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Web 2.0 Summit: Microsoft Demos Mashup Tool
![]() | InformationWeek Daily - Friday, Oct 19, 2007 |
Murdoch, DeWolfe Dissect Social Networking Future
Anyone who has ever written about News Corp. knows that you don't really "cover" Rupert Murdoch in the sense that you cover, say, Sumner Redstone or Michael Eisner or David Geffen. You marvel at him the way you might marvel at a giant, ancient lizard.
You puzzle over his ability to make deals that other, less bold moguls scoff at now and envy later. You wait for the few droplets of information that every once in a while escape his lips. You wonder what he might actually do next, and whether it will match his image as an overbearing, reactionary, populist ogre. At this point Murdoch is less a media mogul than a wizened but still vital force of capitalism, as shrewd as Warren Buffet but far less scrutable.
He did little to dispel that image tonight, on stage at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco with MySpace founder Chris DeWolfe. Moderator John Battelle did manage to extract some news over the course of the hour-long discussion, mostly from DeWolfe. After MySpace was acquired by Murdoch in 2005 for $580 million -- a figure that many analysts considered evidence that the old man had finally lost his mind, and now looks like a bargain -- DeWolfe and co-founder Tom Anderson signed a two-year contract. Tonight DeWolfe confirmed reports that they have re-upped for another two years, likely for less than the $12 million per year apiece they were said to be demanding (Murdoch hasn't lost his talent for keeping costs low, even for an asset that has likely increased in value almost 10-fold over the price he paid for it).
The other news is that MySpace, following Facebook's lead, will open up its APIs to outside developers "sometime in the next few months," said DeWolfe. The opening up was questioned by some in the audience, who wanted to know whether DeWolfe will also allow full portability of MySpace-created apps to other social-networking sites (the answer, though DeWolfe wouldn't acknowledge it, was clearly "No"), but still it's a move many have demanded.
You can read more about Murdoch's take on Web 2.0 -- and leave your own comments -- at the InformationWeek blog.
Richard Martin
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"A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of." --Jane Austen
Ballmer Demos 'Popfly,' Microsoft's Web Mashup Tool At Web 2.0
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Web 2.0 Summit: The Internet Helps You Live Longer
Great quote: At a panel on gaming, Trip Hawkins of Digital Chocolate, drew a connection between smoking, lung cancer, social connectivity, Web 2.0 and casual games.
Liveblogging Web 2.0 Summit: Hewlett Packard Finds Printing Exciting
While Internet enthusiasts like to sneer at "ink on dead trees," and predict the death of print, in fact the opposite is happening. And that's the core of Hewlett-Packard's $30 billion printing business. Vyomesh Joshi, executive vice president, imaging and printing group, talked with conference content co-chair John Battelle about how the new technology of Web 2.0 impacts the ancient technology of printing.
Tired Of Smudges On Your iPhone? Get Phone Fingers
If there was an award for the strangest iPhone accessory ever invented, it would go to the makers of Phone Fingers, hands down (no pun intended). The latex fingers were created specifically for the iPhone's touch screen to prevent smudges and fingerprints. And no, this is not a joke.
Viacom Sets Jon Stewart Free, Online
Providing some relief after the Steve Ballmer bombast, mild-mannered Philippe Dauman delivered his news and comments like an expert fencer today at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. While my colleague Antone Gonsalves covers Dauman's cut-and-thrust on Google's copyright plans, I'll give you the entertainment news: Viacom is posting the complete history of The Daily Show online, for free, for anyone to port to their own sites as they see fit.
First Glance: The Nokia N810 Linux Internet Tablet Doesn't Make Sense
I had an opportunity to play with the new Nokia N810 Internet Tablet for about five minutes last night, and came away confused. It seems pretty darn expensive for a machine with limited usefulness. Even the name is misleading -- a "tablet" should be a device the size of a notebook computer; the Nokia N810 is a pocket-sized computer.
Spam Via Bluetooth? That's What's Next
First there was spam. Then there was spim, which was followed by BlueJacking. Now there's Bluespam. That would be spam advertisements sent to your mobile phone via Bluetooth. What annoyances will we have to deal with next?
Skype Cell Phone To Launch At The End Of October
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What Sentence Does Convicted Hacker Deserve? Vote, See 'Exit Polls'
Click here to vote on what sentence you feel convicted hacker Joseph Patrick Nolan deserves for hacking into and wiping out his ex-employer's payroll and personnel files. As of 12:30 EDT, here's where things stood: 32% of you feel he deserves the maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and $250,000 fine; 32% say 1 year in prison and $50,000 fine; 27% say 1,000 hours of community service; and 9% say no sentence at all -- he's a victim. Vote!
Can The RIAA Close Down Usenet?
Those of us who remember the Internet before the Web -- and yes, Virginia, there was an Internet before the Web -- will remember when Usenet was one of the major destinations for discussion and file-sharing. It's still there, in a quiet corner where the cognizanti hoped it would go unnoticed by the great unwashed. No more.
A Quick Chat With The Folks At Splashtop
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