Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Need2.0Know

Meebo is an instant message service loved by students, because they can use it from any computer, even at school. Its usage keeps growing -- it doubled registered users to more than a million over the past three months.

IDFreeze asks you to type a social security or credit card number into the search box and Trusted ID will tell you if it is published on the web: The information that powers StolenID Search is found online, by looking in places where fraudsters typically trade or store this kind of information. All information behind StolenID search is publicly available, but not in places where you, or even search engines such as Yahoo and Google, would look.

Geni: Interesting "social" genealogy site, lets you build a tree and add relatives who can edit and complete their sides of your family tree using a Flash UI. When you add a relative, there is an option to add their email address and have the tree sent to them as well. They can add their own data, extending the tree, and Geni will launch tools to merge overlapping trees.

Yahoo Personal Finance Yahoo launched a new personal finance today site to help you manage your money.Use tools and guides to learn about balancing your budget, handling taxes, IRAs, just about everything in your life, or could be in your life, that's got a dollar sign on it.

celltradeusa.com, cellswapper.com: Want an iPhone but you're locked into a contract with your current provider. Try these services which help you transfer your contract responsibility to someone else and effectively walk away without paying a hefty penalty.

Finding Opportunities in what you do well

I was planning on posting today about Seach Engine Optimization. Which would be more up my alley as a search guy. However, I was reading CNet today and I came across this. In it they talk about Amazon Web Services.

Its Amazon Web Services business essentially opens up the online store's computing guts to outsiders, giving software developers access to its retail services, such as fulfillment and commerce, as well as to computer processing and data storage.

When most companies go outside their core business to find other opportunties they usually make a mistake by not looking into opportunities within their strengths. Too many people get caught in joining the latest fad, see consumer generated content, without a grasp on how to actually make it work.

When everyone was wondering when Amazon would turn a profit it is things like this they should of been noticing. It doesn't hurt that they are also the new Wal-Mart...

Monday, January 22, 2007

Ctrl C, Ctrl V

Blog 2.0: Improving Marketing And Monetization Coming years will see improvements in how bloggers monetize their sites, through a combination of better content management, site navigation, "widgets," and...marketing.

Now Playing On Joost: Everything
What's so special about Joost? It's a functioning real-time social network. Watch a show then rate it, share it, and chat with friends using its IM platform

Do 'You' really matter?
User-generated content is all the rage right now. But the thought of 'You' controlling the media and marketing world is little more than breathless hype.

Free Content Dominates Video Downloads
More than four times as many households downloaded videos from file-sharing networks as they did from centralized services like iTunes in the third quarter of 2006.

Madison Avenue Calling
Cellular phone carriers like Verizon, Sprint and Cingular, now the new AT&T, are beginning to test and roll out advertising on mobile phone screens, and by next year, cellphone advertising is likely to be more common.

Big Media’s Crush on Social Networking
Social networking, on the other hand, is something potentially deeper — it represents a way to live one’s life online. In many ways, it is the two-dimensional version of what sites like Second Life aspire to be in 3-D: the digital you. And that ties to another earnestly overused term of art at the moment: engagement.

Apple's U.S. share of PC shipments increased about 30 percent from 2005 to 2006
Report: Google In Talks To Buy In-Game Ad Company
Yahoo Adds Advice Columns, Calculators To Finance Section
Fox News Channel debuts live mobile audio feed

Friday, January 19, 2007

Ctrl C, Ctrl V


Apple iPod Sales Hit Record; Zune Grabs 10% ShareWith its best iPod sales quarter ever, Apple continues to dominate the portable player market. But Microsoft's Zune put in a respectable showing, new sales figures show.

News: Sling Media Announces New Viral Video Solution
The new Clip and Sling feature lets Slingbox users share video snippets, and lets content owners make money off of shared content.

Skype Founders Unveil YouTube Killer
Joost users will be able to download the software for free to watch the ad-supported television shows. In addition, Joost will let users rewind or fast forward within a show, much like DVRs can do with standard television.

Negative iPhone articles:
- This Engadget article on the iPhone's profit margins
- This ComputerWorld article on how Steve screwed up
- This InformationWeek report on the iPhone in IT
- and this interview with Steve Ballmer

Online Office Suites: The Winner Is Clear
How I Turned My Treo into an iPhone
Time Warner Exhibit Showcases "Future"
Super Bowl Is An Advertiser's Touchdown
Fashion Phone From LG, Prada Features Touch Screen
Google Base Traffic Soars With $10 Promotion

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Ctrl C, Ctrl V

Can Widgets Fix the Mobile Web? [Third Screen] Business2.0: Mobile operator Alltel Wireless just announced it is launching Celltop, a new mobile phone user interface with pre-installed “cells,” a.k.a. widgets. Alltel customers will be able to download a total of 10 widgets to their handset, each made up of a half screen filled with both graphics and text on weather, news, stock prices, sports scores and other bits of information (see left for some sample widgets).

Apple Posts 78 Percent Rise in Quarterly Profit
PC Mag: Apple reported a 78 percent surge in quarterly profit, boosted by strong holiday sales of iPod digital music players and brisk sales of its MacBook laptops

GPS Boosts Social Networking On Cell Phones
Wall Street Journal: Loopt is one such company, offering a buddy-tracking tool through the wireless operator Boost Mobile, which is owned by Sprint-Nextel Corp. Its service uses GPS to help users find their friends' mobile phones anywhere in the U.S., allowing them to zoom into a city map or zoom out to find out where they are.

Microsoft Unveils New adCenter APIs, Targeting Features
Earlier this week, comScore reported that MSN garnered just 10.5% of search traffic, compared to Google's 47.3% and Yahoo's 28.5%.

Networks Battling For Web Traffic On TV Sites, ABC Leads The Pack
The ABC and NBC Web sites are consistently drawing much larger overall traffic than CBS and Fox sites. Both ABC.com and NBC.com are averaging 9.5 million unique visitors a month for October through December, while CBS.com is averaging 5.2 million unique users and Fox is at 2.8 million, according to Nielsen//NetRatings.

Netflix Moves Into Online Viewing
Netflix took a giant step into the future by announcing earlier this week that the DVD-by-mail subscription service will start renting movies and TV shows via the Internet. The company is introducing the service in a phased rollout over the next six months, offering subscribers more than 1,000 movies and TV shows on their personal computers at no additional cost.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

First Buzzword Of 2007: Simplexity


HAS ALL THAT HOLIDAY COMPLEXITY convinced you we're finally over the simplicity thing? Not so fast.

Market researchers believe that 2007 will find consumers seeking out a new trend, which Robbie Blinkoff, managing partner of Context-Based Research Group, is calling simplexity.

"Consumers have been trying to simplify and organize their lives," he says, "but they've also been going down the complexity path, and the two are converging. Simplexity will be a synthesis of the two, yet distinctly different."

While computer geeks have been tossing the word around for some time, it's now a genuine phenomenon among consumers, and explains their passion for brands like Apple's iPod, Skype, and Google's maps.

"People understand that the technology behind these is very complex, but they have the veneer of simplicity," Blinkoff says.

That doesn't mean the simplicity movement has finally jumped the shark, exactly. But as marketing trends go, it is probably time.

After all, the voluntary simplicity movement dates back to the early 1990s. Real Simple launched in 2000. And the Dutch consumer electronics giant Philips Electronics, which even has a Simplicity Advisory Board, has been milking its "Simplicity" campaign since 2004.

"Simplicity is evolving into its next iteration," says Ann Clurman, a senior partner at Yankelovich. "The need for simplicity comes from an overarching need to be in control of your life. And that's not going away."

In fact, the goal of simplicity hasn't just penetrated the popular psyche--it's even got its own color wheel. Pantone Inc. recently released its palettes for the summer of 2008, announcing that "simplicity isn't a trend, it's a necessity. Next season will offer designers escape from fear of plainness and a new acceptance of the power of nothingness. As consumers move away from conspicuous, flamboyant expenditure, they are embracing an attitude of caring, consciousness and relaxation. Understatement will be in."

Translation: Look for ice-like blues, green shades related to aniseed, chlorophyll and menthol, as well as shades that "give way to a childlike, minimalist interpretation."

And while consumers probably aren't walking around bragging about their "escape from the fear of plainness," they are looking for something new.

Marketers should be thinking about all the ways they can "uncomplicate their products," Blinkoff says. "That doesn't mean reducing the number of choices, which doesn't make sense, given how much research people do on the Internet. Nor does it mean having someone else figure it out for them."

So how can marketers tell when they've gotten it right? "People want the ability to sift and sort through all the clutter of choices, and feel like that process was made easy for them," Clurman says.

The only acid test that matters is how the customers feels afterward: "If it's a choice that makes people feel serene," she says, "then they perceive that they have chosen to simplify."

Adapted from: MediaPost Publications

Friday, January 12, 2007

iWANT ONE

There are an abundant number of iPhone articles available. Here are some of the more interesting ones.

How Apple kept its iPhone secrets: Bogus prototypes, bullying the press, stifling pillow talk - all to keep iPhone under wraps.
  • Apple does make it clear to employees and business partners that they will be dismissed and possibly prosecuted for leaking company secrets.
  • Although their applications will be crucial parts of the iPhone experience, neither Yahoo nor Google saw the actual phone until shortly before the keynote, Jobs said.
  • Two years ago, Jobs and Cingular's chief executive, Stan Sigman, got together to forge a multiyear pact to work together on the iPhone. The Apple phone didn't even exist as a sketch at that point
  • Apple didn't show Cingular the final iPhone prototype until just weeks before this week's debut. In some cases, Apple crafted bogus handset prototypes to show not just to Cingular executives, but also to Apple's own workers.
  • Phil Schiller, Apple's head of marketing and one of the few Apple executives involved with the project from the start, said he had to keep the iPhone development secret even from his wife and children. When he left home for the official unveiling yesterday, Schiller said, his son asked, "Dad, can you finally tell us now what you've been working on?"

Apple Waves Its Wand at the Phone: In combination with Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg, you should read be reading David Pogue of the New York Times.
  • the name iPhone may be doing Apple a disservice. This machine is so packed with possibilities that the cellphone may actually be the least interesting part.
  • As you’d expect of Apple, the iPhone is gorgeous. Its face is shiny black, rimmed by mirror-finish stainless steel. The back is textured aluminum, interrupted only by the lens of a two-megapixel camera and a mirrored Apple logo. The phone is slightly taller and wider than a Palm Treo, but much thinner (4.5 by 2.4 by 0.46 inches).
  • Take the iPod features, for example. As on any iPod, scrolling through lists of songs and albums is a blast — but there’s no scroll wheel. Instead, you flick your finger on the glass to send the list scrolling freely, according to the speed of your flick. The scrolling spins slowly to a stop, as though by its own inertia.
  • You can also conduct text-message conversations that appear as a continuous chat thread.
  • You get to see the entire Web page on the iPhone’s screen, although with tiny type. To enlarge it, you can double-tap any spot; then you drag your finger to scroll in any direction.

Live from Macworld 2007: Steve Jobs keynote
  • This is how I watched the Keynote as it was going on. Engadget was in the hall blogging the minutes, events and photos of the event. I sat at my desk hitting F5 seeing what was happening, as it happened.

Streaming Macworld San Francisco 2007 Keynote Address

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Neutering Net Neutrality



Welcome to my first appearance here on the Nutmeg Media Blog. Greg asked me to provide a different angle to the usual posting on the blog: the political one.

I asked Greg for a bit of direction on the first post ad he pointed me to ‘Net Neutrality’. Thanks. My first posting gets to be over a proposal that is off the mainstream radar, and is full of exaggerations and misapprehensions.

Some of you may have seen the video that musician Moby did.

And news stories that can’t seem to get the details straight are causing problems too. CNET tells you that Moby went to Capitol Hill to lobby Congress and urge them to pass the Net Neutrality provisions, and then they give you quotes from Moby saying that “the current system works fine”. The average reader probably views this as a contradiction. Either Moby got it wrong or CNET got it wrong.

It’s tough to tell because we only know the context of the quote given. What Moby means is that the current way that the internet operates is how it should be. But as business evolves they will begin to restrict access to the internet. Net Neutrality will prevent them from stepping over those bounds.

But there’s hardly room for that on the page, I guess.

Net Neutrality is basically the concept that no one person controls the content or existence of the internet. Providers offer you internet access and don’t restrict what that access provides.

And why would they? If you use Yahoo! Email, then you’re not going to subscribe to an internet service that prohibits the use of it.

What is REALLY interesting to me here is the way the rhetoric changed because of how the Congress changed. Before the election the rhetoric was just like every other issue and invoked the word “Bush” as often as possible. But, now that Democrats are running two out of the three theaters, people are out of places to point their fingers. Or are they?

There’s still big business, our friend, our enemy. They give us lower prices on our preferred goods, and they shut down Ol’ Granny’s Sewing shop down on Old Main Street.

But who here is under the impression that four companies – AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, and Time Warner - supply the internet connection to everyone alive? There’s NetZero, there’s AOL, there’s your local cable provider which doesn’t quite ever seem to have a coverage area that extends to where you happen to live, just to name a few. What do these people have to say about it?

Everyone is worried about what happens if AT&T decides that Yahoo can pay it millions of dollars and so it gets through to your computer faster, but JohnsDowntownMilwaukeeShoeShop.com can’t pay so it might get through but probably won’t.
But AOL or some other business will standup and inform you that “they offer you half the internet for $50, and we offer you all of it for $25”. Tough choice?

And your ISP has been determining how fast your connection is based on how much you can pay since Al Gore invented fire.

Why shouldn’t we let a company go ahead and try to do this and let them find out how fast it’s customer’s jump ship to a competitor? My gut feeling is that those companies understand this is the dumbest idea since one Congressman decided we ought to charge postage for emails.

Besides, hasn’t the internet historically been the industry that has been most responsive to consumer input/criticism/innovation? If the internet really is the last frontier of a truly freemarket in terms of consumer influence then why should its philanderers think this round will be any different?

This is a classic "hands off", "government free", choose your slogan, scenario.

However one caveat where I'm going to cite opinion neutrality. Letting companies restrict your access could result in decreased technological innovation. Where would the incentive be? All the innovations would be for those willing to pay the highest cost, while the rest of us might as well go back to using an abacus, writing on stone tablets, and going to our small wooden frame schools in a horse drawn buggy where everyone from ages 2-25 is learning the same thing.

Plus, I don't want to pay any more for my internet than I already do.

Yours Truly,
PoliTech

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Apple Inc is (has been) the new SONY

Apple Drops 'Computer' From Corporate Moniker
After introducing the iPhone at Macworld, Steve Jobs declared that his company was dropping the word Computer from its name and henceforth would be known as Apple Inc. http://www.informationweek.com

The iPhone...Cell Phones are cool once again!!




Today Apple introduced the much awaited iPhone. Usually, I don't get excited about the newest technology gadgets. I can be rather pesmistic about the newest thing, I guess it is all these years living with Microsoft releases. Is anyone here optimistic about Vista? I didn't think so.

In fact, this morning I was telling Nick how tired I am Apple, iTunes, and iPods. I feel iTunes has monopolized my cubicle life. I listen to music on my iPod and I download songs and tv shows on iTunes with little thought how I can only play them on my computer and iPod. In fact there is a class action lawsuit against Apple over this. Time online had this to say about the iPhone:

Apple's new iPhone could do to the cell phone market what the iPod did to the portable music player market: crush it pitilessly beneath the weight of its own superiority. This is unfortunate for anybody else who makes cell phones, but it's good news for those of us who use them.

I readily admit I was skeptical until Nick sent me the Engadget running log on Steve Jobs' presentation at Macworld. As soon as I saw the pictures I was hooked! This is simply amazing. Finally, I feel America isn't 10 years behind Asia and Europe in the mobile market. Finally, a smartphone I would like to own. Finally, a good reason to be a Cingular customer!

I can't remember the last time I was impressed with a gadget let alone a cell phone, but today changed all of that. I'm marking my calendar for June so I can get one.

Just imagine the impact this could have on the local search market. If as Time says revolutionizes the mobile phone industry, with Google and Yahoo already loaded on it, how many millions will they make in mobile internet advertising? I can't wait to see how this plays out, but most importantly to Apple...I can't wait to own one!

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Second Life is now open source...what does this mean for the future of the internet?

Even though Nick and I don't venture into Second Life much, we have many friends who do, Ecocandle Riel, being one of them. So for Ecocandle's sake we will post most stories we come across concerning second life.

Today in Techcrunch they touch on how SL has become open source. I found the following interesting from the article...

At current growth trends, though, SL could be a real economic force in a few years. When things really start to hop, SL will look more like it’s own private Internet...What might make more sense in the long run is more of a Wikipedia-like approach to Second Life. A non profit organization running open source software where people can add their own island just by plugging in a server in their living room or the hosting provider of their choice. Whoever builds that and provides a serious alternative to the SL experience could help the world at least as much as Wikipedia has.

What I find interesting is the thought of SL as the future of the internet. Ecocandle, or Meeks as I call him, has preached this to me since I first learned of SL about 6 months ago. From the hundreds of articles I have read on SL I haven't really seen anyone else say it until now. I think for this to truely happen people would have to be able to make their own islands without it being controlled by Linden Labs and then these islands would become their own independent webpages, if you will.

Monday, January 8, 2007

Amazon Personal Shoppers?

In a recent pulse2.o.com post entitled "ChaCha Raises $6M from Jeff Bezos and Other Individuals":

"Recently, the New York Times had published an article entitled, ‘In Silicon Valley, the Race is On to Trump Google.’ One of the search engines mentioned includes ‘People Powered Search,’ ChaCha Search. Scott Jones and Brad Bostic created ChaCha based on their lack of satisfaction with other search engines that produce irrelevant search results. . .When searching with a Guide, the keywords that you choose to search for are sent to real people who are quick at finding relevant information on the Internet, so that it finds the right pages that you want.

"By the development of this new form of search that involves direct communication with Internet search experts gave enough of a reason for ChaCha to raise a $6 million round of investment from Jeff Bezos and other individuals [Source: GigaOM]. Jeff Bezos is the founder of Amazon.com and Bezos Expeditions. Bezos Expeditions has also previously invested in 37signals."

Location Based Future

"AppleInsider is reporting that Apple has been working on OS-level integration of an geographical mapping technology as an integral part of Leopard, its next-generation OS. The technology is rumoured to employ GPS functionality. Will GPS chips make Apple iPod phones and MacBooks location aware? Users would be able to post information at a location, hanging in the air, ready to be browsed by people passing by. Imagine getting highly relevant messages, without even pressing a button, simply because you are in the vicinity and your preferences match the content of the post."

Image being able to locate someone when they are stranded on the side of the road, in an AAA type situation. Instead of multiple phone calls, trying to describe that you are between a phone poll and a bush on the side of the road, you can be accurately located. This obviously brings up relevant questions of permissions and security. Under what circumstances would you allow someone access to you and your phones location?

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Stories about your Second Life

Counting the real 'Second Life' population
Last month, the virtual world Second Life reached 2 million registered accounts, an impressive number considering it hit 1 million accounts just eight weeks earlier. C|Net News.com

Second Life and the People’s House
We can just see it now: the scantily clad women, flying chipmunks and robots roaming around the House of Representatives, debating health care policy and energy independence. http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com

Why Second Life Numbers DO Matter

Over at Valleywag, where sanctimony can sometimes reign, a professor named Clay Shirky has been getting some attention for criticizing how Linden Lab reports the numbers for its fast-growing Second Life virtual world. But along with his acidic criticism of Linden Lab's numbers, he seems even more eager to direct vitriol at the business press, including myself. His contempt is aimed at articles in various publications and websites, including a column I wrote in November at Fortune.com. http://money.cnn.com/blogs/

Friday, January 5, 2007