<![CDATA[Valleywag: Quotable]]> http://cache.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/valleywag.com.png <![CDATA[Valleywag: Quotable]]> http://valleywag.com/tag/quotable http://valleywag.com/tag/quotable <![CDATA[ Sometimes atoms are better than bits ]]> "If you've ever tried to download a dildo, it probably didn't take you long to realize the futility of the task." — AVN blogger Tom Johansmeyer, on the resilience of sex toys and strip clubs to piracy.

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Valleywag-5099832 Fri, 28 Nov 2008 10:08:38 PST Paul Boutin http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5099832&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Mark Cuban on Jerry Yang: "Too nice" ]]> Of all the people corporate raider Carl Icahn nominated for Yahoo's board, Mark Cuban, the loudmouthed Internet entrepreneur and Dallas Mavericks owner is the guy we wished had made it. If only for the boardroom theatrics with milquetoast Yahoo cofounder Jerry Yang. Take Cuban's latest comments to Bloomberg: "Jerry's too nice a guy. He cares too much. They've got a lot of avenues they could take but all of them depend on being a lot meaner and a lot more aggressive and that's just not their style." Cuban should know: He took Yang for $6 billion during the dotcom bubble by selling Broadcast.com to Yahoo, then made sure to collar his shares so they kept their value while Yang's fortune plunged. Never heard of Broadcast.com? Exactly Cuban's point.

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Valleywag-5070679 Wed, 29 Oct 2008 15:40:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5070679&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Six Apart exec on LiveJournal founder: "Waaaaay down the path to madness" ]]> Brad Fitzpatrick has a Googlephone, and you don't. And what's he doing with his amazing Android-powered toy? Using Google's mobile operating system, Fitzpatrick is coding an automatic garage-door opener, which senses the presence of his phone using Wi-Fi. He can do this because he's already hooked his garage door up to a Web server. Writes Six Apart executive Michael Sippey on this momentous occasion:

If you've already hooked up a Web server to your garage door opener you're waaaaay down the path to madness, so you know, why the hell not build a mobile app to control it?

Sippey should be aware of just how far down the path to madness Fitzpatrick is; the two worked together until last year, when Fitzpatrick left to join Google and Six Apart sold LiveJournal to the Russians.

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Valleywag-5066582 Tue, 21 Oct 2008 10:00:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5066582&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ What Steve Ballmer really said about Yahoo ]]> Kara Swisher calls Steve Ballmer's tendency to run at the mouth "executive Tourette syndrome." Funny because it's true! Microsoft's CEO sent Yahoo's stock soaring yesterday with comments that were widely reported as suggesting renewed interest in buying the company. We'll skip Swisher's blah-blah-blah analysis and let you judge for yourself exactly what Ballmer said:

NEIL MCDONALD: So advertising and all that business model change that certainly has to be the driving force for why you were very interested in acquiring a company called Yahoo, whose stock we noticed has continued to drop. So we have to ask you if the acquisition made sense eight months ago, why wouldn’t it make even more sense now, now that the price would presumably be a lot lower?

STEVE BALLMER: Well, I don’t know if the price would be lower. We offered $33 not too long ago, and it’s $11-1/2 today, and so I don’t know what price might have really gotten the job done. It’s clear that Yahoo did not want to sell the company. It didn’t want to sell when we offered $33. You’ve got to believe they don’t want to–if they thought the company was worth more than $33 six months ago, they probably still think it’s worth at least $33 today. And so I think what we learned through that is, look, they want to remain independent. Perhaps there will continue to be opportunities to partner around search. We’re not in any discussions with them, but that was an offer we made after the acquisition had fallen through. We’ll see. I still think it would make sense economically for their shareholders and ours.

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Valleywag-5065257 Fri, 17 Oct 2008 13:20:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5065257&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ There is no VC conspiracy, says VC Fred Wilson ]]> "This is not some coordinated cynical attempt by VCs to talk down valuations or put entrepreneurs on the defensive. We are not spreading the contagion of gloom and doom. It's all about acting responsibly and making sure we all survive to fight another day. Because in the end, survival is what darwinian capitalism is all about." — Union Square Ventures partner Fred Wilson, on Sequoia Capital's conveniently timed warning of bad times ahead.

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Valleywag-5062426 Sun, 12 Oct 2008 17:20:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5062426&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Yahoo shareholder trades stake for bag full of literary allusions ]]> Eric Jackson, the sassy activist investor who made so much trouble for Yahoo this year, has given up the ghost, crapped out, sailed into the sunset — pick your truism, Jackson has probably used it! He gave hunky videoblogger John Paczkowski a block-that-metaphor-worthy explanation for why he sold his hedge fund's Yahoo stake at $20:

I had no idea idea it would fall this much but I finally decided to stop pushing a rope by calling for change from the inside (as a shareholder). I voted with my feet. This board has the blood of its shareholders on its hands, and I hope they wear that scarlet letter stigma for a long time.

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Valleywag-5061932 Fri, 10 Oct 2008 14:00:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5061932&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Scoble kills newspapers ]]> "What's killing the newspaper business — with thousands of jobs lost and even the Washington Post Co.'s reporting its first loss in 37 years — is its inability to reach people like me." — Fast Company videoblogger Robert Scoble, in a column some Fast Company editor wrote for him, in which Scoble goes on to relate all of the ways he obsessively consumes newspaper articles online.

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Valleywag-5061798 Fri, 10 Oct 2008 12:00:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5061798&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ The long march ]]> "Slash expenses, cut deep and keep marching. You can't be a general if you turn back." — Sequoia Capital partner Eric Upin at a mandatory all-CEO meeting on Thursday. For you, just remember that creep in the corner office isn't happy as your CEO. He wants to be a general.

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Valleywag-5061702 Fri, 10 Oct 2008 11:40:00 PDT Paul Boutin http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5061702&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Sheryl Sandberg on Facebook's business model ]]> At a conference for magazine publishers, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg all but admitted her company still has no idea how it's going to make money, besides letting Microsoft broker ads for it. "We need to find a new model and new metrics," she told attendees at the American Magazine Conference. It's a classic move from the White House veteran's political background: If you're not winning by existing rules, move the goalposts. (Photo by Doug Goodman/AdAge)

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Valleywag-5060331 Tue, 07 Oct 2008 15:20:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5060331&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Larry Ellison on cloud computing buzzword: "Complete gibberish" ]]> "The computer industry is the only industry that is more fashion-driven than women’s fashion." So says Larry Ellison, who told analysts yesterday that "other than change the wording of some of our ads," the company has no plans to make any actual changes to its business in order to jump on the cloud-computing bandwagon. Really, Ellison needs to get another monkey to do the infomercial thing on stage — he's far more charming when he's being rude but honest. [WSJ] (Photo by AP/Paul Sakuma)

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Valleywag-5055214 Fri, 26 Sep 2008 10:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5055214&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Larry Page calls FCC wireless tests "rigged" ]]> Google cofounder Larry Page brought his shaggy, salt-and-pepper mop to the Dirksen office building in Washington, D.C. to complain to federal regulators about television broadcasters. Google wants access to the dead air between television stations for wireless devices like the new G1 phone from T-Mobile running Google's Android operating system. But an odd alliance of broadcasters and wireless microphone manufacturers oppose opening up the "white spaces" due to concerns over radio frequency interference. Referring to FCC tests held at FedEx Field, home of the Washington Redskins, Page declared:

The test was rigged deliberately. That's the kind of thing we've been up against here, and I find it despicable.

Google explained that the wireless microphone frequency was hidden behind broadcast television signals. When asked if Page felt the FCC aided in the subterfuge, Page demurred, blaming broadcasters instead. A spokesperson for microphone manufacturer Shure, Mark Brunner, shot down the accusation, "These tests were open to the public, and those who choose to discount the results — which have not yet been published — had every option to be present and to witness them for themselves." Just remember, Larry: It's not paranoia if they really are out to get you. (Photo by AP/Paul Sakuma)

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Valleywag-5055225 Fri, 26 Sep 2008 08:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5055225&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Ning employees not normal, says CEO ]]> "My engineers say, 'We're normal people too.' And then I have to have a conversation with them about why they're not." — Ning CEO Gina Bianchini, speaking at MIT's EmTech conference about her workers' lack of a feel for what interests the social-network tool's users.

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Valleywag-5054141 Wed, 24 Sep 2008 09:00:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5054141&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Another IT truth ]]> "If there's one thing all engineers love to do, it's create APIs. It's so awesome because you can draw on a whiteboard and feel like you put in a good day's work." — The Register's Ted Dziuba on the proliferation of software platforms no one uses.

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Valleywag-5053227 Mon, 22 Sep 2008 13:00:00 PDT Paul Boutin http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5053227&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Cafeterias, low wage labor to remain at Googleplex for now ]]> Not aware that there will be any cutbacks in perks at Google, Marissa Mayer admitted to the economic justification for the Mountain View company's famous cafeterias was to wring every possible drop of productivity from salaried employees by keeping them near campus. However wage slaves at the Googleplex, like the undocumented workers at those cafeterias employed by subcontractors, probably won't be seeing pay or working conditions improving any time soon.

It is interesting and important to point out that Google has always been a frugal company. We have always spent money in a way that made sense. We provide food to our employees largely for convenience so that they can stay closer to campus. When we were just starting the company and we were all working 120, 130 hours a week, having food on campus was something that was really convenient and fostered better culture because we all conversed over meal time. To have these perks might seem lavish on the outside, but there are usually common sense reasons why we are doing them on the inside. That said, we always want to be frugal and conscientious about money.

It's all in a refreshingly honest interview that makes no mention of "Don't be evil," and only a subtle pretension that the company is doing anything more than trying to make as much money as algorithmically possible. (Photo by Getty/Oliver Lang)

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Valleywag-5046527 Mon, 08 Sep 2008 07:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5046527&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Valleywag mangles Marc Andreessen, and we think he likes it ]]> PALO ALTO — Thursday night in a Crowne Plaza hotel, with an Elks Club banquet roaring next door, Netscape cofounder, Ning king, and Facebook board member Marc Andreessen sat down with Portfolio writer Kevin Maney for a Churchill Club interview. This wasn't exactly what Andreessen had planned. Back in May, he wrote on his blog that he planned to stop speaking in public: "Used to be, if you wanted to get a message out into the market, you would give a talk at a conference, a reporter would write down some of what you said and mangle the rest, and you'd call it a day.... Mid-year resolution #1: No more public speaking. Mid-year resolution #2: More blogging." Two weeks later, he stopped blogging. Here follows a thoroughly mangled version of his comments. Marc, you have no one to blame but yourself.

On Microsoft:

Microsoft can build software, when they choose to.

On investing in startups:

I usually put in $25,000 to $100,000 per company. My philosophy is to put in a small enough amount of money that I won't get mad at the founder if I lose it.

Translation: Marc Andreessen is so rich that he can lose $100,000 and feel nothing.

On the failure of Friendster:

Friendster was very restrictive on what users did. You were supposed to connect because you know each other in real life, not, as [founder Jonathan] Abrams said, 'because you both like Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.' But sometimes you want to put your chocolate in her peanut butter.

Yes, he really said that.

On his deathwatch for the New York Times:

I don't want to become the crazy anti-New York Times guy. You have to do what Intel did in 1985. The Japanese chipmakers were killing Intel in the memory-chip market. It got out of memory chips and focused on the much-smaller microprocessor market. I would turn off the printing presses.

On his mentor and Netscape cofounder, Jim Clark:

I could tell you a lot of stories about his life [in Florida], but I won't. He's dating a 26-year-old Australian swimsuit model. I just ran into an entrepreneur who said, "I just ran into Jim Clark at a resort town in Italy. Jim was in a hot tub carved into the side of a mountain." I said, "Yes! That was Jim Clark."

On the iPhone's price:

Give it a year, it will be down to $99. Give it another year, it will be free.

On his motives for giving away his money:

My wife teaches philanthropy at Stanford Business School. I would be in big trouble if I weren't hugely committed to it.

On his relationship with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer:

He's my Facebook friend. He's my Facebook 'friend.' [makes air-quotes gesture] I'll stop there.
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Valleywag-5045757 Fri, 05 Sep 2008 01:00:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5045757&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Steve Wozniak only joined Apple after intervention ]]> Steve Wozniak explains how Steve Jobs convinced him to leave Woz's dream job and help found Apple Computer:

"I was never going to leave HP for life. That's where I wanted to be forever," but Apple co-founder Steve Jobs launched a campaign that eventually persuaded Wozniak to strike off on his own. "Steve Jobs got all my friends and relatives to call me."

[News.com] (Photo by Eric Rhoads)

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Valleywag-5040139 Thu, 21 Aug 2008 15:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5040139&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Fox News VP calls Facebook users "more sophisticated" than MySpace users ]]> Joel CheatwoodIn the tangled web woven by media conglomerates and Web companies, MySpace which is owned by News Corp. under Fox Interactive Media has a partnership with news broadcaster MSNBC — the cable partnership between Microsoft and NBC. Fox News, another News Corp. property and direct MSNBC competitor, has now signed a deal with Facebook, which counts Microsoft as the lead investor. Admitting that Facebook is now leading MySpace in the social networking space, Fox News VP of development Joel Cheatwood told reporter Brian Stelter, "They also have a user that’s a little older and a little more sophisticated." Enough with the diplomatic double-speak, Cheatwood — tell us what you really think.

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Valleywag-5038207 Mon, 18 Aug 2008 08:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5038207&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Michael Arrington "classless" says Stewart Alsop ]]> Reporter Brad Stone jumps into the fracas between the Demo and TechCrunch 50 conference organizers, with venture capitalist and Demo founder Stewart Alsop saying of Arrington's public baiting:

What I’ve seen from Mike Arrington has just been classless,” he said. “I don’t understand what business objective he has other than to get notoriety.”

Arrington, for his part, admitted to enjoying a good wallow in the mud. [NYT] (Photo by Pete Jelliffe)

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Valleywag-5038186 Mon, 18 Aug 2008 07:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5038186&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Blather, rinse, repeat ]]> "I know how these stories develop, having written more than a few of them myself over the last 20 years. You start with one fact, get the usual suspects to speculate on what that fact could mean, throw those speculations into print, then look for an official denial of the parts that are wrong. Once that denial comes through we rinse and repeat with the goal of eventually converging on something close to the truth. It's not a very elegant way to do journalism, but that's the way it happens in the tech trades, which now include everything from blogs to the New York Times." — tech columnist Robert X. Cringely, on the Apple rumor cycle. [I, Cringely]

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Valleywag-5033945 Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:40:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5033945&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ "I think that Yahoo management was pathetic" ]]> Oil billionaire T. Boone Pickens told the San Francisco Chronicle that he's given up on a Yahoo/Microsoft deal, and has sold his shares at an undisclosed loss. But let's be clear: Pickens is not a technology investor. He invested in Yahoo because he believed Carl Icahn had a workable plan, and that chief Yahoo Jerry Yang would make it happen. (Photo by AP/Frank Franklin II)

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Valleywag-5030466 Tue, 29 Jul 2008 09:40:00 PDT Paul Boutin http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5030466&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Bostock: Why can't Microsoft be more like InBev? ]]> Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock says that if Microsoft had handled itself the way InBev did, buying Anheuser-Busch for $52 billion even after A-B rejected an initial offer, Yahoo and Microsoft would probably be one company by now. "InBev was a classic, perfectly managed takeover," said Bostock.

They clearly had a commitment to get the deal done. That commitment was not there on the part of Microsoft. I made it clear to board and management, and Jerry made it clear to troops that it was a very high probability this deal was going to get done because they have all the money in the world and can make it happen. Had Microsoft managed it differently, the outcome would have been the InBev and Anheuser-Busch outcome, without question.

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Valleywag-5025870 Wed, 16 Jul 2008 11:40:00 PDT Nicholas Carlson http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5025870&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Jason Calacanis takes first step -- admitting he has a problem ]]> The road to recovery from gambling addiction is a long one, but the first priority is admitting to yourself that you have a problem, which Mahalo founder Jason Calacanis did in his first email missive since quitting the blogosphere:

I've become addicted to playing poker because your constantly faced with confusion, and winning is trying to make sense out of nonsense.

Thankfully, studies have shown recovery is much easier when you have a supportive spouse. No scientific word on the effect of pets, but I can't imagine having two lovely bulldogs hurts. Just remember, Jason, one day at a time. (Photo by wmmarc)

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Valleywag-5025041 Mon, 14 Jul 2008 16:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5025041&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Verizon CEO thinks iPhone hype is a "conspiracy" ]]> Obviously tired of being pestered with questions about iPhone this and Steve Jobs that, Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg put on a tinfoil hat and sat down for an interview with the Financial Times:
He scoffs at suggestions that the iPhone is about to become a mass-market handset because Apple has accepted mobile operators' pleas to subsidise it. "There goes the conspiracy again," he says of Apple. "You're declaring them a winner before they've earned it on the field."

The Verizon CEO is right. Until the second coming of JesusPhone starts working financial miracles, both here and abroad, the media should be a little more skeptical of the word of Jobs — we all know what happens to those who worship false idols. (Photo by AP/Dima Gavrysh)

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Valleywag-5020393 Fri, 27 Jun 2008 14:00:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5020393&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Yahoo plagued by "systematic rot" says Om Malik ]]> Almost every technology and business publication, including Valleywag, has been all Yahoo, all the time. Between the Microsoft merger talks, proxy board battle with Carl Icahn and employees leaving nearly every day, there's been lots of deliciously bad news to report. However, my old boss Om Malik over at GigaOm has been fairly quiet on the issue. One reason why is because a lot of his sources at the company have probably left, which is good for them but bad for a good reporter. Today, however, he weighed in with his analysis.

What hasn’t been discussed is that the company isn’t really facing up to the fact that its layers of management have resulted in a state of masterful inactivity, masked perhaps as a culture of consensus. This starts at the top - from the company’s board and senior management down to VP level where people are prone to organizing and attending twenty meetings before deciding the fate of a project.

Granted, he may be a little petulant that Yahoo wasn't well-represented at the Structure 08 conference he threw this week — even after he gave the company's open source cloud computing software Hadoop center stage at an earlier after-work presentation GigaOm hosted. He has, however, been covering Yahoo for longer than many other publications working the story have existed, and breaking his relative silence to predict doom for the company will hopefully shake up some of the executives down in Sunnyvale. (Photo by Pete Jelliffe)

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Valleywag-5020389 Fri, 27 Jun 2008 13:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5020389&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Bill Gates privately declared Windows usability "an absolute mess" in 2003 ]]> Five years ago, which is probably about when Microsoft started announcing shipping dates for Vista, Bill Gates wanted to play with Windows Movie Maker. Thanks to the power of Windows XP and Microsoft's online support, it took him over an hour in frustration downloading software, installing it and rebooting and, in the end, still without the software he was looking for.

I thought for sure now I would see a button to just go do the download. In fact it is more like a puzzle that you get to solve. It told me to go to Windows Update and do a bunch of incantations.

I can see Gates now, calling for an orisha and leading an anxious goat to a spot in his office covered in plastic sheeting for the candomblé ritual required to install a crappy video editing program.

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Valleywag-5019664 Wed, 25 Jun 2008 13:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5019664&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Bill Gates looks back at the competition Microsoft annihilated ]]> Putting media naysayers in their place, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates continued his farewell tour by pointing to old press accounts of companies like Ashton Tate and Lotus as worthy competitors into the perspective only the ultimate winner can enjoy. When asked by CNET's Ina Fried about the early presumptions that IBM would eat Microsoft's lunch and how that turned out, Gates used the opportunity to challenge those who would similarly presume that Google will eventually destroy Team Redmond.

Google is a very strong competitor, and so people will enjoy watching whether they can be challenged. The world will be better off if they are challenged effectively, and I think there's only one company left in terms of the depth and breadth and staying power that you need (to) really give them a big challenge.

Google-baiting aside, did Gates bringing up WordPerfect make anyone else feel really, really old?(Photo by AP/Stephen Brashear)

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Valleywag-5019347 Tue, 24 Jun 2008 14:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5019347&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Britney Spears, Perez Hilton and Vinod Khosla walk into a courtroom ]]>
Venture capitalist Vinod Khosla of Kleiner Perkins was sued by prison inmate Jonathan Lee Riches, who wanted $43 million from Khosla because "Khosla’s fund invests in prison buildings," among other concerns. Riches has also sued former Giants slugger Barry Bonds and hundreds of other celebrities, inspiring Khosla to quip, "Well, there is at least one thing I have in common with Britney Spears and Perez Hilton now." [Private Equity Hub] (Photos by AP/John Raoux, Rolando Aviles, Jack Plunkett)

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Valleywag-5017755 Wed, 18 Jun 2008 16:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5017755&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Kongregate's Jim Greer, on how to get a girl-crazy VC to commit ]]> In this morning's otherwise sleepy session the "brave new world" of entrepreneurship at Supernova, Vipin Jain of Retrevo offered the analogy first — that for startups, attracting venture capital is like dating. "When you first start there’s some excitement. Then, the unknown!" Jim Greer, CEO of the epic timewasting Flash-game site Kongregate jumped in:

And in that scenario, you're the woman. Wait! I know that sounds sexist, but ... you're being pursued. You're the one looking for commitment.

So far Kongregate has collected $9 million, in a combination of venture, angel, and "super angel" funds. Was Greer's not putting out for just anyone what attracted hard-to-get Jeff Bezos, then? (Photo by Joi Ito)

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Valleywag-5017323 Tue, 17 Jun 2008 14:40:00 PDT Melissa Gira Grant http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5017323&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ The Internet's role in contemporary philosophy ]]> Yesterday Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures quoted extensively from "The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond," a 2006 article in Philosophy Now by Alan Kirby. Kirby's piece does much to sum up the relationship of communications technology and cultural theory without the shrill demagoguery of anticrowdsourcing fanatic Andrew Keen:

In this context pseudo-modernism lashes fantastically sophisticated technology to the pursuit of medieval barbarism – as in the uploading of videos of beheadings onto the internet, or the use of mobile phones to film torture in prisons.

Read it and you'll seem smarter at the next industry mixer, promise.

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Valleywag-5017228 Tue, 17 Jun 2008 13:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5017228&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Esther Dyson: Online advertising will "turn good people into prostitutes" ]]> Esther Dyson, one of the 28 women counted at today's Supernova conference, responding to Bob Iannucci of Nokia in a conversation on the challenges of making money off of emerging networks of users, urged businesses to "appeal to people's pride rather than their avarice" or else they risk "turning good people into prostitutes." When Iannucci replied that "a market is just a language," Dyson extended her metaphor to herself, and to Dopplr, a trip-sharing social network. "I give up my travel information for free on Dopplr," she explained. Dyson is an investor in Dopplr. Does that make her a pimp who gives out freebies? (Photo via esthr)

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Valleywag-5017013 Mon, 16 Jun 2008 16:20:00 PDT Melissa Gira Grant http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5017013&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ 10 things Hugh MacLeod hates about Web 2.0 ]]> Web cartoonist and blog punditarian Hugh MacLeod dislikes many aspects of Web 2.0. We share his pain, but not his taste in metaphors. No. 2 on his list:

The endless train of online armchair quarterbacks endlessly trying to engage you with endless rounds of mental masturbation.

Items 1 and 3 through 10 are much less disturbing, unless you're into quarterbacks. Not that there's anything wrong with that. [Gapingvoid]

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Valleywag-5014102 Fri, 06 Jun 2008 15:00:00 PDT Nicholas Carlson http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5014102&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ ConnectU lawyer on the IM transcripts that will totally milk more millions from Facebook ]]> Mark Hornick, the lawyer representing ConnectU's Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, on the "smoking gun" chat transcripts that data forensics expert Jeff Parmet may or may not have discovered on hard drives subpoenaed from Facebook implicating Mark Zuckerberg in grand theft source code: "We don't have them. The courts have them, Facebook has them, but ConnectU doesn't have them." [Silicon Alley Insider]

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Valleywag-5013670 Thu, 05 Jun 2008 15:40:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5013670&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Jeff Bezos just wants his shareholders to know he's still having sex ]]> Attention, Amazon.com shareholders! Your money is not, repeat not in the hands of a sexless technomonk. Jeff Bezos took a moment to share some evidence of this at his annual shareholders meeting in Seattle. He reprised an anecdote about The Joy of Sex and its pivotal role in the early days of Amazon, lifted from his turn as Carnegie Mellon's commencement speaker last month: "I have a whole mess of children," then demurred, "I have to be a little delicate here because my parents are in the audience."

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Valleywag-5012818 Tue, 03 Jun 2008 20:00:00 PDT Melissa Gira Grant http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5012818&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ And by "compete," we mean "grind the bones of our enemies into dust" -- did I say that out loud? ]]> "Guys like us avoid monopolies. We like to compete." — Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, whose company remains under antitrust supervision, at the All Things Digital conference Tuesday.

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Valleywag-393735 Wed, 28 May 2008 11:20:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=393735&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Arianna Huffington wants you to have a menage a trois ]]> Arianna Huffington"The online vs. print debate is totally obsolete. It's as musty as the old barroom argument about Ginger vs. Mary Ann. It's 2008, why not have a three-way?" — Blog mogul Arianna Huffington, putting the sin in "synergy" for BusinessWeek, 22 May 2008

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Valleywag-393524 Tue, 27 May 2008 16:20:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=393524&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Jeff Bezos to remind John Doerr he's not a virgin ]]> Speaking to young graduates, including eight new Amazon.com hires, at Carnegie Mellon University's commencement ceremonies on Sunday, Jeff Bezos admitted that he's a nerd who does "a mean interpretation of Captain Picard," but is not a sexless monk. That classification was suggested by Amazon board member John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins. Citing Bezos as an example, Doerr said the perfect founder "is undistracted because he has no sex life." Bezos intends to remind the sex-negative venture capitalist of his many children at Amazon's next board meeting. John, if you need a retort, just exclaim how "resourceful" Mackenzie Bezos is.

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Valleywag-392487 Thu, 22 May 2008 09:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=392487&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Meet the man Carl Icahn praised for fixing Yahoo: Terry Semel ]]> How good is corporate raider Carl Icahn's grip on what's wrong with Yahoo? Two years ago, when Icahn complained to the Financial Times about inept executives at Time Warner, he asked why couldn't they be more like then-Yahoo CEO Terry Semel?

Google, obviously, is one of the great success stories of all time, but Yahoo has done a great job with Terry Semel, who incidentally, they threw out of Time Warner.
(Photoillustration by Jackson West; photo of Icahn by AP/Mark Lennihan) ]]>
Valleywag-391623 Mon, 19 May 2008 08:20:00 PDT Nicholas Carlson http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=391623&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Gavin Newsom a simulacrum of himself ]]> AB_06.jpgArt Bruzzone, long time local political commentator and host of SF Unscripted, when I asked what he thought of San Francisco's hunky god-mayor: "Gavin Newsom has become a Second Life avatar."

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Valleywag-388825 Mon, 12 May 2008 10:00:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=388825&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Social network popularity just like high school ]]> "Like the popular kids, Facebook will end up living in a trailer — just down the gravel road from Friendster." [Details] (Photo by AP/Jack Plunkett)

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Valleywag-388471 Fri, 09 May 2008 07:20:00 PDT Jackson West http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=388471&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Wikipedia's Erik Möller on the history of child sexual abuse: All Greek to him! ]]> Pederasty in ancient Greece took on mystical significance, where semen from a noble man was believed to give arete to a young man through anal intercourse. This was part of a common practice in Greece where a noble man took on a young male as a student. This relationship was highly idealized in Greek culture and often involved sexual acts as mentioned. Since the practice was so widespread in ancient Greece, and there is no indication of any detractors at the time, many do not consider this an example of child sexual abuse (see moral relativism). Generally, people who hold this view believe that sexual acts can only be termed "abuse" if there is a victim who experiences negative effects as a result of the activities. Since there is no evidence of this occurring, many have concluded that this should not be considered abuse.— Erik Möller, deputy director of the Wikimedia Foundation, editing a Wikipedia article on child sexual [Wikipedia] ]]> Valleywag-388511 Thu, 08 May 2008 10:40:00 PDT Owen Thomas http://valleywag.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=388511&view=rss&microfeed=true