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Doc Searls: The Periodic Table of possibilities for the Internet is endless mov

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Uploaded by on Apr 21, 2009

Iconic blogger Doc Searls says that the difference between the virtual world that is the Internet, and the physical world that we inherited, is that the periodic table we are going to create of elements that we build, solutions, or the future, or whatever else out of, is endless. For example, there are at least half a million, maybe over a million open source code bases right now. Most of them produced at no cost or very little cost or very few of them owned by companies. They have this characteristic which is unique to the online, the Internet universe.

In this video interview, Doc Searls talks about how the Internet frees customers & helps companies serve them with Ideas Project, a new website brought to you by Nokia. Ideas Project is an online space that provides a new way to interact with thought leaders and their big ideas about the future of connected communications. For more on this idea from Searls, visit http://www.ideasproject.com.

Doc Searls is well known as a visionary, a blogger, an open-source software advocate, and co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto, which in 1999 articulated the impact of the Internet in 95 theses. At the Berkman Center, Doc has pioneered the development of VRM (Vendor Relationship Management Systems) to liberate customers and improve markets by creating a productive balance of power in relationships between supply and demand. A featured speaker at countless events and trade shows, his writings have appeared in OMNI, Wired, PC Magazine, The Standard, and Release 1.0, among others, and he has consulted, on behalf of his company, The Searls Group, for clients such as Hitachi, Sun, Apple, Nortel, Borland, British Telecom, and Motorola. New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman calls Doc 'one of the most respected technology writers in America.' In 2005, he won the Google O'Reilly Open Source Award for Best Communicator and in 2007 he was named one of the 100 Most Influential People in IT by eWeek.

Ideas Project, a project of Nokia, brings together the most visionary and influential big thinkers to contemplate the big ideas that matter most to the future of communications. It is also a new kind of conversation platform aimed at uncovering the connections between these big thinkers and their disruptive ideas.

Explore the Ideas Project website at http://www.ideasproject.com, subscribe to its RSS feed, join its Twitter feed, and come back often to learn about great new big ideas as they break.

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