Google is on the good path, showing to FaceBook what should be a fair policy about data interaction. All datas in Google exportable, data liberation project team is aware of this, providing APIs to all the services of Google to extract at any time any data stored in Google services. It is not the case of other mayor players like FaceBook from which any data entered couldn't be exported, the most important being the social graph. Users should not accept this.
From our Socialwok partner, they are now providing the same Google's new social layer to Outlook and Office documents. Great move for them, we hope it will be successful.
Then I realized over the years that it’s actually more about right time than real time. In fact, when information comes through, it doesn’t necessarily mean that that’s the right time to engage, capture it, and share it. I’m more successful now creating a list of information, relevant information, and then repackaging, repurposing, and broadcasting that information at the right time.
We are business partners of Kwage. It allows you to automatize contact updates from email signatures. Great service, essential to have your address book updated in real time. Boxcar acquisition is a very interesting move. Let us know more in the future.
SendGrid – replaces your email infrastructure so you don’t have to build, scale, and maintain these systems in-house.
ScaleXtreme – a cloud-based server automation product for the modern distributed data center. SystemAdmins gets a single unified automation platform to build and control physical, virtual and public cloud servers.
New Relic – an all-in-one web application performance tool that lets you see performance from the end user experience, through servers, and down to the line of application code.
4. OpenStack is a big trend in cloud computing and will continue to be so. Does the company have a foundation in OpenStack, a belief in open source and working with the community to make technology great? And is this important to you?
Jeremy emphatically disagreed, saying the first million sales were likely to tech geeks but the next wave of sales after that were to others. At the time, neither he or I had many ideas about who those “others” might be, but we were both interested to see how things would shake out when more information surfaced about who was buying iPads.
On Wednesday, we learned where a chunk of those sales are coming from: Large corporations.
This iPad thing has taken the world by storm. It came in as a consumer product and very quickly the people who actually bought them were business people.
Wells Fargo noted that it took two years to get the iPhone accepted, but only a few weeks to bring in the iPad
A new category of usages is rising for the enterprise. This will help for more mobility and more collaboration, because ipad will work connected and will be helpful with cloud based applications. I think this is very good for enterprise 2.0 adoption, if services will be adapted to the interface.
An important move from Microsoft if it is true. But I think so, they know to change their strategy when the market change itself (see what happened at the beginning of the internet).