Twitter Handles 1 Billion Tweets Per Week — Twitter — InformationWeek

In celebration of its 5th anniversary, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey on Monday announced the company now serves almost 1 billion tweets per week, part of his plan to share facts about the organization’s history and growth over the next couple of weeks.

“I’ve been digging through all my drawings, emails, & notes from around that time. I’ll share them over the next 2 weeks right here on #twttr,” Dorsey tweeted.

By comparison, it took three years, two months, and one day for Twitter to grow from its first to its 1 billionth tweet, according to the company.

via Twitter Handles 1 Billion Tweets Per Week — Twitter — InformationWeek.

Apple Staring Down One of Largest Patent Verdicts in History – Law Blog – WSJ

A jury verdict on Friday down in the Eastern District of Texas ruined the weekends for a whole bunch of Apple lawyers.

Let us explain: A federal jury in Tyler, Tex., on Friday awarded the plaintiff in the case, Mirror Worlds, $208.5 million in damages for each of three patents infringed by Apple. For now, the computer maker is staring down the possibility of turning over $625.5 million.

Over the weekend, Apple and its lawyers at Paul Hastings asked the judge to stay the verdict because of a series of “outstanding issues” with two of the three patents at issue. One of the patents relates to Cover Flow, the program that allows users of iTunes and other applications to scroll through their inventories. Click here for the NYT story; here for the Bloomberg story.

According to the NYT story, if Mirror Worlds, a company founded by Yale computer-science professor David Gelertner, is granted the full amount by the court, it would be one of the largest patent awards in United States history. According to Bloomberg, the $625.5 million award is the second-biggest jury verdict in 2010, and the fourth-biggest patent verdict in U.S. history.

via Apple Staring Down One of Largest Patent Verdicts in History – Law Blog – WSJ.

Microsoft, Oracle, Apple Show Competition Through Litigation Is Back – Mobile and Wireless from eWeek

One factor that’s held true through the history of the small computer business (meaning after the exclusively mainframe days) is that there is a basic division between companies that innovate and companies that exist mainly through litigation. Companies that occupy those places in the industry occasionally change sides, but those that start spending too much time on the litigation side invariably find themselves on no side at all, because they fade into nothingness. Usually what happens is that these companies put their energy into fighting other companies that innovate in ways that they don’t like, instead of putting their energy into building better products.

An early example of this is the sad story of a company that probably no one remembers except for those of us who were around this business in the early 1980s: Ashton-Tate,  which developed the first really useful database software for small computers, called dBASE. It sold very well, and provided customers with a level of functionality and ease of use that simply wasn’t available until then. About the time that Windows started to become popular, other companies started to create database software that also performed useful functions.

Ashton-Tate, which had then launched dBASE III, started suing everyone in sight over patent and copyright issues. Eventually, sapped of its resources, its programming language in the hands of others, the company quietly faded away. More recently, SCO has had the same thing happen to it as it’s tried to fight the innovation of Linux open source with nonstop litigation. SCO is almost gone, and one would hope for it to die a self-inflicted death in the near future.

But once again, the competition-through-litigation process rears its ugly head as companies try to kill innovation through the courts. Oracle (which interestingly was Ashton-Tate’s first real competitor) is now suing Google over its Android OS. Meanwhile Microsoft is suing Motorola, as is Apple. Both are suing over patents that they claim either Motorola or Google has violated. Whether these legal actions will be ultimately successful in some way remains to be seen.

But the lawsuits seem strangely timed. After all, nobody bothered Google or Motorola until the Droid series of smartphones suddenly took off, and since Android became the hottest smartphone OS in history. Now, suddenly, there are lawsuits galore.

via Microsoft, Oracle, Apple Show Competition Through Litigation Is Back – Mobile and Wireless from eWeek.

Twitter as History – Library of Congress Signs Up – NYTimes.com

The Twitter fail whale error message.
Image via Wikipedia

Not everyone would think that the actor Ashton Kutcher’s Twitter musings on his daily doings constitute part of “the universal body of human knowledge.”

But the Library of Congress, the 210-year-old guardian of knowledge and cultural history, thinks so.

The library will archive the collected works of Twitter, the blogging service, whose users currently send a daily flood of 55 million messages, all that contain 140 or fewer characters.

Library officials explained the agreement as another step in the library’s embrace of digital media. Twitter, the Silicon Valley start-up, declared it “very exciting that tweets are becoming part of history.”

Academic researchers seem pleased as well. For hundreds of years, they say, the historical record has tended to be somewhat elitist because of its selectivity. In books, magazines and newspapers, they say, it is the prominent and the infamous who are written about most frequently.

But although celebrities like Mr. Kutcher may have the most followers on Twitter, they make up a tiny portion of its millions of users.

“This is an entirely new addition to the historical record, the second-by-second history of ordinary people,” said Fred R. Shapiro, associate librarian and lecturer at the Yale Law School.

via Twitter as History – Library of Congress Signs Up – NYTimes.com.

The Million-Dollar Words of E-Discovery

Throughout history, humans have had miscommunications and misunderstandings. Some are comical like Abbott and Costello’s “Who’s On First?”; others can be tragic like “Romeo and Juliet.” Most of the time, a misunderstood word here or there doesn’t have far-reaching implications, but in the legal profession a misunderstood word or instruction can cost millions.

In today’s litigious environment, attorneys and IT professionals frequently find themselves in the midst of an e-discovery project that requires the team to quickly find information, which can reside on computers and smartphones, within applications such as e-mail, or on backup tapes stored in the closet of someone’s home. Put these challenges together and the stage is set for expensive, complex, and sometimes frustrating, e-discovery projects.

THE BILLION-DOLLAR MARKET

E-discovery is among the fastest growing segments in the IT industry. Spending for EDD software and services will reach an estimated $1 billion by year-end according to Gartner. A survey of medium-sized U.S. companies conducted by Kroll Ontrack found that, on average, companies will spend $1.29 million to manage electronic data in 2009 compared with $437,000 last year.

[continued] Law.com – The Million-Dollar Words of E-Discovery.