You can make some generalized statement--media and computing will converge--and then point to the fact that YouTube emerged in 2006 as the fulfillment of your prophecy.
The fact that you made the prediction in 1989, or were one of the many VCs who passed on investing in YouTube when it was just two guys and some cute cat videos, is irrelevant. You just didn't want to get bogged down in details.
In that spirit, here are my predictions for 2007.
Executives from the Blu-ray and HD DVD consortiums will announce at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that they will settle their differences in the parking lot of the Golden Nugget.
At an O'Reilly conference in San Francisco, pundits will point out that users already share music, movies, pictures, home videos and their personal thoughts (via blogs) over the Internet. No one will be able to come up with something else to share and the entire Web 2.0 movement will suddenly crumble.
Mulch will become a corporate giveaway. So will expired packs of instant pudding.
Steve Jobs will become a public figure in the fight against trans fats when he introduces vegan foods into the Hillsdale minimum-security correctional institution--his new home after an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Other Silicon Valley titans will bang their spoons against their trays in protest.
The line between Second Life and real life will blur, and Second Life patrons will complain about inept customer service and the proliferation of strip malls.
Sony will manage to increase the volume of PlayStation 3 consoles in the U.S. In response, consumers will stop stabbing each other and just sort of nudge each other while waiting in line.
Independent consumer advocates will have a spaz attack over what seems like a flimsy patent, but the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office will uphold it anyway.
IBM Chief Executive Sam Palmisano will make his first major public appearance since assuming the helm at Big Blue five years ago. Attendees at the conference will remark on the lifelike feel of his handshake.
Bloggers and individual tastemakers will see their power increase and force KCRA in Sacramento to bring back Magoo's Scrooge during the holidays and move Barnaby Jones to a new time slot.
Time magazine declares: Keyboards are Hot!
Start-ups will insist on inserting tildes and angstrom marks into their names.
Those thick, crinkly hairs that grow on your big toe? Inexplicably, people will begin posting pictures of these on their MySpace.com pages.
Software as a service. Well, there's really not much you can do with that one.
And finally, security advocates will warn about a plan by the federal government to monitor your travel to and from the U.S. with passports.
Biography Michael Kanellos is editor at large at CNET News.com, where he covers hardware, research and development, start-ups and the tech industry overseas. He has worked as an attorney, travel writer and sidewalk hawker for a time share resort, among other occupations.
What did ya expect? To find insightful advice about where to invest next in a free and widely available CNET article? If you were to find such advice here, then it would be already too late... I think the point here was to say that predictions generally suck and can be easily spinned later to prove right (see Pat Robertson predicting a major tsunami in the US in 2006, and then saying that the East Coast storms were a partial realization of his prediction). The point was maybe to also say that some battles are just plain annoying and almost ridiculous, like HD DVD vs. Blu-Ray, that people shooting each other just to get a (lame) PS3 is insane, that the latest fads in company naming are just plain irritating, and so forth. Whatever...
Web 2.0 will crumble not because of what is being delivered, but how Web 2.0 is being delivered.
Software engineers will realize that with an 80% broadband penetration rate among Internet users, the "YouTube" generation can tolerate thicker client experiences. Hence, instead of having to continue to struggle with trying to implement rich clients with JavaScript and HTML, alternatives will begin to gain market momentum. Perhaps it is time to revisit Java applets and Java Web Start?
Web giant is spending $120 million to beef up its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters, according to filings with the city reviewed by the San Jose Mercury News.
The Samsung Galaxy Mini 2 S6500 could make its debut at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona later this month, according to a leaked promotional image.
MIT creates a simulation to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Spacewar. A relic of the early days of minicomputers, it was one of the first computer video games and set the stage for many others, including Asteroids.
invest next in a free and widely available CNET article? If you
were to find such advice here, then it would be already too late...
I think the point here was to say that predictions generally suck
and can be easily spinned later to prove right (see Pat Robertson
predicting a major tsunami in the US in 2006, and then saying
that the East Coast storms were a partial realization of his
prediction). The point was maybe to also say that some battles
are just plain annoying and almost ridiculous, like HD DVD vs.
Blu-Ray, that people shooting each other just to get a (lame) PS3
is insane, that the latest fads in company naming are just plain
irritating, and so forth. Whatever...
Software engineers will realize that with an 80% broadband penetration rate among Internet users, the "YouTube" generation can tolerate thicker client experiences. Hence, instead of having to continue to struggle with trying to implement rich clients with JavaScript and HTML, alternatives will begin to gain market momentum. Perhaps it is time to revisit Java applets and Java Web Start?