FOI Topics and Links of the Week
December 10th, 2009 | by elisabeth | Published in Android, cloud, Future of the Internet, iphone
Apple’s Game-Changer, Downloading Now. Long NY Times article on Apple’s App Store and how it’s changed the model of what a smartphone should be. The good parts of the article: interesting data (100K apps for the iPhone, 14K for Android, 500 (!) for PalmOS; $1B a year in iPhone app sales), some valuable musings on how important the iPhone has been, and an acknowledgment that the review process can be terrible. The bad: the article ends with “The iPhone will be remembered as the first true handheld computer.” There’s no sense of perspective on how the review process is more than a logistical inconvenience—it really changes the nature of the device. Also, the authors seem totally dazzled by the idea of a platform for which applications can be written—it’s a “breakthrough.” Have they heard of PCs?
The Month of Apple Bugs. For one month, researchers released information every day on different bugs that infect Apple products (OS X, Safari, apps for Macs, etc.). They say they’ve found public release gets quicker results than “responsible disclosure” (i.e., just telling the vendor). That’s one model for cybersecurity…
There’s lots of coverage out there about the Supernova conference, “a forum to examine all of the opportunities and challenges created in the Network Age.” Here’s JZ’s talk (starting around minute 29) and a good text summary, along with some reactions:
Pondering a Rogue Cloud wonders what government and industry pressures cloud computing providers will face.
Beware the Rise of Closed Platforms “But further, Vogels [Amazon CTO] said that users should feel comfortable trusting Amazon because the company’s mission is to be a ‘customer-centric company.’ Which seemed to be exactly Zittrain’s point.”
Cloud Computing an Option for Disaster Recovery Vogels discusses one of the big upsides of cloud computing—your data might be safer. We’ve discussed this topic here.
And bonus JZ links: a talk at Singularity University on Civic Technologies and the Internet, and an interview with Amanda Congdon on cloud computing (with spooky music).
—By Elisabeth Oppenheimer

