With the emergence of new forms° of the commons, there is more content available than ever for practitioners to use everyday. The problem is, how can users know if any given asset has already been used?

This is where it helps to be early and often, and humble as far as quantity of commons assets consumed. It has been said before that as far as intellectual property goes, the commons is not endgame, but without such a pool of resources, there would be an enormous outflow of innovative activity.

In some markets, where its difficult to create assets because of geographical or jurisdictional constraints, the commons is a lifesaver; just be aware of the tragedy of the commons and that without contributions in some manifestation to that market, new participants won’t be able to enjoy the startup benefits at all.

From WXV’s experience, the cloud has transformed greatly in the last two decades. From being a marketing detail, in to being essential for any technology stack.

The most exciting thing about the cloud, is the flexibility to the average user, that its framework offers. And its syncability with “more” advanced tierings like edge computing and ubiquitous file storage capabilities. And from the WXV perspective, now into advanced object cataloging.

Making sense of where the customer fits in to this evolution, has primarily to do with access; and its access which creates “infinite” space for the cloud adopter, ready to make some noise, in an ungated, and friendly environment, of the likes, that has never been seen before.