I'm meeting Jeff Bezos tonight-- what should I ask him?
Going to an event at NYU/Stern tonight, where Jeff Bezos will be speaking, as well as the private reception afterwards.
Anything that fellow HNers would like me to ask him?
Anything that fellow HNers would like me to ask him?
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[ 4.0 ms ] story [ 55.8 ms ] threadI'm curious because I worked for an Italian online bookseller for a few years.
Their offerings are awesome, but they need to improve the interface with them, and make them more user friendly.
http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/entry.jspa?ex...
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/3247
Then Google's app engine would really pale in comparison to Amazon's offering. Right now google is providing an engine that scales up, and which is very easy to get started (their main advantage), but the downside you have to be tied to a very cripled enviroment.
If Amazon provided the glue that sticks all their offerings into one comprehensive package that is easy to use that this would be the best of both worlds. Who would even use google's app engine where you can have great scalability, easy to use, and have your own linux systems running on Amazon?
Over the years, I've found Amazon becoming more and more cluttered. I find myself becoming blind to useful new features because they are hidden in amongst blogs, plogs, video testimonials, recommendation, lions and tigers and bears.
In aerospace, there's the notion of new displays "buying their way into the cockpit", which is not about money, but about being worthwhile enough to share the valuable real estate with other displays. There is an acknowledgement that the existing displays will either get smaller or viewed less or both.
I'd be interested in hearing how he thinks about the fracturing of attention that occurs when there is so stuff on Amazon's pages. There's a real cost associated with that, and it feels like Amazon is not paying attention to it at all.
But have you ever read a plog?
Amazon came up with a way to rent supercomputing facilities to people outside of academia, and continue to refine the offerings. I'm a little surprised it took this long, but that could just be a reflection of Amazon being the first to get it mostly-right for a maturing market.
I'd be more interested in their thought process in terms of "OK, we can offer this, but it's too risky to offer that, and a waste of time to implement that..." That could be enlightening.
Also, where does he believe e-commerce is going? Mobile? Why?
One of the biggest gaps to me using AWS as a Canadian is that I would face a firestorm of crap for storing personal information that could be mined at the whims of US services.
Any plans to open/license S3 to someone in Canada or the EU?
Since I operate an ecommerce statup in a niche market (motorcycle gear - revzilla.com) , his answer to that is very interesting to me.
1) What would you attribute your success to?
2) What was the early days of Amazon like? When did you realize that you can change the way people buy books (and anything for that matter) for ever?