From Twitter: Oh this will make your skin crawl. Zombie bugs! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XuKjBIBBAL8 3 days ago

Fail Whale! Long Time No See

I just saw the fail whale for the first time today in a long while (months maybe)? And I’m pretty sure that this nifty radio network is to blame. It certainly appeared on my own memetic map rather suddenly. Within a day, it seemed like, a large number of people I follow and folks who follow me on twitter were to be found on blip.fm tweeting away at their favorite tracks. It’s no Pandora killer, and I think some of the novelty will where off rather quick, but if you’ve got a tune you want everyone to know about, this is a great tool. I have a feeling some lucky band is going to get rocketed to some new level of stardom with a system like this.

Desktop/Cloud Hybrid Software Will Win

There have been a lot of technology pundits discussing the demise of the desktop—primarily arguing that the desktop is going to get sucked in to the browser. And there has been a lot of conversation about switching from the desktop to “the cloud”—the idea of the network as the computer. In a funny comment in that Wired article I just linked to, Clay Shirky is quoted as saying that when Thomas Watson estimated that the world only needed five computers, his estimate was off by four. It rings true because it is a simple and funny observation, but this new view of the network as the computer is a binary view, problematic because as software engineers still tend to do, the solution takes the user into account second and not first. A user-first outlook for most software demands of it that it be a desktop-cloud hybrid—with good reason. And a desktop-cloud hybrid won’t suck the OS in the browser, it will suck the browser into all the apps that a user has. I want to point out two real successes in this regard first, and then look at gaps in the current software offerings out there.

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