Barnes&Noble: nook & Android

nookBarnes & Noble announced, this past week, their new e-book reader to compete with the Amazon Kindle. A couple under-reported key things about the nook.

1. The nook runs on Google’s new Android operating system. This doesn’t sound like a big deal at first but when you realize this is the first non-cellular consumer device to officially run the android operating system it IS a big deal. Just another example of Google taking over the world. Android is open and the idea that at some point, this device could be extended by open source developers is very cool.

2. Sharing! When I asked the wife if she wanted a kindle the first thing she said was “I can’t share books with my friends, forget it.” Sharing is the killer feature of the nook. I remember when I first got a ReplayTV and sites were spinning up around sharing shows via the features built into that device, it was huge. We will see the same with the nook and the LendME feature.

Bottom line competition is good for any business and this new war between Amazon and B&N will only help drive both products to a better price point and push features faster and further.

Don’t reinvent the wheel twice

Hadoop
What did the team at Yahoo do when they realized they had an old proprietary back-end application running their core search business? They moved to an open source map reduce implementation from the Apache Software Foundation named Hadoop. This is a huge move and shows that sometimes even a core piece of your business is better accomplished with software that someone else has built. In Yahoo’s case they were able to accomplish the same tasks 34% faster on their new 10,000 core Linux cluster using Hadoop.