Archives for 2006

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A Tale of Flashdance, Microsoft and IBM

The woman whose life was the inspiration for the hit ’80s movie “Flashdance” lost her bid in court Monday for a copyright interest in the film, which grossed more than $150 million at the box office in the United States.

Maureen Marder, the former construction worker by day and exotic dancer by night depicted onscreen by Jennifer Beals, released her interest in the project for $2,300 shortly before the film hit theaters in 1983. (Full story at the SF Chronicle)

$2,300 out of $150M … too bad. But a deal is a deal. Just like the deal Bill Gates made with Tim Paterson to buy his QDOS operating system for a grand total of $50K in 1980.

The small fact that Gates and company forgot to mention is that they already had a deal with IBM to develop the next generation Operating System, to be later known as MS-DOS. Still, the real loser in this deal is not Paterson, but Gary Kildall, whose CP/M was the foundation for QDOS.

On second thought, I take it back. The real loser in the deal was IBM, that allowed Gates to keep the rights to DOS and licensed it on a per-copy based royalty instead, essentially “creating” Microsoft, the Monopoly. They did not have a Deal Architect to advise them. ( A funny coincidence that on the day I talk about Flashdance, Vinnie quotes the Dire Straits).

Update (6/14): What a timing! Read Scoble’s piece: Oh, and my brother wrote MS-DOS.

This must be Dire Straits week, read Jeff Nolan here.

 

Finally, a flashback to Flashdance (should the embedded player not work, watch the video here)

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Google is so Generous to me

I have no clue how on earth my little post became the second hit Google brings up on a “Duet SAP” search, but I am certainly not complaining. The first one is Microsoft, then comes yours truly, followed by the Gartner group (hey, InformationWeek was right, after all!) and only then comes SAP itself.

Keep up the good work, Google, I like it.

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Time to Load up on Flat Panels?

Flat ScreenDisplaySearch reports thatLDC desktop monitor market seasonal decline was greater than had been forecast for the first quarter of 2006….As LCD panel production continued to ramp in the quarter, LCD monitor panel inventories continued to build

Hm, sounds like a buying opportunity… I want to see hot flat screen deals

Talk about deals, Dell p***ed me off. Not in the personal way they did with Jeff Jarvis, just with their print promotions. The May catalogue arrived in the last days of the month (this is by design, Dell prints delivery date of May 24-26 on it), with travel and everything it took me a little while before checking it, but by now the promo codes are not valid, and the deals online are far worse than in the catalogue.

Now, I understand sometimes “hot online deals” only last hours… but shouldn’t print media promotions last a few weeks? Oh, well, I am not getting a Dell.

Update (6/13): Read Techdirt on Dell.

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CHP Shooting at Speeding Motorist

A California Highway Patrol officer fired at a speeding motorcyclist who refused to pull over Sunday afternoon, authorities said.” (Sf Chronicle)

Wow… we’re at the Wild, wild West after all.

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When Bloggers Unite…

Read the phenomenal story of how a stolen Sidekick became the hot topic on the blogosphere. The victim’s friend wanted to publicly embarrass the alleged thieves to the point that they return it. So far about 500 blogs / sites picked up the story, he has received thousands of emails, got digged, slashdotted, linked to from MSNBC… crashed four different servers where he started forums. This is his ISP bill:

ISP Bill

And the saga continues ….

Related posts:

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Techdirt Greenhouse Launches New Social Experiment

I’m at the Techdirt Greenhouse, starting in just a few minutes. The previous one was a great experience, and now I am back to lead one of the discussion groups.

One way to measure the success of a conference (unconference?) is how often you talk about it long after it’s over. Ever since the first Greenhouse I could not attend a conference without bumping into a few participants who’d start the conversation by saying how boring the old way felt after the Greenhouse experience.

Greenhouse has become the “gold standard” for participation, interactivity – there are no speakers and audience, just participants.

And now Techdirt is taking it one step further, by launching a social experience: at the end of the day, when everyone’s left, the discussions will not be closed. Greenhouse “lives on” here– courtesy of WetPaint. The site brings the best of wikis and forum discussions together, in an easy-to use format. Feel free to navigate around, and don’t just read – participate! You all have edit rights. Registration is not necessary, but helpful, especially if you’d like to be recognized for your contribution.

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Bush Approval Map

At ElectionMay 2006Check out this animated map of the President’s approval rating – in the beginning it’s easy to miss the changes, but it steps through the changes month by month.

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Google Spreadsheet vs Zoho Sheet – a Visual Comparison

As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words. Well, I save you about 950 words, instead let these two pics show you why I am staying with Zoho Sheet, despite all the hoopla around Google Spreadsheet. I imported the same Excel Spreadsheet into both Zoho and Google – here’s the comparison:

Which one is more pleasing to the eye I leave it to you, dear reader but what happened to my chart? Gone. Google Spreadsheet does not do charts. Of course we can pick a number of analytical functions from Excel that both Zoho and Google are missing.. but I am the average user, barely using 10% of Excel’s functionality. Charting, however, is not “advanced” functionality, at least not in my book. It’s a most expressive way to visually convey information – a must for me.

There is a reason why I am using pictures above, not the original spreadsheets: Google has no global share option, I have to invite specific emails. Zoho Sheet allows me to create a URL for global sharing, and it also has a handy feature of publishing just the chart, without the rest of the spreadsheet.

Considering my own usage pattern, Zoho is the hands-down winner. But of course the significance of Google releasing their spreadsheet is way beyond the current functionality, it’s further validation of Office 2.0, using personal productivity and collaboration tools directly on the Web. In the near future I will come back to the issue of Offline/Online, and what I believe the ideal balance is.

Update (6/7): As luck would have it, “Flickr is having a massage” right now, and my Zoho pic shows, Google does not. That’s certainly not what I wanted to present, bt Flickr is expected to be back to normal in 40-50 minutes.

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20%, Hackathon, Haxo, Fedex Day

(Updated)
Now that title doesn’t make a lot of sense, does it? It’s all about the same thing: Google’s model of allocating 20% of developers’ time to “doing their own stuff” as long as innovative and does NOT belong to their everyday project is becoming increasingly popular.

JotSpot defines it as a Hackathon:

“What the heck is a hackathon?

It’s a day-long event where our engineers each crank on something:

  • valuable to the company
  • but not what they’re “supposed” to be working on and
  • that can be taken from idea to working prototype in one day

Why do a hackathon? Because even startups get into a grind where engineers are working on longer term projects and creativity can feel stalled.

Plaxo calls it Haxo (cute )

“The general rule is that projects have to be somewhat related to the company’s direction, but everyone is encouraged to work on something new and different, and in particular on something that wouldn’t otherwise make it to the top of the priority list.”

Atlassian calls it Fedex Day, except that they extended it to Fedex Week.

“The development task must be something “out of the ordinary”…. it must be deliverable in one day (hence Fedex Day – “We deliver.”). “

And there is Bubbleshare, which simply calls it .. hm.. R&D time. (Isn’t that the term reserved for the other 80%? ). I see a certain cultural influence here. Joke apart, who cares what the name is, Albert clearly “gets it”:

“You’ll get your best ideas/features from bottom-up skunkworks projects that would NEVER be “justifiable” under the company road map.”

Congratulations to all the creative teams, keep on hacking (haxing?) away.

Update (6/16): Techcrunch reports about Yahoo’s 24hr Hack Day.

 

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You Just Called and We Were Listening…

Click to watch the video

Update (6/7): Hm, how relevant: Surveillance as Poison Pill? by Vinnie.

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