Tuesday, September 16, 2003
Well, since the early adopters are just now rearing up on their one year anniversary and will have a chance to cancel it seems that Danger has gotten its act together (thanks Boing Boing) and is actually going to release a functionality upgrade.
The Hiptop/Sidekick still does some things that are first rate in the business. This is the only device I've found to fulfill the promise of 2.5G GPRS, it will actually stay online continuously. Handspring and Palm claim it, but they log off when you go to a screen saver. It's great to see
Thursday, September 04, 2003
This is also occuring in the retail product industry, which I've gotten to know quite well in building Ambient Devices. Everything being made in China is nothing new, however I'm talking to local industrial design companies that are now competing for actual creative design with these same manufacturers. Can it really only be alarmist fear to worry about the fact that many of the major manufacturing houses that make your Samsung and Motorola phone have branched out into actually designing those phones as well? The millions in America were told to get more education to move up from labor to white colar work, but where does one go above programming or design?
Wednesday, September 03, 2003
So I had a newfound faith in the utility of old data repurposed when I saw CorporateAlumni (thanks Seth). It does a scary good job of making at least a modicum of sense out of millions of press releases and SEC filings out there. What was once a million tiny tidbits is organized into clean, searchable, database material that's actually not half bad. It also got me thinking about the confluence of a tool like this with some of the studies of the social networks of blogging like the visual mapping of LiveJournal relationships. Perhaps we are not too far away from using search technlogy and a little intelligence to infer more complex relationships.
Tuesday, September 02, 2003

The bare-bones beta just launched, with only some of the functionality some have grown to love at sites like Friendster and LinkedIn, but it certainly has the potential to both galvanize Dean supporters to enlist their friends, and perhaps even raise the stature of social networking to another level of publicity.
If DeanLink does for social networking software what they did for Meetup it could launch the field, already getting quite enough attention, into the mainstream. One interesting thing to watch is whether this phenomena is ultimately going to boil down to one or two hubs for people networks (a'la the hubs of Yahoo), or if this is going to be a decentralized revolution like blogging, discussion board, etc where vertical integrators and toolsets win out.
Friendster and LinkedIn seem to take the hub approach, representing the Left wing ideal of a centralized service managing everything you need. Although I haven't found a generic toolset yet, DeanLink seems to represent a niche-oriented play. Keep an eye on (although Tribe as well, since it seems to be trying to play both sides.