Blogging for Big Bucks

August 27, 2006 at 10:31 (General Business & IT)

http://biz.yahoo.com/weekend/blog_1.html 

For starters, blogs today are so cheap to create and operate that a lone blogger or a small team can, with the ever-expanding reach of the Internet, amass vast audiences and generate levels of profit on a per-employee basis that traditional media companies can only fantasize about.

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The Next Net 25

August 27, 2006 at 10:26 (General Business & IT)

A list of 25 promising Net Startups

http://money.cnn.com/2006/02/23/smbusiness/business2_nextnet_intro/index.htm

We are in the early stages of what might be better thought of as the Next Net. The Next Net will encompass all digital devices, from PC to cell phone to television. Its defining characteristics include the ability to interact instantaneously with any of the more than 1 billion Web users across the globe — not by, say, instant messaging, but by evolving instant-voice-messaging and instant-video-messaging apps that will make today’s e-mail and IM seem crude.

The Next Net is deeply collaborative: People from across the planet can work together on the same task, and products or tools can be rapidly tweaked and improved by the collective wisdom of the entire online world.

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Google’s Home Town to Get Web Access Free

August 16, 2006 at 0:07 (General Business & IT, Wireless Systems)

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/060816/google_wireless.html?.v=1

The new wireless, or “Wi-Fi,” network, is believed to establish Mountain View, Calif., as the largest U.S. city with totally free Internet access available throughout the entire community …

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Google to pay $900 million to MySpace

August 15, 2006 at 23:57 (General Business & IT)

Last year News Corp bought MySpace for $580 million. Now Google is paying $900 million to become MySpace search provider … http://www.redorbit.com/news/technology/607895/google_to_become_myspace_search_provider/index.html?source=r_technology

Murdoch gamble pays off as MySpace takes over 

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The Expert Mind

August 5, 2006 at 23:30 (Chess)

Good article in ‘Scientific American’ on how 

Studies of the mental processes of chess grandmasters have revealed clues to how people become experts in other fields as well

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=00010347-101C-14C1-8F9E83414B7F4945&chanID=sa006

… chess has served as the greatest single test bed for theories of thinking–the “Drosophila of cognitive science,” as it has been called.

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Blair in the Silicon Valley

August 4, 2006 at 23:59 (General Business & IT)

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/15162564.htm

Seated around an arrangement of tables were Chambers; David Gardner, chief operating officer of Electronic Arts; Hector Ruiz, chief executive of Advanced Micro Devices; Vint Cerf, chief Internet evangelist for Google; Shantanu Narayen, chief operating officer of Adobe Systems; Jim Ward, president of LucasArts; Jonathan Schwartz, chief executive of Sun Microsystems; John Hennessy, president of Stanford University; Jobs, the chief executive of Apple Computer; and Mark Hurd, chief executive of Hewlett-Packard.

The group had some unlikely advice for Blair. The key to Silicon Valley’s success, they said, was failure.”Each of us had one massive failure: a company we founded or an investment we made,” Narayen said after the lunch.”If you have taken a risk and you failed, you potentially become more interesting and more valuable because now you know something,” Schwartz agreed.

Schwartz, whose company was founded by Stanford University graduate students in 1982, said the relationship with the university did not end after the founders moved off campus. That connection continues to this day, and is one of many similar relationships that helps Stanford craft a curriculum that prepares its students to continuously come up with new technological breakthroughs.

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