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Mobile payments between Indian banks: looks promising–sort of

From the press release (pdf) for the Interbank Mobile Payment Service launched by the RBI and a number of Indian banks:

The service provides an inter operable infrastructure for the banks to offer real time money transfer facility to their customers through the mobile channel. Banks are free to use any mobile banking application of their choice. Since IMPS can be made available in all forms (SMS, USSD, thin Client, Thick client), it can support the transactions from low end mobiles to high end mobiles to serve everyone’s needs.

The payer may use either SMS or a bank-provided mobile app; the payee doesn’t need any of these. The ‘participating banks’ are ICICI, SBI, HDFC, Axis Bank, Yes Bank, Union Bank of India, Bank of India.

From what I can gather Union Bank of India has instructions on both SMS-based and application-based transfer. SBI, ICICI and Axis Bank require a mobile app to make payments.  Yes Bank has a generic FAQ (pdf) that refers vaguely to a ‘mobile application’. And there appears to be no information for HDFC’s and Bank of India’s IMPS at all.

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Well, it had to be a touchscreen, then

Steve Jobs, in an interview with Playboy mag in 1985:

Playboy: Most computers use key strokes to enter instructions, but Macintosh replaces many of them with something called a mouse–a little box that is rolled around on your desk and guides a pointer on your computer screen. It’s a big change for people used to keyboards. Why the mouse?
Jobs: If I want to tell you there is a spot on your shirt, I’m not going to do it linguistically: “There’s a spot on your shirt 14 centimeters down from the collar and three centimeters to the left of your button.” If you have a spot–”There!” [He points]–I’ll point to it. Pointing is a metaphor we all know. We’ve done a lot of studies and tests on that, and it’s much faster to do all kinds of functions, such as cutting and pasting, with a mouse, so it’s not only easier to use but more efficient.

(via Cult of Mac)

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Yahoo circa 1998 as Ponzi scheme

Paul Graham, as part of an article on Yahoo!’s problems:

By 1998, Yahoo was the beneficiary of a de facto Ponzi scheme. Investors were excited about the Internet. One reason they were excited was Yahoo’s revenue growth. So they invested in new Internet startups. The startups then used the money to buy ads on Yahoo to get traffic. Which caused yet more revenue growth for Yahoo, and further convinced investors the Internet was worth investing in.

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Strategy Taxes

From Robert Scoble on why Google can’t build something like todays-darling-of-the-echo-chamber Instagram:

6. Google’s engineers can’t use any Facebook integration or dependencies like Instagram does. That makes it harder to onboard new customers. I’ve downloaded a few iPhone apps this week and signed into them, and added my friends, just by clicking once on my Facebook account. My friends are on Facebook, I don’t have a social graph even close to as good on Google. Instagram gets to use every system it wants. Google has to pay “strategy taxes.” (That’s what we called them at Microsoft).

So it isn’t just legacy that bogs down companies as they get bigger.

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Oh, how much is that second-hand app on the home screen?

Frédéric Filloux in his Monday Note column describes a rights-based (as opposed to files-based) future for managing digital content (whether magazines or books):

A first phase is likely to consist of an extension of what we have today, i.e. a transaction system based of book files: text-based books or richer media products. The main players will remain Amazon, or the Apple iBooks store. But, in five to ten years, this way of dealing with intellectual content  will be seen as primitive.

The true revolution will be a shift from a files transaction system to a rights transaction system. This transformation involves radical changes in the way we think of digital content, books, videos or even games.

Today, Joe can’t share a book that he bought (rented?) from an e-book-store, can’t give it back, can’t pass it on, can’t re-sell it – nothing. He can either keep it or delete it. – what a waste! The publisher and technology industries, for all their talent, have created a form that, in important ways, is less convenient than even the original physical book form that it is based on .[1]

They will be forced to fix this state of affairs as more people read their books, magazines and more online, and competitors with saner policies enter the market.

But even in a digital rights-based world, what about a second-hand market for digital books – and apps? If Joe purchased an email program for his Nokia smartphone, and a year later bought an iPhone, he could

1. return his app (the rights to the app) to the store he bought it from. In this case, does Joe get a full or partial refund? Unlike a physical good, there has been no wear. And it’s fair to say he’d be refunded whatever the current price is (or maybe the price he bought it for, whichever is less). But this is flawed – since the number of rights are infinite, they are worth nothing themselves. The store gains nothing by refunding Joe his money, so there’s no incentive in a return-refund.

2. transfer his app (the rights) to Jane’s Nokia. Unless Joe’s gifting the app away, a transfer means Jane will need to pay Joe for those rights. How much are those rights worth to Joe?

This is the second-hand market for digital goods.

An eBay for digital goods sounds about right, and about time [2].

[1] And when we attempt to set the digital book/magazine free, the limited corral of policies we build around it is maddening in its clumsiness: you-can-only-share-with-so-many-people, you-can-only-share-so-many-times, you-can-only-share-with-an-identical-device, you-have-to-pay-extra-to-share. This is when you know that from among the inventors, engineers, marketers, lawyers and accountants, the first two have left the room.

[2] This market will need support from app stores and developers, of course. There’s no way – over-the-counter or otherwise – for Joe to transfer his app to Jane (or any other bidder). This is regardless of whether it’s bought from an app store (Apple/Android/RIM/(ugh)Nokia) or from the app developer itself.

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Great nations and global cities in the 21st century

You are living in some small town in Ukraine or Kenya or some other place, foreign or domestic. You long to break out and go to a place where people are gathering to think about the things you are thinking about, creating the things you want to create.

If you are passionate about fashion, maybe you will go to Paris. If it’s engineering, maybe it’ll be Germany. But if you are passionate about many other spheres, I suspect you’ll want to be in America.

David Brooks in the NYT yesterday about what will make a country an economic power in this century. Not industrial prowess, not technical talent but being at center of world-wide networks – of technology, finance, energy, culture.

Another article in the NYT on the same day explores a related concept – that of the global city:

And yet (despite the perception of decline), New York remains a world city. It is not the great American city — that will always be Chicago. New York sits at the edge: like Istanbul or Mumbai, it has a distinctive appeal that lies precisely in its cantankerous relationship to the metropolitan territory beyond. It looks outward, and is thus attractive to people who would not feel comfortable further inland. It has never been American in the way that Paris is French: New York has always been about something else as well.

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The man who wrote “the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans” has passed on, two new generations of Americans later

Ted Sorensen died last week at 82.

A recurring character in every book and account of JFK and RFK that I have read, his principal characteristic was that he was Young. That Ted and the one in the NYT obituary seemed to me two completely different people. The one I had read about was President Kennedy’s whiz-kid-in-chief: speechwriter, book collaborator and “intellectual blood-bank”, all of 32 when JFK won the ‘60 election. The one in the obituary had practiced for decades as a lawyer, been offered the directorship of the CIA, and had counselled Anwar Sadat and Nelson Mandela. He had spent fifty years – fifty years! – since that historic election and, by all accounts, had spent them well. How long a life can be, with eras spanned, people met and forgotten, opportunities taken and missed, things done and  left unfinished. How different the person who starts from the one who ends.

Two completely different people indeed.

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Recently read

Changing words to change the debate: Steve Jobs changed “open v/s closed” to “fragmented v/s integrated” in the Android v/s iPhone debateothon.

Developers don’t rush to new platforms: Marco Arment of InstaPaper and Tumblr fame lists three reasons why they develop for iPhone. (via Daring Fireball)

Damn you, autocorrect: when the iPhone keyboard is smarter than you’re comfortable with (via Daring Fireball)

Fastcompany profiles 37signals’ new office

The true size of Africa (infographic, JPG): larger than the USA, China, India, Japan and all of Europe – combined. (via Rajesh Jain)

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Perpetual Panic Conflictinator

Jon Stewart at his Rally for Sanity:

“The country’s 24-hour political pundit perpetual panic conflictinator did not cause our problems but its existence makes solving them that much harder.”

The black-or-whiteness, open-and-shutness, did-he-or-didnt-he-ness, correlation-and-causation-be-damnedness of too many of our English, Hindi, regional, print and TV outlets will take us there someday. In watching America, we watch ourselves 20 years from now, but, apparently, don’t see.

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About downtime and disconnecting

Two articles read within 24 hours:

One: ‘Whatever happened to downtime?’

“Why do we give up our sacred space so easily? Because space is scary. During these temporary voids of distraction, our minds return to the uncertainty and fears that plague all of us… It is now possible to always feel loved and cared for, thanks to the efficiency of our “comment walls” on Facebook and seamless connection with everyone we’ve ever know”

Two: ‘My Own Private (Rental) Island, in the Bahamas’

“These are the things I carried: an iPad jammed with various kinds of media, enough batteries to stock a Wal-Mart, a BlackBerry, a bunch of DVDs, 7,000 songs on my iPod, and a bottle of extra virgin olive oil.

These are the things I needed: My wife.

Had I been on Little Deadman’s Cay by myself, I would have gone mad fairly quickly and begun speaking to coconuts or at least banging them together to hear some noise beyond my own breathing. On this trip, Jill was the necessary luxury.”

A significant number among us now feel more comfortable speaking – behind a screen -with our larger circle of acquaintances than with our inner circle of friends. This is changing that thin slice of society we’re part of, changing in real, observable ways. How much we won’t know, except in hindsight.