Roger McNamee: 6 ways to save the internet
Ten years from now we will interact with the internet in completely different ways. Roger McNamee identifies six changes that are already transforming the ways we consume and create content. Full bio
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of watching Silicon Valley take off
what was about to happen?
what I think is going to be
of the technology world
will be entirely about engagement.
a transformational change
to think about engagement.
a major technology cycle
in which I find myself:
about half the day,
10 hours sleep at night,
night the show ended
so I got home a little late.
I've been studying the technology world,
commentator referring to today.
that I'm going to focus on.
each one of these is a hypothesis;
of hypotheses now for about 10 months,
is that I've been exposing them
very hard to debunk them.
a chance of figuring this out.
this is fairly obvious --
as a company has many things it can do
and the only one you need to know
basically taken Windows
devices 3 or 4 years ago,
probably about a year and a half from now.
and crank the price there.
software, which is related to it --
of billions of dollars in revenue.
a jump ball for that revenue.
is not growing that rapidly,
way to create room for new industries.
are going to come from.
knife commercial, there's more!
is not the only company
across the railroad tracks today.
90% of all search volume
that the index became full of garbage.
has become full of garbage.
almost a digital Detroit.
compelling things there.
you can get mugged.
and everyone else out there
the things we want to find.
for matters of taste and money;
Yelp for restaurants,
Dictionary.com for words,
plenty of ways to respond
is recover its position
Google came along in 1998,
provided leadership
all forms of content.
is to look at a Google results page:
has been tremendous for Google
order, it is over --
but because, like word processing,
application we all had,
other ways to find what they want.
on a cell phone,
is a small fraction on cell phones
that Google's recovery, if you will,
is no longer controversial,
to understand what happened.
is the open-source World Wide Web,
with branded, thoughtful, value-added,
an also-ran in computers
100 million internet-enabled devices.
about who he lets in.
imagine Georgia in the Civil War. OK?
they have to sacrifice Google.
the pendulum of technology
who spent their whole lives
compelling entertainment
if Google's over here, and Apple's here,
to be on the other side of Apple."
commoditization versus the App Store,
and highly differentiated content.
let me help you understand.
to construct a web page
embedded interactivity,
whatever it is that you want.
opens up a new canvas.
up for The New York Times,
a differentiated, highly compelling,
even monetizable -- product
is, thanks to Apple,
can do about you.
but I don't think they will.
where we're going to stop
of hypercommoditization are behind us.
how I'm doing it personally.
of why Windows is dead.
so I have no axe in this,
you cannot possibly understand
is that the other players on this thing,
Palm's webOS that HP's shipping
Apple wins this thing
to what they have on the iPod
50 to 100 billion dollars bigger
else even challenging them.
favorable relative to everybody else,
any of the cell phone guys,
exceed the retail price
to leave you with
has most of its money in Facebook.
you are looking for.
so much bigger than this.
Yelp, Skype, LinkedIn --
than what Facebook has.
to have to follow the Zynga model.
subordinate to the platform of Facebook.
anything successful off of Facebook,
of why this platform is so powerful.
in the social world,
I can give you.
of advice is: forget social.
it's not a platform.
"Embed gamification into everything."
I believe in full-contact investing.
about a year ago, and I said,
How do I find out?"
did an album with T Bone Burnett,
a huge hit and blah, blah, blah ...
hippie music done by old folks, so --
went on Facebook and Twitter.
called "Twittercasts,"
and then prerecorded concerts,
the same thing we're using here today,
live video of our shows.
a satellite network.
of what our manager used to cost.
every one of our shows --
within the next month.
our website is being upgraded to HTML 5.
from any phone, anywhere,
nothing to do this.
than most people,
more than most people who are 55.
who live in this world,
to use these platforms
that's built around that.
for every single show.
every show, we have painters.
that creativity has been stifled,
of American culture --
to be educated,
on ritual and beliefs, instead of facts.
going to do us a favor.
the tools to make us independent.
and Facebook had.
gets replaced by this thing
is an instance of a store.
on the New York Times Book Review.
and satisfy it in the same place.
and you go off sites and you lose people,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Roger McNamee - Tech investorTen years from now we will interact with the internet in completely different ways. Roger McNamee identifies six changes that are already transforming the ways we consume and create content.
Why you should listen
Roger McNamee has been an investor in science and tech for close to 30 years. His 2004 book -- The New Normal: Opportunities in a Time of Great Risk -- offers business strategies based on the economic and technological trends that are defining this era. He also plays guitar and bass in the band Moonalice, a band known for its clever use of social media.
Roger McNamee | Speaker | TED.com