MIX06 lesson ONE. Don’t walk to the strip from the Airport….


Yes, I have been to vegas several times but after finding that the stupid strip shuttles they have from the Airport could take an hour to get to my place I thought “hey, I’ll just WALK”. I walk about 2-3 miles every day so how far could it be? FAR. I suppose if I had not had backpack and a suitcase it would have not been all that bad -approx 3-4 miles I’d estimate. I walked for about 90 minutes.

But the good news is I’ve got all that excersize under my belt and now I can eat with reckless abandon. I was here in November for WebmasterWorld and boy was the food and drink ….. GOOD.

And more good news is there are some WIFI spots here so I don’t have to sign up for the usurous 9.95 per day at the Imperial Palace. I’m with Scoble in being pissed at all the high WIFI charges at Airports and Hotels. At SLC Airport I couldn’t even use the spring PCS WIFI because though I’m a sprint customer, and a PCS Vision subscriber, I’m NOT a SPRINT+ PCS VISION+ WIFI subscriber.

Show me some ads and give me free WIFI!

Off to MIX06


No Mom it’s NOT about the glitz, glamour, and free huge nightclub tabs picked up by Microsoft!  It’s WORK and SOMEBODY darn well better get down to Las Vegas and do what has to be done!

MIX06 starts tomorrow morning with keynote by Bill Gates and leads into a large number of concurrent sessions which appear to be focused almost exclusively on how MS applications and future developments can be used in online applications.   That’s OK because this is put on by MS, but somewhat ironically I think the concept here was to have a very “open” environment that tried to get feedback from the community about what they need, want, and where they are going.   I’m anxious to see if MS is sincerely interested in ….. us.

Yahoo and Google certainly are interested as evidenced by the way they interact at other conferences.   I think part of their corporate culture is to say “damn the torpedos, full speed ahead!” even when that approach could threaten some aspect of the company’s revenue.  I’m not expecting this from MS but I’m hoping for greater responsiveness than they’ve shown the web community in the past.  

$100 Laptops Rock. Bill’s wrong. But the Gates Foundation still rules.


I was sorry to see Bill Gates bashing MIT’s $100 Laptop project

Gates’ credentials as an advocate for the developing world are unsurpassed, but I’d guess he’s reacting more to the fact this is a Google sponsored project than legitimate concerns about it’s viability.

I love the $100 Laptop Project not so much because it will bring tech to the poor, especially children (though it will do that), but because it will help to rapidly and aggressively break down what I see as the key barrier to development which is the lack of communication and exchange between “them” and “us”.

A dictator’s tyranny or a famine in Nigeria will take on a whole new relevance when THEIR kids are all playing video games and instant messaging with OUR kids.

Bill, you got this one wrong, dawg. But the Gates Foundation remains the world’s most heroic development effort.

Leaving Las Vegas?


A great movie but a bad choice to watch last night was “Leaving Las Vegas”.  I’d seen it long ago and again was mesmerized by simply brilliant performances by Nick Cage, for which he won the Oscar, and Elizabeth Shue, who was nominated. But this is one of the most depressing films of all time.  I also learned that the writer of the book on which this movie is based – a loosely autobiographical account of the destructiveness of alcoholism – killed himself about 2 weeks into the production of the film. 

My problem with this?  I’m off to Vegas in a few days for the MIX06 conference. MIX06 is Microsoft’s effort to gain some traction in the growing mashup/Web 2.0 space.  It’s at the splendid Venetian Hotel and I’d rather be marvelling at the architectural extravagances and enjoying the huge MS party at “TAO” than worrying about how many of the people walking the street are doomed to untimely and lonely deaths at the hands of their obsessions.

 

Cleverness should be copied, Yahoo and MSN and Google!


Although I’m in the growing crowd that suggests Yahoo and Google search results are comparable and MSN is not far behind, Google remains the leader in simple cleverness.

Why Yahoo and MSN don’t copy these little ideas from Google is a great mystery to me.
C’mon MSN, I don’t think many who search for “17 x 3” want this:
RAD Mfg. 2005 Application Chart & Pricelist
19×2.15 17×3.50,16.5×3.50 Front 17×4.25,17X4.50, 17×5.00 Rear CRF 250R 04-05 (36)Hex or Eagle 21×1.60 (32, 36)Hex or Eagle 18×2.15 19×2.15 17×3.50,16.5×3.50 Front

Yahoo you are no better with this:

Start Start 3 Portfolio – 17 x 22 x 1′ – PriceGrabber.com Open this result in new window

Find the lowest price on Start Start 3 Portfolio – 17 x 22 x 1′. PriceGrabber.com delivers instant bottom-line prices on millions of products from thousands of merchants

Google wins HANDILY with this:

  17 x 3 = 51

It’s hardly a copyrighted thing, so why don’t Yahoo and MSN do this?   Or the temp function of Google calculator where you type  “77 F in C”  to get the F to C temp conversion?

I actually think part of this stubborn foolishness is that competing company people get a sense of pride in the status quo and actually  stick to the wrong approach until they come up with something much better or they are forced by forces outside of their own control to copy the cleverness.

Bill, Warren, Carlos, Ingvar, and Lakshmi


It’s interesting that only the top two of the world’s richest people are household names.
I’d never even heard of the other 3 dudes. From CNN Money

“Hey Slim, can I borrow your truck? Oh, and 157 million dollars for gas?

1 William Gates III United States Washington 50.0 Microsoft 50
2 Warren Buffett United States Nebraska 42.0 Berkshire Hathaway 75
3 Carlos Slim Helu Mexico 30.0 telecom 66
4 Ingvar Kamprad Sweden 28.0 Ikea 79
5 Lakshmi Mittal India 23.5 steel 55

IF Web 2.0 > Web 1.0 THEN Yahoo > Google


I think the most profound issue in the online world right NOW is “where are we going with web 2.0”?

I hope to answer this question, at least in part, at next week’s mashup camp
in the heart of Silicon Valley. The event is really shaping up to be great, with 300 developers, observers, and API providers coming in from all over the country to share ideas, mashups, and a few beers. In addition to API folks from Google, Yahoo, Amazon, ASK, and others two of my favorite bloggers will be there – Robert Scoble from MSN and Jeremy Zawodny from Yahoo. These guys are among the best known tech evangelists for their companies and what THEY blog about is often what *everybody else* will be talking about in a few weeks or months.

Gates hasn’t gone soft, he’s gone heroic!


What a disappointment to read New York Magazine’s John Heilemann on Bill Gates and what he sees as a softening of Gates that has led to a weakening of Microsoft.

Like most tech oriented folks I’ve never been a big MS fan, but ever since hearing Gates on Charlie Rose discuss development with a passion he used to reserve for monopolizing the PC industry I’ve been a huge fan of his and was thrilled to see the media attention, albeit very BRIEF media attention, following the Time award.

Rather than laud him for shifting his generally brilliant focus from software to world health, Heilemann focuses very narrowly on what he sees as the demise of Microsoft.

It’s a dubious premise at best (watch their unique Neural Network search triumph in about 1- 2 years as a fantastic tool), but even if it’s true that Microsoft is dying the challenges are not related to Gates philanthropy or even Gates himself as much as they are the result of the tidal waves of online innovation and change sweeping away old business structures and new and old companies alike.

I expect more from elite magazines, but like most in our sad and superficial corporate media New York Magazine fiddles while the developed world burns, and like mainstream TV media focuses more on a notable’s celebrity while the celebrity, in this case Gates, heroically tackles real and pressing global problems with unprecedented success.

Shame on Heilemann, shame on New York Magazine, and Bravo to Bill Gates.
—————-

UPDATE: John Heilemann very courteously replied to my rant at length in the following email in which he also had to correct my mistake calling NEW YORK MAGAZINE the “NEW YORKER”.

> On 1/10/06, John Heilemann wrote:

joe —

sorry you were disappointed, but at least you can let the New Yorker off the hook — i’m a columnist for New York Magazine, an entirely different publication.

i wrote a book about the microsoft antitrust trial, so i have some views about the company, its past behavior, and future prospects.
maybe we can just agree to disagree on some points there.

but while it’s true that i didn’t devote the bulk of my column to
praising gates for his philanthropic work — a point of view i
considered pretty fully covered by Time’s Person of the Year cover
story — it’s not like i didn’t acknowledge the point:

“By all accounts, Gates has emerged as the most influential philanthropist on the planet; with a $29 billion endowment this foundation is setting new standards for both generosity and rigor in tackling an assortment of the world’s most dire maladies, from malaria to HIV.”

“Gates’s consolation is that his opportunity to be a transformational figure isn’t lost with Microsoft’s abeyance. This is not a trivial thing. Gates has already changed the world once; now, through his foundation—which is not only disgorging a gusher of funds but inventing a new model for philanthropy, driven by statistics, leverage, and an insistence on accountability—he has a chance to do it again. And as Bono told Time, “The second act for Bill Gates may be the one that history regards more.”

sorry if this is insufficient — but please don’t accuse me of
ignoring the good that gates is doing with his charitable endeavors.

jh