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Posts tagged New York Times

Lending a Vacuum Cleaner and a Million Dollar Idea

Aug29
2010

Some of you may know I built a Personal Inventory Manager program (Wazitat) in 2007-8 and then got bogged down trying to make it a way to share goods among friends and neighbors (the philosophical issues bogged me down) .  Now there are numerous companies that provide a platform for sharing items or excess capacity (such as a room). It’s a sound model. This article in today’s New York Times offers a helpful glimpse into the real life world of people who use services such as AirBnB and SnapGoods. The principle underlying these services is “access trumps ownership.” I’ve been a believer in that since “Wired” turned me on to the powers of a network economy. Funny enough, one of my first blog posts (before they were called blogs) was about the diminished importance of ownership versus access. The crux was: “With ownership comes responsibility (taxes, insurance..); with access, opportunity.”

Although I bowed out of developing Wazitat so that I can focus on music and comedy, I remain an advocate and user of peer-sharing… and I may re-start development of some of Wazitat’s functions.

Posted in Random / Consumerism, Software / Usability - Tagged Airbnb, Wazitat

Life in Iraq: Cellphones

Jun25
2007
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New York Times reporters took questions at a blog about Life in Iraq. I sent them a few, but none were approved / posted / answered.

I did ramble and joke a bit, but my questions were worth answering.

I asked if cell phones are an integral part of life in Iraq. How many are in circulation/per capita? I wondered that, if widely adopted, if this was due to the probability of changed plans, emergencies. Or are there other factors at play, such as lack of land lines? What kind of ‘canned’ text messages come with the phone? (“running late”, “bridge blown up”)

An interesting question is whether Iraqis who are irritated by a loud public cellphone talker, simply silence the talker with bullets. Indeed, are there many ‘killings of convenience’ that the shooter justifies to himself and others as a sectarian or insurgent-related kill?

(SCENE: a local bakery)
Abi: This line is SOOO long. We’ll be here our entire lunch hour!

Zasi: (lifts a Remington out of pocket. Shoots every person in front of him in que)

Baker: Number 22? 23? 24? 25? 26? (looks around)…. 34, 35..

Abi: 35! We are 35!

Zasi: Praise Allah. We are rid of those dirty non-believers!

END SCENE

Maybe religion isn’t nearly as large a factor causing civil war as is commonly thought.

Posted in Poly Sci, Software / Usability - Tagged Baghad, civil war, Iraq, killings, Life in Iraq, murder

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