This link has been bookmarked by 10 people . It was first bookmarked on 07 Jun 2006, by Erik Stattin.
-
31 Jul 06
-
07 Jun 06
-
27 Jan 05
Tom SeppWill the future of mobile computing be open?
-
Nowadays, online manifestos often work best as seeds for group conversation, rather than an individual's attempt to start with the last word. I'll stake a modicum of public embarrassment on the possibility that I can talk people I don't know yet into helping me write this piece: I'll start the discussion about the way the mobile Internet future ought to look by posting this draft manifesto; I invite you to suggest revisions and additions. If readers contribute enough valuable feedback, I'll incorporate it and post a revised version as a comment. The devices that most people on earth will carry or wear in coming decades could become platforms for technical and entrepreneurial innovation, foundations for industries that don't exist yet, enablers of social and political change. However, it is far from certain that mobile media will go the route of the PC, where teenage dropouts like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and millions of others actively shaped the technology, or the Internet, where search engines were invented in dorm rooms and innovators like Tim Berners-Lee gave away the World Wide Web for free without asking permission or changing any wiring.
-
Nowadays, online manifestos often work best as seeds for group conversation, rather than an individual's attempt to start with the last word. I'll stake a modicum of public embarrassment on the possibility that I can talk people I don't know yet into helping me write this piece: I'll start the discussion about the way the mobile Internet future ought to look by posting this draft manifesto; I invite you to suggest revisions and additions. If readers contribute enough valuable feedback, I'll incorporate it and post a revised version as a comment. The devices that most people on earth will carry or wear in coming decades could become platforms for technical and entrepreneurial innovation, foundations for industries that don't exist yet, enablers of social and political change. However, it is far from certain that mobile media will go the route of the PC, where teenage dropouts like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and millions of others actively shaped the technology, or the Internet, where search engines were invented in dorm rooms and innovators like Tim Berners-Lee gave away the World Wide Web for free without asking permission or changing any wiring.
-
-
20 Jan 05
-
06 Jan 05
-
05 Jan 05
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.