At WWW2008

As I mentioned in my previous post, I’m currently attending WWW2008. John Breslin has posted an excellent summary of the keynote speech by Google’s Kai-Fu Lee. Lee was at the centre of a law suit between Google and Microsoft over his move to Google.

But I digress.

Rather than comment on the presentations themselves, I have a few comments. First, I’m much more jet-lagged than usual. Normally after a long-haul flight, I snap into the right timezone and sleeping pattern pretty quickly. This time round, I’ve been up most of the night, and pretty wrecked during the day.

A second, slightly more interesting and relevant observation is the use of laptops at the conference. Just about everybody has one, and at any given time, the speaker is fortunate if 50% of his or her audience are actually looking at them. Surprisingly for such a large event (~1,500 attendees), the WiFi coverage has been pretty good. There are plenty of Macs in evidence, as you would expect. Mostly Pros, with a few MacBooks and Airs. The most popular Windows laptop range appears to be IBM/Lenovo ThinkPads, with Sony Vaios a close second.

There are very few Dells in evidence. If one subscribes to the view that what the alpha geeks are doing today, the rest of us (them?) will be doing tomorrow, this does not bode well for Dell.

A third and final comment is that the exhibition stands are pretty poor. The usual web-giants are represented, with Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and eBay (although no Amazon, strangely). But only Microsoft look like they put any effort into their stand. The rest of them appear to be just a bunch of PCs running the vendor’s software, which everybody could do from their own laptop anyway.

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