Google Docs was born as Writely and then bought by Google.
Google Voice was born as Grandcentral and then bought by Google.
Android was born as Android and then bought by Google in 2005 (and never mind that Intel and Nokia were experimenting with Linux-based phones too).
Will it eventually be possible to have a social-networking standard so that anyone can run their own server, just as with email? In that case it wouldn't matter if one friend uses facebook, another myspace, a third linkedin; they would all adhere to the same standard and so which particular social-networking service you use would become irrelevant.
PS: I apologize for being lazy but I haven't thought about this at all, so there could easily be some glaring reason why it can't possibly work.
Keep in mind that some schools won't allow fancy calculators in some of their math classes. I'm a grad student at Ohio State, and our standard calculus sequence bans calculators with advanced algebraic capabilities.
If you want to see a sample calculator policy you can find one here.
(Yes, if you have 10,000 students passing through the math department every year, you need a department-wide "calculator policy":-).)
The introductory comment says it's about "DNA collection from criminals". The whole point is that half of these people are *not* "criminals"!
You're just reinforcing his point.
Google Docs was born as Writely and then bought by Google.
Google Voice was born as Grandcentral and then bought by Google.
Android was born as Android and then bought by Google in 2005 (and never mind that Intel and Nokia were experimenting with Linux-based phones too).
Will it eventually be possible to have a social-networking standard so that anyone can run their own server, just as with email? In that case it wouldn't matter if one friend uses facebook, another myspace, a third linkedin; they would all adhere to the same standard and so which particular social-networking service you use would become irrelevant.
PS: I apologize for being lazy but I haven't thought about this at all, so there could easily be some glaring reason why it can't possibly work.
If you want to see a sample calculator policy you can find one here.
(Yes, if you have 10,000 students passing through the math department every year, you need a department-wide "calculator policy" :-).)