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    Friday, March 28, 2008

    My 5 Min Rant at ICE08 conference in Toronto

    The Techno Peasant Empowerment Manifesto

    Ladies and Gentlemen, I stand before you a sinner, a heathen, a digital pagan if you will. What is wrong with me that I must point out the folly of those less fortunate than myself? Those poor sods who will never know the joy of spending hours in the basement programming a Sinclair ZX81, the wily buzz I feel when a truly cross platform project is created, or that using Google Apps makes me feel like a man. They...just...don't...get it.

    So, there it is. The cry of religious frustration for us the disciples of the binary code. "They just don't get it." The phrase that separates us; the whisper in the ear and the pointed finger of difference.
    They are not like us. They don't understand. They will never be as geek as we are.

    "Who are they?" I hear you bellow
    . Well, we could talk about old people, I mean, people older than us anyway. But that's not who they are. Vint Cerf the father of the internet isn't a 'they', Bill Gates isn't a 'they', and Apple co-founder, Woz, certainly, isn't a ‘they’. They are the people who haven't kept up. Who haven't slaved alone in dark rooms with only the friendly glow of the monitor and the typing of the code to keep them company as their high school social skills withered like grapes on the vine. They haven't canceled a date to save money for an iPhone, they don't know that TED is not a person, and they didn't cry when their school was put on the waiting list for the Apple IIe. They...haven't...paid...their dues.

    Now, it's our turn, us of nimble mind and questionable social graces; of open source and beta stages. We are the new power and how we wield that power will show our true colours to the world. We have beliefs and openness. Sharing and joy. We love technology. We embrace technology. Technology, we believe, will save the environment, the government, and the future of the human race.

    Therefore, I ask you, one and all, to stop using the awful phrase -- "they don't get it". We are above this. Rise up. Empower a techno peasant you know. Show them the way to the geek alter. “How?”, I hear you cry. Install the Facebook app on their Blackberry, help them understand peer to peer networking, show them the power of Basecamp, download Flock as their new browser, give them the power to make a digital change in their lives and the lives of their families without fear.


    Let me be clear, I am not saying you need to become their 'geek on call' like we all are for our mothers, grandmothers, and those beautiful nubile women struggling with their laptops in coffee shops across this great nation. No, I am asking that you give back to those less fortunate than yourselves. The technologically challenged unwashed masses. The people for which the world of binary is like watching a slasher film on meth - terrifying yet strangely pleasing.

    In the end it is all about fear my friends. They fear technology. They fear those who understand the technology. And the fear -- it paralyzes them.

    In closing, I ask you to sally forth and free our beloved techno peasants from the shackles of analogue by gently coaxing them into the digital age. They are our next clients. Without them, and the masses that follow, we will once again be relegated to the rank basements of suburbia.

    And that, my friends, is no place for the saviors of human race.

    Thank you

    Thursday, March 27, 2008

    ICE 08 Panel - Pipelines - Making Money Online

    PIPELINES: The Future of Online Video

    A look at how much video online really costs and why no one is making big money in online video - yet.


    Moderator:
    * Gavin McGarry, Independent Consultant, Joost, MELT, North West Vision and Media
    Panelists:

    * Kevin Bartus, Vice President Digital Media, Rogers
    * Scott Bushman, VP, Business Development, Metacafe (USA)
    * Richard Kanee, Director, Digital Business Development, CTV
    * Jason Roks, Digital Alchemist

    Link to ICE08 website


    OVERVIEW OF VIDEO


    Link to PPT slide on Google Apps


    CAVET
    The numbers we discuss here are very, general and very approximate. The idea was to give the audience an idea of some of the costs involved in delivering video online to help with the discussions during the panel.


    CONTENT
    Our challenge: how much does it cost, very approximately, to serve 1 minute of Youtube quality video with one 15 second ad in it on the web?

    Results: there are a lot of factors to consider and if math was not your strong suit in school -- get a tutor.


    ENCODING

    Free:

    Flash encoders: FFMPEG, Adobe Flash Encoder, Rivavx.de,

    Paid:

    From BetaCam TV Master including removal of 10 second commercial blacks and encoded into MPEG2 (DVD quality) - $5 per minute

    With commercial blacks left in - $3 per minute

    If you shoot and edit in digital and then upload to Youtube via your own machine - free.


    CMS (Content Management Systems)
    The software or service you use to program, track, manage, deploy, syndicate your content.

    Free:

    Brightcove with Ads

    Sharing sites: Youtube, MyAccount, Veoh, Metacafe (trade off you giving up rights and advertising placement - non exclusive to each platform).

    Paid:
    Maven - $5000 per month
    Platform - $5000 per month
    Brightcove - $27,000 ($10K for white label + $17K against bandwidth usage + bandwidth 60cent a gig)
    Ooyala - (new co) per transaction fee + bandwidth + other


    STORAGE
    These are the servers you will store your content on. You could build your own but when you assistant drops their organic orange juice on the machine you'll wish it was off site.

    Approximately $1 per gig per month but can go as low as 20 cents a gig depending on many factors and your negotiating skills.

    Free:

    Archive.org, any video share sites (Youtube, metacafe, etc)

    Paid:

    Regular internet host - (most expensive option) mediatemple, rackspace, godaddy, allstream (MTS).

    EDGE - CDN (content delivery network) -Akaimi, Limelight, Level 3, Vital Stream

    Web services - Amazon S3 (s3 stands for 3 services: hosting, delivery, processing power)

    DISTRIBUTION
    Someone has got to get your content on the pipes of the internet. For that, you pay Pedro.

    Costs about $1.50 CPM but can go as low as 20 cents CPM.

    Free:

    Archive.org (must own your own content or have the rights), Youtube, metacafe

    Paid:

    Same as players as Storage.


    GEO TARGETING
    Maybe you don't want the whole of the world to see your documentary on Canadian knick knacks. These companies will limit your content to IP addresses in a geographical region.

    Cost $1.00 CPM

    DIY

    Free:
    No services at the moment

    Paid:
    Note: most of the big CDN's and CMS's offer geo targeting for an add on fee
    Quova.com


    AD SERVING
    If you want to make money and not charge your viewers a subscription fee (shame) then you will need to engage the services of someone who will serve the advertising.

    Cost: vary widely but work on $3.00 CPM for a 15 second commercial + bandwidth

    No free services

    Doubleclick (Google)
    Freewheel
    AOL Networks
    Microsoft (Avenue A/Razorfish)


    DRM - (Digital Rights Management)
    Someone has to clear all the rights otherwise we would have anarchy on the net. Oh wait, we already do.

    Cost: $3.00CPM

    Free:
    you don't use it ;-)

    Paid:
    Microsoft
    www.EZDRM.com (reseller of Microsoft)
    Apple Store has it build in


    REVENUE SHARES
    Most of the online video is done on a revenue share basis. Some use a net of costs version and then split a percentage based on who sells the advertising.


    Link to Spreadsheet of Money and Glory



    QUESTIONS

    Where is revenue coming from now and next?


    What are traditional content distributors doing?


    With ever expanding options where to watch content, what are the unique offerings of the major online video pipelines?

    P2P (Peer to Peer)
    -high quality
    -mitigating of bandwidth costs

    Joost
    Babelgum
    BitTorrent

    PORTALS
    -audience
    -rev guarantees (sometimes)

    MSN
    AOL
    Yahoo

    SHARING SITES
    -audience
    -bandwidth
    -onsite monetization

    Metacafe
    Youtube
    Dailymotion


    OBSERVATIONS

    -Bell, Rogers, Cogeco now capping bandwidth
    -Bandwidth shaping


    TOOLS
    Flash Bitrate Calculator

    Wednesday, March 19, 2008

    Apple considering clamshell iPhone?

    From CNET

    Apple could be embracing the clamshell aesthetic for a future iPhone.

    Click here to see patent diagrams

    Unwiredview.com found an Apple patent application for a "dual-sided trackpad device," which resembles the current iPhone redesigned into the clamshell format so popular with many mobile phones. The key to this design is having touch-screen capabilities on both the top and bottom of the phone when it's open.

    Could Apple be working on a clamshell version of the iPhone?

    CBC to Release show via Bit Torrent for Free



    CBC Logo Cupcakes



    CBC, Canada’s public television broadcaster has plans to release the upcoming TV-show “Canada’s Next Great Prime Minister” for free via BitTorrent. This makes CBC the first North-American broadcaster to embrace the popular filesharing protocol.

    From Torrent Freak - Full article here

    Thursday, March 13, 2008

    Paid Content: AOL buying Bebo


    Full article from PaidContent

    BREAKING: AOL Buying Bebo For $850 Million

    In a major and rather unexpected deal, AOL (NYSE: TWX) is buying social net Bebo for $850 million in cash. Rumors had swirled around Bebo of either an acquisition or new financing for weeks, but few anticipated AOL as the suitor. AOL will get Bebo's 40 million members and 80 million unique users, its core 13-to-24 demographic and a growing line in both original TV production and hosting broadcasters' content. This comes as AOL completes its transition from an access business to an ad-funded content and community player.

    YouTube, TiVo in tie-in deal

    Full C21 Arcticle

    US digital video recorder (DVR) service TiVo has signed a deal with YouTube to make videos from the Google-owned video website available through television sets.

    Starting later this year, broadband-connected TiVo users with Series3 or HD set-top boxes will be able to search, browse and watch YouTube videos on TV directly through their DVRs. Users will also have the ability to log on to their YouTube accounts and access their favourite channels and playlists through their TiVo boxes.

    Voozoo.tv




    If you haven't seen this new Facebook app you need to add it, like, now.

    Go to www.voozoo.tv. It will add the app automatically.

    Or go to the Facebook group Voozoo

    The Voozoo group is the place where all things voozoo are discussed. The voozoo group will get special access to a huge library of famous movie clips to send to your friends, post to your profile, and more.

    Wednesday, March 12, 2008

    News Blooper: Anchor VS. Reporter - Timothy Beagley

    When bad reporters get worse. Oh my dear gawd. This is hilarious.

    Sarah Lacy after interview with Mark Zuckerberg

    Her response. See video of Mark interview below first.

    Mark Zuckerberg Facebook at SXSW Keynote with Sarah Lacy

    This is the very messy interview that Sarah conducted at SXSW in which the audience revolted. It takes a while to get to it.
    3:39 - Zuckerberg asks her to ask a question and audience erupts.
    6:26 - guy from the crowd says 'talk about something interesting' and the mob takes over.
    7:10 - guy with question owns Sarah

    Microsoft Surface - The Possibilities

    If you have not seen this yet it is quite incredible. Not on the market yet but will be in hotels soon I hear.

    Top 5 Most Useful Websites

    In case you ever wondered click here

    1. Speed Test
    2. Drop Box
    3. Eboostr
    4. Guerilla Mail
    5. Find Sounds

    Tuesday, March 11, 2008

    BitTorrent vs. IPTV: Who Wins?

    IPTV will be harder hit than any other pay-TV industry by free online content. But the game isn’t over yet.

    David Cotriss

    P2P (peer-to-peer) file sharing has always been synonymous with online audio and video distribution, and the BitTorrent protocol has played a major role in this movement. BitTorrent is known for its ability to help distribute files among a large number of users with a reduced burden on the original source. According to Richard Broughton, an analyst at Screen Digest, as much as 70 to 80 percent of online traffic in the Western world is from P2P sources, and 60 percent or more is through BitTorrent.

    Full article here

    Backcasting - A trend?


    A friend and I were having a chat today about getting his show on a Canadian broadcaster. He is running up against myrid of roadblocks and the show is a good idea. A money maker even.

    It seems there are a few wiley Canadian independent TV producers who are working with the US border stations in Erie and Buffalo, creating Canadian content, and sending it back into Canada from the US. Canadian advertisers are following suit. Well, well, well, how very interesting.

    I have lived in Southern Ontario a long time and never realized just how big our market is for US border stations. I always assumed, wrongly, that everything is just bigger and better in America otherwise why would all of our networks keep buying US programming and selling it back to us.

    I need to do some more research to see how many Canadian shows are made and shot in Canada by Canadians for Canadians and then broadcast on US stations back into Canada. I will keep you posted with a list. If you know of any please let me know.

    Here are some interesting statistics from PBS in Erie. I draw your attention to the Canadian versus US statistics.

    WQLN Viewers - TV-54

    WQLN serves Northwestern Pennsylvania, Western New York, Eastern Ohio and Southwestern Ontario.

    342,600 Total U.S. TV Households*
    Total of 822,000 potential viewers
    *Nielsen Station Index February 2003

    675,000 Total Canadian TV Households**
    **Based on Estimated Population of viewing areas.

    Over 9,500 Members in U.S. and Canada

    Here is a link to the full data: http://www.wqln.org/corporatesupport/viewers.asp

    Monday, March 10, 2008

    Moods Baby Moods



    I'm really into understanding large amounts of data from a visual perspective. Here are some sites that are monitoring moods and quite intriguing:

    http://www.moodjam.org/
    http://moodviews.com/
    http://www.love-lines.com/lovelines.html
    http://www.moodmill.com/

    My favourite is: Digg Labs Swarm

    Tuesday, March 4, 2008

    Humanity Lobotomy - Second Draft

    If you watch one video this week. This is it. Net neutrality explained simply.

    Is Noon the new Prime Time?

    From this article by imedia connection

    It turns out that the web hasn't killed primetime after all. But like so many things on the internet, it's not what you think.

    For starters, the web's primetime (if there is one, more on that in a bit), is a midday event. What some refer to as dayparting and others call video snacking is actually a trend of students, office workers, housewives and possibly the perpetually unemployed turning away from the TV and embracing new media in a big way.

    It's noon; do you know who's looking at your ads? Speaking mostly to publishers, The New York Times found that there is a growing push to get content up in time for a midday audience.

    "Go take a walk around your office [at lunchtime]," Alan Wurtzel, head of research for NBC told the paper. "Out of 20 people, I'm going to guarantee that five are going to be on some sort of site that is not work-related."

    Internet TV slow to catch on despite BBC iPlayer

    Consumers still seem unwilling to embrace the idea of watching TV on the internet, despite the launch of the BBC iPlayer and services on several other networks, research suggests.

    Less than one Briton in five streamed or downloaded traditional TV programmes from the web using legal services offered by networks or internet services providers such as Tiscali, according to a survey of the nation's digital entertainment habits.

    Full article from Times Online

    Over half of US to watch video in 08

    eMarketer predicts that 52.5 percent of all Americans (154 million people) will watch online video in 2008 and 80 percent of U.S. Internet users will watch an online video at least once a month this year as well. The audience for online videos is expected to grow to 190 million by 2012. Clips remain the most popular thing to watch online, with 40 percent of the online video audience watching short form content like news, music videos and movie trailers that are five minutes or less.

    Top 15 Concept Phones



    Some very cool ideas. The "snake wrapped around your arm look" is going to be huge.

    Link to blog here

    The New Way of funding media projects

    WMA backs multimillion digital media fund

    Hollywood's William Morris Agency (WMA) has teamed up with two Silicon Valley venture capital firms plus mobile and IPTV giant AT&T to invest tens of millions of dollars in digital media start-ups.

    Rest of the article from C21

    Monday, March 3, 2008

    IPTV slow uptake in the UK

    Out of all the big broadband services it is Virgin Media who comes out on top with twenty per cent of their users occasionally downloading programmes, while Channel Fours 4oD has been used by fifteen per cent, the BBC iPlayer stands at thirteen per cent and Joost, BT Vision and Tiscali TV all receive around four per cent.

    Full article from Techwatch here

    Why I Don't Use Flock



    I have been testing the browser Flock for the past couple of weeks as they are about to release an update. I really like it but it keeps crashing and it is slow. It seems to slow down the more tabs I open. Anyway, still give it a try if you haven't you may not have the problems I had. I'm going to try it again when they come out with the Picasa add on that is currently in beta.