The OS Doesn’t Matter… | Thanks Jean Louis for this interesting article about Unix in the cloud. The really interesting part of the article is about Microsoft

Microsoft does not have an entry here and excellent User Experience is not something we usually expect from the busy bees in Redmond.... We have the spiritual children of Unix living inside the Cloud, powering the millions of Linux servers running at Google, Facebook, Amazon…

The only exception is Windows. Initially built on top of DOS, Microsoft painstakingly added version after version, always striving for backward compatibility while, at the same time, adding new features. It didn’t always work well (who wants to remember Windows Me and Vista?) but it worked well enough because Microsoft never gave up. They fixed mistakes that they claimed didn’t exist, and now we have the well-respected Windows 7. (Inevitably, critics will say that Microsoft wouldn’t have gotten away with such a tortuous path if it weren’t for its vigorously enforced monopoly.)

Windows will live on — in a PC industry now at a plateau. But otherwise, in the high-growth Cloud and smartphone segments, it’s a Unix/Linux world. We need to look elsewhere to find the differences that matter.

The technical challenges have migrated to two areas: UI (User Interface, or the more poetic—and more accurate—UX, for User Experience) and programming tools.

If in fact it's true that everything is moving to the cloud (i do agree!) and that Microsoft has failed to develop an OS of their own for the cloud, then it will be very interesting to see what they will do to advance their cause in the market. Or is this just more proof that it's time to short Microsoft.

Aggregators: the good ones vs. the looters | Monday Note - What do aggregators like the HufPo portend for Big Media?

The relationship to news aggregation needs to be reconsidered. Publishers of original news (magazines and newspapers mostly) should issue a “thanks” to fair-referrals such as Techmeme and many others like it — and, at the same time, protect themselves from cynical aggregators that will prey on their costly journalistic production.

I think that the HufPo and future aggregators of their ilk portend a trend of the best journalists leaving big media and starting their own well read blogs. These blogs will have low overhead and strong sponsors. These blogs will open up an opportunity for independent advertiser networks and new revenue models like Grabbit.

Arthur Sulzberger: 'We Will Stop Printing The New York Times Sometime In The Future' - I predicted this 23 years ago when Desktop Publishing was first introduced to big Media.

The publisher of the New York Times acknowledged Wednesday that the newspaper will go out of print — eventually.

"We will stop printing the New York Times sometime in the future, date TBD," Arthur Sulzberger told an audience at a London media summit Wednesday.

Sulzberger's statement came in response to a prediction that the newspaper would go out-of-print by 2015.

The crazy thing is that most of the traditional (like nytimes) content providers seem to believe that charging for their online content will save the day. I disagree. I believe that a new model for content monetization will evolve through the use of advanced semantic filtering. This could also presage the end of Google's dominance in the market. Check out what we are doing at Grabbit!