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A conversation with Jeff Bezos about Amazon web services Yesterday Jeff Bezos spoke at the MIT Technology Review's Emerging Technologies Conference. Afterward, I recorded a short (12-minute) interview with him that's available here both as audio and as video. The subject of his talk and of our conversation was a trio of new Amazon services that I've explored quite a bit lately: S3, EC2, and
Open Sources | Rodrigues & Urlocker » Why Google and Yahoo! can't be better open source citizens July 25, 2006 | Comments: (0) Why Google and Yahoo! can't be better open source citizens TAGS: Open Source Tim just finished the Ghost in the Machine: The Impact of Open Source on Web 2.0 session. It's part of the Executive Briefing that I helped Tim put together (and which, btw, is completely filled
Google Calendar and its API Until yesterday I'd only tire-kicked Google Calendar. I couldn't use it for real until I loaded it with real data. Last night I finally got around to doing that. In my case, the export/import path led from Mozilla Calendar to an XML representation of iCalendar format to Atom and then into Google Calendar. The hero of the piece is Joe Gregorio, whose wonderful Sparkline
Wikipedia's next five years The wiki medium, Socialtext's Ross Mayfield has said, "denatures personality." Whereas open source developers are often motivated by a desire to build strong individual reputations, Wikipedians care more about inclusiveness and consensus. Enforcing better accountability without eroding these core values will require tricky social engineering. Judging the quality of ar
Bill Gates interview: the transcript I've been too busy here at the PDC to transcribe Tuesday's podcast of my interview with Bill Gates, but the folks at IDG kindly took care of that, so here it is: JU: So, the Napoleon Dynamite thing was delightful. BG: It was fun to do that. He's an amazing person. He was able to ad lib and I think we spent a little over three hours and got it done. JU: I'll
There are some capabilities that Web-based apps can't handle -- yet The rapid spread of the term AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) -- from Weblog to Wall Street Journal within weeks! -- might lead developers to assume it’s a breakthrough that heralds the death of desktop applications. There’s certainly a kernel of truth in that: The recent spate of new Web applications under the AJAX banner
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