ChiefNode
Saturday, January 28, 2006
When to unify, when not to.
The Itanium Solutions Alliance is a group helping Intel build a next generation processor -- the alliance, formed last year, seems stronger than before. Pretty big companies banding together, to build the future. At universities, we hear how this industry cross-licenses, shares, builds the future together. Yet there are other companies, building other chips, with more success. Why ally around one approach? Are there bets on the other approaches as well? Where would you put your money?If you build it, something will come .
At The Commonwealth's Club Should Books Be Free Online? event last Thursday evening, the "Google lawyer" essentially said that Google is building books.google.com now, and is planning that the business model (where Google makes money) will come. Just as the business model emerged for Google, they think that if they prove that they can meet people's information needs in a variety of ways, there will be ways to make money. It's nice to have the cash to make this kind of a bet. Brewster Kahle from the Internet Archive spoke about the OCA, and how they are trying to build systems where people can "bind" on demand, where Google seemed to focus more on directing people to booksellers & libraries -- as both acknowledge that reading online is not yet ideal. Let's get that digital paper here soon!Wednesday, January 25, 2006
Stop the spyware
A consumer-centric (hey, let's help each other) site to watch for and report spyware is up. What is surprising to me is that I don't see the legal conditions about what to post, what not to post - and how wrongfully accused companies may respond.Sunday, January 22, 2006
Valuing virtual assets
"If you haven't misspent hours battling an Arctic Ogre Lord near an Ice Dungeon or been equally profligate spending time reading the published works of the Internal Revenue Service, you probably haven't wondered whether the United States government will someday tax your virtual winnings from games played over the Internet. The real question is: Why hasn't it happened already?"-- Journalist Julian Dibbell wonders whether gamers' online assets -- the wealth and weapons they accumulate in the virtual worlds they conquer -- should be counted as taxable income.
What kind of intellectual property, virtual property, future property, etc. will be valued, by whom & when? Lessons from the venture capital industry will soon be coming, I imagine, to the average gamer.
Tuesday, January 17, 2006
Check out the new GPL 3 draft
The GPL version 3 draft is out. Examine, watch & analyze.http://gplv3.fsf.org/draft