Facebook was ready to go IPO last year based on its fundamentals. But a recession perhaps was not a great time to go public. But now the recession is over. Further delays will cause Facebook harm. To put it down bluntly, Facebook can not make GroupOn like acquisitions if it stays private.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Google, GroupOn: Facebook Needs To Go Public
Facebook was ready to go IPO last year based on its fundamentals. But a recession perhaps was not a great time to go public. But now the recession is over. Further delays will cause Facebook harm. To put it down bluntly, Facebook can not make GroupOn like acquisitions if it stays private.
Labels:
Facebook,
google,
Groupon,
Initial public offering,
IPO,
Marissa Mayer,
yahoo,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: Integration Will Be Key
Image by earcos via FlickrThis is not a merger, this is an acquisition, but it feels like a merger. Granted this is no AOL Time Warner - thank God - but it feels like a merger more so than the YouTube acquisition felt. The YouTube acquisition felt like an acquisition, a big acquisition but still an acquisition. This feels like a merger.
Labels:
Andrew Mason,
Facebook,
google,
Groupon,
Marissa Mayer,
Mergers and acquisitions,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: Marissa Mayer's Stalking Of Andrew Mason
Image by jdlasica via FlickrAndrew Mason first spotted Marissa Mayer at South By Southwest. He did not think much of it. He did not think someone like Marissa Mayer might actually know who he was. Only two years before he had been eating Ramen noodles. He could still feel the taste of Ramen in his mouth.
Labels:
Accel Partners,
Andrew Mason,
Facebook,
google,
Groupon,
Marissa Mayer,
New York City,
Twitter
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: Say No The First Time
Image by jdlasica via FlickrHotmail was hot. So Bill Gates wanted to buy it. The joke in the industry for a decade and a half had been that Microsoft was always one step behind. Sabeer Bhatia was summoned for some face time with Bill G. Bill Gates offered $200 million.
"Can I sleep on it?" Sabeer Bhatia replied. He flew back home to the Bay Area where he lived.
Labels:
AOL,
Bill Gates,
google,
Groupon,
Hotmail,
Microsoft,
Sabeer Bhatia,
yahoo
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: It's The G Factor
Image by earcos via FlickrI am going to post a hypothesis. The hypothesis is that GroupOn always wanted to get bought, and it wanted to get bought by Google. From. Day. One. GroupOn plotted for this day to come before its inception. Why do I say that?
Labels:
Facebook,
Gmail,
google,
Google Earth,
Google Wave,
Groupon
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: GroupOn Perhaps Was Not The Next Big Thing
See, there is that buzz factor. The company that had the crown seat in the buzz kingdom until recently is able to spot the next taker and gets uncomfortable.
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: Google Just Got Offline
Image by ifindkarma via FlickrThis is Google getting offline. That is a big jump. I hear GroupOn has a salesforce. Google has not had that. This is Google now getting high touch. High tech is no longer enough. Online only is no longer enough. Google went offline before it went into hardware. That's significant. A company like Google getting offline also shows how mainstream the web has become. The term In Real Life no longer applies. What do you mean in real life? The web is as real as it gets.
Local, social, mobile, global.
Labels:
All Things Digital,
Andrew Mason,
DoubleClick,
Facebook,
google,
Groupon,
Marissa Mayer,
Search Engines,
Searching,
World Wide Web,
yahoo,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn: Google Could Not Have Avoided The Deal
Image via CrunchBaseTechCrunch: Why Google Hearts Groupon: Groupon is the clear market leader in the fastest growing new category on the Internet .... “I think the way Google will evolve is they will want to control everything significant on the Internet.” ....... Google Places is increasingly front and center on the main search results page for local searches, and VP Marissa Mayer recently switched from Search to now running Location and Local Services. She is known to be a big fan of Groupon .... Through its online-to-offline coupons, Groupon has figured out how to track that last mile in local online commerce between the ad and customers showing up at a store..... Google could start showing Groupon deals as tags on local searches or within Google Maps. The ability to add deals to their Places pages could make Places more appealing to local businesses as well. ..... scaling the business from one which deals with a few hundred businesses per day to tens or hundreds of thousands .... Groupon still requires a large local sales force to manage these deals, and an army of copy writers to make the deals appealing.This is a case of the dog finally catching up with the car. Google might have missed out on social, but it tried extra hard to get local and location right. That begs the question, Facebook refused to be bought for a billion, and now its market value is 50 billion, did GroupOn just miss out?
Labels:
Business,
Facebook,
google,
Google Places,
Groupon,
Marissa Mayer,
TechCrunch,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Google, GroupOn
Image via CrunchBaseThis is great for Google. But was this great for GroupOn? Why did GroupOn not seek an IPO route? That is the question I find myself asking.
Labels:
All Things Digital,
Andrew Mason,
Facebook,
google,
Groupon,
Justin Bieber,
Marissa Mayer,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Tech Bangalore: A Blog
Labels:
bangalore,
Bharti Airtel,
Facebook,
Gmail,
India,
Karnataka,
Norton Internet Security,
prashanth,
tech bangalore,
Twitter
| Reactions: |
Monday, November 29, 2010
Google Earth: A House Is A House Is A House
Image via CrunchBaseGoogle Earth is just swell. When it first came out, I downloaded it right away. I saw the country I grew up in - Nepal - in ways I had never seen before. The Himalayas were so awesome to explore on Google Earth. I spun the globe in slow motion over large stretches of Russia. I was a kid in a candy shop.
Labels:
Earth,
google,
Google Earth,
Google Street View,
iFund,
iPhone,
Mary Meeker,
New York City
| Reactions: |
Number 52 In New York
Labels:
New York City,
Twitter
| Reactions: |
Is GroupOn Like YouTube?
Image via WikipediaFor one I was thinking GroupOn was not going to want to get bought. It had a great independent future, I thought. But perhaps the GroupOn founders felt like they were a one trick pony, and they were not going to be able to ride the imagination wave year in year out, and another hot company will show up, the buzz will move on. And Google wanted the sexy back bad.
Labels:
All Things Digital,
eBay,
google,
Groupon,
Latin America,
LivingSocial,
yahoo,
Zynga
| Reactions: |
I Am A Browser Bigot
Fred Wilson: HTML5 Mobile Apps: They looked and worked exactly like their mobile app counterparts.... you could cache all the elements, including the database, on the phone and deliver an offline experience in HTML5 in the browser .... I've accepted the mobile app paradigm as something we will be living with for the next five years.But I do realize that HTML 5 is not here yet. Universal wireless broadband is not here yet. And that begets the swamp that begets the mosquitoes: iPhone apps.
Labels:
app,
fred wilson,
HTML 5,
HTML5,
iPhone,
Mobile application development,
Smartphone,
Steve Jobs
| Reactions: |
Racism Caused Recession
Farrakhan: Levee May Have Been Bombed To Flood ... flood poor black people out of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.You could argue it was cyclical. It happens every 70 years. The last time was the Great Depression. And there was something like the Great Depression about 70 years before the Great Depression. I guess I will not see the Halley's Comet or another Great Recession in my lifetime then.
Labels:
Collateralized debt obligation,
fred wilson,
Great Depression,
Great Recession,
Hurricane Katrina,
New Orleans,
Recession,
Venture capital
| Reactions: |
Is Google The New Microsoft?
New York Times: Now a Giant, Google Works to Retain Nimble Minds: “At Facebook, I could see how quickly I could get things done compared to Google.” .... Google, which only 12 years ago was a scrappy start-up in a garage, now finds itself viewed in Silicon Valley as the big, lumbering incumbent. Inside the company some of its best engineers are chafing under the growing bureaucracy ..... Omar Hamoui, the founder of AdMob who was vice president for mobile ads at Google .... Much of Silicon Valley’s innovation comes about as engineers leave companies to start their own. ...... a short step from scale to sclerosis .... The company’s attrition rate for people it wished would stay has been constant for seven years ..... “There was a time when three people at Google could build a world-class product and deliver it, and it is gone,” Mr. Schmidt said .... Google has given several engineers who said they were leaving to start new companies the chance to start them within Google. They work independently and can recruit other engineers and use Google’s resources ....... Google is considering opening a start-up incubator inside the company ..... 20 percent time .... The company tries to limit groups of engineers working on projects to 10.... in reality, engineering groups quickly swell to 20 or even 40 .... new products created during 20 percent time are less likely to get anywhere these days..... Popular Google products like Gmail grew out of 20 percent time .... engineers say they have been encouraged to build fewer new products and focus on building improvements to existing ones .... Part of Google’s problem is that the best engineers are often the ones with the most entrepreneurial thirst. ..... said he knew it was time to leave as the number of people he had to copy on e-mail messages ballooned. .... Google says 80 percent of people who get a counteroffer stay put.... According to résumés posted on LinkedIn, 142 of Facebook’s 1,700 employees came from Google. .... “We hire more people in a week than go to Facebook in its lifetime.”I am not the first to ask this question. And I have tried to answer this before. But this is not a question that is about to go away. On the one hand you have people who think Google has already become a monopoly. I beg to differ. On the other hand you have people who are worried not every cutting edge technology is coming out of the Google shop. Those are not opposing views. Those are two weird poles of views.
Labels:
AdMob,
Facebook,
Gmail,
google,
Google Chrome OS,
LinkedIn,
Omar Hamoui,
Silicon Valley
| Reactions: |
What Does Google Do?
Image by Getty Images via @daylifeThe title of this post is a slight play on a famous book by Jeff Jarvis. This New York Times article below has been making the rounds. Looks like the Google algorithms reward bad behavior. Provide bad customer service, have enraged customers talk about you at various sites, and see yourself go up in search rankings.
Labels:
eBay,
Electronic commerce,
google,
Howard Stern,
Jeff Jarvis,
KFC,
New York Times,
White House
| Reactions: |
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Why Are They Still Communicating Through Cables?
Whatever happened to email?
New York Times: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels cache of a quarter-million confidential American diplomatic cables, most of them from the past three years ..... The disclosure of the cables is sending shudders through the diplomatic establishment, and could strain relations with some countries, influencing international affairs in ways that are impossible to predict. ..... The cables, a huge sampling of the daily traffic between the State Department and some 270 embassies and consulates, amount to a secret chronicle of the United States’ relations with the world in an age of war and terrorism..... The Americans, meanwhile, suggested that accepting more prisoners would be “a low-cost way for Belgium to attain prominence in Europe.” .... When Afghanistan’s vice president visited the United Arab Emirates last year, local authorities working with the Drug Enforcement Administration discovered that he was carrying $52 million in cash. ...... China’s Politburo directed the intrusion into Google’s computer systems in that country .... The Google hacking was part of a coordinated campaign of computer sabotage carried out by government operatives, private security experts and Internet outlaws recruited by the Chinese government. They have broken into American government computers and those of Western allies, the Dalai Lama and American businesses since 2002 ....... Saudi donors remain the chief financiers of Sunni militant groups like Al Qaeda ..... while Mr. Putin enjoyed supremacy over all other public figures in Russia, he was undermined by an unmanageable bureaucracy that often ignored his edicts. ...... nearly a decade after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the dark shadow of terrorism still dominates the United States’ relations with the world ..... adding Australians who have disappeared in the Middle East to terrorist watch lists .... American officials managing relations with a China on the rise and a Russia retreating from democracy........ “We’ll continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours” ..... The authoritarian ruler of a conservative Muslim country, Mr. Saleh complains of smuggling from nearby Djibouti, but tells General Petraeus that his concerns are drugs and weapons, not whiskey, “provided it’s good whiskey.” ..... describe the volatile Libyan leader as rarely without the companionship of “his senior Ukrainian nurse,” described as “a voluptuous blonde.” ...... Qaddafi was so upset by his reception in New York that he balked at carrying out a promise to return dangerous enriched uranium to Russia. ...... Mugabe “a brilliant tactician” but mocked “his deep ignorance on economic issues (coupled with the belief that his 18 doctorates give him the authority to suspend the laws of economics).” ..... Private Manning said he had delivered the cables and other documents to WikiLeaks. ..... The State Department’s unclassified history series, titled “Foreign Relations of the United States,” has reached only 1972 . ..... several hundred date from 1966 to the 1990s. Some show diplomats struggling to make sense of major events whose future course they could not guess. ..... In a 1979 cable to Washington, Bruce Laingen, an American diplomat in Tehran, mused with a knowing tone about the Iranian revolution that had just occurred: “Perhaps the single dominant aspect of the Persian psyche is an overriding egoism,” Mr. Laingen wrote, offering tips on exploiting this psyche in negotiations with the new government. Less than three months later, Mr. Laingen and his colleagues would be taken hostage by radical Iranian students, hurling the Carter administration into crisis and, perhaps, demonstrating the hazards of diplomatic hubris. ...... In an era of satellites and fiber-optic links, the cable retains the archaic name of an earlier technological era. ...... the drama in the cables often comes from diplomats’ narratives of meetings with foreign figures, games of diplomatic poker ..... half brother of the Afghan president .... trying to win over the Americans with nostalgic tales about his years running a Chicago restaurant near Wrigley Field. ...... “He appears not to understand the level of our knowledge of his activities. ....... Even in places far from war zones and international crises, where the stakes for the United States are not as high, curious diplomats can turn out to be accomplished reporters, sending vivid dispatches to deepen the government’s understanding of exotic places. ..... ‘Ramzan never spends the night anywhere.’
Labels:
Bruce Laingen,
David Petraeus,
Drug Enforcement Administration,
New York Times,
United Arab Emirates,
United States,
United States Department of State,
WikiLeaks
| Reactions: |
The Real Message From Apple Apps
Image via CrunchBaseThe real message from iPhone and iPad apps is not that the web is dead, like one magazine put it recently, but that people are willing to pay. Steve Jobs dove into the world of music piracy and created the iTunes store. People were willing to pay, it is just that they like the digital format better, he concluded.
Labels:
Apple,
Bloomberg Businessweek,
eBay,
google,
iPhone,
Jeff Jarvis,
Timothy Wu,
World Wide Web
| Reactions: |
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Events: November 29 - December 10
Labels:
Allen Street,
Blip.tv,
Esther Dyson,
fred wilson,
gary sharma,
gary's guide,
Ignite NYC,
meetup,
Scala
| Reactions: |
Old Media, New Media: Man Bit Dog, Dog Bit Man
That is an old dictum from journalism school, that man (sic) bit dog is news, but dog bit man is not. How new media has changed that and turned it upside down! If a dog bit man, and that man is your friend, that is not only news, that is big news. If that man walked his dog, and sent out a tweet about it, that is still news, to you. How things have changed!
Labels:
Amateur sports,
Dog,
Media,
Paradigm shift,
Social media,
Third World,
vinod khosla
| Reactions: |
Offer
Labels:
Biz Stone,
Dick Costolo,
Evan Williams,
Jack Dorsey,
Twitter
| Reactions: |
Making Dick Costolo An Offer He Can't Refuse
The Telegraph: Twitter lacks ‘clear long term vision’ admits new CEO: I am currently trying to define what Twitter’s purpose is in the long term. .... Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s co-founder and chairman, added that it was difficult to try and define Twitter’s function and purpose, as so many of its uses had been defined by its users over the past four years..... mindful of Twitter not losing its company culture, as it opens up offices around the world. ...... , similar to other US technology companies, such as Facebook, most of its international offices would be sales focused as opposed to having a product development division.Vision happens at the DNA level. Founding CEOs who turbocharge - Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg come to mind - are few and far between. People say it is not the idea, it is the execution. But then big, unsexy companies execute all the time. Then people say, it is not the execution, it is the ideas. But then startups with great ideas flounder all the time. It is quite a chicken and egg situation, don't you think?
Labels:
chief vision officer,
Dick Costolo,
Twitter
| Reactions: |
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Brazil: Rio de Janeiro: Videos (2)
Labels:
Brazil,
Rio de Janeiro
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Rio de Janeiro: Videos
Labels:
Brazil,
Rio de Janeiro
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Sao Paulo: Videos (2)
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Sao Paulo: Videos
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Sao Paulo: Photos
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Economy: Not South Korea
Brazil has come a long way, but Brazil still has a long way to go. $10,000 per capita income is not $20,000, it is not $30,000.
Labels:
BBC,
Brazil,
brazil economy,
Central bank,
Federal Reserve System,
Guido Mantega,
South America,
south korea,
United States,
Wikipedia
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Economy: Paving The Way
Brazil's story shows a poor country lifting itself up is great news for the global economy, it is great news for the rich countries. They don't steal your jobs. They create jobs that never existed before and they get rich and then they buy from you.
Labels:
Brazil,
brazil economy,
Forbes Global 2000,
Plano Real,
Sao Paulo,
South America,
São Paulo,
Wikipedia
| Reactions: |
Brazil: Economy: Amazon And Biotech
Brazil is a modern, world class economy. Most Brazilians work in the service sector. If Brazil is poised to be a world power, it is to be on the strength of its economy, not the might of its military.
Labels:
Amazon,
Amazon Rainforest,
Biotechnology,
Brazil,
brazil economy,
BRIC,
Gross domestic product,
Latin America,
United States
| Reactions: |
Brazil: The Amazon Rainforest: Videos (3)
Labels:
Amazon,
Amazon Rainforest,
Brazil
| Reactions: |
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Brazil: The Amazon Rainforest: Videos (2)
Labels:
Amazon,
Amazon Rainforest,
Brazil
| Reactions: |
Brazil: The Amazon Rainforest: Videos
Labels:
Amazon,
Amazon Rainforest,
Brazil
| Reactions: |
Brazil: The Amazon Forest: Photos
Labels:
Amazon,
Amazon Rainforest,
Brazil
| Reactions: |
Brazil: The Landscape
The Amazon rainforest is the most well known geographical feature of Brazil's landscape. But the country is geographically diverse like most large countries tend to be. I don't know if it has a desert though. Looks like it maybe does.
Labels:
Amazon Rainforest,
Belo Horizonte,
Brazil,
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
Resende Nuclear Fuel Factory,
South America,
United States,
Wikipedia
| Reactions: |
Zappos Being Sold
Labels:
Amazon.com,
Customer service,
iPad,
Jim Gilliam,
Organizational culture,
Tony Hsieh,
Zappos
| Reactions: |
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
A Cross Hudson Subway Would Be Nice
Bloomberg: Christie Says New York Must Pay First to Add Cross-Hudson Subway Link: a subway link between Secaucus and Manhattan ... a proposed $8.7 billion commuter-rail tunnel linking Newark to New York ..... The conduit was projected to double rush-hour train capacity between the two cities. ..... an alternative, to extend the city’s No. 7 subway line under the Hudson River to northern New Jersey. ..... alternative, projected to cost about $5.3 billion, is betterI never understood why New Jersey needed to be a separate state, or at least northern New Jersey. I think we should let go of upstate and take over northern New Jersey and carve out a state of New York Metro.
Labels:
Hudson River,
manhattan,
New Jersey,
New York,
New York City,
Queens,
Secaucus New Jersey,
Tunnel
| Reactions: |
A Victory For Larry
Image by yuichi.sakuraba via FlickrBloomberg: SAP Must Pay Oracle $1.3 Billion Over Unit's Downloads: the largest jury award of 2010 ..... s the largest ever for copyright infringement and the 23rd-largest of all time for any jury award
Larry asked for two billion. SAP offered 20 million. So Larry upped the ante. He asked for four billion. Looks like he has been awarded close to what he asked for. Asking for two billion and getting 1.3 billion is close.
Labels:
All Things Digital,
eBay,
google,
Larry Ellison,
MarkPincus,
Microsoft PowerPoint,
OffiSync,
Oracle,
SAP,
Sequoia Capital,
TechCrunch
| Reactions: |
Recession Over, Unemployment Still High
BBC: US Federal Reserve cuts 2011 growth forecast: The Fed expects growth of 3-3.6% next year, down from its previous 3.5-4.2% estimate. .... the US economy grew faster than first thought in the third quarter of this year, at an annualised rate of 2.5%. ...... US Federal Reserve said it would buy $600bn (£373bn) of US government debts in order to try to lower long-term interest rates and thereby boost the economic recovery. ...... support for the move on the policy committee was almost unanimous, with only one member voting against. ..... among the positive effects of quantitative easing that they noted was a lower value in the dollar. ..... the unemployment rate remains stubbornly high at 9.6%.
There is not going to be a double dip recession. The Great Recession could easily have become the second Great Depression, but it didn't, thanks to the stimulus package. The banks are back in shape. Spending is going up. But the unemployment is still at European levels, and that is a big problem. It has to be brought down to something like 6%.
Labels:
BBC,
Boom and bust,
Economy of the United States,
Federal Reserve System,
Inflation rate,
Late-2000s recession,
Unemployment,
US Federal Reserve
| Reactions: |
Bottled Water: Liquid Gold
BBC: Bottled water has become liquid gold: In the last 40 years the bottled water industry has gone from a business prospect that few took seriously, to a global industry worth billions of pounds. .... bottled water has become one of the biggest success stories in the modern food and beverage industry..... demand for bottle water has grown exponentially ..... "I think bottled water actually represents a kind of caricature of… the global economy.... "It provides people in the developed world with 20 or 30 varieties of something for which there is no actual variety." ... The Eau campaign was a marketing coup and sales went through the roof from 12 million bottles in 1980 to 152 million by the end of the decade. ...... "When you held a Perrier bottle up, it said something about yourself, it said you were sophisticated, you… understood what was happening in the world. ...... In an age of instant gratification, still water in portable bottles provided what people needed, exactly when they needed it. .... Strong, shatterproof and a highly valued form of polyester, PET is a by-product of the oil industry. ..... "Evian was sold as a beautiful person's drink" ..... Between 1990 and the turn of the century, global sales of Evian doubled from 50 billion to more than 100 billion litres a year. ..... a world where nearly a billion people have no access to clean water at all. ..... what bottled water is actually made of, oil and water; the world's two most precious resources, in one neat package.
If you can get a bottle of water for a buck, and a bottle of soda for a buck fifty, and the water is good for you, and the soda is bad for your health, then the water is a bargain, right? A lot of people don't think so.
Labels:
bottled water,
Drinking water,
soda,
Water
| Reactions: |
From 30,000 To 60,000 Hits A Month
Getting to 30,000 hits a month for this blog was hard. Going from there to 60,000 hits a month was pleasantly surprising, but I saw how it happened. And it took only a few weeks to get there. Now getting to 100,000 hits a month feels like totally doable. 3,000 hits a day? Of course I can do it.
| Reactions: |
Jai Ho
Labels:
jai ho,
slumdog millionaire
| Reactions: |
Monday, November 22, 2010
Netflix Streaming Only
Finally Netflix cut the chord.
New York Times: Netflix Introduces Streaming-Only Pricing: unlimited streaming on-demand video through the Internet without having to rent any DVDs ...... will cost $7.99, and give customers access to unlimited movies and TV shows in Netflix’s library. ..... Earlier in the year Netflix signed a $1 billion deal with Paramount Pictures, Lions Gate and MGM to add their content to its services. .... beyond physical DVDs and onto dozens of new platforms and services.... the streaming version of the platform available on an abundance of devices, including mobile phones, video game systems, laptop computers, third-party set-top boxes and a number of other Internet-capable gadgets.This was a long time coming. Who needs a DVD? Before long DVD players will be banned.
Labels:
DVD,
Lions Gate Entertainment,
Netflix,
New York Times,
Paramount Pictures,
Streaming media,
Television program,
YouTube
| Reactions: |
Paul Orlando In The New York Times
Labels:
chatroulette,
dogpatch labs,
Facebook,
India,
New York,
New York City,
United States
| Reactions: |
Model Job Offer Scam Threat
from Tammy Thomas tmiy12345@gmail.com
to Paramendra Bhagat
date Fri, Nov 19, 2010 at 4:57 AM
subject Re: Model Job Offer!
Nov 19 (3 days ago)
You must be very foolish and stupid for you posting the info of the company at http://technbiz.blogspot.com/2010/11/model-job-offer-scam.html...
Labels:
Andrew Mason,
Echo Global Logistics,
Eric Lefkofsky,
Groupon,
MediaBank,
Michael Bloomberg,
Monica Lewinsky,
Social media
| Reactions: |
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Brazil: Historically Speaking
Brazil is not a Spanish speaking country. The leading country in South America is not a Spanish speaking country. The British left, but the English language in India just grew and grew and grew. Brazil used to be a colony of Portugal. Just like India basically took over the English language - there are way many more English speakers in India than in England, way, way more - Brazil has taken over the Portuguese language.
Labels:
Brazil,
Brazilian people,
English language,
Portugal,
Portuguese language,
South America,
Spanish language,
Wikipedia
| Reactions: |
Brazil: The Largeness Of A Country
Some countries are huge geographically but minuscule in population: Canada, Russia, Australia. Brazil is not one of those. Its large presence on the map is matched by the people who populate that map.
Labels:
Australia,
Brazil,
Brazilian,
Brazilian people,
BRIC,
Canada,
Microfinance,
Russia,
Wikipedia
| Reactions: |
Bubble, Boom Or Froth?
Image by placenamehere via FlickrFred Wilson has been calling it a bubble. John Doerr says it's a boom. And that's just two guys, although high flying, legendary types. I think what we are seeing is a froth. Let me explain.A bubble is something waiting to burst. As soon as people wake up, they hunker down, and then where are you? The whole thing collapses like a ponzi scheme. There are some bubble aspects to what is going on. Do you think all startups that are getting funded will grow the money for their investors? That has never happened. Even a seasoned VC like Fred assumes one third of his investments will go down. But are too many flaky companies getting funded? The question is are more than the usual number of empty shell startups getting funded?
Labels:
fred wilson,
google,
John Doerr,
Silicon Valley,
Venture capital
| Reactions: |
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Large Countries: Population Matters: People Matter
Labels:
China,
India,
planet earth,
population
| Reactions: |
If Apothepo Is Innocent, Why Is He Hiding?
I am on Larry Ellison's side. Thanks for the drama, Larry. It's been fun watching.
Larry Ellison Cracks Me Up
Putting My Money On Larry Ellison
Larry Is Not Done Yet
The Leo Apotheker Is Human Drama
HP Keeps Making News
Larry Ellison Cracks Me Up
Putting My Money On Larry Ellison
Larry Is Not Done Yet
The Leo Apotheker Is Human Drama
HP Keeps Making News
Labels:
Larry Ellison,
Oracle
| Reactions: |
Friday, November 19, 2010
Chatfe Happy Hour With Paul Orlando
Earlier in the evening I was at the Chatfe Happy Hour for two hours: West 3rd Commons at 1 West 3rd Street. There used to be an Indian restaurant/bar at that place.
Labels:
chatfe,
chatroulette,
dogpatch labs,
Facebook features,
India,
iPhone,
Public relations,
Skype,
Voice over Internet Protocol
| Reactions: |
Tim Berners-Lee: Long Live the Web
Scientific American: Tim Berners-Lee: Long Live the Web: The world wide web went live, on my physical desktop in Geneva, Switzerland, in December 1990. It consisted of one Web site and one browser, which happened to be on the same computer. ..... We take it for granted, expecting it to “be there” at any instant, like electricity. ..... Wireless Internet providers are being tempted to slow traffic to sites with which they have not made deals. Governments—totalitarian and democratic alike—are monitoring people’s online habits, endangering important human rights. ....... Why should you care? Because the Web is yours. It is a public resource ...... The Web is now more critical to free speech than any other medium. ...... Yet people seem to think the Web is some sort of piece of nature ..... The Web should be usable by people with disabilities ...... from a silly tweet to a scholarly paper. .... A related danger is that one social-networking site—or one search engine or one browser—gets
Image via Wikipedia so big that it becomes a monopoly, which tends to limit innovation. ..... many companies spend money to develop extraordinary applications precisely because they are confident the applications will work for anyone, regardless of the computer hardware, operating system or Internet service provider (ISP) they are using—all made possible by the Web’s open standards. ....... The iTunes world is centralized and walled off. You are trapped .... For all the store’s wonderful features, its evolution is limited to what one company thinks up. .... It is better to build a Web app that will also run on smartphone browsers, and the techniques for doing so are getting better all the time. ..... as we saw in the 1990s with the America Online dial-up information system that gave you a restricted subset of the Web, these closed, “walled gardens,” no matter how pleasing, can never compete in diversity, richness and innovation with the mad, throbbing Web market outside their gates. ...... The Web is an application that runs on the Internet, which is an electronic network that transmits packets of information among millions of computers according to a few open protocols. ....... the Web is like a household appliance that runs on the electricity network ..... In 1990 the Web rolled out over the Internet without any changes to the Internet itself, as have all improvements since. And in that time, Internet connections have sped up from 300 bits per second to 300 million bits per second (Mbps) without the Web having to be redesigned to take advantage of the upgrades. ..... A neutral communications medium is the basis of a fair, competitive market economy, of democracy, and of science. .... Although the Internet and Web generally thrive on lack of regulation, some basic values have to be legally preserved. ..... snooping. In 2008 one company, Phorm, devised a way for an ISP to peek inside the packets of information it was sending. The ISP could determine every URI that any customer was browsing. The ISP could then create a profile of the sites the user went to in order to produce targeted advertising. ...... In France a law created in 2009, named Hadopi, allowed a new agency by the same name to disconnect a household from the Internet for a year if someone in the household was alleged by a media company to have ripped off music or video. ..... In the U.K., the Digital Economy Act, hastily passed in April, allows the government to order an ISP to terminate the Internet connection of anyone who appears on a list of individuals suspected of copyright infringement. In September the U.S. Senate introduced the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act, which would allow the government to create a blacklist of Web sites—hosted on or off U.S. soil—that are accused of infringement and to pressure or require all ISPs to block access to those sites. ..... In these cases, no due process of law protects people before they are disconnected or their sites are blocked. Given the many ways the Web is crucial to our lives and our work, disconnection is a form of deprivation of liberty. Looking back to the Magna Carta, we should perhaps now affirm: “No person or organization shall be deprived of the ability to connect to others without due process of law and the presumption of innocence.” ...... Finland made broadband access, at 1 Mbps, a legal right for all its citizens. ..... the latest version of HTML, called HTML5, is not just a markup language but a computing platform that will make Web apps even more powerful than they are now. The proliferation of smartphones will make the Web even more central to our lives. Wireless access will be a particular boon to developing countries ...... devising pages that work well on all screens, from huge 3-D displays that cover a wall to wristwatch-size windows. ..... linked data. Today’s Web is quite effective at helping people publish and discover documents, but our computer programs cannot read or manipulate the actual data within those documents. As this problem is solved, the Web will become much more useful, because data about nearly every aspect of our lives are being created at an astonishing rate. Locked within all these data is knowledge about how to cure diseases, foster business value and govern our world more effectively. ...... The information necessary to understand the complex interactions between diseases, biological processes in the human body, and the vast array of chemical agents is spread across the world in a myriad of databases, spreadsheets and documents. ...... They posted
Image via Wikipedia a massive amount of patient information and brain scans as linked data, which they have dipped into many times to advance their research. In a demonstration I witnessed, a scientist asked the question, “What proteins are involved in signal transduction and are related to pyramidal neurons?” When put into Google, the question got 233,000 hits—and not one single answer. Put into the linked databases world, however, it returned a small number of specific proteins that have those properties. ........ The investment and finance sectors can benefit from linked data, too. Profit is generated, in large part, from finding patterns in an increasingly diverse set of information sources. ..... We build it now so that those who come to it later will be able to create things that we cannot ourselves imagine.
I am not worried. I never thought the web was about to die. Apple does not scare me. The iPhone app warlordism does not scare me. The web is part of an ecosystem. It is the biggest fish, but it does not have to be the only fish.
Labels:
Digital Economy Act,
Digital Economy Act 2010,
History,
Internet service provider,
iTunes,
Tim Berners-Lee,
Website,
World Wide Web
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Web 2.0 Summit 2010: Fred Wilson, John Doerr
TechCrunch: Wilson Vs. Doerr. Bubble Vs. Boom. East Vs. West. Android Vs. iPhone. Facebook Vs. The Web (VIDEO): With Web 2.0 Summit now over, looking back, in my mind, easily the best panel was the one entitled Point of Control: Finance. It featured venture capitalists John Doerr (Kleiner Perkins) and Fred Wilson (Union Square Ventures) talking with New York Magazine’s John Heilemann about the state of both investing and the state of the web ecosystem at large. What made it so interesting is that Wilson and Doerr clearly don’t agree on many of the big issues.
Labels:
fred wilson,
John Doerr,
Web 2.0 Summit
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Thursday, November 18, 2010
Creating, Propagating
Sexism is concrete. Sexism is total. Sexism oppresses like gravity.
Sexism is geography. Sexism is universal.
Sexism exists. Sexism affects.
Sexism impacts.
Sexism holds down.
Sexism is for real.
Sexism is here and now.
Sexism is today.
Sexism is an ideology, sexism is a worldview. And it has to be talked about. It has to be challenged. It is not a men versus women thing. It is a sickness versus health issue. Sexism is sickness.
There is a connection between the mass rapes in Liberia and the glass ceilings in Manhattan. Can you see the connection?
Sexism is geography. Sexism is universal.
Sexism exists. Sexism affects.
Sexism impacts.
Sexism holds down.
Sexism is for real.
Sexism is here and now.
Sexism is today.
Sexism is an ideology, sexism is a worldview. And it has to be talked about. It has to be challenged. It is not a men versus women thing. It is a sickness versus health issue. Sexism is sickness.
There is a connection between the mass rapes in Liberia and the glass ceilings in Manhattan. Can you see the connection?
Labels:
change the ratio,
Rachel Sklar,
sarah lacy,
Sexism
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Google Apps: Open The Flood Gates
Google Enterprise Blog: Ten times more applications for Google Apps customers: Official Google Blog: Google Small Business Blog: Starting today, customers worldwide can access a full spectrum of services from Google—including more than 60 productivity-boosting applications that extend far beyond any traditional software suite.
Labels:
bruises,
Caroline Polachek,
chairlift,
Google Apps
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No More Beer, No More Soda
Don't get me wrong. I have never been much of a drinker. I have n-e-v-e-r enjoyed the taste of beer. But I have done some social drinking over the years. A few days back I decided I wanted to resolve to drink no more beer, and no more soda.
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Dell Duo: Tablet + Netbook
Dell has not done something this exciting in a long time. Maybe it is the Third World guy in me, but I have been a long time fan of Dell's legendary push to keep the price point at the lowest possible.
Dell is back.
Labels:
Broadcom,
Dell Inspiron,
Intel Atom,
Multi-core processor,
Random-access memory,
Third World,
Windows 7 editions,
Windows 7 Home Premium
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Web 2.0 Summit 2010: Robin Li
Robin Li has been caricatured, and he continues to be caricatured. But his is a true success story. Not all of the difficulties associated with doing business in China can be attributed to China being a one party state. The Chinese are like the Jewish people. They both have 5,000 years of non stop history. The Hindus have 10,000 years of non stop history, but that is another story.
Labels:
Baidu,
China,
Chinese language,
google,
Hindu,
Hong Kong,
Robin Li,
Web search engine
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John Battelle's Search Hangover
I think this interview of Mark Zuckerberg by primarily John Battelle is on the lame side. It is out and out hostile. And there is a reason for that.
Labels:
Eric E. Schmidt,
Facebook,
Federated Media,
John Battelle,
Mark Zuckerberg,
search,
Tim O'Reilly,
Web 2.0 Summit
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Web 2.0 Summit 2010: Mark Zuckerberg
TechCrunch: LinkedIn CEO On Why We Need More Than Facebook: Keg Stands
Now Over 200 Million Users A Month, Disqus Gets A New Look, Premium Add-Ons, New API
Twitter Raising New Venture Round at $3 Billion Valuation
Twitter’s Williams On Facebook Relationship: We’re Talking To Them Often — So Far, Nada
Will China’s 1999 Moment Bail-Out Some Valley VCs? You think China is still a “communist” country? Get. On. A. Plane. .... those bumper stickers spotted in the early 2000s that read “Please, Lord, Give Me One More Bubble” .... several firms have told me their China funds might out-perform their US funds
FCC Head: The Google/Verizon Net Neutrality Proposal Slowed Us Down
Labels:
Mark Zuckerberg,
Web 2.0,
Web 2.0 Summit
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Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Dogpatch Labs: Demystifying PR For Startups
So I was at this event earlier. Dogpatch Labs is an incubator. It is not that far from Union Square. Good thing because L is my line.
I have to do some out of the box thinking here. Why would you go to a cramped office when you can work from home? My hero Larry Ellison has a huge company - Oracle - and he is not a regular at the office. That is more along the lines of what I think.
I have to do some out of the box thinking here. Why would you go to a cramped office when you can work from home? My hero Larry Ellison has a huge company - Oracle - and he is not a regular at the office. That is more along the lines of what I think.
Labels:
Adam Isserlis,
Ben Kessler,
Devindra Hardawar,
dogpatch labs,
Erica Swallow,
James Moran,
Jordan Goldman,
Nick Saint,
PR,
vin vacanti
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Brazil: Economic Turnaround
I grew up in Nepal being told Nepal was second only to Brazil when it came to hydropower potential. But what made news year after year was not yet another hydel power plant that was put up, but monsoon floods and landslides. Potential is one thing. Deed is another. Brazil has had the potential. And this past decade it seems to have put its house in basic order. But there is so much that remains to be done. A 6% growth rate is not 10%. Lifting tens of millions out of abject poverty still leaves tens of millions more to be lifted. Brazil could be but still is not a world power.
Labels:
2014 FIFA World Cup,
BrasÃlia,
Brazil,
brazil economy,
Economic growth,
global south,
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
lula,
Nepal,
North-South divide,
South America
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