Oral interpretation and language teaching's Fan Box

Search This Blog

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Redefining Education…in a Tree House

disrupt on livestream.com. Broadcast Live Free

5/28角頭被槍殺 竟有4名警官在泡茶 警察和黑道 是水火不容還是水乳交融?



5/28角頭被槍殺 竟有4名警官在泡茶 警察和黑道 是水火不容還是水乳交融?

來賓:
警察改革協會發言人 馬在勤
中央警察大學外事警察系副教授 葉毓蘭
資深媒體人 沈明杰
資深媒體人 楊天佑

D8 Video

D8 Video: EBay CEO John Donahoe on Divesting Skype
EBay CEO John Donahoe discusses why the company couldn't make Skype worth its while, and why he sold it.




D8 Tech Demo: Kno Takes on the Textbook Industry
Today, the secretive start-up formerly known as Kakai hopes to answer one of technology's future promises by replacing the dense poundage of textbooks weighing down backpacks everywhere with its new Kno tablet device.



D8 Tech Demo: Microsoft's Project Natal
Microsoft's Molly O'Donnell joins Walt and Kara to talk about Natal, the company's new gesture-based controller for the Xbox.



D8 Video: NPR's Vivian Schiller on Media Meltdown
What happens to laid-off journalists? Some of them wise up and get other work, but others doggedly insist on staying in the industry. Those are the ones that NPR CEO Vivian Schiller wants to work with.



D8 Video: DreamWorks Animation's Katzenberg on 3D
To 3D or not to 3D? DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg spoke to this during his D8 appearance today, saying that the industry doesn't expect everyone to run out and replace their current TVs with 3D versions, but expects that they will in the next few years.





D8: Comcast COO Steve Burke on Google, Apple
Web video gets you whatever you want, whenever you want, more or less. So who needs a cable company? Comcast COO Steve Burke made his case Wednesday at D8.




KatieCam: AOL Nightcap Gathering
Katherine Boehret brings KatieCam to the D8 nightcap gathering, sponsored by AOL. Singer Natasha Bedingfield provided the musical tunes for the exciting event.




D8: Steve Jobs on FoxConn
Jobs answers questions from Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher about FoxConn, the Chinese manufacturer that has recently been the site of a number of suicides.



D8: Steve Jobs on the Gizmodo Story
Jobs talks candidly about Apple's situation with Gizmodo, the site that bought an iPhone prototype found in a bar.




D8: Steve Jobs on iAds Restrictions
Jobs responds to a question about data collection and retention with a story about Flurry Analytics.




D8: Steve Jobs on Apple's Relationship With Google
Onstage at D8, Jobs talks about Apple's relationship with Google.



D8: Steve Jobs on the iPhone's Origin
Onstage at D8, Jobs talks with Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg about the connection between the iPad and the iPhone



D8: Apple CEO Steve Jobs Talks About Flash
In his fifth appearance at D: All Things Digital, Jobs speaks with Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher about his well-known issues with Flash.



KatieCam: Talking Apple with Tech Types at D8
All Things Digital's Katherine Boehret walked the lobby at Terranea during registration for D8 and got a few tech-types to talk about what they hope Steve Jobs will discuss during tonight's interview.



KatieCam: Backstage at D8
Katherine Boehret takes KatieCam backstage at the D8 conference. She asks Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher about what they will discuss with Apple CEO Steve Jobs this evening.




Almost Famous: Ben Zotto of Cocoa Box Design
Drake Martinet interviews Ben Zotto, who runs Cocoa Box Design, the app company responsible for Penultimate, a sleeper hit of the iPad app store.



Compatibility Issues Abound With E-Books
WSJ's Geoffrey Fowler finds it's not easy to read material purchased on one e-book on a rival's device. He tells Julia Angwin there's a solution, but there's also a catch.




Conde Nast, Adobe, Show Off Wired iPad App
That Wired magazine app that Conde Nast and Adobe have been trying so hard to get into Apple's app store? It's five bucks, and it's available at iTunes now.

Apple's Steve Jobs at D8: Plenty of insight with ammo in reserve for WWDC

Apple's Steve Jobs at D8: Plenty of insight with ammo in reserve for WWDC

On AT&T…



On TV…




Apple CEO Steve Jobs doesn’t seem interested in revolutionizing TV the same way his company changed the mobile phone industry. But he is hopeful that newspapers will find a way to tap into iPad technology to keep the news flowing and keep us from becoming a nation that gets its news from bloggers.

Hey, should I be offended?

Apple’s CEO spent 90 minutes Tuesday evening on the stage of the “D: All Things Digital” conference, kicking off the event, which is being held near Los Angeles this week. During the Q&A session, he tackled a lot of different topics - from the iPhone prototype that was lost/stolen and the back-and-forth battles with Adobe over Flash to his thoughts on AT&T’s network and the competitive relationship with Google (Techmeme).

There was no news, of course. Jobs will be back on stage in less than a week to deliver a keynote address at his company’s Worldwide Developers Forum in San Francisco. That’s where everyone seems to expect the big iPhone announcement to take place.

But he did offer some insight into where tablet computing might be going and why television isn’t necessarily the industry that he wants to tackle, something many of us had already figured out given the company’s lack of love for its AppleTV product.

I wasn’t in the audience at the D8 conference so my take on the event is based solely on what I’ve read in tweets, live blogs and other posts. What I’ve gathered from his comments about TV, it seems that until the set-top box can be blown up and re-launched with some sort of new user interface, there isn’t room for yet another set-top box on the television.

He jabbed at companies like Roku and TiVo, which have tried to enhance the TV viewing experience with set-top boxes of their own - but really haven’t gained much traction. He even jabbed at Google, which announced Google TV at the I/O developer’s conference last month.

I don’t know that I necessarily agree with Jobs’ assessment of television’s future, largely because consumers have shown that they can be receptive to new technologies if the companies providing them offer enough value. TiVo introduced a disruptive technology that people loved once they understood it. But it also made huge marketing and advertising missteps in its early years, as well as some poor partnership deals that forced into becoming a perpetually niche product while cable and satellite companies offered DVR technology in their own set-top boxes.

Google, on the other hand, recognized that consumers want to be able to watch all content on their living rooms screens - whether from a cable provider or hosted on the Web - and has come up with a multi-pronged approach that includes set-top boxes but also TVs themselves that would have its technology built in.

Newspapers, Jobs said, are in trouble and could make some money by bringing their content to platforms like the iPad - but they’re going to have to get more aggressive about cutting their prices, going for volume and figuring out ways for people to pay for hard-earned content.

Asked if tablets could replace laptops, Jobs used the analogy of early automobiles. Trucks were the preferred vehicles because people needed them for their farms. But, over time, transportation evolved and people started to buy passenger cars. That didn’t spell the end for trucks - it just fragmented the markets into different types of buyers. The same goes for the laptop/tablet game.

Finally, in terms of AT&T and its exclusive relationship for the iPhone in the U.S., Jobs offered no hints of a deal with other carriers in the future but did say that AT&T has the fastest 3G service in the nation and that’s it’s getting better - but that he also wishes it would get better faster.

So do we, Steve. So do we.

Key videos to watch: