Of Malone's suggestions (to Washington), "making education more open" is the one thing that can most easily be done at the grass-roots level by parents.
Quoting Malone, "Why, when mom and dad are multitasking jobs at their laptops at Starbucks, are classrooms still bastions of rigid hours and even more rigid schedules?" Why, indeed. Furthering the missed opportunity, many of the younger children of our most educated and creative are being raised by nannies and missing out on the chance to learn by absorbing their parents' winning ways.
1: Learn how the introduction of particular online markets, starting with a new kind of market for the ad spaces on blogs, will provide people with new and improved ways to develop, showcase and profit from expertise. Details >>
2: Learn why owning popular markets of the aforesaid kinds is an ideal way to increase profits for an American media conglomerate that owns a broadcast TV network. >>
3: Recognize that the aforesaid conglomerates are actively seeking to acquire Internet startups. >>
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If the plan is so good, why am I open-sourcing it?
Some time ago, I set out to develop a sitcom that showcases the best ways to leverage the Internet to expand educational and economic opportunity.
The biz plan took shape because it turns out that producing this sitcom is inseparable from launching the online markets described in the plan, not least because:
1. starting a markets-maker costs money
2. raising money from investors is easier if the marketing plan is good
3. a sitcom is an ideal centerpiece of a marketing plan (e.g., a plan for operating marketing as a profit center)
Does anyone else find this article slightly contradictory? On one hand they are advocating abolishing government involvement in business then, two paragraphs later, they want government subsidies. Subsidies and regulations are one in the same, different modes to the same goal, government control.
I think the US should put satellites in orbit that provide free internet to people with the proper dish. We could distribute small digitally identifiable satellite dishes to less free countries. By default they would be disabled. But if a government ever decided to black out communications for a crackdown we could enable all of our dishes in that country. It wouldn't be perfect but if you made the dish small and cheap enough you could get a bunch of them to the right people via intel channels. The goal being more pictures like this:
http://regentsprep.org/Regents/global/themes/conflict/images...
Absolutely (it is the Wall Street Journal, after all). I do agree with some of what Malone says re: free speech on the Net.
However, this is big business' usual schtick....hypocritically arguing for corporate corporate welfare, while decrying assistance for individuals. He's confusing "the U.S." with "U.S. corporations". They are not the same thing.
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/2008/pulpit_20080321_0045...
Of Malone's suggestions (to Washington), "making education more open" is the one thing that can most easily be done at the grass-roots level by parents.
Quoting Malone, "Why, when mom and dad are multitasking jobs at their laptops at Starbucks, are classrooms still bastions of rigid hours and even more rigid schedules?" Why, indeed. Furthering the missed opportunity, many of the younger children of our most educated and creative are being raised by nannies and missing out on the chance to learn by absorbing their parents' winning ways.