GAMBIT: Updates: Why Am I Jumping? - 0 views
Privacy groups to FTC: Investigate Gmail, Picasa - Ars Technica - 0 views
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The FTC is already aware of the privacy and security concerns that come with keeping everything in the cloud; it recently held a meeting to talk about how companies can manage data security issues when data might span multiple jurisdictions.
Computer science major is cool again - 0 views
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computer science majors are critical for the U.S. economy because their training provides them with computational thinking and problem solving skills that they can deploy in any industry.
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When you compare the demand for jobs with the production of computer science undergrads, we're way short. It's clear there's an opportunity here.
Pattie Maes demos the Sixth Sense - 0 views
Google boss backs subsidized Linuxbooks - 0 views
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Schmidt called netbooks the "next generation" of the low-cost machines produced by Nicholas Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) initiative. "Products today are not completely done. Things are missing.
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Such devices could rule the world, Schmidt said, because cloud online apps are the future. "Cloud computing is one of those changes that are going to happen - regardless of whether or not companies in the ecosystem want it to," he said. "IT systems today are so slow in the way that they evolve...We now have an opportunity to build a whole new generation of applications that cycle much faster."
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Just as predictably, Schmidt began his Morgan Stanley Q&A by insisting that Google's search monopoly could vanish at any moment. He pointed to a recent snafu where Google's search engine blocked access to the entire internet.
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Bulk Data Downloads: A Breakthrough in Government Transparency - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views
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Even though the data is public, it is very expensive today. The Copyright Database, for example, costs $86,625 for the retrospective and a one-year feed (we harvested this in 2007 as you reported, but this would be much easier if they simply provided an FTP server and rsync!)
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The Congressional Research Service is such a no-brainer. With the exception of classified information, who can afford the luxury of paying for some of the best research in the world and then just bury it! Taxpayer dollars paid for CRS reports and they need to be available.
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In this day and age, you can't say a committee hearing is public if you can't access it on the Internet. Itty-bitty streaming video using some proprietary client/format just doesn't cut it any more. We ran a pilot with 4 house committees to show that this is very doable and makes a huge difference
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Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows: Microsoft Strategic Update 2009 - 0 views
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Microsoft is very clearly in the midst of an enormous push into consumer software solutions but its business sales remain its primary source of revenues. And from a mile-high view, all of Microsoft's IT-related businesses are profitable or highly profitable, with the exception of Windows Mobile, which Ballmer described as "somewhat unprofitable." Microsoft's consumer-oriented businesses, meanwhile, are doing notably poorly, almost across the board.
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From a competition perspective, however, Windows has no real competition today beyond pirated copies of Windows. Even on netbooks, over 90 percent of installs are Windows. But Microsoft sees Linux being more competitive on the PC desktop going forward because it believes that Google will port its Android mobile OS to the PC.
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People have always misconstrued the real market forces that are eating away at Windows. This has nothing to do with the Mac, which remains a niche player in yesterday's market. The future of computing is online, and as the box you use to get there becomes less important--or becomes a smart phone--Windows matters less. Netbooks, of course, are a real issue for Microsoft. It's strength in this market is key for the future. But it's a smaller future, from a revenues perspective. That's true across the board, and not unique for Windows.
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Review of Microsoft Strategic Update 2009. Very interesting to get to know this giant's business. It's interesting to note that their revenue vs. market share are not always equivalent. Also the move to an online computing offering for businesses will help to retain it's dominance and profitability on such markets.
Top Predictions | workforce.com - 0 views
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The concept of offshoring will cease to exist. Talent will exist globally and companies will go where the talent is.
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8. The hunt for inexpensive labor will continue, but the evolution of economies from low cost to high value will be quicker, and increasingly, a low-cost labor strategy will be more difficult to sustain.
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2. Millennials will redefine work, doing work at home and taking home to work. This means blurring the boundaries of life and work. More workforce mobility will allow people to work from home and at different hours.
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IBM developerWorks : On demand demos - 0 views
Better Business Bureau Gives Second Life An "F" - 0 views
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But the intricacies of governing a real-currency microeconomy are so maddeningly complex it's impossible to give people anything but superficial customer service.
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Linden encourages people to create virtual goods-based businesses with real money, then makes decisions on land, currency, advertising, outlawed content, or a million other things that directly impact people's livelihoods.
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And as the BBB notes, Linden tends to ignore complaints
the cluetrain manifesto - 0 views
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They will only sound human when they empower real human beings to speak on their behalf.
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A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most companies.
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But learning to speak in a human voice is not some trick, nor will corporations convince us they are human with lip service about "listening to customers."
Social websites harm children's brains: Chilling warning to parents from top neuroscien... - 0 views
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'I'm not against technology and computers. But before they start social networking, they need to learn to make real relationships with people.'
Account Standard Board - 0 views
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The target audiences are non-technical (IT) and non-accounting people who would like to understand both a bit of XBRL code and some of the problems that are tackled in order to allow computers to process and communicate accounting data meaningfully.
Twittering Celebrities Take Fans Backstage in Their Lives - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Twitter appeals to celebrities because it offers a relatively low-maintenance way to keep audiences engaged in between film debuts and album releases
If you're going to tweet from a conference..10 things I want from you. « Dire... - 0 views
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3) You need to assume that maybe we might want to respond back. Allow for it. You are not a court reporter.
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5) Why are you doing it? For who’s benefit? Let’s make this a mutually beneficial experience.
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7) Because you thought they were worthy enough to be tweeted in the first place, right? Engage the non-attendees as well.
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