Archive for January, 2007

Apple introduces the iPhone

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

As someone who often doesn’t like Apple products (although I do like the iPod with some caveats… like the lack of a delete button) I must admit that what Apple introduced today (the Apple iPhone) is pretty damn revolutionary. They leveraged university research on multipoint touch devices, but what they made from it unites alot of powerful technology in a very easy way.

Kudos, Apple, kudos.

http://www.engadget.com/2007/01/09/live-from-macworld-2007-steve-jobs-keynote/7#comments

Update, 3/27/08: With some chagrin I must add that Leopard is significantly better than Vista, so while I find the Mac often frustrating in small aspects of its design, I do think Apple has the edge right now.

America could vastly improve its competitiveness

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

For any organization to thrive it is important that they have access to the best creative capital. The best artists, authors, actors, inventors, business leaders, and political leaders, aligned with the missions of the organization. This is true of clubs, of companies, of countries.

For some time America has had significant advantages in this regard. An open market, an affluent market, with regulation that are relatively narrow in scope, with relatively free exchange of speech and ideas, and with relatively open immigration policies, has brought the world’s creative capital to America’s door and let it thrive.

Thanks to the rapidly dropping cost of transporting atoms (global trade), the even more rapidly dropping cost of transporting electrons (the globalization of information and knowledge work), and the changing economic policies of much of the rest of the world (as other countries move to free market principles, India and China in particular), the historic advantages America has had with respect to creative capital may be diminishing. In ten years it may be better to be a really good student in the rest of the world than a good student in America. And the rest of the world has alot more students.

There are many changes that would help a country thrive in the future. Some changes require policy decisions that are insightful or difficult politically.

There is however a simple policy prescription that would greatly increase a country’s competitiveness in the world: have more of the future creators align their interests with the country.

Creating open, attractive, minimal friction immigration policies for any capable, intelligent, driven individual seem like a must. What country will be the first to really discover this?

When companies like Intel are led by a Hungarian immigrant, and Google are started by the sons of Russian immigrants, it behooves politicians to rethink their approach to such immigration. While there is a raging debate among economists and citizens as to whether the immigration of low skilled immigrants helps the economy, there’s not much debate amongst anyone that having a few more Andrew Groves (the leader of Intel for many years) or Vinod Khoslas (founder of Sun Microsystems and a very successful venture capitalist) would be helpful.

Closing the borders likely wouldn’t work. The rest of the world, having adopted many of America’s philosophies, may move beyond America if America closes its borders. Opening our borders, our paths of citizenship, to the creators, the producers, the entrepreneurs, may.

A library in your pocket

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

The largest collection of knowledge in the world was once contained in the scrolls of the Royal Library of Alexandria in Egypt. As the story goes, Ptolemy III by royal decree required all visitors to the city of Alexandria to surrender all books and scrolls in their possession for copying by official scribes. Alexandria became a haven for knowledge and knowledge seekers (until the library was burned down).

The Internet is now likely the largest collection of knowledge in the world, distributed but still accessible. Yet the Internet has to date been an imperfect substitute for a book, just as a book is an imperfect substitute for the Internet.

For a reader, the advantages of a book over the Internet are (a) a book has a particular tactile feel and easy to read appearance, (b) a book is always on, (c) a book has a certain kind of durability and yet is low cost, (d) a book is difficult to copy elegantly without specialized equipment and therefore book publishers easily attract authors who wish to be compensated for their work, and (e) the audience of readers are accustomed to buying books.

Although electronic books are available, there has never been a particularly graceful way of reading them. That, I believe, will soon change. A number of companies have tried to devise an electronic device to replace the book exactly.  Meanwhile, a number of websites allow consumers to download many books that are in the public domain.  Storage capacities are increasing so swiftly that soon 1 terabyte drives will be coming to laptops and ipods.

At some point the displays of electronic books will improve sufficiently, download services will be easy enough to use, and the storage capacities of electronic books will be so much better than they used to be, that the book publishing world will be forever altered.