Monday, January 16, 2012
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Big Data + Smartphone = New Generation Smartphone
Image via WikipediaFighting the next mobile war
Arduino is a building block for the world to come
The next, next big thing
Google I/O 2011: The Accessory Development Kit is a big deal
Why Google Choosing Arduino Matters
Parallel programming, Arduino and the good kind of trouble
There is very little actual talking on the phone done these days. Mostly people are interacting with apps. The next generation smartphone will constantly interact with the external environment.
Arduino is a building block for the world to come
The next, next big thing
Google I/O 2011: The Accessory Development Kit is a big deal
Why Google Choosing Arduino Matters
Parallel programming, Arduino and the good kind of trouble
There is very little actual talking on the phone done these days. Mostly people are interacting with apps. The next generation smartphone will constantly interact with the external environment.
Related articles
- Fighting the next mobile war (radar.oreilly.com)
- imabonehead: Google chooses Arduino as a development platform for Android | Your Electronics Open Source (dev.emcelettronica.com)
- New in the Maker Shed: Arduino Wireless Proto Shield (makezine.com)
- The Making of the Arduino (wired.com)
- Chrome books should come with Arduino 1.0 installed and come with an Arduino (adafruit.com)
- Getting physical with Android, NFC and the ADK (radar.oreilly.com)
- Annoy Your Cat With This Arduino-Based RC Car Controlled With an iPad (pcworld.com)
- ARM-ed To the Teeth, Arduino Hardware Grows Up (wired.com)
- Arduino Hack Lets You Control TV, Annoy Others (pcworld.com)
Labels:
Accessory Development Kit,
Android,
Apple,
Arduino,
google,
Google I/O,
iOS,
iPhone,
Research In Motion,
Search Engines,
Searching,
Smartphone,
Universal Serial Bus
Location:
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Engaging Mark Cuban
mcubanMark Cuban
The TV Business Keeps Getting Stronger !: Back in my http://t.co/xUGnYr65 days we had a saying that… http://t.co/GpEgc0tS
@paramendra
Paramendra Bhagat@mcuban Gigabit broadband will take care of bottlenecks you point out http://t.co/39cK5kom Your observations have great short term value.
Jan 16 via webFavoriteRetweetReply
Mark Cuban, Television, And The Internet
Image via WikipediaThis was in the late 1990s. Bill Gates was trying hard to marry television to the internet. He called it WebTV. He failed. This was before broadband became mainstream. And still broadband is not there yet. I think gigabit broadband is where TV and the Internet become one.
This was in the late 1990s. Larry Ellison was after something he called the network computer. You would not have much of anything on the desktop. The network would have all the software you would need. Steve Jobs told him the technology just did not exist to support that. The richness possible on the desktop was leaps and bounds ahead of the richness on the browser. Again, this was before broadband, way before HTML5.
5G + HTML5 = Magic
Two titans were not seeing it straight. Positive spin would say they were futurists ahead of their times.
Mark Cuban Replies To My Tweet
Mark Cuban: Contrarian On The TV Business
The conventional wisdom in the industry is that we are almost there. We nailed the phone. Now TV is next. And we are almost there. Even Steve Jobs says so much in his biography. I finally cracked it, he declares.
Not so fast, says Mark Cuban. By personality Mark Cuban is someone you can expect to take a contrarian stand. As he does now. He makes some good points.
Mark Cuban: The TV Business Keeps Getting Stronger!
This is how I summarized his blog post earlier today in another blog post.
(1) TV shows are high quality stuff. Not just anyone can produce them. People like them.
(2) Video is content king. People like consuming content in video format. Much faster broadband might stand a chance but not the broadband we know. The Internet pipes just are not there yet.
(3) Ease of use is supreme. People want to be able to just turn on and watch. No browse and click.
I think all these points are valid. But by the time we hit universal gigabit broadband all three points will have fallen by the wayside.
(1) There's plenty of great quality music on the web. In fact, all the great music is there.
(2) Faster broadband will mainstream video. Video is already big on the web.
(3) People who design smartphones are better positioned than the cable TV people when it comes to simplifying the video consumption experience. I mean, we could get rid of the remote. Voice control, gesture control. There might even be mind reading.
Mark Cuban though makes a solid point that the TV people are not standing still. They are working hard to ease the complexity from another angle.
It is true that for the masses there are times when you just want to sit back and watch.
This was in the late 1990s. Larry Ellison was after something he called the network computer. You would not have much of anything on the desktop. The network would have all the software you would need. Steve Jobs told him the technology just did not exist to support that. The richness possible on the desktop was leaps and bounds ahead of the richness on the browser. Again, this was before broadband, way before HTML5.
5G + HTML5 = Magic
Two titans were not seeing it straight. Positive spin would say they were futurists ahead of their times.
Mark Cuban Replies To My Tweet
Mark Cuban: Contrarian On The TV Business
The conventional wisdom in the industry is that we are almost there. We nailed the phone. Now TV is next. And we are almost there. Even Steve Jobs says so much in his biography. I finally cracked it, he declares.
Not so fast, says Mark Cuban. By personality Mark Cuban is someone you can expect to take a contrarian stand. As he does now. He makes some good points.
Mark Cuban: The TV Business Keeps Getting Stronger!
This is how I summarized his blog post earlier today in another blog post.
(1) TV shows are high quality stuff. Not just anyone can produce them. People like them.
(2) Video is content king. People like consuming content in video format. Much faster broadband might stand a chance but not the broadband we know. The Internet pipes just are not there yet.
(3) Ease of use is supreme. People want to be able to just turn on and watch. No browse and click.
I think all these points are valid. But by the time we hit universal gigabit broadband all three points will have fallen by the wayside.
(1) There's plenty of great quality music on the web. In fact, all the great music is there.
(2) Faster broadband will mainstream video. Video is already big on the web.
(3) People who design smartphones are better positioned than the cable TV people when it comes to simplifying the video consumption experience. I mean, we could get rid of the remote. Voice control, gesture control. There might even be mind reading.
Mark Cuban though makes a solid point that the TV people are not standing still. They are working hard to ease the complexity from another angle.
It is true that for the masses there are times when you just want to sit back and watch.
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