The Web is no Model T
Robert Scoble has composed two or three posts as of late about Microsoft items being a stage:
1. Robert citing Kevin Warbach: "The Internet organizations that have flourished while AOL wavered — Microsoft, Amazon.com, eBay, Google — have two things in house. They are profoundly innovation driven, yet they see innovation not as an end in itself but rather as a stage."
Also, multi day later…
2. "Indeed, the Web is the thing that the Web is. I can see huge amounts of spots that Amazon could be tons better, if the stage underneath was better. Be that as it may, no doubt, the Web is amazing. So was the Model T, in now is the right time."
The suggestion obviously is that the Web is past its prime and ought to be sent to the paste industrial facility like a spent racehorse. To which I answer, well perhaps the Web has a few lacks as a stage for 2003-time Internet applications. In any case, the Web still makes them thing making it work which beats everything – it's FREE. Truly the World Wide Web is FREE, as in both discourse and lager. That is gotta mean something, isn't that so?
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Robert reacts: "It surely does! The Model T was the principal moderate vehicle, as well. In any case, would we be able to move past that?"
Sure however wouldn't we be able to expand on the stage we as of now have – the Web – as opposed to make new ones? Nobody organization – not Microsoft, not Google – claims the Web. The Web is decentralized and it works on a couple of essential open models – URI's, HTTP and HTML. The Web is more similar to a street than a vehicle. Not that I need to revive the "Data Superhighway" similitude from the 90's! Be that as it may, my point is the Web is the accepted stage, based on a couple of all inclusive conventions. How about we expand on what is sans now and usable.
1. Robert citing Kevin Warbach: "The Internet organizations that have flourished while AOL wavered — Microsoft, Amazon.com, eBay, Google — have two things in house. They are profoundly innovation driven, yet they see innovation not as an end in itself but rather as a stage."
Also, multi day later…
2. "Indeed, the Web is the thing that the Web is. I can see huge amounts of spots that Amazon could be tons better, if the stage underneath was better. Be that as it may, no doubt, the Web is amazing. So was the Model T, in now is the right time."
The suggestion obviously is that the Web is past its prime and ought to be sent to the paste industrial facility like a spent racehorse. To which I answer, well perhaps the Web has a few lacks as a stage for 2003-time Internet applications. In any case, the Web still makes them thing making it work which beats everything – it's FREE. Truly the World Wide Web is FREE, as in both discourse and lager. That is gotta mean something, isn't that so?
update
Robert reacts: "It surely does! The Model T was the principal moderate vehicle, as well. In any case, would we be able to move past that?"
Sure however wouldn't we be able to expand on the stage we as of now have – the Web – as opposed to make new ones? Nobody organization – not Microsoft, not Google – claims the Web. The Web is decentralized and it works on a couple of essential open models – URI's, HTTP and HTML. The Web is more similar to a street than a vehicle. Not that I need to revive the "Data Superhighway" similitude from the 90's! Be that as it may, my point is the Web is the accepted stage, based on a couple of all inclusive conventions. How about we expand on what is sans now and usable.
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