Terminemos con la mentira Seleccion de artículos para combatir la sanata en la Web

4sep/100

Android avanza tiembla Apple

Más allá de las cifras de ventas o activaciones de unidades, Android esta avanzando fuertemente en el consumo de acceso a Internet desde un dispositivo móvil.

Android’s Mobile Web Consumption Share In The US Is Surging, iOS Share Dropping

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22ago/100

La Web esta muerta. Larga vida a Internet

Muy buena nota de Chris Anderson en Wired acerca de como el mundo de las aplicaciones en dispositivos móviles estan reemplazando al clásico acceso a Internet desde un web browser.

Estamos cambiando un entorno Web abierto a plataformas semicerrradas que usan Internet con medio de transporte.

"You wake up and check your email on your bedside iPad — that’s one app. During breakfast you browse Facebook, Twitter, and The New York Times — three more apps. On the way to the office, you listen to a podcast on your smartphone. Another app. At work, you scroll through RSS feeds in a reader and have Skype and IM conversations. More apps. At the end of the day, you come home, make dinner while listening to Pandora, play some games on Xbox Live, and watch a movie on Netflix’s streaming service. You’ve spent the day on the Internet — but not on the Web. And you are not alone."

http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/08/ff_webrip/

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22ago/100

Una nueva raza de magnates de los medios en Internet

Chaos isn’t a business model. A new breed of media moguls is bringing order — and profits — to the digital world.

(Por Michael Wolff en la Revista Wired)

An amusing development in the past year or so — if you regard post-Soviet finance as amusing — is that Russian investor Yuri Milner has, bit by bit, amassed one of the most valuable stakes on the Internet: He’s got 10 percent of Facebook. He’s done this by undercutting traditional American VCs — the Kleiners and the Sequoias who would, in days past, insist on a special status in return for their early investment. Milner not only offers better terms than VC firms, he sees the world differently. The traditional VC has a portfolio of Web sites, expecting a few of them to be successes — a good metaphor for the Web itself, broad not deep, dependent on the connections between sites rather than any one, autonomous property. In an entirely different strategic model, the Russian is concentrating his bet on a unique power bloc. Not only is Facebook more than just another Web site, Milner says, but with 500 million users it’s “the largest Web site there has ever been, so large that it is not a Web site at all.”

According to Compete, a Web analytics company, the top 10 Web sites accounted for 31 percent of US pageviews in 2001, 40 percent in 2006, and about 75 percent in 2010. “Big sucks the traffic out of small,” Milner says. “In theory you can have a few very successful individuals controlling hundreds of millions of people. You can become big fast, and that favors the domination of strong people.”

Milner sounds more like a traditional media mogul than a Web entrepreneur. But that’s exactly the point. If we’re moving away from the open Web, it’s at least in part because of the rising dominance of businesspeople more inclined to think in the all-or-nothing terms of traditional media than in the come-one-come-all collectivist utopianism of the Web. This is not just natural maturation but in many ways the result of a competing idea — one that rejects the Web’s ethic, technology, and business models. The control the Web took from the vertically integrated, top-down media world can, with a little rethinking of the nature and the use of the Internet, be taken back.

This development — a familiar historical march, both feudal and corporate, in which the less powerful are sapped of their reason for being by the better resourced, organized, and efficient — is perhaps the rudest shock possible to the leveled, porous, low-barrier-to-entry ethos of the Internet Age. After all, this is a battle that seemed fought and won — not just toppling newspapers and music labels but also AOL and Prodigy and anyone who built a business on the idea that a curated experience would beat out the flexibility and freedom of the Web.

Más sobre el tema

The Web is Dead. Long live Internet.

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19mar/100

Apple’s iPhone Platform Still Light-Years Ahead

Uno de los motivos por los cuales uso un Iphone. Lógico que hablar por teléfono es lo que menos hago ...

Aplicaciones para Iphone

Apple's iPhone Platform Still Light-Years Ahead.

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31ago/090

iPhone Dominates Mobile WiFi Usage

El Iphone consolida su liderazgo en el mundo de la web móvil.  Por más de que lo acusen de ser un chiche cholulo, parece que el futuro de la web pasa por el teléfono de la manzanita.

iPhone Dominates Mobile WiFi Usage

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9ago/090

The Case Against Apple

Parece que la manzanita no es tan cool como parece. Cuando se trata de defender su quinta, el amigo Steve Jobs es igual de monopolista que su archirival Bill Gates.

Years and years after Microsoft’s antitrust headlines, Apple is now the anti-competitive monster that Jobs rallied us against in the infamous 1984 commercial. Steve Jobs is the oppressive man on the jumbotron and the Olympian carrying the hammer is the open-source movement

Una nota muy interesante escrita por uno de los mayores fans de Apple en el mundo nerd.

The Case Against Apple–in Five Parts « The Jason Calacanis Weblog

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30jul/090

iPhone Hack Exposed

Se terminó la seguridad en los barrios cerrados, y parece que en el mundo de la manzana también. Tiemblan los Apple fans (siempre tan altivos y soberbios sobre su invulnerabilidad a los virus)

Iphone con Gripe Porcina ? Veamos.

iPhone Hack Exposed, The Key Facts

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24jul/090

Seinfeld contra el Blackberry y el iPhone

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

Seinfeld contra el Blackberry y el iPhone

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24jul/090

Why AT&T Loves The iPhone

Why AT&T Loves The iPhone: Todos se cuelgan de las tetas del amigo Steve Jobs y sus éxitos. El Ipone da para todo.

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