Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Leveraging multimedia to reach out

[Update: This post does seem ironic in retrospect!]

I wanted to scribble a few lines on Social CRM. My research begins at alter of the almighty Wikipedia. Here’s my search for Social CRM. What? No page exists?! Let’s try CRM 2.0, shall we? Nada. But Wikipedia suggests ever so thoughtfully ‘Did you mean: CMR 2.0’. Unfortunately this time around I didn’t.

Strategy #2: YouTube. Much better! I got 63 results. Interesting and relevant too.

Now this post is not about how I seized the opportunity and created and a wiki page and neither is it a conspiracy to bash Wikipedia. Rather it’s about the growing trend to ‘multimediaize’, if I may use the term. Inevitable I’d say: Encyclopaedia Britannica vs. Animal Planet? For that matter books vs. TV? Let’s extend that one more time TV vs. Internet? Bandwidth prices are tumbling and the ‘other’ screen is catching up too - most newer handsets are capable of streaming YouTube or iPlayer. Podcasts anyone?

And in the enterprise space, companies should start taking notice: in the 3-4 minute time a visitor (a potential customer maybe?) is searching for information it’s a no brainer that you need (not) throw 10 pages! There are however obvious reasons to keep text, but I believe companies are still not leveraging multimedia. YouTube, Dailymotion or even your own website, but please start using multimedia to reach out (Product Offerings, Case Studies etc etc). Reaching out increases mind share increases knowledge increases consumption.

Case in point: Paul Greenberg & Brent Leary’s CRM Playaz discussion actually became Paul’s top rated post. It’s an audio with supporting text. Though I have to admit content still drives a fair amount of (listeners) readers.

Honestly if the Vatican has started taking notice of YouTube, then so should enterprises.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

On Technology for startups. Idea vs tech!

Last night a friend messaged over IM that Microsoft had selected him for some entrepreneurship sponsorship. He wanted my thoughts on a lot of freebies that came with the package. Excited as hell I replied 'ok. kinda busy tho'. Don't want him to know how excited we are, do we? :)

So I headed over to the page... Microsoft Startup Zone.

He was shouting 'its free man! all you need to do is pay $100 at the end of 3 years'. Eh? No free lunch. The 'What do I get?' page has the following:

  • All the software included in the Microsoft® Visual Studio® Team System Team Suite (VSTS) with MSDN® Premium subscription
  • Expression® Studio Version 2
  • VSTS Team Foundation Server (standard edition)
  • Production use rights to host a “software as a service” solution (developed during participation in the BizSpark Program, on any platform) over the Internet, with regard to the lastest versions of Microsoft products including:
    • Microsoft Windows Server® (all editions up to and including Enterprise)
    • Microsoft SQL Server® (all editions)
    • Microsoft Office SharePoint® Portal Server
    • Microsoft System Center
    • Microsoft BizTalk® Server
    • Microsoft Dynamics® CRM (coming soon)
  • In addition to the core program offering, BizSpark startups will be eligible for other Microsoft offerings, such as:
    • Microsoft Azure Services Platform
Not bad I thought... as a marketing plan of course. They pull you into their sofwares for free till you build up a considerable switching cost! Smart.
(But Azure would be fun to try out though.)

Anyway what got me thinking was not Microsoft. Rather this: he's got a business idea quite faraway from IT services. Nevertheless IT can help. Why would you need such a suite?

His explanantion 'I need to develop websites and I need a CRM system'. I can't disagree more, I believe that the Relationshiop should come before the Management part.

Bottom line: Build customer relationships, then see what technology can be useful. Don't retro fit your business idea into technology. Technology is dumb and will not get you money. Ideas will.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

SOA is dead. Services or the architecture? Or the enterprise?

And we're back after a lazzy month of solitude and peace (not to mention the extra kgs!).

Stumbled on this read SOA is dead. Long live the services. Anne writes that as on 1st Jan, SOA is officially dead. SOA is more to do with enterprises. Hmm haven't heard any biggies comment about any their future roadmap either. Well of course enterprises aren't dead. Or are they? lol. Interesting times indeed.

Pause for a second. But don't we still need all the efficiencies and benefits of SOA - reduced costs? Absolutely and I wasn't surprised to see that she's written (as expected) that it's all a farce. Tomaeto tomaaato. Whatever SAO meant would manifest itself in many forms as part of SaaS, mashups etc etc.

The world was getting too small for so many acronyms anyway. Lets get the next baby to the sacrificial table. Green IT anyone?

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

When is metadata too much metadata? (aka why I left delicious)

Lazy Tuesday morning; just read a post on the Value of Social Metadata on the Oracle Social CRM blog. Interesting read, but it's made me put to paper (no jokes please) a thought... when is data enough?

Quoting Marta from the blog:
For example, I can tag a presentation that is relevant to me and choose the tags I believe best describe that presentation. The keywords I choose help organize and categorize the content in a way that’s meaningful to me.
This brings two thoughts to mind. Firstly if everybody starts deciding what is 'relevant for them' imagine how messy the world will get (not that it isn't!). Lets pick an example. How would I categorise Friends, the sitcom that is, oh wait the tv show, no no the serial, rubbish its all of this. You see where I'm going? There would be a dozen words to describe content depending on who you ask. And I'm not even going remotely how to categorise music!

Secondly, on the social front what you categorise would not be just for you - it'll be for everyone out there. So when you categorise do you think of all the possibilities? We might end up categorising the categories!

I love the concept of sharing information, but it certainly is getting overwhelming and the SEO jobs has never been so popular. Take the social bookmarking site Delicious . I gave up on the concept of me contributing quite a while back. The reason, it'll throw me 10 similar categories to post a link under, not forgetting the option tocreate my own. What happens if I've a typo? Hmm maybe someone's already bookmarked it.

With the myriad sources to source and funnel information, how do you decide what's relevant? Metadata or metacrap? The Semantic web? The more I think about it, I think not. Anyway thats for another rainy day.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Nokia goes the Linux way with Maemo - Cool specs, but another OS?!

It's now official folks - Symbian and the S60 platform are soon to be defunct. (I may be reading too much into this; but if not today, tomorrow for sure.)

Nokia has just announced the Maemo 5 SDK. Slated for the Nokia Internet Tablets the OS is 100% opensource (well so was Android till they circulated newer SDKs to the elite. Disclosed later, but that's another story) and will feature a revamped UI called 'Midas'.

Some of the new features include (although I don't quite get the data connectivity part, WiFi?):
  • OMAP3 support.
  • Cellular data connectivity.
  • High definition camera support.
  • hardware-based graphics acceleration.
Nokia warns that the release is pre-alpha (that's a new one. pre-beta = alpha? So pre-alpha = zeta :) and is not at all suitable for development. More of a heads-up fashionable entrance. Impressive specs, yes you've got our attention. I forgot the best part... it's Linux!

I was curious to find if Android had moved into Nokia territory and came across this. Check out the video of Andriod on an N810 Internet Tablet. Also came across this interesting quote by Ukko Lappalainen, Vice President of Nokia's markets units “In the longer perspective, Linux will become a serious alternative for our high-end phones,” I can't agree more, but wait “I don’t see anything in Android which would make it better than Linux maemo.” What I see here is bruised ego than anything!

Geek talk: Since Maemo 5 SDK is not backward compatible, implementation on the N810 would not have been possible anyway.

Quite certain there would be very stong drivers for Linux in the future, however I'm seeing it restricted to the consumer electronics, small devices space - where there is a lesser chance for the user to muck up. In many ways Nokia is the Microsoft and Dell duo, if they pull their weights in the Maemo direction, there would be alliances being formed.

With the Linux synergy and being 100% opensource I certainly hope the Meamo and Android application are compatible. As long my system is stable all I want is functionality and not operating systems.

We certianly are living in interesting times...

HTC Diamond Backlight Problem - Good things come in small packages (maybe 'slightly' damaged)

Just when I thought I'll gift myself the perfect phone for Christmas! Came across this write up on Gizmodo.

Apparently one of the hottest phones out there (and it has nothing to do with running WM!) seems to have a serious problem. Serious as it gets... after a few minutes of operation, the backlight becomes dim... wait for it... permanently! Before you ask, no it's not a Microsoft bug.

I am at a loss now. For quite sometime now, I've been after the elusive 'smart'phone. First it was the Touch, then the Cruise, then the Tytn II, then the Diamond. The G1 design is downright ugly and the iPhone... well lets just leave it at that. And the Storm? That's a laugh!

All I ever wanted was a decent WM phone - sleek, eyecandy, mail, games and yes make calls. Is that too much to ask? I mean with all these years of experience, somebody ought to get it right. And I thought the Diamond was the one for me (dramatic pause).

That said, I'm still on the prowl for a good deal on the Touch HD. At £500 way over my budget. Boxing day perhaps. The Max 4G is droolalicious but WiMAX is not something I'd surfing on any time soon. (And does it run on a battery or do you need to buy the generator:p ) Guess I'll wait for 2009...

All this proves: too much research will leave you heart broken, frustrated, jealous craving for the next best thing out there. And I'm talking about the phone here...

Update: As on 10:53 pm 9 Dec I'm the 'proud' owner of an XDA Ignito... impulsive buy! No comments please.

Saturday, December 06, 2008

nslookup works, ping doesn't on Linux - Missing routing entry!

This one drove me nuts (for 2 hours!!) Here's my problem: I can't ping outside the LAN, but nslookup works!
Since my Linux skills are rusty enough to give anyone passing remotely close tetanus, I did what what anyone would... google. And here we go (drum roll please) with the awesome support Linux enjoys, I hit 78,200 results. To my surprise was lots of talk and no solutions. Closed that tab. Open the rusty swiss army tools

1. cat /etc/resolv.conf -> check! Silly me! How else would nslookup work? :p
2. ifconfig -> here's what i got (click to enlarge)
(Confession time: I'm working on my FSG.)
So I've eth0, eth1 and mwl0. But the last two are mapped and I'd have only eth0 and eth1

3. Next step route
(and waste 30 mins chatting, 170g Pringles, 300ml lemonade)

Finally figured there's no default routing for eth0
A quick route add default gw 192.168.1.1 eth0
192.168.1.1 is my router's IP. My gateway that is.)
And presto...
Ping!

I'm afraid this post is more from elation than providing a solution. But the troubleshooting essentially should be:
  • Checking connectivity
  • Checking routing
My summary and learning from this whole affair:
1. Linux may be popular, but finding a solution is a pain
2. Google and the Internet is a must must! Had I been in India, I'd certainly have trouble
3. Pringles is addictive. You cannot stop.
4. Finally an MBA will not necessarily turn your brain off and your tongue on. Go figure!

Amazon.com introduces iPhone Photo Matching App

I'm sure everyone would've had the moment 'Oh boy I got to buy me one of those' only forget it an hour later and move on. Enter Mr Bezos with the Amazon.com app for the iPhone.

Well what does it do?
  1. Lets you buy stuff from your phone (how interesting!)
  2. Lets you take a snap that's uploaded to your Amazon.com account (hmmm. Tell me more)
  3. Lets you take a snap and searches for that item online (eh? Really?)

On anohter note I remember reading about an app that scans barcodes and does price comparisons, for Android however. Was for the Android app contest I think.

Amazon Remembers is a really cool feature, but wait its no artificial intelligence (oh absolutely. Technology has advanced, semantic web here we come!) there's a team Mechanical Turk program that does this visual comparison and matching.

My thoughts
  • When is the 'matching' going to be outsourced? :)
  • Can I just walk into a shop take a pic and buy it cheaper online? Dear shopkeeper, will you ban pictures (dare ?I say it iPhones!) in your shop? What the iPhone camera sucks, you say? I hear you!
  • Since nothing good ever happens after 2 am (sorry too much TV shows lately), and I've got my 1-click shopping turned on, how fast can I blow my balance? Every click might turn out to be a purchase!
  • Err.. if its just a picture matching, why did it take so long? We scared of Windows Mobile or Java?
  • Matrimony site, can you find me a girl with similar proportions (or this one, if not spoken for)? (alright, not quite the example. I understand.)

Well good thing the iPhone's damn expensive in India, and boy is the mobile internet fast!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Linux on the iPhone!

Extra extra! Read all about it! Came across wonderful news on ZDNet:

Hackers (ok lets call them enthusiasts) have successfully managed to boot Linux on the iPhone.


There has always been this tussle between the Cupertino geeks and iPhone Dev Team. They make it, these guys make it better. They remake it these guys reremake it better. (I like humour. I tried. I failed. You get the idea.) Head over the the blog for the download with instructions.

Still far from complete, they basic OS runs. Kudos guys!

Drivers are to be ported, including the ones for the touchscreen. Oh yea the iPhone is completely touchscreen usage :) Check out the video posted here.

Pause for thought. What happens now?
* Android to be ported? (certainly hope so)
* Apple to relase patch? (big Yes!)
* Microsoft to lose ground? (small yes. Remember SE statement about future Xpreria having a dfifferent OS? But it aint over till Balmer comes out with a WM version complete with all the iPhone, Android bells and whisltles.)
* Blackberry: why oh why can't you move to opensource :|

I've already started making my switch to Linux. That's
1. Ubuntu
2. Moto ROKR E1 (must keep away evil thoughts about Touch HD)
3. Freecom Storage Gateway (whohooo! I luv this family member)

What do you think? Any funny ads: I'm a Windows Mobile. I'm an Android. ??

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Blu-spec - Sony's new CD format (Floptastic!)

Aren't CDs dead? To be honest in the last 2 years the only time I used a CD was a month back to install drivers for my FSG (oh yea the Ubuntu installation last week too). I hear you say DVDs, well that's another story.

Still remember during engineering Biju had come over with a spindle of 25 blank CDs for burning MP3s :)

*Note to self: Must stop digressing*

Sony has plans to launch a new CD format - Blu-spec CD. People are still mourning over Blu-ray. Why won't Sony give it a break? Apparanetly they have perfected the art of the 'Blue laser' and wants to bring out audio CDs. Not much information is available at the moment, but the company says it will have over 50 titles ready by Christmas eve, in Japan that is.
The new way of creating CDs apparently would be extremely close to the master plate. Sure we'll have audiophiles queuing. Remember MiniDisc anyone?

My two questions to Sony:
1. What DRM plans? Now, now, you can't have anyone and everyone making copies, can you? ;)
2. Why go to such extreme length to create the "perfect" CD when my ears (pardon me, but yours too) won't distinguish any of this!

Another monumental flop for Sony I'm predicting. Bring back Blu-ray, change the pricing model, but please refrain from confusing the all too confused folks.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Mail Goggles: Google Mamma Watching

This is a brilliant one! I'll quote directly from the Gmail Blog
"Sometimes I send messages I shouldn't send. Like the time I told that girl I had a crush on her over text message. Or the time I sent that late night email to my ex-girlfriend that we should get back together. Gmail can't always prevent you from sending messages you might later regret, but today we're launching a new Labs feature I wrote called Mail Goggles which may help." Check out the Blog here.
How it works is by asking you a few arithmetic questions. See the screenshot below.


The default setting is to activate Mail Goggles on weekends and that too late night. Quite imaginative. And I'm pleasantly surprised such a simple idea has been taken up by and put into an application millions of people use!

Can't deny that I haven't had the urge to send out quite a few email under the influence of herbal products. What next Google? Decide when the best time would be to send the email? Gimmie a break! Link to my earlier post: Technology & Me

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Mashups - An overview

This post came about after a little chat I had with my boss on a 'thought leadership' paper submission. His thought was on a way in which enterprises (say power companies) can talk to each other over the Internet. As he was explaining, here's how my mind went: "Hmm standards, eh? Services on the Internet. SOA. Hmm why not have a website where the customer can pick and choose the company and why just electricity? Water too. Let's put together a map to find out the nearest office, and comments and maybe even YouTube videos. Yes YouTube. Spiderpig was hilarious. Should download the Simpsons. Sorry what were you saying?"

So here I was wondering about mashups and I still don't have a clue what to write for the paper. Anyway thought I'd post an overview of mashups before the Kronenberg kicks in.

Lets start with examples, shall we?

Example 1
Consider the PC. We have many applications that we use everyday like Word, Firefox and Winamp. Now spare a moment on the picture below. So at the bottom we have Windows as the OS and all these apps run 'on-top'. But we can obviously use other alternatives like Abiword, IE & foobar. Double click and voila! The seamless operation is because Windows provides something called APIs or Application Programming Interfaces. Interfaces are exactly what they - application use these are well defined requests to query information such as Date/Time, access to the graphics display, or even authenticating the user. Windows recognises the request, does the necessary work and provides the information.

The steps would be something like this
* App: Hey Windows what time is it? (of course it's all in some computer language;)
* Windows: I undesrtand your request. Let me check the system clock.
* Windows: The time is 12:00 pm

Now thanks to APIs, all applications have a consistent way of working with Windows ie. even when new versions of Windows is released or even if it's an Intel or an AMD processor or even if you have an NVIDIA or an ATI.

Now lets extend the concept to the Internet.
Example 2
For this example I'm taking my all time favourite company: Goggle :) We've all come across websites (apart from Google, of course!) that have a little search box that actually uses Google to search the website. And the recent one is where there is a bigger box with a map showing locations. Check out this cool website. http://todaysstory.googlepages.com/tokyo.htm

All this is possible because Google 'publishes' APIs that websites can use. Now the important thing to note here is that these websites do not hold Google code to do the search, rather they query Google. A more geeky way to describe this would be 'the website consumes services that have been published by Google'.

Finally Mashups
All this is fine, so what are mashups? Ah well lets extend example 2 further. Consider the picture below.

Now Google is not the only company that provides services, Yahoo! for example provides a lot of financial information. Now how about if there was a website that provides financial information for say, Nike and at the same time gave you an option to buy at eBay and also shows you the nearest store. Hows that for interesting! Well folks this is what a mashup is.

Quite simple if you think about it, bring in data and services from many places put them at one accessible place. Of course you can't just bring in anything and everything: the data & services need to be capable of understand user requests or in geek speak should be 'mashable'. The concept is nothing new, but i guess the tipping point was when Google launched it's Google Maps API (2006 I'm guessing, so you see mashups are not ver new!).

Mashups thus bring with them two very important things: standardisation and more importantly innovation.

Business/Enterprise Mashups
For businesses, mashups can be essential tools to reach out to the customer. An ecosystem ahs already developed companies offering mashable content, companies offering tools to mash content and even companies that offer ideas of how to mash them together!

Now lets take a peek inside the enterprise. IT has been focused on providing infrastructure, and usually has not been able to deliver what users want! Imagine a scenario where end users can actually create applications that take consume data from various application sources and create a soluions without asking too many people. This is business intelligence, this is self service IT, this is what enterprise mashups provide.

Enterprises no longer need to spend huge efforts in building applications that span the organisation. No more suite of products. Consider Acme Inc that has it's field force automation happening on SFDC, the HR running Peoplesoft and trouble ticketing on AmdocsCRM (my favourite!). A mashup can easily drive up productivity (and also drive down costs) by linking all three together.

Standards for data and interfaces are thus very very important. Enter SOA. I'll talk about that in another post.

Well my friends I hope that provided a quick overview of mashups. Time for me to hit the sack.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Tweet-a-boo (aka The Twitter Phenomenon)

The Wired Magazine calls it "Incredibly useful" and Time calls it "Twitter is on its way to becoming the next killer app." Damn I have to part of cutting edge useful things and it's been around for a year or two! Click here to visit Twitter. Well I've been watching Twitter for a while now, sightseeing. And this fine Sunday, thought I'll share my penny's worth.


The concept is quite simple and the site so eloquently puts it
"Twitter is a service for friends, family, and co–workers to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to one simple question: What are you doing?"
Long story short you build timelogs of your activities. Postings are called "Tweets" and you have a plethora of applications that help tell the world what you're upto. Check out the video explaining why you need to Tweet! Take for instance SMSs from your mobile, direct posting from the site, IM apps and dedicated desktop clients. (Digressing a little: found a really cool (free!) multi IM called Digspy. Had been using Pidgin, meebo & Trillian for a while. Will do a quick comparison later)

My first impression: doesn't Facebook already have this?

Second impression: redundant information. Too many sources of information. And in someway you following someones Tweets, doesn't it vaguely resemble subscribing to an RSS feed of a blog? Possibly ambiguous too "I got an out of office mail and his Tweet says he's working today!"

Biggest impression: do we need to be this open?? (Pause for thought) I'll give that a morbid yes. How many times have we checked out friend's videos and photos? Youtube, Flickr. I rest my case.

The experiment (if I may call it) is quite interesting. Check out how many guinea pigs we have: (Source)
March 2008
Total Users: 1+ million
Total Active Users: 200,000 per week
Total Twitter Messages: 3 million/day

And interestingly 40% of the traffic is from the US. Now now, I'm not drawing any conclusions here :)

So what ideas do I see (apart form the one where there'll be electrodes stuck in your brain that can directly feed Twitter)? Thought I'd list the fisrt few that popped up.
  1. We're all going to be even more dependent on Internet. And that means ubiquitous... convergence of devices. "Why call him to see if he's at home? I'll just check his Tweets!". "Did he remember to pay the electricity bill? I'll just check his Tweets!"
  2. A Tweet channel where you can collaborate and Tweet together. "Okay man, I'm with you. We'll wake up everyday at 5 and got jogging."
  3. A service where you can plan your day and Tweet through them. "Hmm. Practice guitar at 4 for 15 mins. "
  4. Distribution points for information. "Follow me to find the best deals on the Net."
  5. Curiosity among PR guys & enterprises. New medium to reach out to users. Facebook is something I joined recently and it struck me as a huge marketing ground.
The concept is so wild that I actually think it might work! Heard recently about Dell planning to answer customers through Twitter. And then there was a bank, can't seem to recall the name. The idea was again to use Twitter to reach out. Hey if your customers are hanging out in Secondlife and you can set up shop there, why not Twitter?

I'm very sure that enterprises are confused about the phenomenon. But the concept of Twitter is so wild that I think it might just work. And I certainly do see it evolving to videos, voice, streaming stations and merging with a popular social site;)

As an after thought frankly I think the name is hilarious! What are the people called Twits? :p

PS: To hell with privacy. You can catch my activities here.... when I eat, sleep, run to catch the bus. How interesting! Hmm lets see if this is gonna work out.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Just Imagine... Life in 2020: CNN Article

Came across this very interesting read on CNN about the living in the future. To put an year across 2020. Read here.

Various topics discussed include The future of Gaming, Virtual Reality (quite cool), the future of Cities, social networking. I have to admit it's too much to read at one sitting though.

Also found an interesting one one teleportation. I'd written an article about this during my engineering. Lemme see if I can dig it up...

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Of god Particles

Seems taken straight out of a Douglas Adams' novel. Another wonderful way to end the world. The Hardon Collider has raised quite a few eyebrows. I'm really surprised that some behemoth of a contraption that apparently had the capacity to create a black hole was allowed to operate without any public opinion poll. I would love to stand corrected on this one.

Nuclear testing, cloning all created such commotion so why not this one?

Sunday, September 07, 2008

On Chrome, Google & the fight for the enterprise customer

Note: Had this urge to write something so I've scribbled horribly in this post (promise to clean up soon!)

And what a hype it has created! And I certainly wasn't expecting Google to come up with a new browser (with it funding Mozilla).

Chrome has been developed with the idea of being able to run pages totally independent of each other. Hmm seems familiar to the way an OS would want to run applications.

The Google ecosystem certainly isn't getting any smaller with Android scheduled. I expect a bloodbath.

Here's what I think the top 3 fights would be
1. Microsoft. Yes it involves IE, but the plot thickens... with Live Mesh, Online Office and family. Microsoft's attempt at device agnostic data.

2. Nokia. Symbian going opensource should have lit a few bulbs. And with the recent announcement expecting reduced market shares. If they embrace Chrome on Symbian it's a sure suicide. In all probability this would be Google's trojan horse into the enterprise mobility space.

3. RIM. Blackberry. If (Google, that is) they have email solutions, calendar solution, a mobile OS that integrates so well, a way to deliver content, tie up with CRM vendors (SFDC). Oh and let's not forget data centres. Sums it up for me.

Of course a lot of little fish would get eaten up. I'm not quite sure how Opera (who incidently is the inspiration to Chrome's look) fits into this whole picture. Shout and let me know your thoughts.

Another interesting thought is the impact on retail users. If everything goes online, I sure do see a lot more revenue coming in through legitimate licensing.

Indian IT Industry Trends & Challenges

A friend of mine had a few months ago asked my opinion on the trends & challenges facing the Indian IT industry. Here's my take. Guess the slides are self explanatory (too lazy i know!). Lemme know your thoughts. This is more for a formal reading;)

Saturday, December 15, 2007

The Knol Edge (Or Is It?)


Yup it’s official, Google is going to take over the world. With a plethora of applications, services and rumours (the latest being the Sprint takeover!), Google has come quite way. Wikipedia introduces them as an ‘American public corporation, specializing in Internet search and online advertising.’ And we all know that the Sun revolves around the Earth! Let me put it this way where do your clicks mostly point you to? Wikipedia, Google, orkut? (Okay leave out the last one.) To put things in perspective Wikipedia received close to a couple of hundred millions visits in the last month where as Google received more than twice that! But the last time I searched for info, Google took me directly to Wikipedia.

That’s soon going to change if ‘knol’ has its way. On December 13th, Udi Manber, a Vice President of Engineering at Google created quite a stir (check out the official Blog http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/12/encouraging-people-to-contribute.html) when he declared that providing search results would simply not do and that Google would provide answers too. Poised as a competitor to Wikipedia by many, Google positions knol as follows “…meant to be the first thing someone who searches for this topic for the first time will want to read”. And their goal “… for knols to cover all topics, from scientific concepts, to medical information, from geographical and historical, to entertainment, from product information, to how-to-fix-it instructions”. Sounds kind of scary if you ask me!

Based on a similar collaborative wiki platform, knol would provide authors with tools to create and link articles and contents. But it differs from Wikipedia in that it emphasises the author i.e. there could be competing authors and ipso facto knols.

And Google has made its stand clear ‘Google will not serve as an editor in any way, and will not bless any content.’ And that ‘At the discretion of the author, a knol may include ads.’ This is all too well for a company that goes by the slogan ‘Don’t be Evil’. Gives me the tingles, if you catch my drift. Still in beta (invite only) stage, the best source of information still remains Wikipedia for most.

From being a number 2 (or a 3) search engine to acquisitions left and right, Google has slowly (but steadily) built an ecosystem around itself. ‘Google’ around for more info (sounds kind of ironic, if you ask me!). Now if only I can Google where my left sock is…

(just realised I blog on Google :P)

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Technology and Me

Convergence seems to be latest fad these days. Technology, applications, services you name it. We're living in a wolrd where we work (comfortably) from our homes and shop from our office (not too comfortable though with the cubicles these days). Technology has provided us with a whole new range of possibilities. Even our common everyday gadgets are becoming “thoughtful” (or intelligent, as any technology enthusiast will phrase it!). For example, a new refrigerator introduced by LG is capable of automatically placing orders for “out of stock” items, digitally. And if that makes you wonder where all of this is going, read on.

Wait… if you thought I was going on about how technology is going to help you (and me), well, maybe you are half correct, and if you thought this article was on how technology should not help you, then you are nearly there. I remember one Samsung ad quite a while back that so aptly puts it across- “Technology shouldn’t overwhelm you…” And that sums it all… do we really need all these intelligent (or so they say!) gadgets? Call me a cynic, a pessimist, but hey I wouldn’t want my radio planning the day for me, or my toilet deciding when it needs to flush! Ha! That made you think, didn’t it?

That something between my two ears (and yours too, actually) was not an extra accessory. It was given so that I could plan my life, so that I could take responsibility for my actions, so that I could make mistakes and do stupid things! I want to be able to drive my car, make the wrong turns, and get stuck in the traffic. I want to able get up and change my TV channel, than let a bot read my mind (the geeks claim to able to read your thoughts by sticking little electrodes in your brain. Not a pretty picture, I’m sure.) This is life, my life. It’s not perfect, but believe me, that’s the way world went all these 20 centuries! When I had a problem, I would sit down with my parents and discuss it. And it certainly wouldn’t feel the same with silicon and steel.

And my idea of technological advancements? Take a look around. Aren’t you satisfied with all the little gadgets? I am satisfied, comfortable would be more appropriate. No, I am not saying we should stop discovering and inventing, not now, not ever. Please I live on gadgets and gizmos. All I trying to prove is that we don’t want a “take me to your brain” situation, where we have someone else deciding and making choices for us. (Or do we? That's a thought for another rainy day)