Tuesday, November 20, 2007

iPhone Wars

The hackers have made more headway in the war against locked iPhones. Now iPhone users can unlock their iPhones without rendering the phones unusable.

Apparently, the hackers have pledged to modify every new update Apple publishes so that the unlocked phones are never rendered useless again. But a security issue arises: how does one know the hackers aren't adding anything malicious to the updates? They could modify the updates to grant them access to the phones. How would one know? Anything that can affect your computer can affect your iPhone, like viruses and spyware. Is slightly better customer service worth the risk of an insecure phone?

In other news, the iPhone will be released in China at some point in the future. It makes me happy to know that people around the world are benefiting from the improvements of technology. On the other hand, many people in the world are unable to enjoy life as they go without adequate food and shelter.

More news on the iPhone:
http://www.wired.com/gadgets/miscellaneous/news/2007/11/iphone_china
http://www.itwire.com/content/view/15433/1103/1/0/

Monday, November 12, 2007

Global Competition

Global Competition

The world is flatter. This is good because those of us in the United States seem to be falling asleep. We aren't as competitive as we used to be. Many expect that they will be guaranteed a well paying job, but that isn't true - it never has been true. More so now than ever, we are involved in a global competition for jobs. We all must strive to perform better than each other if we want to be paid well. This will drive progress.

In an ideal world, we wouldn't compete with each other. Everyone would have a job they enjoy and that they can excel at without competing with others for it. But we don't live in an ideal world. We live in a world with naturally lazy people that try to satisfy their desires with the least amount of effort. If all those who choose to be lazy are allowed to do so, society would be severely hindered in its progress. Would the hunters and gathers have become anything more if they had succumbed to laziness? With the incentive of financial power, many are enticed to compete so they can fuel their natural desire for power. Progress is a natural side-effect of competition that benefits many. Compare our life today with life of hunters and gatherers: we can communicate with people all over the world; we live in comfortable buildings; we take food for granted; and we understand more about the world around us.

Everyone will have a job. The number of jobs that can be filled is infinite. When jobs are replaced by technology or outsourcing, more jobs are created. The computer replaced many jobs, but many jobs have been created by the computer: computer scientists, information technology departments, computer factories, and many more. Outsourcing will have the same effect. As jobs are shipped overseas, more jobs will be created at home. The limiting factors are entrepreneurship and education. Those who lag behind the changing environment risk difficulty in finding a job, but not all jobs can be outsourced: on-site construction, counseling, management, and many more. As Thomas Friedman pointed out, those with higher education move up in their jobs to care for the more difficult parts of the job as the menial parts of the job are sent to those who can accomplish them. For example, he pointed out an artist that concentrated on sketches as artists in India filled in the colors and shading. The artist concentrates on the creativity, and artists in India concentrate on completing the picture. The ideas will start at home, and their development will occur abroad. Much knowledge remains to be discovered; therefore, the levels that can be achieved are limitless.

In the end, the flattening of the world is beneficial for all. Those abroad now have higher paying jobs, and those with more education can concentrate their efforts on increasing knowledge and wisdom.

Persistence of Hierarchal Organization

The Library of Congress contained about 20.5 million books at the end of the year 2006 (http://www.loc.gov/about/reports/). If one person read one book per day, that person would finish reading every book in the Library of Congress about 56,126 years after beginning. It is impossible for one person to know everything in this life. Because one person will not know everything, groups of "followers" develop around the respective experts of various fields. If someone wants advice about something, he will seek out someone he knows that he considers the most knowledgeable about the subject.

Instead of replacing hierarchies, the flattening of the world will improve them as current experts are replaced with better experts. People don't have time to read hundreds of blogs to find answers. They prefer to read one blog that is correct and complete than dozens of blogs that contain only part of the information being sought, or that are inaccurate.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Software Patents

Lets say you alone develop and sell software that becomes wildly popular. As you dream of the things you will buy with your coming fortune, a software company develops software that does the same things your software does, except the company sells its software for less and does a better job marketing and maintaining the software. As your dreams of luxury begin to fade with the realization that the software company will inherit your coming fortune, you wish that you could stop the company from stealing your idea. Something exists to prevent others from stealing your idea, and it has been around for many years: patents.

I'm for software patents. If people cannot patent their software ideas, they will be less likely to research better methods without the ability to make money from their improvements.

Software patents not only help large companies, they also help small companies and individuals. If a small company develops a unique software program and patents it, they can profit from it while the larger companies must either pay royalties or find a better way to do the same thing - thus driving progress.

Software patents don't hurt those who don't patent their ideas. If someone can prove the idea existed before a big company came up with the idea, the big company will be unable to patent the idea.

In an ideal world, better algorithms will be shared without charging money, but we live in an imperfect world. We live in a capitalistic society, and we must follow the rules of that society if we are going to progress together. Too many people would take advantage of the system if everything was free, and society would not progress if everyone was a thief.