I dislike Facebook because they’re mediocre.
Facebook has become to the social web what Microsoft is to the desktop: mindbogglingly gargantuan, relentlessly mediocre, and almost inescapable. Like Microsoft twenty years ago, they will succeed because a bad standard is better than none: and like Microsoft ten years ago, they “innovate” by clumsily copying—and then trying to squash—the real innovators.
writes Jon Evans in the linked article on TechCrunch.
I find Facebook infinitely more dangerous: Microsoft established itself among a number of proprietary, closed and obscure desktop platforms. Facebook, on the other hand, threatens to engulf and absorb the Web, probably the most open, most amazing development in computing, ever. The path to openness is hard — we need standards, modelling of semantics and relationships, but above all good implementations making use thereof. Facebook provides an easy, ‘closed’ alternative, as does twitter and a number of other services building upon their proprietary protocols and interfaces. That’s why FOAF and OpenSocial are nowhere to be found and everyone (including us) uses Facebook widgets. Again the age-old saying: “ideas are cheap, implementations cost” rings true, and Facebook have a more popular implementation, like Microsoft did back in its heyday.
Έχετε GPS και σας αρέσει η χαρτογράφηση; Εαν ναι ίσως αξίζει να ασχοληθείτε με το πρόγραμμα OpenStreetMap, το οποίο είναι μια ανοιχτή, κοινωνική παγκόσμια προσπάθεια χαρτογράφησης του οδικού δικτύου ολόκληρου του πλανήτη. Υποστηρίζεται από το VR Centre, μια κοινή προσπάθεια του UCL και του Ιmperial College London και σε αντίθεση με άλλες εμπορικές προσπάθειες αποτελεί μια δωρεάν, ανοιχτή βάση πληροφοριών. Ιδιαίτερα για μια χώρα όπως η Ελλάδα, όπου οι διαθέσιμες έγκυρες πηγές χαρτογραφικού υλικού στο επίπεδο οδών είναι πενιχρές ή πολύ ακριβές σε σχέση με τον ανεπτυγμένο κόσμο, η ύπαρξη μιας τέτοιας προσπάθειας θα μπορούσε να είναι καταλυτική για την ανάπτυξη λογισμικού και υπηρεσιών που κάνουν χρήση την τοποθεσία του χρήστη. Περισσότερες πληροφορίες και οδηγίες στο wiki της προσπάθειας.
Android and the Open Handset Alliance.
Apple may have produced a great, polished and closed device in the iPhone. Revolutionary? Nope, but very impressive nevertheless. As a device, as a user interface and — soon — as a platform. Yet in some years from now, what will probably be the iPhone’s single most significant contribution to the world was the belief that sometime in 2007 or 2008 a single, competing device would come from the dominant player of our times, Google. A device called gPhone. It isn’t. It couldn’t be. Instead we got something Open. Open as in Open Source, open as in Open Standard. We got Android and the Open Handset Alliance.
They may — on the surface — be very similar to a number of existing open platforms for mobile devices, but there’s one, major difference: It’s got Google’s backing and along with it that of most of the leading manufacturing, service and research companies of this industry. nVidia, Qualcomm, SiRF, Synaptics, TI, Marvell, Intel, Broadcom, eBay, Samsung, Motorola, LG, HTC, T-Mobile, Sprint, NTT DoCoMo, Telecom Italia, Telefónica and Google among others are all there. Something tells me that with proper coordination this can change the market in more ways than glossy UI widgets, animated lists can and a polished closed device could ever possibly do.
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