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Tech Is Too Cheap to Meter: It's Time to Manage for Abundance...

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Saved by 7 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2009-06-23


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Highlighted by ignitesrini

It turns out that my kids, and many like them, aren't really that interested in Star Wars as created by George Lucas. They're more interested in Star Wars as created by their peers, never mind the shaky cameras and fingers in the frame.

Highlighted by digizen

It turns out that my kids, and many like them, aren't really that interested in Star Wars as created by George Lucas. They're more interested in Star Wars as created by their peers, never mind the shaky cameras and fingers in the frame.

Highlighted by amst3rdam

Once we had YouTube, and didn't need a marketer's permission to do things, that demand suddenly emerged.

Highlighted by devijvers

In a sense, we're "wasting video" in search of better video, exploring the potential space of what the moving picture can be. YouTube is a vast collective experiment to invent the future of television, one thoughtless, wasteful upload at a time. Sooner or later, through YouTube and other sharing sites, every video that can be made will be made, and every person who can be a filmmaker will become one. Every possible niche will be explored. If you lower the costs of exploring a space, you can be more indiscriminate in how you do it.

Highlighted by amst3rdam

Sound schizophrenic? That's the nature of the hybrid world we're entering, where scarcity and abundance exist side by side. We're good at scarcity thinking—it's the 20th-century organizational model. Now we have to get good at abundance thinking, too.

Highlighted by takuya514