Wednesday, February 10, 2010

One Gig Per Sec: This Is What I Am Talking About

Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase
This Google talk of an experimental broadband by Google of one gigabit per second is more exciting than all the buzz around Google Buzz (Buzz Takes Gmail To A New Level) and all the buzz around the Apple iPad. (iPad) Innovation is a basic property of the human mind. There will always be innovation. But some territories are more fertile grounds for innovation than others. And between hardware - example: iPad - software - example: Buzz - and connectivity - example: a one gig per second broadband - I have to argue there is much more room for innovation in the connectivity sector. Universal high speed internet is a lofty goal. I don't know what universal means to you, but for me that means global.


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Buzz Takes Gmail To A New Level

Image of Adam Carson from TwitterImage of Adam Carson
Earlier today I was fooling around with Buzz. Even before that from just reading about it in the news, I never thought of Buzz as a Twitter or Facebook killer. My suspicions have now been confirmed. Buzz is a Gmail enhancer. Otherwise my Gmail experience was starting to get a little staid.

Google reinvented email with Gmail. I don't think it has reinvented social, updates and geo with Buzz. But it sure could not have afforded to be left behind. Social is not Facebook, updates are not Twitter, geo is geo. These are elements of the web experience, and they will seep through to everywhere or most places. The leading dot com could not have skipped the cacophony.

Two names popped up during my first experience: Adam Carson, and Vin Vacanti. I never connected with Adam on Facebook like I now do on Buzz. The guy got me on the Reader bandwagon long back, but once I got strong on Twitter, I shifted over to Twitter. My Twitter page is my newsfeed. I skim through the headlines in the morning on my Twitter page. Vin I got introduced to over email last year. I met him in person a few days back. And now I am part of conversations with his friends. And Buzz does not cut into my allowed Gmail space. That is important to me.

Right now my Buzz box is sexier than my Gmail Inbox, and only one click away. I am liking the experience.

One Buzz thread had the founder of Gmail and FriendFeed saying Buzz looks "familiar." How did Google find out I might be interested in that particular Buzz thread? They got it right. I don't know how they did it, but all I got to say is keep tweaking those algorithms.  

Introducing Bzz
Introducing Google Buzz For Mobile
Readers: Get Your Buzz On
New York Times: Bits: Google Gets More Social With Buzz



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