate and give credit where credit is due.

Right now the audience believe , they are present to see a demo and hear another person's spill /pitch.  Whereas, they are have to come to the event thinking-- here is what I need to share, or here is what I need to ask. The value is the audience. IF they  interact in a manner and mode which creates value,then that becomes their take away !!


 



 

March 06, 2007

Pirates Crack Vista

A pirate group Pantheon, which allows a pirated, non-activated installation of Vista (Home Basic/Premium and Ultimate) to be properly activated and made fully-operational. This certainly is a blow for MSFT in terms of Vista Product ActiviationStrategy. Who would  ever think that OEM/hardware was the vectors to look into.  Still  no  response from   MSFT.

"Vista uses System-Locked Pre-Installation 2.0 (SLP 2.0). It allows the “Royalty OEMs” to embed specific licensing information into the operating system which Vista can activate without having to go back to Microsoft for verification. The licensing components include the OEM’s hardware-embedded BIOS ACPI_SLIC (which has been signed by Microsoft), an XML certificate file which corresponds to this ACPI_SLIC and a specific OEM product key.

Pantheon released a bundle which includes the certificate files from ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo along with OEM product keys for Vista Home Basic, Home Premium and Ultimate, and an emulator which allows the BIOS ACPI_SLIC driver for any manufacturer to be installed without requiring the system to be physically running that hardware. For example, you can install the ASUS certificate information on any machine, not just an ASUS."

Update : Video demo here or  alter Mirror

March 05, 2007

The Lords Prayer 2.0 !!

I really found this kewl. I had to link love and repost in total from Chris's blog. Btw, Chris and me go back some 38 odds years , so I think its ok to cut and copy :)-

Heres' his Wifes;  (programmer) version of the Lords Prayer ;

The Lord is my programmer, I shall not crash. He installed His software on the hard disk of my heart, All of His commands are user friendly, His directory moves me to the right choices for His name’s sake.

Even though I scroll through the problems of life, I will fear no bugs, for You are my backup; Your password protects me; You prepare a menu before me in the presence of my enemies; You help is only a key away.

Surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life, And my file will be merged with His and saved forever!   



February 28, 2007

mesh '07 tickets are now on sale

Mesh '07 tickets are now on sale. AT $399/- for the two days, its worth the money !! The line-up of talkers also seem OK, they are  some of the regular loud mouths of Web2.0. However,  Richard Edelman, CEO of Edelman Co.speaks on  the tension between the openness of the Web and traditional marketing. This certainly will be an interesting session , after all -  blogopshere still remembers the Walmart scenario !!

Anyhoot, cya all there..

February 22, 2007

Pharming 2D

Hackers launched the "pharming" attack on Monday, Feb. 19 and authorities shut it down on late Wednesday. "It was a professional team. It was very well planned," says Hubbard. "It was quite successful and very resilient.

"On Monday, the first e-mail lure was spammed out. It contained the bogus news that Australian Prime Minister John Howard was struggling for his life after suffering a heart attack. The e-mails are set up to appear to be a link to a news story from The Australian, a daily newspaper. The second e-mail lure offered up news of a cricket match in Australia. Hubbard notes he was surprised how many Americans were conned into clicking on a link for more information about Australian cricket.

The e-mail lures directed users to connect to a Web site for more information. When they clicked on the link, they were redirected to one of five different malicious Web sites, where their machines were infected with malware.

When anyone with a corrupted machine connected to a Web site for one of 65 banks or financial institutions, any information they entered there would be sent to both the real destination, as well as back to the hackers. The stolen information, along with more malicious code, was stored on a master server." [ source ]

Infection Rates : Australia 35%, US 32% , UK 11.5% , Others .5%

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