A New Take on Innovation

Thanks to my iPad and a rediscovered joy for reading, I’m reading How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer. It’s a great read so far, and I highly recommend it regardless of what you do for work. It’s interesting. Anyway, one excerpt resonated with me today: Once this overlapping of ideas occurs, cortical cells start to… Read More

Cheating and the Generational Divide

I didn’t find this story about accusations of mass cheating at the University of Central Florida terribly interesting until I read this on Hacker News. News: Cheating and the Generational Divide – Inside Higher Ed Aside from the generational argument (only politics and religion get people going like generational biases), I’m waiting for the other… Read More

Carrots Not Sticks

Earlier in the month, Luc Glasbeek, a colleague of ours here at Oracle, penned an interesting piece called Social Media and Corporate Disobedience: The Third Way? Luc has decided to take his thoughts primetime with his very own blog, Carrots Not Sticks. Why that name? Luc explains: So, I have a lot of affinity with… Read More

Cheap and Smart Phones

In case you haven’t noticed, the smartphone has begun trickling down and replacing, for lack of a better word, dumb phones. Case in point, the Huawei Ascend, which runs Android 2.1 and can be bought without a contract, i.e. unsubsidized, from Cricket for $150. The service costs $55 a month, including, well everything. Not too… Read More

How People Use the iPad

I recently got an iPad, and this survey is a pretty accurate representation, with a few exceptions, of my thoughts so far. Of the three main observations: Safari, the web browser, is the iPad’s most important app. But iPad owners download, pay for, and regularly use many apps, on average. Most people say they are… Read More

Gingerbread with NFC is a Big Deal

By now, you’ve probably heard that the soon-to-be-released Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) will have near field communications (NFC) capabilities. If not, check out Eric Schmidt’s chat yesterday. He’s also rocking a Nexus S, confirming a rumor. Eric Schmidt shows off a Nexus S at the Web 2.0 summit, says Gingerbread coming in ‘next few weeks’ —… Read More

Convenience Trumps Freedom

This article came out months ago, and until now, I’ve resisted reading it, if only because of the sensationalist headline. The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet | Magazine (h/t to OpenAppMkt for pushing me) Setting aside the graphic, which is based on potentially false data interpretation, the core arguments made by Chris Anderson… Read More

The Economics of Seinfeld

Great fodder for a Friday, I give you: The Economics of Seinfeld From their about: This site will be part of an ongoing and expanding attempt to make these sorts of popular culture teaching materials widely and conveniently available. We are doing this in the hopes that the materials hosted here, now and in the… Read More

Website vs. Web App?

For no real reason, I asked myself a question yesterday: what’s the difference between a website and web app? Failing to come up with a concrete set of differentiators, I took my question to Rich (@rmanalan), and subsequently stumped him. He eventually boiled the differences down to: A web application is an application that’s accessed… Read More

Interesting: Long Bets

I found out about Long Bets, an ongoing charitable endeavor that provides, “an arena for competitive, accountable predictions” by way of Hacker News and the declaration of a winner in this bet. A profitable video-on-demand service aimed at consumers will offer 10,000 titles to 5 million subscribers by 2010. Netflix fits the bill for this bet… Read More