Ted Leung on the air: Open Source, Java, Python, and ...
In this enhanced physical world, the logic of the book business is transformed. Human attention is limited, and a massive number of newly browsable books from the long tail necessarily compete with the biggest best-sellers, just as cable siphons audience from the major networks, and just as the Web pulls viewers from TV.I think that the same thing is going to be true about microcontent. There will be value provided by those who are sourcing that microcontent. But I believe that there is going to be so much microcontent that there'll be a traffic in that as well, as microcontent, of course. In the blog variant of microcontent, this is already happening. You have blog posts, which are content, but some are also meta content in the form of commentary, reply, or actual "this blog rocks".This shifts power away from the people who own finite sets of copyrighted material and toward the people who offer access to information about where this material can be found. Information about books, not ownership of copyrights, becomes a new center of power. Manber is correct when he says that Amazon's Search Inside the Book is not an ebook project. It is merely a catalog. But a decade of Internet history proves that the catalog is exactly what you want to own.

here's my latest post about this, as an example
http://www.enochchoi.com/thoughts/archives/000423.html
Posted by enoch at Sat Jan 3 08:57:40 2004
Posted by Ted Leung at Sat Jan 3 10:48:48 2004

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