October 13, 2006

walled gardens explained

walledgarden220.jpg
[Click on image to enlarge/download/print etc. Licen­sing terms here etc.]
[Bonus Link:] After a recent trip to Big Sur, Cali­for­nia, Evelyn Rodri­guez ram­bles on nicely about its most famous resi­dent, the great Henry Miller.

6 Responses to “walled gardens explained”

  1. Luka says:

    Ouch. That’s direct. You can’t be that direct, Hugh. You need poli­ticks.
    A — every­body here makes money
    B — every­body here gets bread and games

  2. what i like best is here is that the model doesn’t con­si­der cus­to­mers at all. much like walled gar­dens in other words

  3. Mike says:

    Howe­ver famous Henry Miller was, you are for­get­ting Big Sur’s really famous resi­dent: Hun­ter S. Thompson.

  4. Hugh Lang says:

    I have an idea for a car­toon…
    Get your hands off my walled gar­den!
    It would be great as a t-shirt or biz card.

  5. Dug Falby says:

    The thing that never cea­ses to amaze me is that walled gar­dens just won’t go away.
    They *do* ignore the con­su­mer so I find it all the more sur­pri­sing that they keep being built and funded.

  6. Of course some walled gar­dens don’t grow as well as you thought when you went in. .. and often some others pre­fer the wide-open spa­ces to grow their fine plants. The really good crea­tors will grow their gar­dens without a wall and hope the world will beat a path to their ‘door’.
    It’s not just money but also a ques­tion of con­trol. If you let the mar­ket place decide, who knows what may happen.