Inspiring. Still.
"Here's to the crazy ones." — Steve Jobs
3:05 PM, Thursday, Nov 17, '11 | Comments
Inspiring. Still.
"Here's to the crazy ones." — Steve Jobs
3:05 PM, Thursday, Nov 17, '11 | Comments"we drift from block to block, from city to city, traversing continents and timezones. we live in cheap hostels, tiny flats and abandoned structures, scavenging the left-overs of a fallen industrial society.
we speak many tongues, but one language. we smell riots long before they happen, and sense wireless hotspots. we distrust all that claim to lead us, and fear those who pretend to protect us.
we inhabit new worlds inside and outside our heads our ancestors didn’t dare to dream about. we are leaving their dreams of material wealth behind and spin new ones of liberty and life and happiness.
we hate those who demand respect without earning it. we phase in and out of different realities and change our personae like underwear. we are digital conquistadors, exploring the strange new plane that produced us.
we consider gender, skin color and spiritual alignment as accessoires we can wear, not as defining aspects of ourselves. we disregard nations, for we are children of the city and the river.
we are born as the slaves of a dying time, struggling to get free.
we are the chosen ones, for we have chosen ourselves.
we are the new."
— the new. a fanfare for those who are still alive.
— kewagi
/via c3o
4:52 PM, Saturday, Oct 22, '11 | Comments

With tooling (Brightly) and massive developer and evangelism resources backing Dart, will we really have the kind of open-web-first, fair-play contest that people who thought Google was (as Paul Graham put it) "aligned with the grain of the web" have come to want and expect from Google?
It looks like we won't. GOOG is acting more like MSFT of old (also like AOL, wanting sticky eyeballs and time-on-site instead of being the best search engine). The game theories of public companies, the innovator's dilemma, the Facebook challenge, and the browser-vendor Prisoner's Dilemma, all predict this ironic development. It is not a surprise.
But companies are made of people, and I have hopes that Googlers on the right side of this conflict will speak up.
— /be
11:13 PM, Sunday, Sep 11, '11 | Comments