Saturday, December 31, 2011
Happy New Year
Via Deborah Lilly Weddington
My idea of New Year was to go for a long walk in Queens. And soon I am headed to Times Square. After midnight I might be headed to a party in the East Village.
Happy New Year everyone! It is going to be exciting.
Friday, December 30, 2011
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Texting While Driving Asks For Driverless Cars
Self Driving Google Car
Related articles
- Driverless cars will redefine public transportation (kottke.org)
- Google Gets Patent For Driverless Car Technology (techie-buzz.com)
- Google secures patent for driverless cars (sociable.co)
- Google Awarded Patent for Driverless Car Technology! (bfreenews.com)
- Google gets patent for its driverless cars (venturebeat.com)
- Google granted driverless car patent (techradar.com)
- Google gets patent on driverless car tech (slashgear.com)
- Google granted patent for its driverless car project (9to5google.com)
- Google granted driverless car patent | News | TechRadar (techradar.com)
- Google wins patent for driverless car technology (fmeccawi.wordpress.com)
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Is Tech Blogging Dying?
But there is a minor storm on the topic going on. It was, I believe, started by Jeremiah Owyang.
End of an Era: The Golden Age of Tech Blogging is Over
Many people have pitched in with their own reply blog posts. Notables like Pete Cashmore, Fred Wilson, and Loic Le Meur - founder of Le Web conference in Paris - have participated in Jeremiah's comments sections. Pete Cashmore's comment is particularly interesting.
Sarah Lacy: Golden Age of Tech Blogging Done? I Couldn't Disagree More
Brian Solis: Is the Golden Age of tech blogging over?
Marshall Kirkpatrick: The Next Era of Tech Blogging: 3 Things That Could Make it Better
Hugh MacLeod: Oh No! Blogging is REALLY, REALLY dead this time!!!!!! :D
TechCrunch Predicts The Year Ahead
This statement is almost irresponsible. It is more fitting for The Onion than for TechCrunch.
It is funny. Who would have thought?
Could Google+ End Up Bigger Than Gmail?
But I think Google+ is different from Facebook. In terms of the social graph it resides somewhere between Twitter and Facebook, although Facebook's new subscribe feature brings it more into the Google+ realm.
If Google+ ends up with something like 400 million users by the end of 2012, that will be remarkable. The news will not be that it has become half the size of Facebook. The news will be that it has become bigger than Gmail.
Google+ might many people's solution to the inbox problem. Don't clutter people's inboxes, instead send out a Google+ post. That is the message. Whats' the difference between an email that never got read a Google+ post that never got seen? Not much.
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