Exponent, a production of Stratechery.com, is hosted by Ben Thompson and James Allworth.
In this program we seek to explore the massive effect technology is having not just on technology companies, but also on society as a whole. Ben Thompson is the author of Stratechery, a blog about the business and strategy of technology. James Allworth is the co-author with Clay Christensen of ”How Will You Measure Your Life” and a writer for the Harvard Business Review.
Visit the website at https://exponent.fm for show notes and to subscribe. To see old Stratechery.FM episodes, please visit http://stratechery.fm
The podcast Exponent is created by Ben Thompson / James Allworth. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Ben and James reunite to discuss the potential impact of AI on white collar work.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook and Microsoft’s metaverse announcements, and how the future might play out.
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Are we in the middle of the IT revolution, or on the verge of something new?
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Ben and James discuss the history of podcasts and why Spotify’s recent announcements are so compelling for creators.
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Ben and James discuss Substack and the rise of the sovereign creator.
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Ben and James discuss Australia’s Media Bargaining Code and its fall-out.
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Ben and James discuss whether Facebook and Twitter should de-platform President Trump.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s new chip announcement and what it means for both Apple and Intel.
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Ben and James discuss the state of bundles in 2020, including Netflix, Amazon, Disney, Microsoft, and Apple.
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Ben and James discuss the antitrust subcommittee hearing, the problems of mixing antitrust and Aggregators, and how to think about regulation and democracy.
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Ben and James discuss the Indian internet, TikTok, and whether or not the U.S. should ban it.
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Ben and James discuss the current protests and Facebook’s decision to not take down Trump tweets.
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Ben and James discuss Dithering, how Spotify is like Facebook, and a bit about working from home.
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Ben and James discuss masks and Twitter’s decision to delete tweets about COVID-19.
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Ben and James contrast U.S. and China’s response to the coronavirus, and the choices facing society about how to handle information.
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Ben and James discuss the FTC’s decision to block the acquisition of Harry’s Razors, the DTC market, and the difference between being a monopoly and being too big.
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Ben and James discuss Ben’s new Daily Update Podcast, and why Exponent is not on Spotify. Then, should regulators roll back acquisitions or prioritize the avoidance of unintended consequences?
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Ben and James eulogize Professor Clayton M. Christensen
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Ben and James discuss whether mobile and hyper-scale clouds are the natural endpoint for this stage of technology, or if new companies will ride new paradigm shifts to replace Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Apple.
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Ben and James discuss the downsides of monopoly, and Apple. Then, why there is no absolute answer when it comes to integration or modularization, and why different approaches require different types of organizations and different types of leaders.
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Ben and James discuss the origins of the First Amendment, what a culture of free expression means, and Facebook’s ad policy.
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Ben and James discuss how the Internet’s impact will be like the printing press’s, and what that means for how we should think about Facebook.
Note: We apologize for the slight audio discrepancy between Ben and James
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Ben and James discuss the NBA and Apple in China and the long-term implications of doing business with authoritarian governments.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook from multiple angles, including child sexual abuse material, encryption, Oculus, and a leaked all-hands meeting.
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Ben and James discuss Cloudflare and what it is like going through an IPO, as well as what has gone wrong with WeWork.
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Ben and James discuss WWDC keynote and why it was so important for Apple to move past the iPhone.
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Ben and James discuss the U.S.-China trade war and the fundamental issues facing both countries generally and tech specifically.
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Ben and James discuss the Zoom and Slack IPOs in the context of Microsoft’s current success and long-term challenges.
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Ben and James discuss Disney’s recent announcements on streaming and what it says about not just TV but strategy broadly in the Internet era.
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Ben and James discuss why Internet regulation is coming, why it is probably necessary, and how it should be targeted.
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Ben and James discuss the question of YouTube, why it’s similar and different from Facebook, and why engagement is both alluring and a potential problem.
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Ben and James discuss Senator Warren’s proposal to break up Big Tech, including why its history is wrong, why details matter, and what needs to be done instead. Plus, Spotify’s antitrust complaint against Apple.
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Ben and James discuss Mark Zuckerberg’s latest missive, whether Facebook is actually changing anything, and wonder if the company will ever tell the unvarnished truth.
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Ben and James discuss Amazon, Walmart, and groceries, Google Cloud versus AWS, and why understanding value chains helps evaluate business opportunities.
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Ben and James discuss Apple News as it is today, where Apple wants to take it in the future, and why publishers should push back.
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Ben and James discuss Spotify’s move into podcasts and integration and modularity in value chains.
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Ben and James discuss Apple vs Facebook (and Google!).
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Ben and James discuss Netflix, why it is an Aggregator, and why Disney isn’t actually a competitor
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Ben and James discuss open source in a cloud world, how enterprise value chains have changed, and AWS versus Microsoft.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s revenue warning and the company’s shift to services.
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James and Ben talk about the connection between Jobs to be Done and Aggregation Theory, why the consumer and enterprise markets are so different, and discomfort with big companies like Google.
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Exponent is back, kind of.
Ben and James talk about Apple’s case in front of the Supreme Court, and debate whether the company is acting anti-competitively with its App Store policies.
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Exponent is taking a break, for now anyways. We couldn’t be more grateful for everyone that has given us so much of their time.
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Ben and James discuss Microsoft’s acquisition of GitHub.
Note: This is the last episode of the season; Exponent will return in the fall
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Ben and James continue their discussion on why aggregators and platforms are different and why it matters for big companies, competitors, and regulators.
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Ben and James continue to discuss the differences between platforms and aggregators, including Facebook, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Netflix, Amazon, and Uber.
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Ben and James discuss the differences between Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Apple specifically, and the differences between aggregators and platforms generally.
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Ben and James discuss how Apple and Amazon’s focus on the customer experience protects them from low-end disruption.
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Ben and James discuss Zillow’s shift in business model and the further refinement of Aggregation Theory through the incorporation of the ideas of disruption.
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Ben and James discuss Mark Zuckerberg’s appearances before Congress, and try to sort out exactly which Facebook issues matter, and which don’t.
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Ben and James discuss Microsoft’s reorganization, how Satya Nadella has managed the decline of Windows, and how it applies to Apple and services.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook’s current crisis, and why almost everyone misunderstands what the company did wrong: the problem isn’t advertising, it was Facebook’s desire to be a platform.
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Ben and James discuss President Trump’s intervention in Broadcom’s takeover of Qualcomm, the problem with patents, and whether or not markets inherently overvalue short-term thinking.
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Ben and James discuss Spotify’s F-1, why Spotify isn’t Netflix, and why record companies are doing well even though they are acting sub-optimally.
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Ben and James discuss Dropbox’s S-1 and why the company is a success but still a disappointment. Plus, why companies should go public sooner.
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Ben and James discuss Google’s recent moves around blocking ads and promoting AMP and whether they raise antitrust questions. Plus, why Microsoft couldn’t have stopped Google, and why cryptocurrencies are aggregator kryptonite.
NOTE: The previous version of this episode was not edited in the middle. There is no new content in this episode, but it should be easier to listen to.
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The original version of this podcast included an editing error. The new version is here.
Ben and James answer reader questions. Topics include business school, career advice, the nature of strategy, creating the next Silicon Valley, and how governments should deal with the disruptions caused by the Internet.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s strategy of monetizing its customer base, how that explains HomePod, and whether or not it is a problem.
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Ben and James discuss Amazon’s health care announcement and why the industry is so challenging.
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Ben and James discuss Amazon Go and what it says about the economics of tech and how Amazon is building multiple monopolies.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook’s algorithm change, the difference between Facebook and Snapchat, and what the company’s motivations might be.
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Ben and James discuss the Meltdown and Spectre bugs and what they say about processors, technology, and even society.
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Ben and James discuss Disney’s recent history, its acquisition of Fox, Netflix’s power, and why more and more policy decisions are about choosing the worst of two options.
Note: This episode was recorded on Monday, December 18, 2017.
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Ben and James discuss why effective content moderation is so hard, how it can be done, and why it sometimes shouldn’t be. Plus, how tech optimists and tech critics make the exact same mistake.
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Ben and James discuss the net neutrality debate and why both sides of the issue at hand involve making difficult tradeoffs; the bigger problem is broken governance. Please listen to the end!
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Ben and James discuss IPOs, including those of Stitch Fix, SendGrid, and Blue Apron, and the importance of understanding what type of company you are.
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Ben and James break down the differences between new market and low end disruption and how they apply — or don’t — to Apple and the iPhone.
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Ben and James walk through the history of Stratechery to explain why Facebook is inescapable for a podcast about tech and society.
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Ben and James discuss why acquisitions should be the focus of tech regulators in the context of Facebook buying tbh today, and Instagram and WhatsApp previously.
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Ben and James discuss the structure that leads to gatekeepers and abusers like Harvey Weinstein, and why it is so dangerous to accept as fact that the world was better before the Internet.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook and where both its critics and executives go wrong. It’s time for everyone to consider the worst-case scenarios.
NOTE: We unfortunately had significant audio issues this week on both sides (which, by the way, had nothing to do with the cut cable referenced in the podcast ). Our apologies.
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Ben and James discuss the development of theory, why blogs have disrupted books, and why too many in tech are too pessimistic about humanity.
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Ben and James discuss the different levels of aggregation, Facebook and Russian ads, and why it’s worth defending the future.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s the cellular Apple Watch, the iPhone X and 8 markets, and whether the opening was over-the-top.
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Ben and James discuss the why it is Ben can’t stop talking about Aggregation Theory, and the future of regulation.
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Ben and James discuss the Theory of the Conservation of Attractive Profits, Intel, Netflix, and how it all applies to Disney.
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Ben and James discuss Benchmark’s lawsuit against Uber and Cloudfare’s ban of Daily Stormer.
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Ben and James discuss the European Commission’s antitrust ruling against Google and the challenges of antitrust in a world governed by Aggregation Theory.
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Ben and James discuss Amazon’s acquisition of Whole Foods, when acquisitions make sense, and the potential future of antitrust law.
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Ben and James discuss the business of podcasting specifically and advertising generally, and why Apple’s recent changes will have less of an effect than people think.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s WWDC keynote, playing to your strengths, and privacy that matters.
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Ben and James discuss myths, culture, and blockchains — and yes, bubbles.
NOTE: The original version had a corrupted file. Our apologies.
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Ben and James discuss Google I/O, the importance of business relative to technology, and why Uber is in trouble.
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Ben and James discuss why figuring out a new model means abandoning the old, this time in the context of newspapers and news.
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Ben and James discuss how leverage shifts in a value chain, why WeChat is so powerful in China, and why that is a problem for Apple.
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Ben and James discuss whether or not monopolies are good, the differences between education and healthcare, and how to build an economy of the future.
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Ben and James discuss what it means if Facebook is a monopoly, what is lost if it is, and why there isn’t anything that can be done about it — for now.
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James and Ben discuss moral hazard and what seems to be going wrong with the U.S. economy, the different kinds of regulation, and how the App Store explains government policy.
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Ben and James discuss Apple’s Mac Pro screw-up and what it might say about the company and its culture.
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Ben and James discuss the meaning of artificial intelligence, whether machine learning qualifies, and a platform for dealing with the impact.
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Ben and James discuss the concept of The Smiling Curve and how it applies to various industries. Then, where value might be found in self-driving cars, and why both Uber and Google are getting it wrong.
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Ben and James discuss Uber’s recent scandals, and debate whether the company’s business actions can be separated from its culture.
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Ben and James discuss Mark Zuckerberg’s manifesto, the problem with regulation, and why Facebook needs exactly that.
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Ben and James compare Snap and Facebook to Apple and Microsoft, and worry that Snap’s business is misaligned.
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Ben and James discuss what kind of politicians and products cut through in the Internet age, and why they are profoundly different than what worked before.
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Ben and James discuss the history of messaging apps, the rise of Snapchat, and why Instagram Stories was such a brilliant move.
NOTE: The original audio file had a problem at the 36:50 mark; if you encounter this, please delete the file from your podcast app and re-download.
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Ben and James discuss why different types of media have responded to the Internet with varying degrees of success.
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Ben and James celebrate two milestones: 10 years for the iPhone, and 100 episodes for Exponent. This is a good one: it in many respects summarizes the entire run of both Exponent and Stratechery.
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Ben and James discuss Amazon Alexa and the history of operating systems
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Ben and James discuss real estate and Opendoor, and the types of startups that will succeed in the future.
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Ben and James discuss cloud computing and why Google fell behind AWS, and how the company is taking a very wise strategy in catching up.
Note: Due to a recording error Ben’s track quality is poor. Our apologies.
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Ben and James discuss the fake news epidemic on Facebook, from its structural causes to its effects. Then, Facebook committed sins of omission; the tech industry ought not do the same.
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Ben and James discuss the Trump election, filter bubbles, and the responsibility of the tech industry.
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Ben and James discuss when acquisitions make sense, why Apple shouldn’t buy Tesla, and debate whether they should or should not buy Netflix.
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Ben and James discuss the difference between the IT era and the Internet Revolution, first in the context of newspapers and then in the context of society broadly.
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Ben and James discuss what Consumerization of IT means in the context of Workplace by Facebook, Skype Teams, and Slack.
Note: This podcast originally had a dead spot at the 8:13 mark. It has been fixed. To update please delete the podcast and re-download.
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Ben and James discuss the history of Android and why Google’s new phone signifies such a profound shift for the company.
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Ben and James follow-up on Facebook versus the media, and then dive into Spectacles and what makes for a compelling product.
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Ben and James discuss Oracle’s prospects in the crowd and how the Internet has changed the enterprise.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook’s latest run-in with the media: both are wrong but for different reasons.
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Ben and James discuss James’ adventurous summer and the recent Apple event and what it says about the future of Apple.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook Live and Pokémon Go. Please note that this episode was podcast five days ago, on Saturday, July 16.
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Ben and James discuss why the sociopolitical factors underlying the Brexit vote and their relationship to technology and a system of the future.
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Ben and James discuss how the TV industry and the companies that advertise on TV are interconnected, and how they will rise and fall together.
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Ben and James discuss Microsoft’s acquisition of LinkedIn and Apple’s WWDC announcements, and figure out why they feel so differently about the two of them.
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Ben and James discuss the present and future of podcasts, and how media companies need to take a holistic approach to their businesses.
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Ben and James explain why Alexa is an even bigger deal than it seems, and why both Apple and Google should fear Amazon. Plus, why Microsoft’s challenges are only beginning.
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Ben and James discuss briefly revisit last week’s discussion on Facebook, then discuss the Peter Thiel versus Gawker affair, and the implications for tech broadly. Then, how culture helps and hurts at Facebook, Apple, Google, and Microsoft.
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Ben and James discuss the allegations that Facebook is censoring conservative news, and renew their ongoing debate about Facebook’s power. Then, why Google’s current situation is similar to Microsoft, even though the long-term looks good.
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Ben and James discuss how the world will change, how change happens in companies and society, and debate whether or not we have crossed the rubicon to a new world.
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The web app that Ben mentioned for writing is Draft.
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Ben and James follow-up on last week’s Apple services discussion and take a look at Apple’s earnings. Then a discussion of the European Commissions investigation of Google for antitrust, and a debate about how antitrust regulation needs to change, if at all.
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Ben and James discuss the different types of organizational structures, the benefits Apple gains from having a unitary form, and whether or not the company should make changes to more effectively compete in services.
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Ben and James discuss Facebook F8, how the company is trying to own both public and private social, and why Messenger is a good idea, but bots may not be.
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Ben and James discuss the Tesla phenomena, how they built such a powerful brand, and debate whether that will be enough to lead the company to success.
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Ben and James discuss how Snapchat has built it’s product so effectively, the narcissist in all of us, and the structure of social around the world.
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Ben and James continue last week’s discussion about Apple’s struggles with the cloud, then discuss why the iPhone SE is such a brilliant move — and how those two things are related. Plus, an after-show about Microsoft and Intel and what makes for an effective leader.
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Ben and James discuss the connection between Amazon’s business model and organizational structure, why Dropbox shouldn’t have left AWS, and why Apple should buy Dropbox. Plus, does WeWork’s valuation make sense, and why such companies are exciting.
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James’ sister’s startup (referenced at 1:06) is Adorne Monde.
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Ben and James discuss the Amazon Echo, Apple’s cloudy future, Google’s Missed Opportunity, and why Amazon has so much growth potential ahead of it.
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Ben and James discuss how the aggregation of media led to a weakening of political parties, opening the door to unexpected candidates. Plus, why Facebook’s focus on engagement might be dangerous, and why diversity is important from day one.
This episode is sponsored by Wunder Capital. Make a good investment and do good at the same time through Wunder Capital’s solar investment opportunities. Create an account for free at WunderCapital.com/exponent.
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Wrapped Around an Axel
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Ben and James discuss Apple versus the FBI.
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Ben and James discuss the mistakes made by Zenefits, when to challenge regulation, and the problem with short-term thinking.
This podcast was recorded before the Apple/FBI news broke; we currently plan to cover that next week.
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Ben and James discuss winner-take-all dynamics and its implications for advertising, bubble talk, and venture capital. Plus, what Facebook and Marc Andreessen got wrong about Free Basics and India.
This episode is sponsored by Wunder Capital. Make a good investment and do good at the same time through Wunder Capital’s solar investment opportunities. Create an account for free at WunderCapital.com/exponent.
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Ben and James discuss Apple earnings, Twitter’s troubles, and whether or not the Internet is over-rated.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/exponent.
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Ben and James discuss the Donald Trump and inequality, then FANG, Aggregation Theory, and Disruption.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/exponent.
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Ben and James discuss the future of cars and transportation.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss Paul Graham’s essay on inequality and the politics of technology.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss OpenAI’s new mission and what it says about capitalism. Or is it just a strategy credit that we are reading too much into?
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss when disruption theory is useful — and when it isn’t.
Note: We apologize for some mic fuzz issues on this podcast.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss PC Gaming and the fascinating way in which it monetizes, leading to a wide-ranging discussion about how business has changed because of the Internet.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James touch on Twitter’s new “Like” button before diving into what might be a new model for publishing. Then, a discussion of bundle economics and Stratechery’s future. Buckle up!
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss the importance of the user experience in not only avoiding disruption but also in building dominant companies. It’s a key component of Aggregation Theory
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James try to make sense of YouTube Red. Plus, why is Amazon responding to The New York Times now?
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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Ben and James discuss how cloud services have set the stage for fundamental changes in venture capital, just as they have in the enterprise.
This episode is sponsored by Wealthfront. See recommended portfolios and get up to $15,000 managed for free by visiting Wealthfront.com/Exponent.
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NOTE: James’ mic developed a bad connection half-way through the podcast. We apologize for the audio fuzz.
Ben and James make clear that they know pollution causes death, then discuss the future of brand advertising. Then, a rather strident debate as to whether radical ideas will have a home in the future.
This episode is sponsored by Zendesk. Make your customer service seem like magic by building it directly into your apps, websites and products with Zendesk Embeddables.
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We start with Volkswagen, then mortgages, then Ben’s time in Taiwan, and finally end with a critique of the Apple Watch. It all makes sense in the end. Hopefully.
This episode is sponsored by Zendesk. Make your customer service seem like magic by building it directly into your apps, websites and products with Zendesk Embeddables.
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Ben and James briefly discuss ad-blockers, then admit it’s an academic debate and move on to the business of advertising and the far more profound shifts that are caused on the Internet and by new places on the Internet.
Note: This podcast references Marco Arment’s Peace application, but was recorded before Marco pulled the app. Please see the relevant links below.
This episode is sponsored by Zendesk. Make your customer service seem like magic by building it directly into your apps, websites and products with Zendesk Embeddables.
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Ben and James discuss James’ sophomore experience at Burning Man, and then turn to the iPad Pro and its paucity of quality of applications. Just how much is Apple responsible?
This episode is sponsored by Zendesk. Make your customer service seem like magic by building it directly into your apps, websites and products with Zendesk Embeddables.
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Ben and James discuss the New York Times exposé on Amazon’s work practices at its Seattle headquarters. What exactly was the story about, what questions are raised by it, and more importantly, what are the right answers for not just Amazon but society as a whole?
This episode is sponsored by Zendesk. Make your customer service seem like magic by building it directly into your apps, websites and products with Zendesk Embeddables.
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Ben and James discuss the decision by the California Labor Commission that at least one Uber driver is an employee: will this affect the company’s valuation? More broadly, is this a good or a bad thing for society, and why is it that people blame Uber for societal shortcomings? Then, more on the alleged bubble, unicorn valuation, and how the next couple of years might play out.
In addition, Exponent will be on hiatus for the next two months. We may have an episode or two (and will likely repost some “greatest hits”), and will be back to a weekly schedule in the fall.
Note: Due to a failing mic, we had to re-record one side of the conversation for the last half of the episode. We apologize for any choppiness or mismatched tone
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In this week’s episode, Ben and James discuss Dick Costolo stepping down as CEO of Twitter, Apple’s seeming war on Google, and the concerning launch of Apple Music.
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In this week’s episode, Ben and James briefly discuss Jony Ive’s promotion, the future of Apple, Google I/O, and Tim Cook’s speech on privacy.
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In this week’s episode, Ben and James discuss ad-blockers, both personal ones and the rumored carrier-implemented one, as well as Internet.org and the moral quandary that is the Internet.
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In this week’s episode, Ben finally has an Apple Watch: James has lots of questions about it. (And yes, we should have talked about Google Now.)
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss why Twitter needs new leadership, its massive potential, and why Google probably should acquire it
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss the prospects for Google’s Project Fi as well as Facebook’s decision to change their News Feed algorithm
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In this week’s episode Ben and James thank John Siracusa then dive into the EU’s antitrust investigation of Google and discuss whether or not antitrust is more or less important in technology.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss whether or not there is a bubble, as well as a bit on the Apple Watch. Please note this was recorded before the Apple Watch reviews were released.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss BuzzFeed in the context of the Brother Orange story, then talk about Amazon’s Dash Button and Home Services initiative, along with a dive into the technical details of Amazon’s balance sheet (sorry, it’s a bit dry) and why Ben is nervous.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James follow up on last week’s episode, introduce the Toilet Bowl philosophy of career development, and then dive into the future of publishers in the world of Facebook.
Due to some technical issues there is a rather abrupt stop at the end – sorry about that!
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss why California is unique, diversity and inequality, James’ work on “How Will You Measure Your Life”, making decisions, and whether or not business school was worth it for us.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss the recent Apple Event, including the MacBook and Apple Watch
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss tradeoffs in the context of net neutrality, AT&T’s new gigabit service, and Lenovo’s Superfish debacle
Note: when talking about the history of cable, Ben kept saying “companies” instead of “communities.” Sorry for the confusion!
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We apologize for the late delivery of this podcast!
In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss why Apple is so fascinating, why the Mac lost to Windows, debate whether or not Google should have open-sourced Android, and discussed the implications of Apple’s new market – your entire life
Also, please note that there will no episode later this week due to Chinese New Year.
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This is the story of Stratechery, presented with much sheepishness on Ben’s part. How Ben thought about the market, his business model, and more. We apologize that this is a little long and perhaps a bit choppy. It’s hard to talk about us!
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We discuss Apple’s recent results, why analysts get Apple wrong, the fraught nature of fans, epistemic closure, and whether the iPhone can continue to grow.
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Note: I originally uploaded the wrong file. The correct file is 1:07 long, not 1:17. I am reposting this as many podcast clients download the file immediately.
We briefly follow-up on last week’s copyright discussion, discuss Ben’s article on what the technology adoption curve gets wrong about Apple and Xiaomi, and then react to Microsoft’s Windows 10 (and Project HoloLens) presentation
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James thinks the idea of copyright is outdated and should be abolished. Ben is, well, see the title.
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Ben and James discuss Xiaomi’s ambition to own the home, why we’re frustrated with patents, why the West is unfair to the developing world, and what makes China unique.
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Ben and James discuss the problems with drones, how they could be used for terrorism, and how you balance upside and downside.
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Ben and James discuss the recent App Store controversy and how a person – or company’s – greatest strength is also their greatest weakness. Plus a special 2nd recording about the Harvard business school professor and the Chinese restaurant.
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Ben and James follow up on last week’s Uber discussion, talk about the problem with regulation, and worry about stagnation and the different cultures of Europe, America, and Asia.
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Ben and James briefly discuss Ben’s belief in the Internet opportunity for content creators, and then dive in to the recent Uber controversy.
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Ben and James discuss Twitter and its strategic options, as well as YouTube’s new music service, Taylor Swift and Spotify, plus the special return of the garbage truck song.
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The idea for Exponent was hatched when Ben and James were arguing about Ben’s article What Clayton Christensen Got Wrong a year ago. In this episode, we finally reach a resolution to the question about how Apple escapes disruption. Plus, whether or not Xiaomi is a threat to Apple, personal development philosophies, and more (sorry, we went a bit long…)
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss Apple Pay and its impact on retailers and banks.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss Ben’s article “Peak Google” and the future of advertising.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss why Ben thinks the Internet is totally overreacting to HBO’s announcement that they will sell subscriptions directly to customers, and then delve into what might be the underlying motivations behind Gamergate.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James discuss the problems with Ello’s business model, James’ discomfort with Facebook, and why Social Networks always have ads. We also talk about incentives and something surprising Ben learned from the notorious Episode 18.
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In this week’s episode Ben and James reflect about last week’s episode and the personal feedback that resulted, then move on to discuss why Minecraft is a big deal as well as a bit about Apple’s new focus on privacy.
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In this week’s episode Ben explains why he has changed his mind about Apple Watch. James is not convinced. We go on for a while.
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In this week’s episode we follow-up on Episode 15’s console discussion, and then dive into the Apple Watch introduction. We cover why we were disappointed in the presentation, and discuss the luxury market in Asia and why the Edition will cost thousands of dollars. And then we go back for seconds. And thirds.
(Note: This is an updated version that removes a gap present in the previous version)
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In this week’s episode we follow-up on Episode 15’s console discussion, and then dive into the Apple Watch introduction. We cover why we were disappointed in the presentation, and discuss the luxury market in Asia and why the Edition will cost thousands of dollars. And then we go back for seconds. And thirds.
(Note: There is a gap at around the 12:30 mark due to an editing error. We apologize)
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In this week’s episode we discuss James’ first ever trip to Burning Man, ugliness in modern culture and on the Internet, the new divide in politics, and ultimately why we have hope for the future.
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In this week’s episode we discuss whether or not consoles will be disrupted. This episode was recorded a week ago (immediately after last week’s episode), before Ben wrote his pieces Games and Good Enough and Games and New Market Disruption.
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In this week’s episode we spend a good bit of time revisiting the native ads discussion, then dive into the different ways that Twitter and Facebook have handled the news this week. From there we discuss Twitter’s timeline changes, the realities of venture capital, and whether or not our entire economic system will survive the automation revolution. Yes, it gets deep quickly!
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In this week’s episode we discuss feedback about Ben’s Android criticism, then dive into Andreessen Horowitz’s $50 million investment into BuzzFeed. Is there a real business here? We also discuss native advertising: Ben is quite a bit more optimistic than James.
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In this week’s episode we discuss how the Internet is enabling not only big winners, but also small, focused niche players, and why that’s exciting. We also discuss the impact this transition will have on society, follow up on last week’s integrated/modular discussion, and in a special “After Dark” segment briefly discuss Ben’s recent experience with Android and theorize that the Android/iOS are at equilibrium.
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In this episode we discuss this tweet of Ben’s:
Apple has a monopoly on the iOS market. And monopolies are profitable.
— Ben Thompson (@monkbent) July 25, 2014
We also discuss the news that OKCupid and Facebook are running tests on their users.
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In this episode we discuss feedback about Uber and pricing, then discuss Ben’s recent articles on Microsoft and Apple/IBM.
We had some technical difficulties while recording this show, so we apologize in advance if there are any issues.
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In this episode we first defend surge pricing before continuing our debate from last week: is society better off when corporations try to innovate, or would we be better off if we left the innovation to startups? Your answer to this question may change your opinion of Silicon Valley.
Note: In the podcast Ben talks about owning a lot of Microsoft stock; to be clear that was while he was an employee. As a matter of policy he does not hold any individual stocks currently.
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In this episode we take on the validity of Disruption Theory in three parts:
The quote referenced at the ending from Jill Lepore’s article on political polarization is as follows:
“But intellectuals, as Bruno Latour once pointed out, are nearly always one critique too late: “entire Ph.D. programs are still running to make sure that good American kids are learning the hard way that facts are made up, that there is no such thing as natural, unmediated, unbiased access to truth, that we are always prisoners of language, that we always speak from a particular standpoint, and so on, while dangerous extremists are using the very same argument of social construction to destroy hard-won evidence that could save our lives.”
Also! We would love it if you would rate and review this podcast on iTunes. The link is here Thank you.
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There’s a bit of a consensus building post WWDC: Apple has grown up, and it’s great.
But is it great? Is it possible that something essential has been lost? After all, a lot of the praise being heaped on Apple and Tim Cook was once used for another company – Microsoft. In this episode we examine what it is that makes Apple unique, and why things might turn out different this time – and why they might not.
In addition, we discuss the end of privacy and what might be done about it.
Also! We would love it if you would rate and review this podcast on iTunes. The link is here Thanks!
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In this episode we discuss why James was less excited by WWDC than was Ben, why the Beats acquisition may actually be a textbook response to the Innovator’s Dilemma, whether Apple has every truly faced disruption, as well as James’ review of Michael Lewis’ Flash Boys
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This episode surprised us; through a discussion of who is at fault in the latest series of new vs old-world spats, we realized that not only has the Internet fundamentally changed winners-and-losers, but also the very nature of economic competition and the type of regulation that is required.
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Google v MetaFilter
Journalism v Facebook
Amazon v Publishers
Antitrust, Network Effects, and the Age of Abundance
Do Tech Companies Have a Responsibility to Society?
On how the Internet has fundamentally changed the world, and how government regulation is hopelessly behind
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Are the recent debates on net neutrality, the protests of Google buses, even SOPA a sign of things to come? Building on Ben’s article The Net Neutrality Wake-up Call Ben and James discuss the intersection of technology and politics.
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Note to listeners: the Stratechery.FM feed is now redirected to Exponent (although the archives remain on Stratechery.FM). If you have subscribed to both, just delete one or the other. Thanks! Also, James is not actually married. That was the joke…
This episode is all about the (alleged) Apple Beats acquisition. While it may make a certain amount of business sense, does it signify a small but significant change in Apple’s priorities, and is it a cause for concern? Topics covered include:
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This episode was actually recorded on February 18; however, due to circumstances, we had to hibernate Exponent and the episode was never actually edited and posted.
Now that the show is back – for good this time – we wanted to post the “missing episode” plenty of folks have asked us about. There are a couple of dated references, but the content is still very applicable.
In this episode we talk about privilege and whether Silicon Valley is solving the right problems. It’s certainly not a new question, but has it become more pressing in the last few months?
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Thanks for your patience!
In this, the first episode of the Exponent podcast, we talk about our background, Microsoft and disruption, and the meaning of culture. We also explore our goals for this podcast, and just a bit about Taiwanese garbage trucks.
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En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.