
This was taken on my Nokia N95 camera phone to show you the view from my office window on this sunny Friday afternoon.
![]() This was taken on my Nokia N95 camera phone to show you the view from my office window on this sunny Friday afternoon. Claiming that you are the nominee because you won the popular vote is like losing the Wimbledon final
6-4 1-6 6-4 2-6 6-4 and claiming you should be the winner because you won more games (24 verses 21)! I was surprised to hear that the Habitat stores in Ireland have been closed suddenly and without prior warning. The stores, located in Dublin and Galway, were closed on Friday and a note was posted on their doors. See the notice on their website here.
Rent issues? Previously, the Dublin Habitat store moved from it's Stephens Green location to its College Green base because of high rental costs on Stephens Green. The rent they were / are paying must be astronomical. Sometimes I wonder how businesses manage to survive at all in Dublin with the rental cost of retail space. ![]() Let's encourage the government to be good European citizens and remove the anti common market vehicle registration tax on cars in Ireland. If the Government wishes people to vote Yes on the upcoming Lisbon Treaty, the least that they should do is to remove the protectionist barriers and allow people to participate in the Common Market. David McWilliams explains the issue in his piece in the Sunday Business Post today. He says... Let’s make a contract with the government. We will vote Yes to the Lisbon Treaty when it starts to treat us European citizens on a par with the other citizens of the union. .... Our state demands that we sign up to a treaty, yet every day it thwarts thousands of citizens who are trying to reap the benefits of the common market. If an Irish citizen wishes to import a second hand car from the UK, for example, the Government imposes a Vehicle Registration Tax (VRT) on the car before it can be used legally in Ireland. This is clearly in contradiction to the European Community laws outlining of "The free movement of goods". The web is an exciting place, things move at breakneck speed and the competitive landscape shifts on a daily basis. Billions dollar companies are grown from multi million dollar investments, good ideas and reasonably good technologies.
By the way, I think most people realise that the equity stake taken by Mirosoft in Facebook was not a pure equity investment. It was a mixture of a pre-payment for an advertising deal and an equity stake and therefore it doesn't place a clear valuation on Facebook. Microsoft's advertising on Facebook is atrocious. Who in their right mind clicks on those banner adds anyway? Less and less people according to Businessweek. I've think that Facebook have to be careful not to become the new AOL. Social networking is a relatively new phenomenon and the market has yet to be played out in full. What Facebook are doing is building a walled garden which holds the user community inside. I have my Linkedin page and I have my Facebook page, but what am I missing out on by not participating in myspace, bebo, ning, xing, friendster? I would like my profile to be on the open web but I still want the functionality of privacy and friend finding and linking, sharing pictures, news and movies with my friends only. Registration with Facebook should not be required to connect with me. Technically, this is a trivial challenge and is already being addressed see Slap in The Facebook for a discussion on this and the open friend project for more technical information. The crux of the matter is that there is no way to define social relationships on the open internet and social networking sites have stepped in to provide this and have been successful at it. The Google OpenSocial initiative is not addressing this as far as I understand - it is just addressing the development of widgets for social networks and porting these applications to participating sites. Not really a big deal as sooner or later some smart developer would have created an interface library for this anyway. What is more important is that as social technology matures, the internet will reassert its open and free principals and closed walled gardens will not be favoured. This is fundamental to the basis of the internet: openness and freedom, not freedom from constraint but the more important one: freedom to participate. Since Linkedin are making money from advertising on my Linkedin page.
And Facebook have signed a 240 million dollar deal with Microsoft for exclusive advertising on my Facebook page (and all other Facebook pages). These sites rely on user generated content. Will people get tired of providing content for free to billion dollar enterprises with no payback? Maybe I should start a new Facebook Group called "Please pay me if you are making money from advertising on my page". What do you think? And, no, I do not want to buy a Linkedin tshirt. Back Next |