Marc Andreessen
The future’s on both sides [client & server] because the client needs to have the capability to display information and to make it useful.
The future’s on both sides [client & server] because the client needs to have the capability to display information and to make it useful.
The catalog of resources on the Internet will be supported by advertising in the future.
There are not a lot of software applications able to have that many users, and it just happened so quickly. The downside is that it could vanish overnight. You have to keep up.
People are becoming addicted to all this stuff. It’s like television. Look at the education fall-off since television began. Why? Kids are vegging out. People are becoming isolated from the outside world, literally and figuratively. They’re dealing with pieces of equipment, rather than each other.
There’ll be a bond between technology and academia.
You should have broadband data going into everyone’s home, and you should have computing devices everywhere doing interesting things. And when that happened there could be a very large new part of the software industry to address that.
We’re moving at an exponential rate of change. This whole technological revolution is unsettling to a lot of us. These times are so uncertain for so many people, they’re looking to the past for some kind of anchor.
The NREN is at all odds the most important and lucrative marketplace of the 21st century.
On the Net there are no economies of scale. It really doesn’t matter how big you are. If your content is better, then you’re bigger. The next big wave that’s going to hit is when lots of bandwidth is available.
If we start providing a product that isn’t interoperable with everybody else’s, we have no business.