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Linux — Coming to Consumer Devices Near You?

A recent article,“Electronics makers rally around Linux”, describes some of the work going on to make Linux more suitable for consumer electronics applications. In the interest of fair disclosure, I have friends who have investmetns in MontaVista Software. What could this consortium mean for consumer electronics products?

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Don’t Look Now, but Sprint is Making Money in Wireless Data

A recent article inWirelessWeek describes the great strides that Sprint has made in actually generating revenue from ringtones, games, and other consumer-focused data services. I am a big believer in mobile consumer entertainment and I am glad to see a carrier release hard data on the volume of transactions that these services are generating.

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You’ve Got Contacts — The Future of Contact Management Software

If you have perused my blog, you probably get the sense that I am the type of person who will try just about any software application if it is easy to use and useful. Well, that is in fact the case. I have been playing with a lot of new tools designed to help end users keep their contact databases up-to-date or to get more value from the contacts that they or their colleagues have. I definitely believe that these tools are the future of contact management, but my early experience with these tools has unearthened some interested information about the value that others see in these products.

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Whatever Happened to the USB Keychain Drive?

When I first saw and played with a “keychain storage” dongle, I was convinced that this was the next big thing in portable data storage. There was a big article on ZDNet
painting a rosy picture for these devices. Based on what I have seen, these devices have not yet set the world on fire in the way that I and others had predicted. What went wrong?

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What if Wireless Home Networking Doesn’t Happen?

Every now and then I try to step back from position as a technophile and dissect an area where I feel particularly passionate. I am certainly hoping that wireless home networking comes to pass in the very near future, but I can construct a case in my head as to 1) why it doesn’t happen at all or 2) why it doesn’t happen as quickly as I would like.

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The Corporate Blog is Catching On

I was reading an interesting article at the New York Times (The Corporate Blog Is Catching On) about CEOs and corporate executives who blog. I have had a few readers ask me how I determine what is or is not appropriate to write in my blog as a venture capitalist. Here is a quick-and-dirty list of what I think are best practices and a few thoughts on how these rules will evolve.

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NewsGator — A Great Tool for Blog Enthusiasts

A colleague of mine, Mike Mettler, pointed me to a very neat tool called NewsGator. NewsGator allows you to subscribe to any RSS-enabled blog or newsfeed service and have the content delivered directly to you in your Outlook inbox. In addition, NewsGator allows you to publish to popular blog formats including MT, Blogger, and Radio. As blogs continue to move into user communities that are less technically proficient, tools like this will become increasingly important.

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Why the Success of Apple iTunes Confirms what we Already Knew

My local paper, the San Jose Mercury News, recently posted an article about the
Apple iTunes initiative and its early success at generating interest in paid legal music downloads. I am more surprised by the amount of press given to these initiatives than I am by the success that paid music offerings are having.

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