tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7165044694341896839.post5711740944840708454..comments2024-02-29T06:51:50.242+01:00Comments on Daniel Pargman's academic homepage: EIT ICT Labspargmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17208443783482286491noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7165044694341896839.post-5488469507622051232012-03-14T18:10:27.300+01:002012-03-14T18:10:27.300+01:00It wasn't the easiest comment to interpret, bu...It wasn't the easiest comment to interpret, but I did understand that you liked it and that's enough for me... :-)pargmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17208443783482286491noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7165044694341896839.post-81863141512145072912012-03-12T22:38:54.727+01:002012-03-12T22:38:54.727+01:00(Oj, vilken slarvig engelska det blev, hoppas det ...(Oj, vilken slarvig engelska det blev, hoppas det är läsbart)<br />just to this -> just to think'magnushttp://blay.senoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7165044694341896839.post-90973175104904168402012-03-12T22:35:58.129+01:002012-03-12T22:35:58.129+01:00I like this perspective. Especially how it require...I like this perspective. Especially how it requires not just to this of "less affluent computing" as extrapolating the present into the past. Its not the same but with less computing power, its computing for other life situations that for example might also require a different distribution of computing power (the relation between personal, p2p and cloud computing and storage).<br /><br />Regarding the industrial partners. I would think that since at the same time as they see the developing countries as emerging ICT markets with different conditions than the affluent west/north, they could be interested in something like this, given that they can be convinced that it is actually a plausible scenario.Magnushttp://blay.senoreply@blogger.com