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    June 23

    ZZ: 改天请你吃饭

    时下最不可信的承诺就是:改天请你吃饭!就像很多人在表态时的一句口头禅,比如:我可以负责任的说、我可以肯定的说、我不客气的说、说实在的、说句老实话、实话告诉你吧等等,一概不必当真。

        “改天请你吃饭”这句话我听过无数次,当然我也对很多人说过。“改天”究竟是哪一天?是“土改”的那一天,还是

    “劳改”的那一天,不得而知。总之是未来的某一天,未来的未来,如果有耐心且记性好的话,你就老实地等着吧。

        我们为什么会一扭脸就将“请客吃饭”的承诺忘得一干二净呢?难道是彼此都忙于革命工作,自己的饭都顾不上吃,自然也就无暇履行诺言……想来肯定不是。破费一下难道真的就这么难?非也!那么问题究竟出在哪呢?

        假如有意淡忘自己许下的诺言,相反却恶意记下别人的邀约,失望之余,“请你吃饭”便可理解为礼节性的寒暄,含义和用途就跟说声谢谢差不多。例如走在街上,你向乞丐的碗里扔下一枚硬币,他回馈你的不再是“好人呐,谢谢你!”,取而代之的是“好人呐,改天请你吃饭!”

        假如宽容别人的失信,转而反省自己的言行,惭愧之后,猛然发觉问题往往出在自己身上。试想,被请的人时常爽约,请客的人老被放鸽子,久而久之,彼此彼此,谁还会把这口头协议当成格式合同呢。

        按传统思维理解,什么困难事一到酒桌上就会迎刃而解,仿佛饭馆就是公证处,端茶倒水的店小二就是公证员,诚信因此便会确立。如今看来,这个思维模式恐怕得改一改了。“请你吃饭”都能随便遗忘,显然是不把“公证处”放在眼里了嘛!

        革命不是请客吃饭。单为一顿饭失信违约,自然也就不会闹出人命来。经济条件宽裕了,一顿饭不再是性命攸关的事,而往往已经成了一种礼节或仪式,能否吃到嘴里无所谓,只要桌上盘碗罗列即可,看看色,闻闻味,饭就算已经吃过了。至于实实在在的温饱问题,如果结账时不好意思打包带走,那就回家后泡包方便面,相对于脸面,肠胃是最好打发的。

        据说二战后,欧洲经济复苏时期也曾出现“吃饭”热,“讲排场”是经济发展的必然过程。如今大家已经务实了,看在眼里不如吃到嘴里,吃到嘴里还要计算一下卡路里,且心情和情调也提升到首要地位,“请你吃饭”无疑将会与时俱进,发生意想不到的变化。假如有一天你随口承诺改天请人吃饭,恰好这个人不解风情,给个棒槌就当针:“别麻烦了,还是折现吧,给点钱就行了。”那么你不妨跟他说:“好,改天给你折现。”(作者:邢大军)

    May 14

    那一年

    那一年 你正年轻
    总觉得明天肯定会很美
    那理想世界就象一道光芒
    在你心里闪耀着
    怎能就让这不停燃烧的心
    就这样耗尽消失在平庸里
    你决定上路就离开这城市
    离开你深爱多年的姑娘
    这么多年你还在不停奔跑
    眼看着明天依然虚无缥缈
    在生存面前那纯洁的理想
    原来是那么脆弱不堪
    你站在这繁华的街上
    找不到你该去的方向
    你站在这繁华的街上
    感觉到从来没有的慌张 ........
    你站在这繁华的街上
    找不到你该去的方向
    你站在这繁华的街上
    感觉到从来没有的慌张 ........
    你曾拥有一些英雄的梦想
    好象黑夜里面温暖的灯光
    怎能没有了希望的力量
    只能够挺胸勇往直前
    你走在这繁华的街上
    在寻找你该去的方向
    你走在这繁华的街上
    再寻找你曾拥有的力量
    April 03

    Why Google's Business Model is So Revolutionary

    pkm
    “Google’s not a real company. It’s a house of cards,” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer allegedly said recently. His jealous remark is at least half true. What is it about Google that so mystifies every group that tries to analyze it? The more I study them, the more convinced I am that Google has a truly revolutionary business model, and are the most visible pioneers of the emerging 21st century Gift Economy. Microsoft, and the irresponsible brokers who keep flogging overpriced stocks based on unsustainable growth promises, and everyone else who owes their living to the Ponzi scheme that is the modern growth/market economy, should be very afraid.

    There is a giant gulf between Google and its investors. The investors, justifiably recognizing that Google is the most customer-obsessed (their #1 principle, even ahead of 'doing no evil') and innovative (a neat trick -- the two rarely come together) company in the world, believe that that will necessarily translate into the greatest revenues and profits in the world. They're mistaken.

    Google, meanwhile, behaves as if it really doesn't care much about revenues and profits. Until recently, its two principal sources of revenue were (and still are) marginal and fragile: Advertising online, Google's #1 revenue source, is a virtual oxymoron. As the economy moves from a supplier-driven to a customer-driven one, a revolution Google is helping engineer, advertising as a whole will be history, and Google's advertising is no exception, notwithstanding their attempt to 'qualify' ads as relevant to each viewer. Its #2 revenue source is selling search tools to corporate customers. But the type of search tool that is needed for an Intranet is very different from the 'popularity-based' Google search technology that works so well in the complex Internet world. You can get a sense of this from Google Desktop, whose refreshing speed and ease of use is just a delight to its users, but which often doesn't locate the precise document you were looking for nearly as deftly as it finds the Internet page you were looking for in a vastly larger haystack.

    But recently Google discovered there's a third great source of revenue in today's wildly inflated and delusional stock market: IPOs. I'm convinced that, more than anything else, Google went public because it gave them a ton of cash to do even more things for free for their customers -- which is exactly what they've done since then, offering a never-ending stream of wonderful goodies. Far from a sellout to corporatist philosophy, with its IPO Google may have pulled off the biggest Robin Hood act in history.

    There are some who believe Google will be successful, ultimately, by realizing the promise of Web 2.0 -- moving the focus of the 21st century worker from the desktop (documents on the hard drive) to the network (where everything is kept online). Indeed, Google has been pivotal in the advance of AJAX, the fusion of technologies that allow users to assemble a page of information from multiple web-based applications, much as MS Office allowed users to assemble a page of information from multiple desktop-based applications. I have long espoused the development of two simple desktop meta-applications -- a document annotator that would let you do, electronically and intuitively, everything your pencil can do with manual documents, and a workspace manipulator that would do, electronically and intuitively, everything your hand can do in a physical office, saving, storing, moving, aggregating, receiving and sending stuff  (the illustration above shows how these applications drive all our essential information processing processes). If there is any hope of getting the 80% of the population that are not power users of computer and Internet technology on board, the use of these tools must be made this simple and intuitive, and I believe these two meta-applications are the best way to accomplish this.

    But Google and Web 2.0 may offer another alternative -- making the personal document, desktop and office disappear entirely. Instead of having a collection of documents on your desktop and in your 'files', Web 2.0 keeps all those documents out on the Web (subject to security and access permissioning rules that you set) as a designated, tagged subset of all the documents in the world on the Web. And instead of having an office that routes documents to files and mailboxes, you keep your 'virtual' office on Web 2.0, accessible anywhere anytime.

    With Web 2.0 the two meta-applications are still the same (we all understand the functionality of the pencil and the hand) but they move from the hard drive to cyberspace. Or perhaps you have the choice of either or both -- the applications work the same regardless of where you choose to keep your stuff. But strategically the development of these applications is different if the primary locus of data processing is physically local on a hard drive or virtual. Google may be waiting to see which primary locus emerges -- which will depend on legal, cultural, security and technological advances and developments we cannot yet predict.

    But Google surely understands that however this unfolds, Web 2.0 and future desktop applications are not going to be profit-making ventures. They will necessarily be Open Source. They will be gifts, from Google and others, to their beloved and grateful customers. Unfortunately, investors will eventually realize this, so it is unlikely that public offerings are going to provide Google with much more revenue. The money, as I've said before, is not in software and content, but in hardware and personalized applications (concerts and customizations).

    So how will Google make money? It won't. Perhaps it won't have to. Perhaps in a Gift Economy customers will be so delighted by Google's innovations that they will volunteer their time to identify and develop the next generation of applications. Open Source institutionalized.

    Or perhaps we'll find that, fundamentally, there are only so many applications for computer technology, and the Internet will become, like phone lines and pipelines, another utility, to be maintained more or less unchanged.

    But back to the revolutionary Google business model. Traditionally customers have needs, wants, and nice-to-haves. Needs they will pay 'market' value for. Wants they will pay modestly for, especially if they're bundled with needs. Nice-to-haves they will not pay for at all, but they'll take them, and may make differential purchase decisions based on them (if the needs and wants of two vendors are indistinguishable). The market economy is focused on needs, since they are the corporation's bread and butter, the only source of reliable revenue and growth, and hence profit.

    Now enter Google. They fulfil needs, wants, and nice-to-haves, all free. So those of us on the leading side of the digital divide gratefully take all three, and we don't even really differentiate between them (unless some of the nice-to-haves unduly complicate the application, in which case we don't want them). Those on the other side of the digital divide get none of them, widening the divide to a chasm. The market understands none of this behaviour, since it doesn't conform to any accepted business model. Google doesn't really seem to care. They're too busy doing what they do so well -- delighting customers with valuable, intuitive, boldly innovative and expansive new products, on a scale that is the envy of every entrepreneur.

    There is one last 'search' frontier that Google has not yet conquered, however, and it could be Google's biggest hit yet, and possibly generate significant revenue as well. Google is well established as the company that best helps you find what. And recently with Google Maps/Earth they are becoming established as the company that best helps you find where. What if Google is now working on becoming the company that best helps you find who? The company that becomes the expertise finders, the shared-interest finders, the companion finders, the people who, at last, will help us find, effectively and intuitively, the people we're looking for, not just their stuff. And not just find them, but make sure they're available (and if applicable affordable) and seamlessly put us in touch with them.

    If they could do that, even I might consider buying shares in the company.