Thinking lazily about inequality and freemium models

        We had lunch at Le Cafe des Chats in the Marais a few days ago. My youngest daughter is a confirmed card-carrying ailurophile. And a delightful time was had by all. [By the way. Le Marais. Means roughly the same thing as Slough.  Life can be so unfair.] We’d chosen a hotel, Jules et … Continue reading “Thinking lazily about inequality and freemium models”

Of barons and corvos, continued

        Yesterday I wrote about interventions that were needed to ensure that the Second Machine Age does not accelerate inequality. Continuing to think about that, I wanted to share a few things that came my way over the past 24 hours. First, let me add a few bits about inequality. The Gini … Continue reading “Of barons and corvos, continued”

And then we win

  The Cluetrain continues to roll. Two of the original authors, Doc Searls and David Weinberger, have set out some New Clues. If you want to tune in (or for that matter, if you want to turn on or drop out) the Gillmor Gang piece in TechCrunch is a good place to start. Dave Winer’s got … Continue reading “And then we win”

Bureaucracy as a platform? The power of diversity

I was born in a house that housed a printing press in its basement. When I first left home, it was in that basement that I stayed. [Not for long: my need of home cooking proved far greater than my yearning for independence]. We left that house around 1960, and I grew up in flats … Continue reading “Bureaucracy as a platform? The power of diversity”

Of sharing and millionaires and learning: A Sunday stroll

      The first “job” I ever had was mind-numbingly boring. I had to go every morning to Kidderpore Docks in Calcutta, find my way to a steelyard there, walk over to the only building in the steelyard, and proceed to occupy that space from 8am to 5pm. A desolate job in a desolate … Continue reading “Of sharing and millionaires and learning: A Sunday stroll”