
Tim O'Reilly's Rules of Life
Tim O'Reilly gave an interview and talked a lot about what he had told many times before. But there is also something interesting. I will give here the most interesting of his quotes. It turned out something like Esquire’s “rules of life”. So, "the rules of life from O'Reilly."
1. People over the past two years have begun to think about web 2.0 in a new way. Someone came up with how to use the “network effect” in, say, video or news. But it seems to me that I should always remind people that the idea of using collective intelligence and the “network effect” to mobilize unused resources is a fundamental aspect of the changes that are happening in web 2.0.
2. Remember, for example, Nintendo Wii: the main thing there is the use of inertial sensors. They allow you to play interactive games: you do something by playing it in front of the computer, rather than typing on the keyboard. Such sensors will be built into mobile phones, and I really think that we are on the verge of a "principle (paradigm) of interaction." In the next phase of technology development, for example, things like speech recognition will be. This will spawn a whole new class of mobile applications. I think there are still a lot of surprises.
3. To be honest, I think the new generation of awesome new apps will be in a slightly different area than the internet.
4. Imagine Nintendo Wii - you control the application by moving objects in space. But what if you do it with your mobile phone? But what if you can go into the room and talk to your computer, rather than typing on it?
5. When blogs first appeared, everyone was equal, and now there are the top 100, and many blogs belong to publishing companies. There was once a time when every newspaper was like a blog - some printer said: I will make a newspaper.
6.Windows is a serious challenge. It will not disappear to a greater extent than the computer hardware has disappeared. Web 2.0 can be compared with the history of personal computers. At an early stage in the development of the computer industry, we had computers, and the software was not so important. All large companies were hardware companies. But when the hardware became standardized, with IBM computers, the software became more valuable than the hardware. Hardver did not disappear, he simply began to bring much less profit. This profit was concentrated in software from Microsoft and other similar companies. And what is happening today - the software is taken for granted, just as the hardware once took for granted.
7. I'm actually going to come to Russia for the first time closer to the end of this year. I really want to visit St. Petersburg. As far as I heard, there are a lot of interesting specialists in Russia, and as part of my business, I would like to get to know Russian hackers and programmers more closely.
Source: Akciya.Online
Link to - original
PS By the way, the editors of the Campaign collect additional questions and suggestions for Tim and are ready to transfer them to him.
1. People over the past two years have begun to think about web 2.0 in a new way. Someone came up with how to use the “network effect” in, say, video or news. But it seems to me that I should always remind people that the idea of using collective intelligence and the “network effect” to mobilize unused resources is a fundamental aspect of the changes that are happening in web 2.0.
2. Remember, for example, Nintendo Wii: the main thing there is the use of inertial sensors. They allow you to play interactive games: you do something by playing it in front of the computer, rather than typing on the keyboard. Such sensors will be built into mobile phones, and I really think that we are on the verge of a "principle (paradigm) of interaction." In the next phase of technology development, for example, things like speech recognition will be. This will spawn a whole new class of mobile applications. I think there are still a lot of surprises.
3. To be honest, I think the new generation of awesome new apps will be in a slightly different area than the internet.
4. Imagine Nintendo Wii - you control the application by moving objects in space. But what if you do it with your mobile phone? But what if you can go into the room and talk to your computer, rather than typing on it?
5. When blogs first appeared, everyone was equal, and now there are the top 100, and many blogs belong to publishing companies. There was once a time when every newspaper was like a blog - some printer said: I will make a newspaper.
6.Windows is a serious challenge. It will not disappear to a greater extent than the computer hardware has disappeared. Web 2.0 can be compared with the history of personal computers. At an early stage in the development of the computer industry, we had computers, and the software was not so important. All large companies were hardware companies. But when the hardware became standardized, with IBM computers, the software became more valuable than the hardware. Hardver did not disappear, he simply began to bring much less profit. This profit was concentrated in software from Microsoft and other similar companies. And what is happening today - the software is taken for granted, just as the hardware once took for granted.
7. I'm actually going to come to Russia for the first time closer to the end of this year. I really want to visit St. Petersburg. As far as I heard, there are a lot of interesting specialists in Russia, and as part of my business, I would like to get to know Russian hackers and programmers more closely.
Source: Akciya.Online
Link to - original
PS By the way, the editors of the Campaign collect additional questions and suggestions for Tim and are ready to transfer them to him.