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the.world.is.flat-第19部分

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Technology companies; through much backroom wrangling and trial and error; started 
to forge more common Web…based standards; more integrated digital plumbing and 
protocols; so that anyone could fit his hose…his software applications…onto anyone 
else's hydrant。 
This was a quiet revolution。 Technically; what made it possible was the development 
of a new data description language; called XML; and its related transport protocol; 
called SOAP。 IBM; Microsoft; and a host of other companies contributed to the 
development of both XML and SOAP; and both were subsequently ratified and popularized 
as the Internet standards。 XML and SOAP created the technical foundation for software 
program…to…software program interaction; which was the foundation for Web…enabled 
work flow。 They enabled digitized data; words; music; and photos to be exchanged 
between diverse software programs so that they could be shaped; designed; manipulated; 
edited; reedited; stored; published; and transported…without any regard to where 
people are physically sitting or what computing devices they are connecting through。 


Once this technical foundation was in place; more and more people started writing 
work flow software programs for more and more different tasks。 Wild Brain wanted 
programs to make animated films with a production team spread out around the world。 
Boeing wanted them so that its airplane factories in America could constantly resupply 
different airline customers with parts; through its computer ordering systems; no 
matter what country those orders came from。 Doctors wanted them so that an X…ray taken 
in Bangor could be read in a hospital in Bangalore; without the doctor in Maine ever 
having to think about what computers that Indian hospital had。 And Mom and Dad wanted 
them because they wanted their e…banking software; e…brokerage software; office 
e…mail; and 
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spreadsheet software to all work off their home laptop and be able to interface with 
their office desktop。 And once everyone's applications started to connect to everyone 
else's applications…which took several years and lot of technology and brainpower 
to make happen…work could not only flow like never before; but it could be chopped 
up and disaggregated like never before and sent to the four corners of the world。 
This meant that work could flow anywhere。 Indeed; it was the ability to enable 
applications to speak to applications; not just people to speak to people; that would 
soon make outsourcing possible。 Thanks to different kinds of Web services…work flow; 
said Craig Mundie; Microsoft's chief technology officer; 〃the industry created a 
global platform for a global workforce of people and computers。〃 
The vast network of underground plumbing that made it possible for all this work to 
flow has become quite extensive。 It includes all the Internet protocols of the 
previous era; like TCP/IP and others; which made browsing and e…mail and Web sites 
possible。 It includes newer tools; like XML and SOAP; which enabled Web applications 
to communicate with each other more seamlessly; and it includes software agents known 
as middleware; which serves as an intermediary between wildly diverse applications。 
The nexus of these technologies has been a huge boon to innovation and a huge reducer 
of friction between companies and applications。 Instead of everyone trying to control 
the fire hydrant nozzle; they made all the nozzles and hoses the same; creating a 
much bigger market that stretched across every neighborhood of the world。 Then 
companies started to compete instead over the quality of the hose; the pump; and the 
fire truck。 That is; they competed over who could make the most useful and nifty 
applications。 Said Joel Cawley; the head of IBM's strategic planning unit; 〃Standards 
don't eliminate innovation; they just allow you to focus it。 They allow you to focus 
on where the real value lies; which is usually everything you can add above and around 
the standard。〃 
I found this out writing my last book。 Once Microsoft Word got established as the 
global standard; work could flow between people on different continents much more 
easily; because we were all writing off the same screen with the same basic toolbar。 
When I was working on my first book; From Beirut to Jerusalem; in 1988;1 spent part 
of my year's leave in 
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the Middle East and had to take notes with pen and paper; as it was the pre…laptop 


and pre…Microsoft Word era。 When I wrote my second book; The Lexus and the Olive Tree; 
in 1998; I had to do some of the last…minute editing from the computer behind the 
front desk at a Swiss hotel in Davos on a German version of Microsoft Word。 I could 
not understand a single word; a single command function; on the toolbar of the German 
version of Word。 But by 1998; I was so familiar with the Word for Windows writing 
program; and where the various on…screen icons were; that I was able to point and 
click my way through the editing on the German version and type my corrections with 
the English letters on the German keyboard。 Shared standards are a huge flattener; 
because they both force and empower more people to communicate and innovate over much 
wider platforms。 
Another of my favorite examples of this is PayPal; which enabled eBay's e…commerce 
bazaar to become what it is today。 PayPal is a money transfer system founded in 1998 
to facilitate C2C (customer…to…customer) transactions; like a buyer and seller 
brought together by eBay。 According to the Web site ecommerce…guide。com; using PayPal; 
anyone with an e…mail address can send money to anyone else with an e…mail address; 
whether the recipient has a PayPal account or not。 PayPal doesn't even care whether 
a commercial transaction is taking place。 If someone in the office is organizing a 
party for someone else and everyone needs to chip in; they can all do it using PayPal。 
In fact; the organizer can send everyone PayPal reminders by e…mail with clear 
instructions as to how to pay up。 PayPal can accept money from the purchaser in one 
of three ways; notes ecommerce…guide。com: charging the purchaser's credit card for 
any transactions (payments); debiting a checking account for any payments; or 
deducting payments from a PayPal account established with a personal check。 Payment 
recipients can use the money in their account for online purchases or payments; can 
receive the payment from PayPal by check; or can have PayPal directly deposit the 
money into a checking account。 Setting up a PayPal account is simple。 As a payer; 
all you have to do is to provide your name; your e…mail address; your credit card 
information; and your billing address for your credit card。 
All of these interoperable banking and e…commerce functions flat

tened the Internet marketplace so radically that even eBay was taken by surprise。 
Before PayPal; explained eBay CEO Meg Whitman; 〃If I did business on eBay in 1999; 
the only way I could pay you as a buyer was with a check or money order; a paper…based 
system。 There was no electronic way to send money; and you were too small a merchant 
to qualify for a credit card account。 What PayPal did was enable people; individuals; 
to accept credit cards。 I could pay you as an individual seller on eBay with a credit 
card。 This really leveled the playing field and made commerce more frictionless。〃 
In fact; it was so good that eBay bought PayPal; but not on the recommendation of 
its Wall Street investment bankers… on the recommendation of its users。 
〃We woke up one day;〃 said Whitman; 〃and found out that 20 percent of the people on 
eBay were saying; 'I accept PayPal; please pay me that way。' And we said; 'Who are 
these people and what are they doing?' At first we tried to fight them and launched 
our own service; called Billpoint。 Finally; in July 2002; we were at 'an' eBay Live 
'convention' and the drumbeat through the hall was deafening。 Our community was 


telling us; 'Would you guys stop fighting? We want a standard…and by the way; we have 
picked the standard and it's called PayPal; and we know you guys at eBay would like 
it to be your 'standard'; but it's theirs。' And that is when we knew we had to buy 
the company; because it was the standard and it was not ours。。。 It is the best 
acquisition we ever made。〃 
Here's how I just wrote the above section: I transferred my notes from the Meg Whitman 
phone interview from my Dell laptop to my Dell desktop; then fired up my DSL connection 
and double…clicked on AOL; where I used Google to find a Web site that could explain 
PayPal; which directed me to ecommerce…guide。com。 I downloaded the definition from 
the ecommerce…guide。com Web site; which was written in some Internet font as a text 
file; and then called it up on Microsoft Word; which automatically transformed it 
into a Word document; which I could then use to write this section on my desktop。 
That is also work flow! And what is most important about it is not that I have these 
work flow tools; it is how many people in India; Russia; China; Brazil; and Timbuktu 
now have them as well…along with all the transmission pipes and protocols so they 
too ca
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