Chris, if what you are saying is true, I'm even at a disadvantage, because
development, I had the idea, worked, tried and develop all documentation
everything alone.

I do not think that the teams will have advantages not, in fact I think it
is he who is alone should have developed a differentiated evaluation, for
several reasons:
-- Lack of time
-- Lack of others to discuss the idea, improved interface
-- Solitary research in forums and websites of Android
-- Low financial investment

They are much more difficulties we have, that the teams and companies do not
have, or at least should not have!

See, please:
http://healthmobile.blogspot.com

Regard

Eduardo Dutra Gonçalves



On 5/7/08, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> I think a lot of winners will be teams, but not individuals.  It is
> very rare for one person to have the ability to pull together every
> piece of an application on their own and do a good job.  Everyone on
> our team had a very different background and I think it allowed us to
> build a much better application (not saying we are going to win by any
> means, just that we would have been much worse off otherwise) - one
> person had front end interface skills, one person did UI coding, one
> person did server side coding, one person did non-technical product
> development, and one person managed the process.
>
> I think the problem with individuals is that you might get an engineer
> who thinks they are building the best thing ever, but then it is so
> unusable to the average Joe they miss what is really under the hood.
> On the other hand, you might have the business types who have a great
> vision without the technical skills to pull it off.  If you look at
> the old posts on the board, you can see a lot of evidence of this -
> both from people who recognized this was the case, and others who were
> to narcissistic to see a problem.
>
> Companies often lose out on innovation, but think about their
> resources.
>
> So I predict most winners will be in teams first, corporations second,
> and individuals third.
>
> On May 6, 5:48 pm, Incognito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I disagree with you. I would be really surprised if most of the
> > winners were not individuals and small teams. Why? Because most of the
> > new ideas come from individuals and small teams in my opinion.
> > Assuming that the distribution of good ideas is the same among
> > individuals and corporations then I think we should have more
> > individuals (and small teams) winning.
> >
> > On May 6, 8:21 pm, Biosopher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > My $.02.
> >
> > > The Android Challenge community is most likely identical to other
> > > online communities.
> >
> > > If so, then <5% of the people entering into the Google Challenge are
> > > actually active participants in the community.  That would be in line
> > > with the number of Challenge submissions as 1788 * .05 = 100 is
> > > roughly the number of people that posted to the ChallengeMeter post.
> >
> > > Given that we've seen mostly individual Challenge participants posting
> > > here, my guess is the majority of the non-posters are the company &
> > > team submitters.  Since those team/company submissions are most likely
> > > to win due to greater time/effort spent on their submissions, the
> > > majority of the top 50 winners are probably people that have not been
> > > active in this community.
> >
> > > If you followed all that, this is the unfortunate reality of most
> > > communities...i.e. that the many benefit from the posts of the few.
> > > With a new product like Android, it's guaranteed that every Challenge
> > > submission benefited greatly from the dialogue in these communties,
> > > but sadly few of those who benefited probably gave back to that same
> > > community (ie. were active posters).
> >
> > > So the short end of my answer is "No...I wouldn't expect many people
> > > who are posting to this community to have many hits from the judges as
> > > we're probably not in the top 50."  I REALLY hope I'm just being
> > > cynical and pessimistic...but then again, that would mean this
> > > community is unlike the majority of online communities out there.
> >
> > > This isn't a diss at Google or online communities, but simple the sad
> > > fact of our society in general.
> >
> > > Now please...please...let me be proven wrong when the winners are
> > > announced...!
> >
>

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