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Tuesday, January 18, 2005
Thin Office Computers
WSJ writes:
Google and Small Businesses
CBS News had a segment on Google recently. An excerpt from the transcript:
Emerging Enterprises
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Yup that's true and my wife is another example. She is a Henna artist and a Bollywood dance teacher. This is something that cannot be shipped and cannot be sold online - target audience is very limited (30 miles within the area of service). Still google has helped her big time. I helped her create a website (savitajain.com) and put together a campaign on google. Response has been more than what we expected. Posted by Rahul JainYup that's true and my wife is another example. She is a Henna artist and a Bollywood dance teacher. This is something that cannot be shipped and cannot be sold online - target audience is very limited (30 miles within the area of service). Still google has helped her big time. I helped her create a website (savitajain.com) and put together a campaign on google. Response has been more than what we expected. Posted by Rahul JainThe erectile dysfunction cure Levitra works uniquely in your system the moment you administer the drug and provides immense relief to the patient suffering under the impact of male impotency. But for the drug to show its effects on your system, you should buy levitra and take it according to the guidelines recommended by your physician. When you order levitra, the doctor will recommend the dosage that suits best and then you can carry on with your war against male impotency with levitra effectively. Buy Levitra only through levitra online and once you order the prescriptions of Levitra, cheap levitra will arrive at your doorstep. Remember that if you look out for other avenues instead of opting to buy levitra online you may not be able to get hold on the right drug. Posted by levitra
Taggle
John Battelle points to Brian Dear, who imagines a search engine where user-generates tags are searchable: "...if more and more services in 2005 add user-generated tagging, will 'federated tagging' be far behind? And if someone were to index all the tags from these various sites.... would the result be Taggle? Imagine: a service where you type in a keyword, and you get back all the hits that have that word as a tag. If Flickr, del.icio.us, and umpteen other sites cooperated, then an uber-tag-search service might just work."
CNN's Top 25 Innovations
CNN lists the top innovations of the past quarter century: 1. The Internet
General
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They left of DVRs - digital video recorders Posted by keith knutssoncan we get down to earth from the ether. can we get down to earth from the ether. can we get down to earth from the ether. can we get down to earth from the ether.
Blog Plasma
John Battelle writes:
BlogStreet
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Yup, it is interesting. See here... http://www.touchgraph.com/TGGoogleBrowser.html Posted by abhijitYup, it is interesting. See here... http://www.touchgraph.com/TGGoogleBrowser.html Posted by abhijitYup, it is interesting. See here... http://www.touchgraph.com/TGGoogleBrowser.html Posted by abhijitYup, it is interesting. See here... http://www.touchgraph.com/TGGoogleBrowser.html Posted by abhijit
MIMO
Walter Mossberg writes about a new version of Wi-Fi that expands both the range and speed:
TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Mobility and Memex
8. Russell Beattie on the Mobile Web (November) Russell Beattie’s essay was an eye-opener. For long, I have been among those who believed that the cellphone was never going to replace the PC. Of late though, I am re-thinking that assumption, given both the trajectory of innovation in mobile phones and its omnipresence with us as a personal device. When I first started reading RSS feeds on the mobile, it was an “Aha” moment – similar to the one I experienced when I first browsed the Web using Mosaic and a Netcruiser account a decade ago. The mobile web is happening and we better wake up. Of course people are going to want to access the web from their mobile phones. Why wouldn't they? They're not going to want to be walled off in some mobile-ghetto, but rather have the full-on, do everything I can do from my desktop on my mobile phone, access to the web. I think people are going to want to view and use the web from their mobile devices just as quickly and easily as they use the web from their PC. And not just for when they're moving around, but when they're on the couch as well. I don't see the future as one where there are different mini-webs per device or proprietary ways of accessing content and services, but a multi-device norm which adds some pressure to the webmasters out there, but forces a shift to web standards to meet the demand of billions of data-connected handsets all sporting standard minibrowsers. 9. Jon Udell on the “network is the blog” (December) Reading Jon Udell’s article made me think of Vannevar Bush’s Memex. What bloggers are constructing is an emergent information system – we still don’t have the top-level views to appreciate the landscape that is getting constructed. But we will – very soon. My own reading habits have changed – expert bloggers take precedence over mainstream journals for deep insights. Just as telephones are meaningful only when connected to the telephone network, so blogs are meaningful only when connected to the blog network. Both are carriers of human communication, but where the telephone network is essentially fixed -- at least for now, until VoIP softens its structure -- the blog network is malleable and is shaped by our use of it. It’s more like a nervous system than a computer network, and for good reason. The crush of information we process every day creates a terrible dilemma. On the one hand, we must conserve the scarce resource of attention. On the other hand, we need to become aware of everything that matters. It’s a tricky balancing act, but one that nature’s humblest creatures have adroitly mastered. Consider how my own inputs have evolved over the past five years. At one time, my RSS intake was mostly feeds from conventional published sources, along with a few from individuals. Now it’s the reverse. I subscribe to people more than to publications, and not because I don’t value the information in those publications -- I do, very much -- but rather because, outside of the realms in which I’m closely involved, I can delegate the job of tracking primary sources to people whose interests and inclinations qualify them to do so. The blog network is made of people. We are the nodes, actively filtering and retransmitting knowledge. Clearly this architecture can help manage the glut of information. More subtly, it can also help ensure that no vital inputs are suppressed because nobody has to rely on a single source. If one of the feeds I monitor doesn’t react to some event in a given domain, another probably will. When they all react, I know it was an especially important event. The resemblance of this model to the summing of activation potentials in a neural system is more than superficial. Nature knows best. Tomorrow: Education Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Entrepreneur Q&A [January 21, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Simplicity [January 20, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Education [January 19, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Art and Artists [January 17, 2005] TECH TALK: The Best of 2004: Software Shifts [January 14, 2005]
Tech Talk
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http://www.universityofnorthtexas.info/ |
I truly agree with you, we have deployed thin client (40+) and beleive me life has become simple. No more desktop upgradation, centralised data storage, easy backup. No running around for patch management, anti-virus updations.
Posted by Sheetal Amarnath