bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Brexit Deal Fails in Parliament
bookbinder's comments
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Slack closes account of an Iranian user living in Canada
Only techies care about decentralization. Most people would rather follow a Twitter feed rather than an RSS feed. Most would prefer a mega forum like Reddit rather than multiple, standalone forums with separate accounts. There are also network effects that give centralized platforms more of a competitive advantage.
I keep hearing people talk about the need for decentralized social media, but nobody knows how to make it an attractive, viable option for the masses...especially when such a solution wouldn't be as profitable (or as frictionless) as Facebook, Twitter, etc.
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: There Are Now More Shows Streaming Than There Are on Broadcast or Cable
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: I'm looking for examples of one-person startups that scaled big
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Tumblr will ban all adult content on December 17th
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Microsoft Is Worth as Much as Apple. How Did That Happen?
In the 90s, MS attempted mobile devices using Windows CE (based on Windows 3.1—long after the release of Windows 95) and that went nowhere. Microsoft has always been the first for the longest time they were incapable of building things people genuinely wanted to buy.
If Apple didn't make the iPhone or iPad, all MS could do is rip off Blackberry. They wouldn't have made anything worthy of spurring the mobile industry we have today.
And Apple didn't really need that $200M from MS. Instead the investment had more symbolic value—signaling that Apple was still a viable company that had software support from the biggest tech company of the day.
Also, before Steve Jobs returned to Apple, Larry Ellison wanted to buy up shares for a hostile takeover and then install Jobs as CEO, but Jobs talked Ellison out of it.
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: America’s Need for Skilled Immigrants Isn’t Going Away
Where did you go to school? How did your education differ from what you've seen in America?
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: The high-risk, high-reward world of selling random stuff on Amazon
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Mixnode: Turn the web into a database
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Prepare for changes to macOS Server 5.7.1
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Linus Torvalds apologizes for years of being a jerk
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Introducing Votable, the spiritual successor to DMOZ
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: But Rich People Live Here, So We Can't Be Going Broke
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Surprising Findings About How People Actually Buy Clothes and Shoes
We need people to mindlessly buy stuff they don't want want/need in order to grow our <strike>house of cards</strike> economy.
bookbinder | 7 years ago | on: Netflix Is Why AT&T bought Time Warner, and Comcast and Disney want Fox
I associate CBS with bland procedural crime dramas and awful three-camera sitcoms. CBS All Access would have been doomed without Star Trek: Discovery. Admittedly, the show isn't particularly good, but I'm a trekkie so it doesn't matter. On the plus side, I discovered The Good Fight (a surprising smart, entertaining and well written show) so I now I have a legitimate reason to give a damn about All Access.
And then Apple will offer their own gateway drug (Lord of the Rings?) and Disney (...well they could just offer their back catalogue alone and still be a major player) and so on.
bookbinder | 8 years ago | on: In 2004, Zuckerberg Broke Into a Facebook User's Private Email Account (2010)
bookbinder | 8 years ago | on: It all made sense when we found out we were autistic
I've often felt the same way about the need to label one's self in order to have an identity. But I can empathize with people who have some kind of undefined handicap/limitation and ultimately find solace in a label and sense of community.
For example, pretty much anyone over the age of 40 who has dyslexia will tell you how cathartic it was to be diagnosed when previously they were just regarded as stupid or lazy. A diagnosis meant that they had a medical condition that they could overcome (or at least manage). If they were simply stupid then it meant there was no hope for them. So their new, better, label mattered.
However, one could argue that pretty much anyone who suffers from any kind of limitation...is suffering from some kind of medical malady. Perhaps, in the future, people we will create new labels and therapies for many of the currently unlabelled, but afflicted, people as well.
bookbinder | 8 years ago | on: An AI app that generates quizzes from a photograph of a texbook
bookbinder | 8 years ago | on: Why Don’t the 20 Cities on Amazon's HQ2 Shortlist Collectively Bargain?
bookbinder | 8 years ago | on: Airbus buys majority stake in Bombardier CSeries passenger jet business