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Salesforce demos Service Cloud 2
At Dreamforce Global Gathering 2009 in San Francisco, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Kraig Swensrud, senior vice president of product marketing, show attendees the ...
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Salesforce CEO chatters about new social media platform
At Dreamforce Global Gathering 2009 in San Francisco, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and technology head Parker Harris show attendees Chatter, a new collaboration and ...
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Adobe CTO: Flash in the future
At the NewTeeVee Live conference in San Francisco, Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch talks about how the companys Flash software is coming to new devices ...
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NBC brings new media player features to Winter Olympics and NFL
At the NewTeeVee Live conference in San Francisco, Vertigo CEO Scott Stanfield shows new HD video player features for the Winter Olympic Games, adding ...
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Peering inside Microsoft's giant data center
CNET's Ina Fried speaks to two of the designers of Microsoft's just-opened data center in Chicago.
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Facebook COO sees economic models changing on the Web
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg talks about the how the Web usage patterns are shifting from an ...
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U.S. CTO: Health care needs better billing systems
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Franicsco, U.S. CTO Aneesh Chopra talks about IT changes that need to be made to the current ...
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HP CEO: The challenges of cloud computing
At the Gartner Symposium in Orlando, Fla., HP CEO Mark Hurd talks about how the company plans to layer cloud services on its infrastructure ...
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Microsoft demos Twitter feeds in Bing
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Yusuf Mehdi, a senior vice president at Microsoft, previews Twitter integration with Bing search results. One ...
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GE shows off mini ultrasound device
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, GE Chief Executive Jeff Immelt introduces a handheld ultrasound gadget called Vscan. Immelt believes that the ...
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Twitter CEO: Why he turned down Facebook
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Twitter CEO Evan Williams explains to Federated Media CEO John Battelle his rationale for turning down ...
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Gartner: 'Worst year ever' for IT spending
At the Gartner Symposium/ITExpo 2009 in Orlando, Fla., Peter Sondergaard, a senior vice president of research at Gartner, says 2009 was the worst spending ...
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Oracle announces Exadata 2
At Oracle's OpenWorld conference in San Francisco, CEO Larry Ellison previews the company's Exadata Version 2 computer. He says the new database computer is ...
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Michael Dell brings self-service IT to the enterprise
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Dell CEO Michael Dell talks about how his company is delivering a more efficient enterprise with its services. ...
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Nokia jumps into Netbook game with Booklet 3G
This Windows 7 Netbook is set to arrive on October 22 for $299 with a two-year AT&T wireless contract.
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Sony unveils new Windows 7 Vaio PCs
Just in time for the launch of Windows 7, Sony throws a party for the new additions to its Vaio lineup, from touch-screen all-in-ones ...
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Microsoft unveils Windows Phone
Microsoft's Robbie Bach gives details on a new platform called Windows Phone that features a mobile app store. The company also unveiled updates to ...
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Windows 7, a better power saver?
At Microsoft's Silicon Valley Campus, ZDNet's Sumi Das talks to Microsoft's chief environmental strategist, Rob Bernard, about power-saving features in the new Windows 7 ...
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Intel unveils the Net-savvy CE4100
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Eric Kim, senior vice president at Intel, revealed a new Atom-based CE4100 chip. It is designed ...
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Microsoft's new version of Silverlight on Moblin
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Microsoft General Manager Ian Ellison-Taylor and Intel General Manager Renee James show attendees Silverlight 3 running ...
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Peering inside Microsoft's giant data center
CNET's Ina Fried speaks to two of the designers of Microsoft's just-opened data center in Chicago.
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Facebook COO sees economic models changing on the Web
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg talks about the how the Web usage patterns are shifting from an information model to a more social model, which benefits Facebook rather than Google. In the future, she adds, more Web users will glean referral information from friends rather than strangers.
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HP CEO: The challenges of cloud computing
At the Gartner Symposium in Orlando, Fla., HP CEO Mark Hurd talks about how the company plans to layer cloud services on its infrastructure in the future. However, with more than 1,000 hacks a day, security creates an important need on differentiating what they put in public versus private clouds. "We wouldnt put anything material in nature outside the firewall," Hurd says.
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Adobe CTO: Flash in the future
At the NewTeeVee Live conference in San Francisco, Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch talks about how the companys Flash software is coming to new devices such as game consoles, smartphones, and TVs. Lynch says Adobe is working with chip vendors and TV manufacturers on a variety of different television platforms to bring more interactivity to the living room.
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U.S. CTO: Health care needs better billing systems
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Franicsco, U.S. CTO Aneesh Chopra talks about IT changes that need to be made to the current health care system. He believes one of the biggest areas of waste is the money spent on billing within the system, with 17 cents of every dollar going towards medical billing. He says his department is working on solutions to reduce these costs.
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Microsoft demos Twitter feeds in Bing
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Yusuf Mehdi, a senior vice president at Microsoft, previews Twitter integration with Bing search results. One of the interesting features he introduces is "hottest topics." He explains that the Bing-Twitter search will aggregate information around the most popular links shared on any given topic.
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Microsoft unveils Windows Phone
Microsoft's Robbie Bach gives details on a new platform called Windows Phone that features a mobile app store. The company also unveiled updates to Zune HD and Xbox 360, including the ability to stream HD video to Microsoft's gaming console.
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Twitter CEO: Why he turned down Facebook
At the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Twitter CEO Evan Williams explains to Federated Media CEO John Battelle his rationale for turning down Facebook in October of 2008. He says, "he didn't see a reason to sellthe point is really what we can build."
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Windows 7, a better power saver?
At Microsoft's Silicon Valley Campus, ZDNet's Sumi Das talks to Microsoft's chief environmental strategist, Rob Bernard, about power-saving features in the new Windows 7 operating system. Bernard says Microsoft made energy efficiency a core design element, with better battery optimization, and Bluetooth and DVD features that won't be activated until necessary.
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Sony unveils new Windows 7 Vaio PCs
Just in time for the launch of Windows 7, Sony throws a party for the new additions to its Vaio lineup, from touch-screen all-in-ones to pencil-thin luxury laptops.
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Doing business on Facebook: What are the risks?
At the Always On Summit at Stanford University, business executives discuss the risks involved in developing applications and businesses on social networks with proprietary platforms. Panelists include Gerry Campbell, CEO of Collecta; Max Ventilla, CEO of Aardvark; Shervin Pishevar, CEO of Social Gaming Network; and moderator Bambi Francisco, CEO of Vator.tv.
>> Is there a risk and do you think that there's gonna be some sort of fee and or Jerry you called it rent that you might have to pay. What are the risks of building on top depending on these platforms?
>> Sure I'm happy to dig in. I think my situation with building search where what we want to do is provide transparency across both social networks and the web is a little bit different. So what we want to do is provide users where ever they may be an opportunity to find people they might not have connected with or people who are interested in topics that they're not currently aware of so from our perspective I think the most important thing is for us to just stay on top of it. It's really important to have good relationships with people at the networks and it's really important to also create value that is unique, that is hard to copy and I think you know we were talking about this back stage, it's really you know it's one of the number 1 rules of doing anything. You've got to make sure you really create value. What we're seeing is that it's increasingly important that users resonate with what you provide and if there's if that exists then you're in a good position. I think that the idea that these networks are now where users go you know I ran search at AOL for about 5 years and one of the things that happened while I was there was people used to go to a destination site to find stuff and again this is something else we were talking about back stage. You go to a destination site to find stuff. The way it is now users actually go where they're most comfortable which is with their friends and the people that they know and so now it's all about moving into that environment so from my perspective the risk long term is that its important for us to be able to find the opportunities for transparency. Openness is fantastic. I'd love to see Facebook be more open and provide more visibility into the fantastic conversations and expressions that are taking place there. So there's the risk of what might go away and having to pay rent for that and I'd actually love the opportunity to buy the full Facebook feed or buy the whole Twitter feed and then the other risk is that the opportunity to provide that visibility might not happen over time and that's that's one that I'm really interested in understanding as well.
>> I think it goes back to a little bit of what we've talked about if you wanted to have a presence and engage with people or have a business or what not so the business example would be you know hundreds of years ago you would have to open up a store and put your name up there and say ok I'm you know this is my business, I'm the butcher in the town and people knew where to go for that service then when the telephone came around you needed to get a telephone number and that became the communications protocol for people to reach you and engage with you, and then when in the 90s when the web came around then you know you had to get a dot com address and people knew that's where I go. Today, basically I mean Facebook and Twitter and all of these to us they become the communications protocol in which we are integrating services like you know SGN ad Aardvark and a lot of other services like yours.
>> So you have expectations that one day you're gong to have to pay some sort of toll or fee or it's not out of the question. I think Max he said it's actually inevitable.
>> I think the perfect example is we do business on the iPhone and we do business on the Facebook and iPhone gets 30% of everything that we sell for a premium app and we're happy with that right so on Facebook, you know they didn't ask for that initially and maybe they regret that today because there's quite a lot of activity. So the idea of there being a payment system for example for transactions inside of that platform that is op then is not a bad idea and I think a lot of people would who are actually building multi multi million dollar businesses in those platforms would be happy to engage in that.
>> Sure.
>> And I think that the big risk and the big difference relative to exactly these examples that you site you know setting up a store, or having a telephone, or having a website is that these are proprietary platforms they're not for profits, they're not sort of open federations and that they will want to extract their fair share of whatever value you're creating along with them and I think Larry you raised an excellent point which is that you have to sort of be cross platform. If you're gonna build on Facebook or Twitter it shouldn't be 1 and only 1 and I'm sure that Josh's comment was towards building a business exclusively on one of these sort of shifting giants and if you do build a cross platform business and you're working on different IM networks and you're working on different social networks and you're working on different equivalents to Twitter and micro blogging sites and they're all successful and you sort of know you're the one creating the value it's not any individual player and that said I also think that these platforms are both extremely smart so they want to create situations where people are incented to behave correctly and not only get their own value but give value to the platform itself and the other nice thing which is gravy but you can't really expect it is that these guys are also idealistic so you know having come from Google do no evil was not just lip service, the company behaved differently from it and Twitter and Facebook both have their very own strong versions of that because of their founders and that sort of makes it easier than if you had sort of the blood thirsty monopoles out there who at some point is going to take every penny. I don't think that's going to be the case even if they could because that's not sort of the personality of those companies.
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