Sydney Speaking

Wed, 12Aug09

city2surf fun run 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — sydneyspeaking @ 20:41

it’s not guiness world record, but it’s the longest tongue in sydney’s city2surf 2009 fun run…lol

the longest tongue of city2surf 2009, sydney, australia

the longest tongue of city2surf 2009, sydney, australia

click to see more
City 2 Surf is ‘world’s largest race’, “it’s become just an iconic event. It’s not a running race, it’s an event that people want to participate in, it’s the camaraderie, it’s the Australian way of wanting to go from the city to the beach” said a prominent runner

Sun, 26Apr09

Mobility Update

Filed under: Uncategorized — sydneyspeaking @ 21:25

Well I am up to 3.5g in mobile technology and found it incredible,
it makes 3g look a bit of a dud, 3.5g is 6 times faster, it’s a much
better experience compare to 3g, I purposely turned off 2g all together
as it’s useless for internet browsing, even a weak 3.5g or even 3g is
much better than a strong 2g.

A quick recap:

  • 3.5g or High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA),  I love it
  • 3g ok I use it as an alternative when 3.5g is not available
  • 2g I turned it off completely as it’s useless

Next:

  1. Peer2peer GPS (Peer-to-peer Global Positioning System, Navigation) is working great.
  2. See the traffic condition of the Sydney Harbour Bridget (and many
    other places in the world) with my own eyes wherever I am, the world is
    really tiny ;)

Tue, 17Mar09

Google Browser – Chrome

Filed under: Uncategorized — sydneyspeaking @ 19:24

Has anyone tried out the google browser “chrome”, any one using it on a regualar basis?

Sat, 02Aug08

Search Engine – Cuil Kool Cool!

Filed under: Uncategorized — sydneyspeaking @ 23:53

The Cuil search engine isn’t that great after all, but it deserves a chance to grow before we conclude on whether it has a place in the market.

The real issue of Cuil is not about competition in the search engine market. It’s great to have competition, at least good for users in terms of having more choices. Industry wise, Cuil raised concerns on whether those inside the industry got their priority right. More importantly, if the investors got their priority right.

Take a look around on the internet. Are there any real urgency to have more competitions in the search engine market, or there are more important things we can do? In other words, is there anything else needed competition more than google, or yahoo?

There are quite a few and it’s not too hard to spot them.

In priority order, they are

  1. Facebook
  2. Ebay
  3. Second Life

Does anyone look shocked when reading this? I hope not. Is there anyone game enough to raise a few more for us to agree or disagree? :)

If Cuil’s investor didn’t get their priority right, then we should make all efforts to avoid following their act unless you have a few million pocket money and don’t quite know what to do with them.

So are the three listed above bad technology?

No. In contrast, they are good technologies which all soar to popularity for different reasons. People have fun socializing in Facebook, trade in ebay, have fun and even start a new virtual life in Second Life. They are so good and they are part of people’s lives.

The relationship between users and the three are quite different from people’s relationship with Google.  You may hear people say ” I can’t live without google” “I love google” But when you think about it carefully, loosing Google isn’t comparable to loosing, say Facebook.

The key different is the degree of co-production.

Say you have been using google to search the net everyday for two years, suddenly you can’t access to google any more. Are you going to loose much you have? not really, you just go to Yahoo, msn search, Alta vista or whatever search engines available. Life goes on as usual.

But if you have been using Facebook to socialize everyday for two years, it would be a different story when you suddenly found you have no access to it. “I just change to MySpace” Did you just say that? No you didn’t and I hope nobody did as that would be completely naive.

(This is an interactive posting. The contents are under constant development to reflect the latest interactions between the creator, moderator and visitors’ comments etc. Please feel free to comment at any point of time when you see this posting. Some coments will be reflected in the future edition of this posting to remain relevant.)

Wed, 26Mar08

e-marketing: e-competition

Filed under: Uncategorized — sydneyspeaking @ 11:34

 

e-Monopoly vs e-Competition

 

e-Competition

 

The 1st step to create true e-competition is to recognise the existence of e-monopoly as it’s not always as obvious as traditional monopoly.

MySpace is not actually a competition to Facebook despite we group them as “online social network” for convinces. If they were, you should be able to substitute one with another without losing the core benefits. In other words, you should be able to migrate your social network to another service provider if you choose to leave Facebook or Facebook close your account. Currently, this option is blocked by Facebook.

For example, getting your qualification is a core benefit of going to college, that’s not what you should lose when you leave one college to join another in a educational industrial with competition. You may have new campus, new teaching staff or new way of learning, but not losing the qualification you developed and finally achieved from your previous college.

Imaging applying the Facebook-MySpace model for competition in the educational industry. You still have more than one university, they may all offer degrees, except, they are different degrees in different universities. When you leave the Melbourne University and go to the Sydney University, people in Sydney tell you that your qualification in Marine Biology is different from your Marine Biology degree. So you have these “choices”,

  1. Forget about your previous study and develop your study on Marine Biology in Sydney from scratch to get your degree in Sydney’s style
  2. Stay in Melburne University
  3. Study something else from scratch

Do you still think there is competition in the educational industry?

If you think this is ridiculous, wait until you see this.

Luckily, Sydney people is super nice (Yes, we are :) . So you were told that, we are so nice that we are going to recognise your previous study and your degree in Marine Biology. But just before you kick off your celebration party, you get a message from your old uni saying that your degree is not an open one, they are going keep (retrieve) it for you. So after all, you don’t have a degree unless you stay in Melbourne.

Well, there are still more than one institutions under the umbrella of “university”, they all offer education and degree, but how’s competition going? do you think it truly exits?

Definitely not from a consumer choice point of view. It’s a new form of monopoly with multiple leads, which is why it’s harder to spot compared to traditional single-lead monopoly. The multi-lead characteristics create an illusion that there is competition even though there are clearly no viable options for consumers to choose without losing core benefits.

Although in theory multi-lead monopoly can happen in both the real world and the online world, it does tend to happen in the online world much more often than in the real world. Part of the reason can be the ease of the control in online business. A close source software is difficulty to copy, but there are little secret you can keep when you run a shop in the real world.

The current law also lags behind the development of the online business environment. It tends to protect multi-lead monopoly. There is no law to protect competition by requiring software based services to ensure customers can take the core benefits with them when they choose to leave the service.

Multi-lead monopoly was once seen in the telecommunication industry in Australia. Many people may still remember the traumatic experience of being trapped in the dilemma of having to choose tween staying with a service that didn’t suit them or spend days, months or even years to rebuild their personal contacts. You change service provider, you have to change your phone number, a core benefit of a telephone service.

Fortunately, the multi-lead monopoly environment in Australia’s telecommunication industry has changed for good. Consumers no longer have to tight their phone numbers with a company just because you started with it.

Another obstacle on the road to true competition in the online space is the perception that free services like Facebook and MySpace can bypass some well established principles. The “lures and traps” tactics are regarded as unfair business dealing, which are made illegal in most part of the developed world. This applies to both paid and free services. If a company give you free drink with the purpose of developing addition, it’s a unfair dealing regardless the drinks were free.

Further more, Facebook and MySpace rely on users’ participation to increase their popularity to secure sponsorship and advertising revenue. It’s clearly an exchange of benefits, not a charity service.

So what can be done to facilitate true e-competition.

Porting - Social network sites has the responsibility to ensure that users’ social connections are not detained or have to be rebuilt just because their choose to leave one service. Just like when you change to a new mobile phone company, you should be able to keep the same phone number and your phone book is not detained by the old phone company, so you connections with friends and family is not interrupted.

The connections you develop with your friends and associates belong to you. When a user’s association with Facebook discontinues, regardless if the user chooses to leave the service or Facebook decided to close the account, Facebook has the responsibility to ensure he/she can migrate his/her social network to another service without interruption.

Refer to the previous chapter “e-Monopoly” to find out more solutions to ensure e-competition.

It’s about time that choices are given back to the consumers.

It’s about time to have a consumer choice based definition of “competition” to incorporate the arrival of e-competition.

e-Monopoly vs e-Competition

Tue, 18Mar08

e-marketing: e-ambush marketing

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 12:08

This post is open up for discussion on ambush marketing in the e-business environment. But a bit of introduction on ambush marketing may help to kick start the discussion.

Ambush Marketing

Despite fairness concerns, ambush marketing exists and it’s not more legal or illegal than other forms of marketing. Ambush marketing strategy has not only been used by market followers, it has also been used by market leaders to maximize the effectiveness of their marketing dollars.

Ambush marketing is not just for the amateurs, it’s also adopted by professional marketers. Even some market leaders have crafted million dollar marketing campaigns based purely on ambush marketing strategy or combining it with other marketing activities.

To find out how ambush marketing works, you need to look no further than the Olympic Games, which is known as a field day among elite ambush marketing specialists. Olympic ambush marketing has become such a phenomenon that many companies think it is really not worthwhile to become official sponsors of the games. Why pay millions of dollars when you can achieve very similar result at a fraction of the costs?

This has apparently raised serious concerns for the organiser of the games. They have to think serious on what they can do to deliver substantial benefits to sponsors.

Ambush marketing is also an attractive field for elite marketers as it’s a highly creative area of marketing. The problem for those who dislike ambush marketing is that, the phenomenon would always exist. It’s also increasingly creative and upgraded at a pace faster than traditional marketing.

So is it the end of the world for traditional marketing?

This reminded me the panicking state the world was in when Microsoft first offered Internet Explorer for free by bundling it with the windows system. A lot of people think, oh no, Internet Explorer is going to kill our beloved Netscape Navigator and the internet will be taken over by Microsoft. Instead of thinking the positive side of it, hatred was developed against Microsoft and anti-trust lawsuit against Microsoft dominated the media.

What actually happen is unexpected. Microsoft continue to offer Internet Explorer for free and people started to like the idea. And yes, Netscape Navigator died, but it didn’t take too long for it to be born again. It has never been better looking, million times more powerful and unstoppable as it’s being continuously developed by not one person, one company, not even a group of companies, but by millions of keen contributors around the world as a open source software. Its functionality has gone far beyond what a browser was originally intended for. You can check multiple email accounts in one go within the browser, get your life or work organised, listen to music, download things you can do with normal browsers, conduct research like a professor with a loyal and efficient assistant, talking to people reading the same page from other parts of the world, know what your friends are doing without entering Facebook, bid much better on ebay and develop your own website easily etc. It even has a new catchy name – Firefox.

A lesson to learn here is that Ambush marketing is not the end of the world for traditional marketing. It would make marketing even more interesting. It’s time to look at ambush marketing as one of the mix in your overall marketing strategy. It would be more rewarding to work with it rather than working blindly against it.

For event organisers, it would be more productive to think about building a frame work to coordinate ambush marketing just like developing strategies to secure sponsorship. The objective is to lead at least part of or even the entire ambush marketing movement from the wildness into activities that can be beneficial to the organisers and even the official sponsors.

So what’s the key element that marketers can leverage to achieve the desired positive result? Choice, an attraction that consumers can not resist. And the clear differentiation between sponsor company’s offers and ambush marketing company’s offers. More often then not, ambush marketing does help to bring attention to the events. If guided appropriately, it can act as a self funded publicity campaign for the event concerned.

I am not suggesting this lightly.  I have been researching and studying the pros and cons of ambush marketing for years while many other marketers simply resent it or being shy to talk about it.

So what’s the distinctive characteristics of e-ambush marketing?

For one, it’s even more unavoidable due to the convenience made available by the electronic media and the flatter structure of social networks that bring power to individuals and smaller organisations. So it’s not a choice to avoid or just resent it.

Mon, 17Mar08

e-marketing: e-monopoly

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 22:51

 

e-Monopoly vs e-Competition

 

e-Monopoly

Is Facebook monopoly?

A good way to make a judgment on monopoly is to see if the power is in the users’ hand or in the seller’s hand.

If you don’t buy ice cream from one shop, you can buy one from another one. Does the same apply to social network website service. Not really. Say if you have been using facebook to socialise with your friends and associates.

One day, you account is not there. Can you say, “oh well I can always use myspace”? Obviously not, there is no option for you to migrate you social network from facebook to myspace, meaning you lose everything valuable in facebook. So clearly, they have the monopoly power although this new e-monopoly is presented in a different way form monopoly in traditional business environment.

If there is a anti-trust case against e-monopoly, what would be the solution?

  1. Porting. There is not yet any protocol to connect Facebook with other social network websites, so if you leave one you lose all your social networks in that service. You should have the option to migrate your social network from one service to another without interruption. This should be legally guaranteed regardless if the service providers like it or not.
  2. Open source. Some may have mistaken Facebook as an open environment. It’s not. There are part of it open only for third party company to develop plugins. Social network service should be required to open at least part of its source codes to ensure porting. In addiction to this minimum requirement, service providers should be encouraged to have a bigger part or the entire source code open, so they can focus on providing better service rather than taking advantage users’ fear that they have to rebuild their social network if they leave one service provider for another.
  3. Legal protection for users. The only reason that “The end justifies the means” policy works for Facebook is that there is no effective regulation to prevent its use.

The first two can lead to e-competition instead of e-monopoly. If the social networks in facebook are interconnected with myspace and other social network sites, or competing sites are allowed to develop to share the same social network in facebook (with the users’ permission), then users would have the choice to pick a service they like without losing their social network. In other words, the power is returned to users’ hand.That’s the future of the network society.

As long as e-monopoly exists, online social network is still in its infancy regardless how popular one or two particular services providers may seem.

The third one is only a temporary solution. It merely limit the impact of e-monopoly power on users, not a real solution. The solution is to build an open environment to encourage e-competition.

e-Monopoly vs e-Competition

e-marketing: ebay

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 20:43

ebay has also adopted a counter marketing strategy similar to facebook

see also e-monopoly

e-marketing: facebook

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 9:50

I did a comprehensive study on facebook and wrote a thesis on it last year, so I collected quite of a lot of primary data from a group of facebook users. It’s interesting to look at the study again from an e-marketing prospective.

Facebook was initially marketed to students before opening up to the public and it’s also been marketed to businesses and investors. So there are currently three segments in their target market.

  1. End users
  2. Investors
  3. Advertisers

Word of Mouth is the main way that facebook is marketed. This is mainly done online, like you can enter your friend’s email and invite them to join.

Facebook got a lot of free publicity due to it’s popularity. This applies to all groups.

A seldom known aspect of facebook’s marketing is its counter marketing practice, which I think is the most interesting one of all.

Counter Marketing

We all know that in marketing we must get the product, price, place and promotion (4p) right.

Facebook doesn’t charge users, so the price is right for most people, but not all. Some people would only use facebook if they are paid to do so, some others won’t even use it for money. So the price is not right for everybody.

Put the price issue aside, does Facebook want everybody? Interestingly, no, or at least that’s what appears to be the case.

Facebook has an surprisingly aggressive approach to retrieve its service with no meaningful explanation. That means, after getting everything right in marketing, facebook is happy to allow everything to drop dead just like that.

Imaging applying this to a real estate agent. After doing all the marketing to sell a house, you suddenly give up the sale and refund the customer with no meaningful reason. You also take one step further and decide this customer can never buy from you again.

A bit odd? That’s just what facebook does online. Facebook has a high rate of discontinued accounts, not because users left, but because the company has been systematically closing accounts as a way of manipulating the portfolio of their target users.

When you see a friend turned into a question mark, it’s often not because your friend removed his/her profile photos. The most likely scenario is facebook suddenly removed the account without even telling your friend. There are a large number of people I interviewed have question mark friends in their facebook. It’s reported that facebook did not give explanation to users affected. If there were any explanation at all, it would be the “The end justifies the means” policy that facebook has. What the company did was basically saying, look, your account is closed, so you much have done something wrong, just go to check our TOS (Terms of Services) to find out yourself. Occasionally, an affected user may not buy this, then facebook would make an effort to send out a copy of the TOS. But that’s about it.

When this were translated into real estate business, it would be like saying, well, since we are not selling you the house, you must have done something wrong, just go check the real estate journal and all the law and regulations, to find out what you did wrong. If the customer were foolish enough to do that, it’s very likely he/she would lose interests half way doing it.

This “The end justifies the means” policy offers the service provider or seller more flexibility in modifying their user portfolio with less possibility to be accused for being unfair. It’s reported that facebook has successfully used the policy to filter out some older folks and people with special interests, so they can create what they think is the ideal environment for facebook without being protested by users affected. Anyone read Facebook’s TOS would notice the company is making extraordinary efforts to internalise their ideology to their users: if we close your account, you must have done something wrong, end of the story.

This way of modifying user portfolio has a strong e-business imprint, partly because taking back service is a lot easier in the e-business environment than in the off-line environment. Take real estate business as an example again, it’s not always easy to take the product back as if you leave it too late, the buyer would have signed a bunch of legal documents and possibly already moved into the house. But on facebook, the service can be retrieved any time not matter how long you have been using the service. There is no law suggesting that you are more protected for being a loyal user.

So why companies do counter marketing?

  1. Some companies are running on certain ideology which may at time override their financial objective.
  2. Modifying customer portfolio is a way of maximizing market reach although there are fairness concerns.
  3. A company in monopoly position can use it as a way to modify customer behaviours to better serve the company’s needs rather than the reverse way commonly seen in traditional business environment.

see also e-monopoly

Sat, 15Mar08

Wealth: Passive Income

Filed under: wealth — sydneyspeaking @ 14:02

I was discussing with a friend last night on what could be the ways to earn passive income, meaning that you get paid even when you are no longer working. Here are a few,

  1. Create something the earn you commission, like a music album, a book, so as long as they sell, you would get paid.
  2. Invent something and earn a percentage on each product sold.
  3. Own property

Can you think of more?

Passive Income strategy

The thing is, if you do not have a Passive Income strategy in your life, you are not planning to enjoy your life to the full extend. You may do a lot of trading, ebaying and have a little office etc, but once you stop working, you have no income, so what’s so good about your busy schedule except surviving. If a good life has to be meaningful in addition to surviving, even inheriting a large fortune would not give you immunity from being called a bored. So start thinking about it :)

Fri, 14Mar08

e-marketing: e-business models

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 9:18

How to make money from open source software, something everyone can copy and distribute?

There are a few ways you can do it.

  1. charge service fee for things like training, maintenance and trouble shooting etc.
  2. develop customized extension for the open source software and charge for the customization. A company did that and they released the extension as open source after a while. The they develop new extension or customization and charge for it.

Can you think of any other way?

Check out freedom or free beer here too.

That’s what we have been talking about? How a business actually makes its money – business model, the unofficial definition.

Be aware of the differences

These are not business models, they are just a bunch of people looking at you laughing.

X



This is inspiring, but no

X



This one is a business model

V



These are also business models

V

Sun, 09Mar08

e-marketing: Scarlett Johanssson

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 9:38

Update: This is the official result. The Scarlett Auction ended 14:00:00 AEDST, 13-Mar-08. The winning bid is US $40,100.00 (approximately AU $43,016.52), the winner is from the UK, apparently male. The winning bidder loves to have his or someone else’s hair straighten. He bought at least 3 different brands of hair straighteners this year alone.


Scarlett Johanssson

This is an interesting one. Anyone can have a date with Scarlett. But it would cost you around…US $38,100.00 and counting, there are currently 160 bids, and still 3 days and 15 hours to go, so you do have competition in addition to your willingness to invest in an opportunity like this.Actually, when they said anyone, they didn’t mean just anybody. Somehow, the marketing guy organising this decided to do some scheming to let only people they like to bid. The criteria is part of a secret process for unknown reason. Well they did say it’s a way to filter out those who are not serious bidders. It sounded ok at first except they forgot to define who are considered not serious. Those pay too little? or those who are not paying in US dollars? or something else.The auction is for charity and that’s also the reason Scarlett is doing it. There are a few other female stars doing it, but no male so far. You can argue this is not business marketing as it’s for charity. But as far as I am concerned, if you put something up for sale, that is business. The difference is what you use the money for after the sale.Another interesting point is the role of new media. Auctions like this could be done before the internet was invented. So why it wasn’t done before.

  • Has the internet got much to do in making the auction a reality. Maybe the internet makes auctions more popular in general? or
  • maybe the internet has brought so much social change to the society, auctioning a date has become a lot more acceptable than before? or
  • maybe it’s about time something like this would happen with or without the internet?

What do you think?

Thu, 06Mar08

e-marketing: Wiki

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 17:12

A few of us asked about how to do the wiki thing, here is some info to help you get started

After you login U-online, activate “My e-Portfolio” before you enter the subject area.

Step 1: To activate “My e-Portfolio“, you click on the “Modify Content” button on the up right corner, it will then give you a bunch of choices, tick everything above “News”, you should be fine to start your Wiki.

activate my e-portfolio

Step 2: To start your wiki or blog, click on the “my u-online” tab on the top of the page. You would see “My e-Portfolio Site, View and manage my personal e-portfolio site “. Click on it, the rest would be straight forward.

e-porfolio


Joey recommended a video tutorial on wiki, which is also pretty good. Click here to check it out.

Wed, 05Mar08

e-marketing: Speed

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 23:48

Do we need speed? definitely. But the cost of speed is high for a big country with a small population. The issue is quite different from those in highly populated cities like Seoul, Hong Kong and Tokyo etc. So cost is a central issue in determining what technology to invest in to achieve the desired speed.

Fibre or Copper? The choice between Fibre Optics and Copper Wires is a difficult one as we have to rely on future technologies to make the judgment. The problem of future technologies are they are not here and when they become available, they could be quite different from our prediction, so it’s more of a gamble, or an educated guess. Adding the national significance to the issue, it’s not surprising that it became a little political.

Base of Educated Guess:

Fibre has proven ability to deliver the desired speed, but it costs a lot as it’s not an existing network.
Copper network is here, but it’s ability to deliver the desired speed is yet to be proven although promising.

So what do you think?

e-marketing: Cyber Identity (w2)

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 9:38
cyber twin

It’s interesting to look back how the internet started, and compare to what we have today. Steve Jobs’ up and down is also a fascinating story.

Second Life was well discussed, but here is something even more stimulating. Have you heard of Cyber

Twin? When I first told people about this about a year ago, they all thought it’s was really odd and foreign. It’s actually created by a Sydney company, a lot more closer to home than you think.

You CyberTwin is not you, rather, it’s someone you want it to be. You train your twin, it would then have a life of its own. Well, you can always do the training again in case your twin gets out control. Now that’s something scaring, or exciting, depending on how up-to-date you are in dealing with cyber identity I guess. Just like you, your CyerTwin can live and breath in Second Life too.

Wed, 27Feb08

e-marketing: Introduction w1

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 3:03

Starting e-business marketing project today. First gathering. Presentation allocation done.

Tue, 26Feb08

e-marketing: E-Business Marketing

Filed under: EBM: e-marketing — sydneyspeaking @ 9:35
Tags: , , , , ,

Well, my first thought is that marketing is business, so we can call this e-marketing in short, what do you reckon?

From this week, I will look into e-marketing regularly and systematically, so I can combine some theories with my experience on e-marketing and do it better in marketing online and catch up with the latest trend. Since a lot of dollars have been moving away from traditional media to new media marketing, e-marketing is really the future of marketing. Fortunately, both business and new media are my kind of areas, combining the two is really though provoking for me. So I am looking forward to doing this.

Fri, 08Jun07

TechReflect: Next

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 19:05

It’s the beginning of the next project: apply the knowledge and experience gained from this one to the next one – DMT is now in our vain, but a short break won’t hurt I guess. :)

Tue, 05Jun07

Tech: Project

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 10:48

DMT Project & Report

Mon, 28May07

Freedom & Free Beer

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 22:01

Open Source vs Closed Source

Just came back from the Open Source vs Closed Source debate. It’s inspiring and quite entertaining with an unplaned swap side drama half way through the debate.

Here is a quick recap,

  1. Free as in freedom, not as in free beer, in the open source world.
  2. Majority of people there liked the open source side of the debate. (Because of the swap side thing, we don’t know who is who, but people voted for open source)
  3. People don’t always trust open source software for important things like medical applications. One reason is that there is no one to sue if something goes wrong
  4. Open source software tends to have higher chance to fix security problems before they happen. Closed source software has no chance of doing that
  5. Job security is higher in open source software dealers. If a closed source software company decides to cease development on their software for whatever reasons, their dealers would suffer
  6. Microsoft made what people like, that’s why they are successful
  7. People dislike monopoly rather than Microsoft, there are differences between the two
  8. Microsoft’s monopoly is MS Office, not windows like many people think. Even open source dealers are using MS Office for their own business. It’s just better
  9. Patents mean to encourage innovation. But the over use of patent can effectively work against innovation. The effective period of patents may need to be shorten
  10. Patents are good for attracting investment regardless if they are good for innovation
  11. Open source could hold the key to end software piracy
  12. It wouldn’t help to believe religiously one side of the argument. Rational analysis is needed
  13. Businesses don’t particularly care about open or closed source, they use whatever is commercially viable
  14. Open source licenses are there to protect the software from becoming closed source, not to prevent people from making profit
  15. Some companies charge a license fee for extensions of open source software
  16. Companies dealing with open source software can be profitable. There are proven successful business models
  17. The existence of open source forces closed source companies to be more competitive. It’s good for innovation
  18. The co-existence of open and closed source worlds will likely continue with open source software playing a more important or even predominant role in the future

Well, that’s enough for more debates. Comment here to express your view if you like.

Firefox: Acting Explorer

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 0:10

This may sound a little odd at first.

I just found out one more advantage of Firefox: its ability to act as Internet Explorer whenever needed.

What, “Spy vs Spy“? Is it necessary for a good browser to act like a not-so-good one?

Oh yes, because it’s a real time saver when you have to test your web project on both browsers all the time. It also helps when you want to save a table from a webpage into excel.

Now in firefox, I simply do one click to see how my pages look on explorer, another click to be firefox again, then exploer, firefox, explorer and firefox, it’s that easy. :)

Starting Firefoxing

Sat, 26May07

TechReflect: Conceptual

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 17:49

Conceptual thinking is arguably one of the most important things to take home. Although common in management, it’s not something people would usually relate to technology, where logical thinking is more common. It’s worth mentioning as it takes technology to a whole new level. The graphic approach is stimulating and the idea of conceptual approach in technology is thought provoking.

conceptualthinking.jpg

Image: An example of highly graphic conceptual schema in database design

Tue, 22May07

Care: Heat Reflection

Filed under: sydney+more — sydneyspeaking @ 8:35

An elderly lady felt sick and was under the care of railway staff at Strathfield station in western Sydney at 6:49am earlier this morning. The lady was kept warm with heat reflecting material while waiting for paramedics to arrive. A personal shopping trolley was found nearby, which belonged to the passenger who accidently felt ill on her way to western Sydney.

sickpassenger001

Mon, 21May07

Japan: Wollongong

Filed under: tech, world travel — sydneyspeaking @ 16:47

I accidentally found out that many of the photos I took in Wollongong last week have already ended up in a Japanese site. The new web2.o technology is just amazing. I guess translation is not needed as a picture says a thousand words. :)

A preview of the Japanese site is here.

wollongong-japan.jpg

Joost: Preview

Filed under: design, just-4-fun, motion, process, social, still, tech, world travel — sydneyspeaking @ 15:44

I have been asked about Joost a lot lately. Here is a screen preview on what you can get from Joost.

Scroll down to see more, or search “joost” in the search box on the right to find out more on Joost.

———-
popular events
joost005.jpg

———-
fast cars
joost008.jpg

———-
fast boats
joost004.jpg
———-
animation
joost009.jpg

———-
travel & leisure
joost011.jpg

———-
variety & religions
joost013.jpg

———-
possible crime & violent
joost015.jpg

———-
health & meditation
joost021.jpg

———-
sports & fitnesses
joost016.jpg

———-
live concerts
joost017.jpg

———-
out door concerts
joost052.jpg

———-
extreme sports
joost049.jpg

———-
serious issues
joost023.jpg

———-
restricted programs
joost054.jpg

———-
political issues

joost032.jpg

———-
animals & wildlife
joost014.jpg

———-
more
joost000.jpg

———-
a lot more
joost001.jpg

Wed, 16May07

CSS: Deformat

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 17:36

CSS technology provides a flexible way to format web pages in massive scale. I also found the reverse process, deformatting, another advantage of the technology.

This finding is related to another passion of mine – mobility.

Handheld devices are handy. But it also means smaller screen unless you have a hand of the size like King Kong. That creates the need for web developers to build sites that can display well on both common computer screens and smaller size handheld device screens.

CSS can solve this problem in at least 3 ways.

1-CSS Options

Developers can offer more than one CSS to display the same webpage in different ways to suit different screen sizes. Manufacturers may configure their devices to select the most suitable styles automatically or users may select their preferred viewing size and style manually.

2-Flexible Design

Having web pages of flexible width controlled by CSS is an even better way to ensure that web pages are displayed properly on screens of all sizes.

3-Deformatting

If all else failed, the CSS deformatting capability can be a life saver. Instead of displaying a scramble page like non-CSS pages may do, a deformatted CSS page is still viewable in a plain format.

In order words, CSS can not only control web pages, it also has the ability to surrender such control without any side effect whenever required.

(Written on 2:12pm 15/05/07 on the way back to Sydney from Wollongong, Wollcome to Wollongong)

Wollongong

Filed under: sydney+more — sydneyspeaking @ 17:27

Wollcome to Wollongong! Here is an quick pictorial tour to the city

You can tell you are not far from a art gallery

———-

It’s not drinking water, but good for the eyes

———-

Get a different view by adding a few extras

———-

The work of a carpenter turn artist
———-

You can always tell where people keep their money in Wollongong

———-

The work of a plumber turn artist

———-

The work of a real life artist

———-

Everything is safe in Wollongong including the stuff you just threw away

———-

Forget the GPS thing on your mobile, it’s more pleasant to find your direction here.

———-

More artwork on transparent media

———-

Would you mind having a coffee here

Sun, 13May07

Youtube: Eurovision07

Filed under: design, just-4-fun, motion, social, tech, world travel — sydneyspeaking @ 17:47

Youtube has a large collection of clips on this year’s Eurovision. There are also talks on including the event in a Joost channel in the future.

Meanwhile, if you want to see it but don’t want to go through the downloading process, you can watch the Eurovision final on SBS televison tonight.

Why do we watch it?

Well, I found it quite unpredictable and seriously entertaining. You get to see something that is very different from the main stream entertainment. You are guaranteed to get a mix feeling from something new, something beautiful, something weired or anything at all, you name it. This year’s event is held in Helsinki, Finland. So you also get a chance to have a virtual tour to Finland.

If you are too used to life in Australia, you may also be surprised by the number of countries that can fit into one continent. Naturally, politics is also part of the excitement when you have so many countries involved in a competition.

Some facts worth knowing: Celine Dion represented Switzerland and won Eurovision in 1988. Abba won 1974 Eurovision with their song Waterloo. Paris Hilton has yet ruled out the possibility to represent a European country to compete in the event. –There has been something good came out from the whole thing although not everything you know is associated with it.

Best of all, the politics involved has nothing to do with us. What’s left is sheer entertainment.

eurovision 2007 helsinki

(image: Eurovision 2007 Helsinki Finland)

SEO: fightback

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 15:24

One way to counter act the black hat SEO sites* as a user is to preview the sites before you open them.

The following image is a google search result page with previews. Note the thumbnail images on the left.

google preview

At the moment, google itself does not provide the preview option to users. But there are good news for firefox users. You can install a addon to get google previews as demonstrated in the above image. The addon is called … googlepreview. As I write, a similar addon is also made available for internet explorer. Click here to find it.

Once you install the addon, you can also use it to preview yahoo search. The following image is a search result page with preview from yahoo.

yahoo preview

A test shows that the current version of the addon is not integrated well with yahoo. Everything is fine when you search from the yahoo homepage. But if you attempt a second search from a result page in yahoo, you may not get the previews again. You have to return to yahoo’s homepage to do a new search in order to get the previews. Well, it’s called googlepreview. The name says it.

You can easily switch the previews on and off with one click on your browsers status bar. Click here to find it.

——

*Black hat SEO refers to the methods used to fool the search engines to give high ranking to websites with contents that are not relevant to the search key words. The methods are also called spamdexing. Legitimate search engine optimization (SEO) is known as white hat SEO.

Fri, 11May07

The Report

Filed under: tech — sydneyspeaking @ 19:52

Start writing the report. That’s the message we got this week and really helped me to focus on it. It’s also great that the rescheduling helped everyone to be back on track.

Next Page »

Blog at WordPress.com.