Two-way latent grouping model for user preference prediction
Eerika Savia, Kai Puolamäki, Janne Sinkkonen and Samuel Kaski
In: UAI 2005, 26-29 July 2005, Edinburgh, Scotland.
Apple may change its business model to provide unlimited music to challenge Nokia offer. The discussion is currently focused on how much should Apple pay to the industry (20$ per ipod) whereas Nokia is already engaged on 80§ per device.
New Rules for the New Economy
Table of Contents
This New Economy
Chapter 1: Embrace the Swarm
Chapter 2: Increasing Returns
Chapter 3: Plentitude, Not Scarcity
Chapter 4: Follow the Free
Chapter 5: Feed the Web First
Chapter 6: Let Go at the Top
Chapter 7: From Places to Spaces
Chapter 8: No Harmony, All flux
Chapter 9: Relationship Tech
Chapter 10: Opportunities Before Efficiencies
A Thousand Points of Wealth
New Rules for the New Economy
Annotated Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Notes
The internet is a copy machine. At its most foundational level, it copies every action, every character, every thought we make while we ride upon it. In order to send a message from one corner of the internet to another, the protocols of communication demand that the whole message be copied along the way several times. IT companies make a lot of money selling equipment that facilitates this ceaseless copying. Every bit of data ever produced on any computer is copied somewhere. The digital economy is thus run on a river of copies. Unlike the mass-produced reproductions of the machine age, these copies are not just cheap, they are free.
Our digital communication network has been engineered so that copies flow with as little friction as possible. Indeed, copies flow so freely we could think of the internet as a super-distribution system, where once a copy is introduced it will continue to flow through the network forever, much like electricity in a superconductive wire. We see evidence of this in real life. Once anything that can be copied is brought into contact with internet, it will be copied, and those copies never leave. Even a dog knows you can't erase something once its flowed on the internet.
Damián H. Zanette, Marcelo A. Montemurro
We investigate the origin of Zipf's law for words in written texts by means of a stochastic dynamical model for text generation. The model incorporates both features related to the general structure of languages and memory effects inherent to the production of long coherent messages in the communication process. It is shown that the multiplicative dynamics of our model leads to rank-frequency distributions in quantitative agreement with empirical data. Our results give support to the linguistic relevance of Zipf's law in human language.
July 11, 2006 with social media, the consumers are in control of production, programming, and distribution … which is a complete reversal of the traditional media model. This reversal in control leads to some interesting consequences, the most obvious
A pre-relational databases datamodel. "Preceeded" by the relational model since the flexibility of this makes it hard to work with. Now re-invented in RDF :)