Zappos has been acquired by Amazon, meaning Amazon will have even more shoes to sell, but also a new corporate culture to integrate with. Windows 7 gets released to manufacturing, meaning it's on its way to you. And Microsoft and UBIsoft are getting int
Zappos has been acquired by Amazon, meaning Amazon will have even more shoes to sell, but also a new corporate culture to integrate with. Windows 7 gets released to manufacturing, meaning it's on its way to you. And Microsoft and UBIsoft are getting into the movie business. Is that a good thing?
ATandT activates 2.4 million iPhones; Second quarter tops estimates
http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=21579
Microsoft and Ubisoft get into the film business
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-ct-videogames23-2009jul23,0,5232624.story
Instant search comes to Splashtop
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10293479-1.html
Major League Baseball Beans Jon Stewart, and Obama's Pitch Vanishes
http://mediamemo.allthingsd.com/20090722/major-league-baseball-beans-jon-stewart-and-obamas-pitch-vanishes/
Artificial brain '10 years away'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8164060.stm
Camaro Transformers Edition
http://www.autoweek.com/article/20090722/CARNEWS/907229993
VOICEMAIL
Joe Baton Rouge RTM?????
EMAIL
Hey Buzz Crew,
I'm about a day behind, but listening to Episode 1023 today, I was intrigued by the fact that Natali has switched search engines to Bing. So have I, but I actually have a reason:
A staunch Google user, I decided to give Bing a try when it came out. One day my wife and daughter phoned from the car to ask me to look up a movie time for them. They said they were going to an AMC Theatre, but couldn't remember the show times. I figured I'd have to look up AMC, filter through a number of entries to find the theatre chain, open that link, find the Canadian locations and so forth. What happened in Bing was that as I entered AMC in the search box and selected the suggested AMC Theatres link, it brought up the actual listings and times of the shows at our neighborhood theatre, right on the Bing search page. I had the answer for them on the phone by literally typing 3 characters and hitting enter.
Not only does Bing read my mind, it knows where I am!
LOVE THE SHOW!
Mike
Toronto
********
Hey BOL crew,
A couple episodes ago you were talking about how Google keeps its
products in beta for years. I was talking to a buddy of mine, who
works at a large accounting firm as a technical auditor, about the
topic and he mentioned a reason, which I've never heard of before,
that benefits their bookkeeping,
According to him, when software is in beta the money that is spent
working on it gets counted as a development cost for the asset, but
after beta, it gets counted as a support expense.
So lets just say up to now gmail cost a total of $1 million:
a) By keeping it in beta, there books can show that they developed a
$1 million asset
b) If they were to take it out of beta earlier, they would show that
they developed a $700k asset, which cost them $300k to support.
In both, they spent $1 million but by keeping Gmail in beta their
books look better. I don't know if this is right or not, and I don't
think would be the reason gmail was in beta for so long, but it's an
interesting reason I've never heard before, maybe an accounting guru
out there can debunk it.
Love the show,
Jamie, the software developer from Nebraska
********
Hey there,
Just listening to the kilosode and you mentioned that the manager for
RadioHead? started what amounts to a venture capital fund for start-up
bands. And Tom suggested something similar for other arts. This is
an amazing idea!
For a long time now, I've seen our culture as a feudal system
consisting mainly of indentured servitude--to the monthly bills, the
credit cards, the car payment, the mortgage--where we've decentralized
our fealty or mastery. This new idea seems a clear step towards doing
the same thing with patronage. It could work for any traditionally
scholarly endeavor, art, science, literature, investigative
journalism, whatever. I had always imagined Japan's 'keretsu's (sp?)
as being the standard model for corporate feudalism, but it appears
that a distributed model may be more robust and could also circumvent
many of the bureaucratic problems associated with the culture of
ownership.
Very cool.
Lts,
Will Cool
Portland, OR USA
Close
Be respectful, keep it clean and stay on topic. We delete comments that violate our policy, which we encourage you to read. Discussion threads can be closed at any time at our discretion.
Be respectful, keep it clean and stay on topic. We delete comments that violate our policy, which we encourage you to read. Discussion threads can be closed at any time at our discretion.