Archive for December, 2004

IBM Plus Apple?

Monday, December 6th, 2004

There’s a wildly speculative piece over at The Register about a linkup between IBM and Apple, stemming from IBM’s much-reported but still not confirmed decision to spin off its PC division. Quoth El Reg:

“(A)n even better and more audacious speculation is that once publicly free of the PC division IBM will either buy, or form a close joint venture with Apple to sell its PCs, which coincidentally are now built around IBM’s PowerPC chip.”

I guess stranger things have happened. But this reminds me of the olden days when IBM and Apple were partners in “Taligent” — an ill-fated software-by-committee project and company, both of which sank like a rock.

I also remember a riddle going around at the time.

Q: What do you get when you combine Apple with IBM?
A: IBM.

Comments


Posted by: on December 6, 2004 06:17 PM

Oh! That would be a great Christmas present!


Posted by: on December 7, 2004 09:40 AM

I’ve heard that when Apple, IBM and Motorola first got together, the folks at Apple were concerned about the stuffed shirts at IBM. They were very pleasantly surprised to find the IBM folks a lot easier to work with and more laid back than the Moto folks.

My own experience (in my day job) with the IBM Software folks is similar. Some very practical and easy to work with folks. Unlike some of their large s/w competitors here in silicon valley.


Posted by: on December 7, 2004 04:25 PM

A merger doesn’t make sense (but it sure is amusing!) If anything, how about a partnership with IBM for reselling and supporting the Mac, just like HP has done with the iPod?


Posted by: on December 8, 2004 11:19 AM

My question is, would this be a merger or a take over. I wish apple could just stay apple, but let’s face it, Steve Jobs is recovering from Cancer. If I were him I’d be thinking about calling it a day. He single handedly saved the company. Apple’s stock is as high as I’ve seen it in a looooong time.

My only request is, keep the apple brand in tact. I don’t mean the logo, I mean everything the brand means in the strategic direction, maintaining the MAC culture, etc… And by all means, STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS!!!!

Tony

Hong Kong Buildings

Wednesday, December 1st, 2004

Hkbuild1A demo for class: two famous Hong Kong buildings.

Comments

My Book Web Citations Now Fully Linked

Wednesday, December 1st, 2004

Many thanks to Kevin McAllister, who posted this page of links to the websites I mentioned in We the Media. The book’s online in a PDF format, but he took the time to put in the hyperlinks in the “website directory” we created for the appendix in the dead-tree version. This is the kind of remix we like to see.

Comments


Posted by: on November 30, 2004 07:56 PM

Speaking of blogs, here’s an odd story about a blogger who (1) sold his blog, and (2) is using Ebay to sell himself as a blogger:

Story:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/yhoo/story.asp?source=blq/yhoo&siteid=yhoo&dist=yhoo&guid=%7BD354F4C4%2D3F69%2D4ED4%2D9471%2D1C93CF7A9712%7D

Ebay:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=193&item=5142129647&rd=1


Posted by: Drew B on December 1, 2004 03:00 AM

Dan, your book is covered in a viewpoint column in today’s FT (01.12.04). Thought you might like to know.
Here’s a link.


Posted by: Kevin McAllister on December 1, 2004 07:05 AM

You’re welcome. Thanks for noticing.


Posted by: David Anderson on December 1, 2004 11:53 PM

Hey Dan, congrats on all the success. I just want to know why you didnt mention your buddy dave’s blog. My feelings are hurt. Just kidding. I am very glad to see the book is such a success, I feel as if we as your regular readers had a great part in making it happen.

Saludos from Costa Rica and In Search of Utopia

CCIA’s Fall from Honor

Wednesday, December 1st, 2004

For many years, a Washington lobbying organization called the Computer and Communications Industry Association took a stand for competition and innovation in the technology and communications marketplaces. In the courts of law and public opinion, the CCIA challenged the practices of an unrepentantly abusive monopolist, Microsoft, that violated laws and ethical standards to maintain its dominance and bought off competitors and critics with its monopoly profits.

Last month, the CCIA joined the crowd. And according to published reports, first in the Financial Times last week, the organization scored some $20 million in the settlement, with its top employee, Ed Black, getting about half of that amount. The settlement represented a rounding error for Microsoft but real money for the CCIA, which agreed to pull out of the European Union’s antitrust case against Microsoft and to stop pursuing legal challenges to the 2001 U.S. settlement with the company.

The CCIA now has negative credibility in my ledger. But in today’s Washington, such acts are apparently considered par for the course. I’m sure most lobbyists are green with envy, utterly untroubled by even the slightest ethical pang.

This deal only reinforces the need for tough and relentless government regulation to enforce the valuable rules that make capitalism work — ensuring fair marketplaces where law-breaking monopolists aren’t rewarded for their deeds. We don’t live in such a nation at the moment.

In America, for now, government considers honest capitalism a nice idea but not much more than that. The Bush administration’s giveaway in the Microsoft settlement was just one bit of evidence of the lack of rules or enforcement of the rules we do have. In such a climate, the CCIA’s move is the logical one.

Someday, America will recoil at the way things are routinely done now. We will have a government that believes in an honest marketplace, and lobbyists will need to learn new rules. And people like Ed Black will have to make their millions in a different way.

Comments


Posted by: Brian Benz on December 1, 2004 08:57 AM

100% agree. Things that are just wrong are par for the course these days. Yesterday I wrote about a similar disturbing trend – the apparent acceptance of the proliferation of No-bid contracts, even where lives are at stake.

http://bbenz.typepad.com/softwaresoapbox/2004/11/bad_trends_nobi.html


Posted by: Stan Krute on December 1, 2004 08:47 PM

Dan, you’re usually quite right, but regarding
the folks taking on MS, I fear you were wearing
blinders based on your own feelings about MS.

Mr. Black was a pompous fraud from the beginning.
His money grab flows directly from his previous
actions and character.

Stan