A genious…
Imagen de Maxistentialism via Microsiervos
RT@TechCrunch Steve Jobs: The End Of An Era http://tcrn.ch/oC4E10 by @johnbiggs
Historia del software pirata: http://bitelia.com/2011/08/historia-del-software-pirata via @bitelia
RT@edans Estrategias de código abierto http://edans.e
Stop! You’re All Mad! WebOS Is Better Than Android! via @techcrunch http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/23/im-very-serious/ don’t make sense without a robust app marketplace
RT@arielcamus Hoy @TouristEye sale en El País, en el artículo “El equipaje está en la pantalla” – http://bit.ly
RT@TechCrunch Breaking: Google Buys Motorola For $12.5 Billion http://tcrn.ch/qbMgfD by @robinwauters
RT@microsiervos Las Coordenadas de Google maps (Internet) http://bit.ly/oIL1jy
The Internet of Things from IBM Media on Vimeo.
Who will lead us in this new concept of world? Most of the current giants will need some changes to adapt themselves to this new scenario:
Information is going to the cloud (huge datacenters) and we change our old PC for a new set of small and smart devices such as: smartphones, netbooks, laptops and all the sensors from The Internet of Things.
Apple, whose products have always been more integrated, is building a huge data centre and also offering web-based services. Google has developed Android, an operating system for smart-phones. The heavyweights in corporate IT are invading each other’s territory, too. That is the only way to grow, they believe. Also, clients love a one-stop-shop. Cisco, the world’s largest maker of data-networking gear, has started to sell servers. That spurred HP, a vendor of these machines, to push into the networking business. Oracle, which sells business software, bought Sun Microsystems, a computer-maker, last year.
Vía: The economist


