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The Proliferation of The Enclosed

By Dan Katcher on September 8th, 2010

“You’ve spent the day on the Internet, but not on the Web.”  Smart words from a smart guy: Chris Anderson from Wired (http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/08/ff_webrip/all/1).  An amazing article that’s best read twice – he points out the obvious, but it’s worth pointing out.  The internet has evolved from the traditional web site.  The web is replaced by video streaming to Wii boxes running Netflix, by sharing between game platforms, and by (of course) apps.  And those end-points aren’t necessarily open; in fact, they are closed.  They are custom, closed experiences built just for the device in hand. And yet people vote for them in droves, because they provide specialized, tuned interfaces that are beautiful, and work just the way they should.

Much of that specialization is being driven by mobile.  As Anderson points out, the smaller footprint of mobile means that apps do smaller number of things better – specialized interfaces that do small numbers of things incredibly well.  But that specialization quickly leaps to a larger platform – the iPad – where it can be expanded to take advantage of the larger canvas.  The general purpose browser, great for search and email, gets supplanted by specialization.  Hence FlipBoard.  Hence the Elements.  Hence a lot of great iPad-specific apps.  And people will pay for them, as long as they are done well.

Apps do things better then the web.  Hence TweetDeck is a far better experience then Twitter home page.  FlipBoard is a far better experience then reading a blog.  And there’s a reason for that.  Web experiences are very two dimensional – you go up and down on the web page.  App experiences are multi-dimensional – you flip through pages (think FlipBoard), you rotate things (think Elements), you move things forward and back in time. It’s more natural, and more freeing, for the user, which makes for a far better experience.  Hence again, the triumph of the enclosed.

Yes, it takes a lot more special purpose programming, at least for now.  But so did the web initially.  The web required lots of special purpose programming, but 18 years into it, and its pretty easy to put together a HubSpot site or pay our man Shazzad in Bangladesh to put together a WordPress blog.  Early days.  Let’s see where we are in another 18 years.  And keep those apps coming in the meantime.

Thanks AT&T

By Dan Katcher on July 24th, 2010

AT&T gets bashed so much for their network, specifically their ability to make a simple phone call.  Maybe it’s Apple’s fault, but most people seem to think AT&T is at the root of the frequently-reported connectivity issues.

I for one am pleased this week to say “Thanks AT&T”, because two things have happened.  The first is that the volume of dropped calls seems to have, well, dropped – significantly.  It used to be literally 5-10 dropped calls a day.  No more.

The second thing, and this is really good, is that I can finally make a phone call from my house.  We used to have very spotty coverage – calls could only be made upstairs on the 2nd floor or in my backyard.  Now – with what ever changes have come to pass – my phone actually rings and I can just pick it up and talk.  All of a sudden people can reach me and we can talk without me having to dash outside or upstairs.

What a difference.  Thanks AT&T