"The next 10 years will find us moving decidedly from an era of personal productivity to one of joint productivity and social software. That will involve a move from tightly coupled systems to more loosely coupled interconnections." (2003)
"If you look at the innards of a Yahoo or a Microsoft, an MSN, or a Google, you will see the people who have designed the systems and have taken a number of the things we’ve learned in the enterprise space. We have to throw them them away, because the way that we did it in the enterprise space was more tightly coupled. We need to be more loosely coupled." (2008)
"These changes will transform the personal computer into an interpersonal computer. This will be a rich, self-synchronized and readily interchangeable device focused specifically on people and what they do with one another online." (2003)In his post Ray Ozzie bringing ’syncromesh’ to the Web, Larry Dignam points out that this has always been a consistent theme of Ozzie's work going back to Lotus Notes.
"The Internet is this resource in the back end that you can design things to take advantage of. You can use it to synchronize stuff, and communicate stuff amongst these devices at the edge." (2008)
"What programming models can I give these folks that they can extend that functionality out to the edge? In the cases where they want mobility, where they want a rich dynamic experience as a piece of their solution." (2008)Ray didn't actually talk about the Edge in his April 2003 article, but by September 2003 he was writing an enthusiastic review (now offline) of a book called Power to the Edge. I'd really like to find out what he thinks about this now.
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