"More than two billion videos are watched daily on YouTube and Google generates revenue from more than two billion views per week, the company said during its earnings conference call this month.
Executives previously have said it is close to being profitable, despite the large costs associated with storing and delivering so much video content."
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Google As A Carrier. It’s Not A Question Of “If They Will”, But Rather “When They’ll Try”
"Without the net neutrality safeguards in place, the carriers will make moves to restrict certain services down the road. YouTube is one example. Google Voice is probably another. There will likely be a dozen others.
Interestingly enough, it’s none other than Google who will share a big part of the blame for this happening. Not only did they leave Android so open so as to allow for the carriers to do whatever they want, but they also teamed up with none other than Verizon to dream up the current bogus non-rules the FCC just voted to adopt for wireless access.
But what if it is just a big “keep your friends close and your enemies closer” scenario? What if Google saw teaming up with Verizon as the only way to move at least part of the net neutrality debate forward (as Google CEO Eric Schmidt has more or less stated) and realized that it was inevitable that they’d be competing with them in wireless down the road? It can’t be ruled out. And at the very least, the partnership may be a bit of bet hedging — a way to ensure continued money-making just in case they can’t enter the wireless space down the road."
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Pulse: awesome Android app
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
What you need to know about the Gawker breach (FAQ) | InSecurity Complex - CNET News
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Device
Monday, December 13, 2010
Mobile Future: Mobile Year in Review 2010 Video | Mobile Future
"Watch our rapid-fire tour of 2010's key consumer and technology mobile trends showing the staggering growth in consumer mobile usage across a dizzying array of applications and social media platforms."
FoxNews.com - Mystery Surrounds Cyber Missile That Crippled Iran's Nuclear Weapons Ambitions
. . . was designed to jump from computer to computer until it found the specific, protected control system that it aimed to destroy: Iran's nuclear enrichment program. The target was seemingly impenetrable; for security reasons, it lay several stories underground and was not connected to the World Wide Web. And that meant Stuxnet had to act as sort of a computer cruise missile: As it made its passage through a set of unconnected computers, it had to grow and adapt to security measures and other changes until it reached one that could bring it into the nuclear facility. When it ultimately found its target, it would have to secretly manipulate it until it was so compromised it ceased normal functions. And finally, after the job was done, the worm would have to destroy itself without leaving a trace. That is what we are learning happened at Iran's nuclear facilities --both at Natanz, which houses the centrifuge arrays used for processing uranium into nuclear fuel, and, to a lesser extent, at Bushehr, Iran's nuclear power plant.
Friday, December 10, 2010
Charting the Rapid Rise in Mortgage Rates. 4.75% Still Best Execution
The other reason we bought this year - at the end of Nov we almost achieved rock bottom interest rate. 4.25 for a point made us very happy. Interesting chart of buydown vs time for a given interest rate.
Thursday, December 09, 2010
AP News : Authorities burn down explosive-laden CA house
The home was so cluttered with unstable chemicals that even bomb-disposing robots couldn't be used to enter it, for fear of setting off an explosion. Nearly every room had piles of explosive material and items related to making homemade bombs, prosecutors said. A coffee table was found cluttered with documents and strewn with detonators, they said.
In the backyard, bomb technicians found six mason jars with highly unstable Hexamethylene triperoxide diamine, which can explode if stepped on. Prosecutors said they did not know of a commercial use for it in the U.S.
The jars were discovered after a gardener accidentally set off an explosion by stepping on a byproduct of the chemical that had been on the ground, prosecutors said. Investigators said Jakubec told them he had been dumping the byproduct in the backyard.
Monday, December 06, 2010
Our Banana Republic - NYTimes.com
"The richest 1 percent of Americans now take home almost 24 percent of income, up from almost 9 percent in 1976. As Timothy Noah of Slate noted in an excellent series on inequality, the United States now arguably has a more unequal distribution of wealth than traditional banana republics like Nicaragua, Venezuela and Guyana."
From WikiChina - NYTimes.com
"Most of the Republicans just elected to Congress do not believe what their scientists tell them about man-made climate change. America's politicians are mostly lawyers —not engineers or scientists like ours —so they'll just say crazy things about science and nobody calls them on it. It's good. It means they will not support any bill to spur clean energy innovation, which is central to our next five-year plan. And this ensures that [China's] efforts to dominate the wind, solar, nuclear and electric car industries will not be challenged by America."
Extra Calcium and Vitamin D Aren’t Necessary, Report Says - NYTimes.com
"Some labs have started reporting levels of less than 30 nanograms of vitamin D per milliliter of blood as a deficiency. With that as a standard, 80 percent of the population would be deemed deficient of vitamin D, Dr. Rosen said. Most people need to take supplements to reach levels above 30 nanograms per milliliter, he added. But, the committee concluded, a level of 20 to 30 nanograms is all that is needed for bone health, and nearly everyone is in that range."
The Big American Leak - NYTimes.com
"Fifty years ago, the world was shaped in a certain way, to promote certain values, because America had the leverage to shape it that way. We have been steadily losing that leverage because of our twin addictions to Middle East oil and Chinese credit —and the WikiLeaks show just what crow we have to eat because of that. I know, some problems —like how we deal with a failing state like Pakistan that also has nukes —are innately hard, and ending our oil and credit addictions alone will not solve them. But it sure would give us more leverage to do so —and more insulation from the sheer madness of the Middle East if we can't."
Saturday, December 04, 2010
Wikileaks: 5GB of Dirt on Bank of America | The Big Picture
"Here is the sad reality: Can you really embarrass any of these banks? They were incompetently run, with criminally inept risk management. They blew themselves up and exist today only due to the largesse of the taxpayer. They gratefully took all they could grab and more. What else can you release to embarrass them? Unless they have 5GB of video showing their CEOs engaging in bestiality, its hard to imagine Wikileaks embarrassing the big banks."
I love The Big Picture. Why did I stop reading it?
Employment trends
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/12/employment-chart-roundup-4/
Seems one could easily extrapolate time to recovery of the employment rate, based on historical behavior.
Fast Food Maven » 2 restaurants to open at Irvine Spectrum
Capital is soon to open at Irvine Spectrum. It's part of a string of well known dim sum eateries in Orange and Los Angeles counties. While the menu will boast classic dim sum fare, the decor is modern.
Friday, December 03, 2010
We want Netflix, Amazon Video On Demand & Amazon Kindle Apps? - Android Help
Seen in a comment thread in an Android discussion group: spam from a Chinese tablet maker:
"Dear Robert H, How are you today, This is Ant, a general manager of a Chinese factory, we are producing Electronic book reader with E-Ink. Regarding to the E-Book reader, we have two series. . .I attached the specification of it. Please remember we can produce it with your brand name. . ."
Now that ive seen this, i dont know why i havent seen more of this kind of spam!
And then there's - HP Slate sales top out at 9,000 units [iPad Rival] | Touch Reviews
"Can hardware selling just 9000 units really be a success?"
Samsung sells one million Galaxy Tab units (update: confirmed) -- Engadget
"Either way, one million's nothing to scoff at, particularly when you consider that only 600,000 had been sold as of November 22nd."
Half a mil sold during Thanksgiving week!
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Cyber Monday breaks 1B in sales, thanks to your employer
Half of all dollars spent at US websites occur on work computers.
And someone bought a $250k rolls royce on ebay. . .from a mobile phone. A gold plated one no doubt.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Le Truc ‘Bustaurant’ Seats 12, Sells Out Fast | Wired.com
"For his new "bustaurant" called Le Truc, chef Hugh Schick has transformed a yellow vehicle designed for hauling schoolchildren into a gleaming, black mobile eatery tricked out with copper grills.
Instead of food truck standards like tacos and sausages, Le Truc is serving up locally sourced, seasonal menus out of the 66-passenger vehicle. The unconventional eatery might be housed in a 1983 Ford school bus, but with a gourmet kitchen, skylights and indoor seating for up to 12, Schick says he designed his rolling restaurant to be a destination dining spot that just happens to move."
Monday, November 29, 2010
Shipping Company Reviews – Best Package Shipping Company - Popular Mechanics
"How does the data stack up? In our modest experiment—12 trips, three carriers, three cities—FedEx delivered the most big bumps, with an average of three acceleration spikes over 6 g's (equivalent to a 2.5-foot drop) per trip. The USPS was the gentlest yet also the most active handler, with an average 12.5 position changes per trip. UPS was tops at keeping our package upright."
Sunday, November 28, 2010
How-To Geek » Never Run Out of Minutes Again: Make Free VoIP Calls on Android Phones
"Using Google Voice you can call any number for free but you are not able to receive calls directly to your Google Voice number on your Android phone without a voice plan with your carrier. Using sipgate you can receive any call for free but cannot place calls without adding money to your account. Combining the two services, we will be able to place calls using Google Voice which will automatically call back your sipgate number connecting you to your intended recipient, and we will do all of this using WiFi, 3G data, or EDGE, meaning you will never run out of minutes again."
Friday, November 26, 2010
Canon U.S.A. : PowerShot S95
The amazing S95, with wide angle f/2.0 lens.
Electronic shelftags at Whole Foods in Austin
375 Square Feet? Just Think of the Possibilities! - Habitats - NYTimes.com
375 sq ft for only $2000 per month!
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Could She Reach the Top in 2012? You Betcha - NYTimes.com
"The same criticisms that the Bushies fling at Palin were those once aimed at Bush: a slender résumé, a lack of intellectual curiosity and foreign travel, a lazy inclination to favor from-the-gut improvisation over cracking the briefing books. These spitballs are no more likely to derail Palin within the G.O.P. than they did him."
Epilepsy’s Big, Fat Miracle - NYTimes.com
"About a third of the nearly 3 million epileptics in the United States have drug-resistant seizures, and doctors estimate that at least 250,000 of those drug-resistant patients are children. Since keto often works when drugs do not, neurologists finally see a way to fix that problem."
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
this is a test
I'm composing this email in gmail on my gf I'm using google voice recognition and it's very accurate.
well okay pretty accurate
I never going to have to type again
now I have to put myself down and take my daughter to bed
oh my jog in sick blue head
damn autocorrect
Saturday, November 13, 2010
the mighty Samsung Galaxy Tab! (mine arrives Monday - yay!)
http://gizmodo.com/5686161/samsung-galaxy-tab-review-a-pocketable-train-wreck
"There is no way to not feel like a total dorkface while typing on this thing. In portrait, it's like tapping on a massive, nerdy phone. In landscape, it's just dumb. You still have to thumb type, only you're stretching out further, and text entry swallows up the entire screen. Swype might be dandy on a phone, but on a seven-inch screen it doesn't work so well—you have to travel a lot further to sketch out words. In other words, you get the worst of a phone's input problems—amplified."
"The Tab feels like a grab bag of neglect, good intentions and poor execution. Example: Samsung's built-in task manager, with one-touch kill switches to free up gobs of RAM, is plenty effective at dealing with apps running in the background. But why does it have to be there in the first place. Should you really be actively managing background apps?"
"Reading Kindle books feels better than on the iPad… The viewing angles are vast like the BP oil spill."
"Battery life is thoroughly phenomenal: Four hours of constant, heavy usage over 3G—Google Talk, browsing, YouTube—only knocked it down to 40 percent. "
"The browser is miserable, at least when Flash is enabled. It goes catatonic, scrolling is laggy, and it can get laughably bad. When better browsing is half the reason to go for a larger screen, that's insanity."
"The Tab is like a compromise's evil twin, merging the worst of a tablet and the worst of a phone. It has all of the input problems of a tablet, with almost none of the consumption benefits."
From the comments:
"My biggest complain it that the screen is a bit too small for general web browsing. I had to do a lot of pinching and zooming. Though the pixel density is obviously not as good as the iPhone, it is much better than the iPad. That does make it possible to read smaller text without always having to zoom."
"I will say that I like the haptic feedback while typing"
http://www.wired.com/reviews/2010/11/galaxy_tab/
"…performs well, but is not exemplary. It feels snappy enough, but longish load times can sometimes be tiresome, and webpages invariably loaded more slowly than the iPad — sometimes taking twice as long. We also ran into a few issues with apps hanging and the Wi-Fi connection suddenly vanishing without explanation. Reboots solved both issues."
"the light, 13.4-ounces unit just fits in a single hand, but the slick surface tends to be slippery and prone to dropping."
"the problematic location of the power and volume buttons. Holding the device in your left hand often causes you to hit these by accident. They're temperamental and touchy, until you eventually adapt to a grip further down the chassis."
"The Tab ultimately reveals itself not as a competitor to the iPad but as a new class of mobile device"
http://www.engadget.com/2010/11/01/samsung-galaxy-tab-review/
By the way, the Tab's smooth back causes it to slide off things every so often -- so we'd suggest keeping this little guy in a case or nabbing a stand for it. We do wish the Tab had a built-in kickstand like the Evo 4G and Archos 7. Think about it, Samsung.
While the Tab's resolution isn't as high as the iPad's 1024 x 768-resolution IPS panel, the screen does have better pixel density, which translate to a crisper e-book and webpage reading experience than the iPad. [iPad 132ppi, GTab 169ppi]
The core of the email app looks like those on the Galaxy S phones, but when you flip the display into landscape mode you get a Microsoft Outlook-like pane that displays your Inbox on the left and the messages on the right. We preferred managing and responding to mail in this app over the Gmail app, which is just the smartphone version.
For instance, Angry Birds looked beautiful on the larger screen. Seriously, it looks so incredibly awesome on the larger display that we spent the last four days replaying the game.
Not to sound like Steve Jobs or anything, but scaled-up smartphone apps and Flash compatibility alone don't create a well-rounded tablet platform -- it's going to take native apps for the Tab to be truly competitive.
We warn you: people will look at you oddly when you pull it out and take shots with its giant viewfinder!
We were able to get a video call going using Qik over WiFi, although there was quite a lot of delay and in some cases a serious amount of pixelation. We did attempt to use Fring, but the app hasn't been optimized for the tablet yet, and we couldn't get two-way video calling working. Fring's audio was much better, however. [Videochat seems to be the one type of app that won't necessarily just run when dropped on any mobile device]
The entire experience is snappy, and it kept up with us even when we had four or five applications open.
Update: Well, this is a bit crazy. It was brought to our attention that the Tab cannot be charged via a laptop or desktop.
And that is in fact the case -- when plugged into a USB socket the Tab will maintain its charge, but won't be recharged. [Tablet charging is a new paradigm that most users don't understand – the 500mA max that a PC USB port can provide is less than what tablets need to run, much less charge.]
After spending the last couple of days with the Galaxy Tab, we can confidently say it's the best Android tablet on the market. Now, that's not saying much given the state of the Android competition, but we can also assuredly say that the Tab is the first true competitor to Apple's iPad. Its crisp display, compact form factor, touch-friendly software and dual cameras undoubtedly have what it takes to win over the average tablet seeker. However, we still have some reservations right now. Google hasn't yet provided any direction on Android as a tablet platform, which means that the Tab is held back by lagging application support and software that doesn't fully take advantage of the extra screen real estate. Remember, that when the iPad launched many developers were already working on tablet specific apps and Apple had an iPad app store in place. Put simply, without that ecosystem and support from Google, Samsung is left to its own devices -- literally. Just today Samsung rolled out an emulator for the Tab that uses the Android SDK and the company says it's working with Google and plans to use future iterations of Android, so we'll have to see what happens -- but for now it looks like the saga of the Samsung Galaxy Tab still has several chapters to go.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703805004575606580224319038.html(Mossberg)
I've been testing the Tab for a couple of weeks and I like it. It's a serious alternative to the iPad and one that will be preferred by some folks. It includes the three most-requested features missing in the iPad: a camera (two in fact); the ability to run Web videos and applications written in Adobe's Flash software; and multitasking, though, to be fair, the latter feature is coming to the iPad imminently via a software update. Another strong point is that like Apple, Samsung has rewritten some of the standard apps, such as the email and calendar programs, to make them look more like PC programs and less like smartphone apps.
On balance, however, I still prefer the iPad. For one thing, I like getting twice the screen size for a little more money up front—as little as $29 for the no-contract model with cellular capability. For another, the iPad has vastly more apps specifically designed for a tablet versus a smartphone—about 40,000 according to Apple, compared with just a handful for the Tab. And it can run about triple the apps overall, if you count smartphone apps that aren't optimized for tablets. [For Android tablets, this should be just a matter of time…]
Also, in my tests, the iPad's battery life was about five hours better than the Tab's, its maximum storage capacity is higher, and its aluminum body is more rugged than the Tab's plastic casing.
Still, the Tab is a very attractive product and I enjoyed using it. For buyers who want to spend less up front, don't mind the smaller screen, prefer the more compact dimensions and one-handed usability, and place high value on the cameras and on Flash, it may well be a better choice.
I was especially impressed with Samsung's attractive and usable rewrites of the calendar, email and contacts apps, which, like their iPad cousins, use multiple panels to make them more computer-like, while still remaining touch-friendly.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/technology/personaltech/11pogue.html (Pogue)
Samsung sweated the details on this thing. The screen is gorgeous. The touch response is immediate and reliable. The whole thing is superfast and a pleasure to use.
Google doesn't monitor what goes into its app store, so the Android ecosystem is unlimited, chaotic and more confusing.
You can customize its nine home screens by placing icons or mini info windows anywhere you like (they don't have to sit in an organized grid). You can dictate text instead of typing it, or search Google or Google Maps by voice.
When you visit sites like nytimes.com, CNBC.com and Amazon.com, the Galaxy's browser shows the stripped-down, mobile versions of those sites. According to Samsung, there's no way to turn that feature off and no way to visit the full-size sites. You can delete the little "m." in the Web address until you're blue in the browser, but the Galaxy always puts it right back.
It's a little odd that you can't recharge the Galaxy from your laptop's U.S.B. port. It must be plugged into a power socket.
Another problem: most of the 100,000 apps on the Android store are designed for a phone-size screen, not a tablet. The Galaxy either blows them up, at the expense of clarity, or lets them float in the center of the larger screen with a Texas-size black border.
Pros:
- Nice, bright screen
- Responsive touchscreen
- Android marketplace
Cons:
- A bit small
- Thick and heavy
- Browser is slow
"Android isn't for moms."
So: you're reading this because you're an anything but iPad kind of person. If you weren't you'd be busy playing Cut The Rope HD on iOS right now instead of shopping around. So let's be frank: this is what you're going to have to buy if you want any modicum of satisfaction when it comes to tablet computing. The HP Slate is a lump and the Dell Streak is even smaller than this. The Nook Color is just weird. The CherryPad is garbage. You're stuck…
Bottom Line: Our esteemed friends at Giz found this to be a train wreck but I don't agree. This device is what it is: a small, fairly powerful tablet for Android lovers. I'd love to play to my own bias and state that the iPad is unequivocally better but I can't. This is for a different consumer and based on a different architecture. It is a good product, a little big, and an able device for media playback, e-book reading, and general email productivity.
http://www.slashgear.com/samsung-galaxy-tab-review-31111323/
Samsung offers far more control over the panel than you'd get on an Android phone
A power saving mode which claims to automatically adjust the LCD backlighting according to what's on-screen at any one time.
Brightness sensor for automatically adjusting the backlighting.
There are few omissions, to be fair, but we would've liked to have seen at least one notification LED – for new message, battery and other status indications – and a regular USB port rather than Samsung's PDMI-based dock connector. There's also no USB On-The-Go support for plugging in peripherals, though we were able to pair and successfully use a Bluetooth keyboard for text entry.
Swype works well, but Samsung's keyboard … also supports auto-completion, spelling correction, next word prediction and double-tapping the space bar to automatically append a period. In general it all works very well, though we turned the default haptic feedback off as the Galaxy Tab's vibration motor makes a noticeable buzzing sound.
It's possible to view each account inbox separately, or combined into one universal inbox, with each message color-coded to indicate where it comes from. All in all, it's a great email experience, surpassing the regular Android mail app and proving you don't need an iPad-sized display to neatly triage your inbox.
Image quality is unsurprisingly less impressive than, say, the output from Samsung's recent line of Android smartphones, which generally get 5-megapixel sensors. …Video, meanwhile, lacks the detail of 720p content, but the reasonable 30fps rate means there's not too much blur in fast moving subjects. Still, the Tab isn't going to replace a point-and-shoot camcorder.
Unfortunately, it's not currently possible to make full use of the front-facing camera for app-based video calls. Qik apparently intend to have an updated version of their app with support for video calls ready for the debut of the T-Mobile USA Galaxy Tab; the current version only offers real-time video streaming. Meanwhile we were able to initiate a Fring video call between the Galaxy Tab and a Galaxy S, but the in-call UI was mangled on the Tab and it wouldn't send video.
Skype, meanwhile, worked for VoIP calls but there's still no Android video support. In short, until Qik release their app (and Fring update theirs) video calls on the Galaxy Tab lack the simplicity of FaceTime, support for which is expected to be added to the second-gen iPad predicted for 2011.
…you don't get much in the box with the slate itself: a power adapter, USB sync cable, stereo headset and some printed documentation. We'd like to have seen a case or pouch of some sort, at the least.
Wrap-Up: Listen to Steve Jobs and you'd automatically discount the Galaxy Tab as simply too small for a tablet; the Apple CEO is convinced 9.7-inches is the optimal size for a usable slate. Our time with the Tab suggests otherwise. Its 7-inch display may offer only half the usable area of the iPad, but the high resolution and responsive, accurate capacitive touchscreen add up to a user experience that's significantly better than a regular smartphone for browsing, multimedia and – thanks in no small part to Samsung's custom apps – messaging.
…The value of Samsung's own apps can't be understated, however; they're what lift Android 2.2 on the Galaxy Tab from being an oversized phone to a proper tablet.
…Samsung has confirmed that multiple Tab variants are in the pipeline…Their investment in software customization will act as a significant differentiator when it comes to usability, just like having official Android Market access adds to the Galaxy Tab's appeal.
There'll be plenty of people left unconvinced by the first Galaxy Tab, but Samsung seems willing to pick off different user groups with different models along the way. If the iPad's iTunes dependence, the controlled nature of the iOS ecosystem and the Apple slate's sheer size have put you off, Android's relative openness and the Tab's relative scale are highly appealing. Perhaps most telling, with both the iPad and the Galaxy Tab on the table, we found ourselves reaching for the Samsung for quickly checking email and browsing. That might change once iOS 4.2 is released for the iPad – early reports are certainly glowing – but for now the Apple behemoth has some serious competition.
Galaxy Tab: iPad's Nemesis Hurtles Into View
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The tunnel people of Las Vegas: How 1,000 live in flooded labyrinth under Sin City's shimmering strip
"Deep beneath Vegas's glittering lights lies a sinister labyrinth inhabited by poisonous spiders and a man nicknamed The Troll who wields an iron bar.
But astonishingly, the 200 miles of flood tunnels are also home to 1,000 people who eke out a living in the strip's dark underbelly.
Some, like Steven and his girlfriend Kathryn, have furnished their home with considerable care - their 400sq ft 'bungalow' boasts a double bed, a wardrobe and even a bookshelf."
Tuesday, November 09, 2010
A First Tour of the 9/11 Museum at Ground Zero (In-Progress Pics and Video) | Co.Design
"Despite the museum's unfinished form, a profound sense of what it will be emerges, because this isn't your typical sort of building. Rather, it's a processional decent into the gaping hole left by the towers--marked by reminders, both gargantuan and intimate, of what happened on the ground you step across. "Almost no memorial museum is sited where the tragedy actually happened," says Davis. "And this museum is the reverse of most. Usually, the museum houses the exhibit. Here, the exhibit houses the museum." "
DamnYouAutoCorrect: iPhones, Androids, and the Greatest Texting Auto-Correct Errors - ABC News
Texter A: What time is the meeting? 9 or 930?
Texter B: Boner
Texter B: Stupid auto correct!
Texter B: Niner"
Saturday, November 06, 2010
Swimming From Oahu to Kauai
"Australian Penny Palfrey, age 48, is about to do the unthinkable: swim the Kaʻieʻie Waho channel that separates Kauai from Oahu by nearly 75 miles. She hopes to begin the swim by Tuesday, depending on conditions, and plans for the crossing to take between 30 and 40 hours.
Palfrey is one of world's most experience long distance swimmers whose accomplishments include the English Channel. Yet this will be her longest, roughest and most challenging swim ever. This channel is known for extremely harsh currents. It was responsible for keeping Kauai separate from the other Hawaiian Islands until it was conquered two hundred years ago by King Kamehameha."
Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Interesting analysis of San Diego housing market.
===
Tracie Kersten and Ryan Mathys
Profund Financial and Real Estate
Phone: 858-405-4004Email: ryan@profundrealestate.com
Website: www.profundrealestate.com
Hello,
We hope you had a great Halloween as we now start off the Holiday Season! Activity in the market the last few weeks has picked up a little bit, but overall pretty typical of the season. The last part of the year is usually busy for Tracie and I as this is the time of year that filters out the passive buyers and sellers and leaves the active players in the game. This year seems to be shaping up the same way.
As for inventory, it is increasing slightly but still turning over. It can be misleading for buyers because even with 13,000+ listings is takes patience and persistence to find the right opportunity. Below is my non-statistical, in the market every day assessment.
13,000 + Listings
6,500 are overpriced, not motivated and unrealistic sellers that are dreaming.
3,500 are perpetual short sales, loan mods, foreclosure stall tactics and not relevant inventory even if buyers want to buy them.
3,000 are available, realistic and tangible properties. Spread these across the entire county and there are few good deals in each neighborhood to be had. Hence the need to be active, patient and persistent in your home search. You also need to be working with an agent that is active with you in your search and can help you filter the noise...
California Election Results: How Barbara Boxer Bucked a National Trend by Beating Carly Fiorina - Political Hotsheet - CBS News
"Unlike Californians, Fiorina was much more conservative than the constituency she wanted to serve. California is not a conservative state like Arizona and other sunbelt states and has voted for a Democratic president the last three elections - there are more registered Democrats than Republicans, yet declined-to-states (independents) are increasing each election year. Right now declined-to-states are about one out of every five voters. The issues that are important to the electorate align more with what Boxer stands for than her opponent. The Democratic senator is a strong pro-choice candidate, against off-shore oil drilling and was against the war in Iraq. The opposite of what Fiorina thinks, plus she was endorsed by Sarah Palin who has a high unfavorable rating in the state."
Google’s AdMob, YouTube Chiefs Step Down - WSJ.com
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303284604575582740394620482.html
Tuesday, November 02, 2010
Best quote: "I could have lost that race for $80M"
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Jonathan Adler and Simon Doonan's Anti-Depressive Apartment - WSJ.com
On the day of our visit: In addition to the two ceramic dog sculptures there was a canister with a high-relief marijuana leaf and what appeared to be a gun. "That's a mantique from the 1970s, a men's perfume flask," Mr. Adler said. "It's hard to say no to a gun-shaped perfume flask, I always say.""
Thursday, October 28, 2010
check your Yahoo account
Monday, October 25, 2010
Ray Ozzie on cloud computing, and complexity
""We're moving toward a world of 1) cloud-based continuous services that connect us all and do our bidding, and 2) appliance-like connected devices enabling us to interact with those cloud-based services," he writes. He continues:
At first blush, this world of continuous services and connected devices doesn't seem very different than today. But those who build, deploy and manage today's websites understand viscerally that fielding a truly continuous service is incredibly difficult and is only achieved by the most sophisticated high-scale consumer websites. And those who build and deploy application fabrics targeting connected devices understand how challenging it can be to simply & reliably just 'sync' or 'stream'. To achieve these seemingly simple objectives will require dramatic innovation in human interface, hardware, software and services.
Meanwhile, the PC-centric, client/server world has "accreted simply immense complexity over the past quarter century. To which he adds a warning: "Complexity kills. Complexity sucks the life out of users, developers and IT. Complexity makes products difficult to plan, build, test and use. Complexity introduces security challenges. Complexity causes administrator frustration." "
Me: "Complexity Kills." I'm going to write that on my whiteboard.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Has Microsoft -- gulp -- figured it out?
"The mobile picture is now officially a three-way dance: Apple, Google, and Microsoft. The same people who dominate desktop computing. Everybody else is screwed. Former Palm CEO Ed Colligan famously said a few years ago: "PC guys are not going to just figure this out. They're not going to just walk in." That's precisely what's just happened. Phones are the new PCs. PC guys are the new phone guys."
Me: Has Microsoft figured it out? This could be the most stunning turnaround ever. It's clear to me now that ayone who intends to compete and be taken seriously in the smartphone arena MUST have world class software AND hardware. Clearly that is what these companies are capable of. "Parity" devices that are "good enough" just wont cut it. We are witnessing the new generation of smart phones - Smart Phones 2.0. Does HP WebOS have the vision -- and the will -- to compete?
Keep that cell phone out of your bra
"It's too late for Andrea X, a young, active mother of three from Southern California. For more than six years, this vegetarian and runner drove her children everywhere, with her cell phone tucked snugly into her sports bra. She used her hands-free headset and was on the phone for four to five hours a day. Often her chest or ear would redden, but she thought little of it. This spring she developed a malignant tumor right where her phone had sat on her breast. No one in her family has ever had breast cancer"
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
HP WebOS 2.0 review - Engadget
"Despite some issues, webOS 2.0 is probably neck and neck with iOS4 when it comes to polish and ease of use, and that's a pretty huge thing for Palm. This isn't just a good OS, it's a great OS, and the updates in this version have made it even better. It's obvious that when combined with even slightly better hardware, it's also a fast experience that makes it easy to get real work done. And that's the problem with webOS 2.0, really. Palm is still hampered by last-generation, underpowered hardware. The Pre 2 is nice, but it's not cutting edge, and it doesn't hold a candle to the iPhone 4 or G2. If Palm wants to survive in this game -- let alone truly compete -- it needs to push killer hardware into the marketplace now. The faithful are dwindling, and the smartphone race is getting more crowded every day -- webOS 2.0 is a big improvement, but if this and the Pre 2 are Palm's hail mary, they just lost the game."
Sunday, October 17, 2010
another blog template change in order
- spend hours getting it "right"
- end up with a questionable combination of background and colors
- but remain confident that i have retained my uniqueness
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Amid the headscratching over Apotheker, and ongoing discontent about Hurd, finally some positive spin on HP's new CEO, which I want desperately to believe
“I do find it amusing that people like Jack Welch and that idiot at Oracle have gotten absolutely apoplectic regarding our new CEO.”http://www.businessinsider.com/hp-leo-apotheker-ceo-2010-9
“Leo has to be better at handling people than Mark Hurd. That guy sucked to work for and kept the money for himself.”
“I was concerned it would be Hurd henchman Bradley so it could have been worse I suppose. It doesn't matter, the inept board remains in place, Hurds plans continue to move on…So to your question about the CEO, "WHO CARES".”
“In many respects, I always felt like Apotheker's reign was similar to U.S. President Barack Obama—both men inherited a glamorous, high-profile position that was in a world of hurt when they were sworn in.”http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/70946.html (if you read only one article, read this one)
“Now if you were to sit back and go down a list of folks who both know how to compete with Oracle and have a personal desire to bury that company along with its CEO -- and omitted Charles Phillips, who is under a strong non-compete (great backstory on how Larry may have screwed Charles) -- you'd end up with Leo Apotheker and Ray Lane, both of whom lost their CEO jobs, largely thanks to Larry Ellison.
Both men are back, they are pissed, and they want a big piece of Oracle. They now have access to HP's vast resources, have deep knowledge of Oracle's weaknesses, can likely convince companies like SAP and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) to help, and represent a preferable choice to many of Oracle's recently acquired customers than Oracle likely does. I expect HP is going to experience some rather dramatic changes in the next few months.”
Tuesday, October 05, 2010
FOX News - SciTech - Latest Headlines - Microsoft's iPad Answer Will Be Here for the Holidays
http://scitech.foxnews.mobi/quickPage.html?page=23952&content=43415354&pageNum=-1
And while Microsoft has finally confirmed the launch date for its Windows Phone 7 operating system -- stick with FoxNews.com for the big event on October 11 -- a recent video discovered by Engadget of an alleged HP Slate prototype hints that the experience still hasn't been streamlined for touchscreen operation.HMM LETS SEE - MINUTES TO BOOT, HEAVY, HOT, POWERHUNGRY (short battery life), HUGE APPS REQUIRING TONS OF MEMORY, CANT LOAD ANY NEW COOL MOBILE APPS THAT ALL YR FRIENDS ARE USING (Angry birds, Qik Videoconf, Foursquare, etc), AND PROBABLY NOT 3G, SO ITS HOUSEBOUND, NOT MOBILE - it will feel like a humongous, expensive Ipod Touch (which is also wifi only) -- but with no apps and all the downsides of a Windows machine. Yeah, I would pay money for that why? To run MS Excel on my couch? I guess that's interesting.
Ballmer admits Windows 7 isn't fully optimized for the tablets. "We're not going to do a major revamp of Windows 7 for slate applications; that will come in the next version (Windows 8)," Ballmer said at the UK Tech Days conference.
I'm sure Ballmer knows this, but a touchscreen and WiFi does not a mobile device make. It's enabling a mobile experience (with 3G); supporting new mobile use cases like liveblogging, location-based (Foursquare) and augmented reality (Yelp Monocle) applications; in a lightweight pocket device form factor.
Monday, October 04, 2010
NYT: At Risk From the Womb
"Stress in mothers seems to have particularly strong effects on their offspring, perhaps through release of cortisol, a hormone released when a person is anxious. Studies show that children who were in utero during the Arab-Israeli Six-Day War of 1967 were more likely to have schizophrenia diagnosed as adults. And The Journal of the American Medical Association reported that Chinese born during the terrible famine from 1959 to 1961 were twice as likely to develop schizophrenia as those born at other times."
Third Party Rising
"We have to rip open this two-party duopoly and have it challenged by a serious third party that will talk about education reform, without worrying about offending unions; financial reform, without worrying about losing donations from Wall Street; corporate tax reductions to stimulate jobs, without worrying about offending the far left; energy and climate reform, without worrying about offending the far right and coal-state Democrats; and proper health care reform, without worrying about offending insurers and drug companies.
"If competition is good for our economy," asks Diamond, "why isn't it good for our politics?"
We need a third party on the stage of the next presidential debate to look Americans in the eye and say: "These two parties are lying to you. They can't tell you the truth because they are each trapped in decades of special interests. I am not going to tell you what you want to hear. I am going to tell you what you need to hear if we want to be the world's leaders, not the new Romans."
Saturday, October 02, 2010
HP on Léo Apotheker: 'We have never felt more confident' - Oct. 1, 2010
$4.6million for relocation expenses? doesnt hp have some spare real
estate they can just give him?
Friday, September 17, 2010
Oh God! Yet Another Lame Carrier-Backed Mobile OS
"Let's face it: the mobile game is all about the developers. Developers maketh and developers taketh away. The carriers and their OS efforts are only going to be good if they gain traction with developers, and that's hard considering the effortsalready invested in iOS, Android, BlackBerry and Symbian.
The phone companies are suddenly realizing, "Oops, we're losing grip on our customers." The customers who use iPhones use Apple's billing systems. Android users will make money for Google via its mobile ad systems, and eventually through Google's other mobile services like Google Checkout. Mobile app developers — who in the pre-iPhone era paid millions of dollars in baksheeshto get on the carrier decks — no longer have to deal with the draconian bureaucrats at these mobile operators.
Sure they try to re-create carrier decks by launching their own mobile stores on smartphones — T-Mobile has done it, and so has Verizon with its VCast Store — but the fact remains:Nnone of these have the same money-gouging potential as the carrier deck.
These attempts are like seeing a middle-aged uncle, who upon finding that his wife left him, gets back into the dating game. He tries to feel hip by wearing Ben Sherman shirts and skinny jeans. The only person who doesn't quite grok how ridiculous he looks is him!"
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Tim Cook May Go To HP (AAPL, HPQ) | Benzinga.com
"If Cook does not accept the offer, HP will go with an internal candidate."my prediction: todd bradley. clearly they're interested in tuning up the operations of outsourced consumer electronics. although i was going to bet that they'd leave CE behind now that EDS is performing for them & generating all kinds of profit. however, hp did buy palm so we've pushed out the sale of the PC & printer divisions for a few more years. and the closest person to tim internally is todd, especially with his ace in the hole of Palm experience.
oh wait - i got it now. hp needs tim's kung fu around whipping contract mfg partners into shape. otherwise the palm acquisition is all for nothing, if they cant launch products ontime. and who better than the guy responsible for harnessing foxconn for apple? obviously apple figured it out...with tim at the helm.
Adults as a group are missing out on the power of smartphones
"Adult cell phone users reported taking pictures and sending/receiving text messages were by far the most common non-voice uses of their phones, with 76 and 72 percent usership rates, respectively. Farther down the scale, 38 percent said their accessed the Internet, 34 percent said they played games, handled email, or recorded video. Some 33 percent said they played music on their phones, and 30 percent engages in instant messaging. Next, at 29 percent, came apps"
Monday, September 13, 2010
first google videochat
also, it was a little disconcerting to have a phonecall where I also had to make eye contact. i am so used to talking on the phone and staring off into space, or down at my keyboard, basically expressionless, that i had to force myself to engage him. also, the lag was tremendous - i would start talking without realizing he was done talking, and all of a sudden we'd be talking over each other.
but even though voice calls are dwindling, might it be that we'll prefer the richness of face to face conversation to one-dimensional voice-only conversations? in the 30 years that the world has had video conferencing, only very recently has anyone (in this case, Apple) made us feel like we were missing out on something if we weren't having video conversations.
but google got it into the hands of everyone on the internet; apple has to make do with only 40 million. in other words, BUY CISCO!!
Data swamps Voice
"In 2007, there was almost no data traffic in the mobile networks. In December last year, data passed voice. On average now, there's more data than voice in the mobile networks. And we expect that to double every year for the coming five years. If you double something five times, it becomes 30 times bigger. So in 2015, there will be 30 times more data than voice in the networks."
From http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/14/technology/personaltech/14talk.
- growth in voice minutes used by consumers has stagnated
- The number of text messages sent per user increased by nearly 50 percent nationwide last year
- for the first time in the United States, the amount of data in text, e-mail messages, streaming video, music and other services on mobile devices in 2009 surpassed the amount of voice data in cellphone calls
- the average length of a local call was 1.81 minutes in 2009, compared with 2.27 minutes in 2008, according to CTIA
Friday, September 10, 2010
iLoveHandles turns nano iPods into oversized watches - Engadget
could there be something to this gadget on a wrist idea?
ok, i want an epaper bracelet that i wear like a watch that shows me
the time date weather stocks headlines. yes, really. then if i need to
know more ill pull out my smartphone. something about 2/3" wide. and
it would be elegant and goodlooking, not like a hospital wristband.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
PCWorld: How To Use Facebook Places
I think it's more fun to use Foursquare myself. I don't see why social media has to boil down to just one application. I mean, I already don't trust Facebook, why should I trust them with my places?
"This can be rather tricky for users concerned about privacy--while researching this piece, I checked several of my PCWorld colleagues into local bars at about 11am on a workday--so if you want to use Facebook Places without letting your friends check you in, you can disable it by turning off Friends Can Check Me Into Places in the privacy settings (click the link for detailed instructions). Once this is disabled, your friends can still try to add you at check-in time, but it won't display on the actual check-in."
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Hurd and the Board: Failure all around
"On the other hand, putting up dazzling short-term numbers that have the effect of enriching himself while robbing H.P.'s future — isn't that what a C.E.O. should be fired for? Firing Mr. Hurd for that reason, however, would have taken courage, something that has always been in short supply on the H.P. board."
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: Larry is furious about this Mark Hurd thing
"My own paranoid conspiracy theory is that this woman was probably a Microsoft plant. Because think about it. A few months ago HP shoved a fork in Ballmer’s eye when they bought Palm and, in effect, rejected Windows. So, Ballmer waits a little while and then bam — he knocks Hurd out of the box. Maybe this all sounds crazy but trust me, the Borg has these sluts planted everywhere. We all do it, actually. They work their way in on some CEO or other top manager; they gather evidence; and then when we’re negotiating something tricky and we need something, we pull the trigger. The slut springs a blackmail attempt or, in this case, a groundless sexual harassment claim which everyone knew would fail in court but was basically just a way to embarrass Hurd and knock him out of his job."
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Men with money, and the women who prey on them
http://princess-teri.blogspot.com/2010/05/diane-passage-knew-just-how-to-hook-him.html
WSJ: New Superbug Spurs Warning
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704901104575423340559483222.html#articleTabs%3Darticle
"Researchers in an article published in the U.K. journal Lancet Wednesday identified a superbug that is resistant to most antibiotics and warned that it is widespread in India and could spread globally.
The new gene, called NDM-1, alters bacteria, allowing them to become resistant to nearly all known antibiotics including carbapenems, a group of antibiotics often reserved as a last resort for emergency treatment for multi-drug resistant bugs."
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Mark Hurd, Larry Ellison, and girlfriends that pass in the night
"In his 1997 book, "The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison (God Doesn't Think He's Larry Ellison)," St. Petersburg Times reporter Mike Wilson described Ellison conducting simultaneous romantic relationships with as many as three female employees. That sometimes created confusion -- Ellison openly described to Wilson an incident in which a woman employee arrived at the executive's house one night, only to find another girlfriend-employee there."
Sunday, August 08, 2010
Watch out for them reality TV stars
http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_15712227
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0167546/
Source: HP's Hurd paid harassment accuser to settle claim, denies sexual relationship - San Jose Mercury News
"But according to one source, the woman complained to HP that she felt pressured to have sex with Hurd and feared she might lose her work with the company if she did not comply. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Hurd has acknowledged a friendship with the woman but denied having any sexual relationship or ever pressuring the woman about sex.
Hurd has paid the woman an unspecified amount of money to resolve her claim, according to a person who has spoken with Hurd's advisers. The person described the amount as" less than what Hurd's legal fees would have been if the matter had gone to trial.
AP: Timeline: Major HP events over past 5 years
"A timeline of some key controversies, acquisitions and news events for Hewlett-Packard Co. over the last five years, and the trajectory of HP's stock price under now-ousted CEO Mark Hurd:"
Saturday, August 07, 2010
HP CEO ouster leaves leadership hole - Yahoo! News
"Hurd will get about $28 million in cash and stock just to walk away. The person said Hurd realized he could no longer lead HP in part because at least two board members were convinced he had had a sexual relationship with the woman and was trying to cover it up."
Friday, August 06, 2010
Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd Resigns After Sexual Harassment Probe - WSJ.com
hmmm, do i smell conspiracy?? - funny that it happens during contract renegotiation. who knew that and could benefit from it?
the fact that there was no affair is a red herring. harassment is an attempt tocoerce someone into an improper relationship thru ones position power. looks like he tried for a while, wined and dined her, paid her a little too much, but she turned him down, and like any Master of the Universe, he thought he didnt have to take no for an answer, and she finally called him on it. and by that time there was a paper trail. hello, gloria allred? she probably got the big payoff for not pressing further charges in public.
with all the ethics scandals that hp has seen, the board had no choice but to fire him. any other ceo would have gotten away with it, come on.
"Mr. Hurd, H-P's CEO since 2005, had been in discussions with the board to extend his tenure as CEO before the woman's letter surfaced, according to a person familiar with the discussions. Mr. Hurd was in talks for a three-year contract that could have been valued at $100 million, a person familiar with the matter says."
Mr. Hurd's relationship with the board soured during the investigation, people familiar with the matter said. The findings of the investigation were presented to the board July 28, these people said.
.
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Orange County Register Mobile story - Blufftop mansion's price cut $25 million
Portabello, the sprawling, 20,000-plus square-foot, two-level blufftop home in Corona del Mar is back on the market with a listing price chopped by a third.
Owner Frank Pritt, a computer software mogul, is now reportedly asking $49.6 million for the residence that boasts its own theater, bowling alley, soda shop and jewelry store. It also features an outdoor grotto, two pools and an upper-deck whirlpool tub with a see-through plastic bubble on the bottom. (Click on photos above for larger views!) When the home first went up for sale four years ago, it?s $75 million asking price was the county?s high and the second-highest in the nation.
The Wall Street Journal reports:
"Mr. Pritt purchased three oceanfront lots in 1996 for $13 million, with a total of 325 feet of oceanfront, and built the house over about six years. He says he?s selling because his youngest children are out of college; he now lives in Seattle. He took the house off the market about a year after its 2006 listing. Despite the size, he says ?it?s really a pretty cozy house,? with the everyday living spaces designed to feel intimate."
Monday, July 12, 2010
Study: Mixing school-age kids and computers makes for bad stuff
Studies are showing that free computers provided to school age kids are associated with lower grades in school.
Thursday, July 08, 2010
Microsoft, Kin, and the future
"Maybe that next great idea hasn't shown itself just yet to Microsoft. Or maybe that's why we're seeing a complete reboot of the Windows Mobile brand as Windows Phone? Mobile is the obvious choice for that next big idea. Hell, it already is a massively big idea (just ask Apple and Google). But it's going to get even bigger. And mobile computing in particular is going to get more important to the fabric of society. Microsoft undoubtedly realizes this, and that's why it's okay that they're re-entering the game so late. The big prize is still there for the taking.
But unlike with Windows 25 years ago, Microsoft faces one very big challenge this time around if mobile is the next great idea they're going to pursue: Google. Google's Android platform is more or less taking the role that Windows took during the PC wars of the 1980s. They're the more open variety of Apple's popular but closed idea. They're the ones going for massive market share while Apple continues to prefer tight controls over its system.
Microsoft can't get away with the licensing fees that they got PC vendors to pay for Windows this time around because the Android software is free. And again, Microsoft is already coming late to the game. So that leaves Microsoft with no clear outlet to make money in mobile since they'd neither be selling hardware nor selling software licenses (again, if they truly hope to compete with Android). What does that leave? Mobile search? Maybe — but again, that's Google's game plan and Microsoft is going to have a hard time playing catch up there.
The touchscreen tablet computing revolution is also a problematic area as Microsoft's next idea. Again, there they'll be facing both Apple and Google. The latter is starting to ramp up Android tablet ideas, and soon, Chrome OS too. Microsoft can offer a full-fledged OS (a flavor of Windows 7) to run on tablets — but will anyone want that? Or will native apps win out?"
Monday, June 21, 2010
Business: China's housing boom spells trouble for boyfriends
"Young Chinese are coming of age at a time of exploding wealth and rising expectations for material success. In a survey last year on Sohu.com, a popular Web portal similar to Yahoo, 73% of respondents said homeownership was a necessity for marriage. An almost equal percentage said they had difficulty buying an apartment."I'm 25 years old, looking for a boyfriend.... I want you to have an apartment and a car.... The apartment has to be built after 2000 and the car has to be better than a minivan," read one post on the popular Chinese Web portal Baidu."
Sunday, June 20, 2010
The End of Men - Magazine - The Atlantic - Flash Player Installation
"As recently as 1985, about half of all women in a national survey said they "must have a son." That percentage fell slowly until 1991 and then plummeted to just over 15 percent by 2003. Male preference in South Korea "is over," says Monica Das Gupta, a demographer and Asia expert at the World Bank. "It happened so fast. It's hard to believe it, but it is." The same shift is now beginning in other rapidly industrializing countries such as India and China."
Monday, June 14, 2010
TechCrunch: Zynga goes to the mattresses with Mafia Wars users
"When Zynga continued to ignore users they started emailing us [TechCrunch] instead. Emails thousands of words long came in containing the kind of bitter passion that you usually only see when we say something mildly critical about the iPhone. Some users are saying that they are going to do a credit card charge back on money they've previously spent on Zynga games. Others say they're leaving to try one of the many competitors. Etc.
What really seemed to make the users angry is the tone Zynga used in communicating with them:
"Your account was determined to have attempted to use an unauthorized redemption code that would result in $120 worth of Reward Points.
As a result of this action, your account has been reverted to its status as of 5am PST on Tuesday June 8th."
Remember that this is just fake money to buy fake stuff on Mafia Wars that costs Zynga nothing to create. The code was created by Zynga and distributed without any technical restrictions on its use (meaning anyone could use it).
In other words, Zynga screwed up."
Thursday, June 03, 2010
Engadget for Mobile
"hey, Mark? You should really look into the smartphone business when you get a second, okay? Just trust us on this one"- hopefully he means "today smartphones, tomorrow the world".
Or is Hurd in the "cell phones are toys" camp?
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Diane Passage knew just how to hook him: Rich men like Kenneth Starr are easy prey for strippers
"The [girls] make them feel comfortable. They assuage their insecurities. They somehow convince them they are attractive, interesting, funny. That they are loved not for their money or power, but for who they really are.
"These CEOs are easy prey for a beautiful Scores girl," Osher says. "They become hypnotized, and follow them around like lost puppy dogs.""
Thursday, May 27, 2010
For a laugh...
"Just got the concession call from Exxon Valdez. They were great competitors and remarkably evil about everything. #bpwins!"
Apple, HP, Dell Begin Probing Supplier After Suicides (Update2) - BusinessWeek
"Gou said he plans to increase psychological testing to help prevent more suicides.
"I offer my sincerest apologies to society, the entire public, all our employees and their families because we had no way of preventing these things from happening," Gou said as he bowed at a press conference today. "
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Why you shouldn't believe 'Facebook backlash' numbers | The Social - CNET News
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-20005921-36.html?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=TheSocial
"The best indication of concern about Facebook and how it handles user privacy is not a quantifiable one. The lack of alternatives to Facebook--as well as the many legitimately good things that the service does, from event organization to keeping in touch with old friends--means that many dissatisfied members probably will not delete their accounts altogether. It's more likely that they may be clamping down on privacy controls, deleting information that has been defaulted to public (the "interests" section, for example), or taking additional privacy-conscious steps like deleting old photo albums. There's not a good way for market research firms, pollsters, or pundits to find this out. It could very well still be happening.
The reason for Facebook to be concerned is that many of these actions that members could be taking will make their profiles less valuable to advertisers because they'll be chipping away at "engagement," that magic factor that Facebook execs love to hold up. If you delete information on your profile, it's tougher to target ads. If you're deleting a friend from your contacts list, that's one fewer News Feed that your Facebook-connected third-party actions will show up in--and so forth. That's something that I'm sure has been the topic of many a discussion internally at Facebook over the past few weeks, and maintaining engagement levels could indeed be very central to the company's current decision-making process."
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Facebook, Zynga, 7-11, and the "Third Wave"
Zynga And 7-Eleven Strike Branding Deal, 10% Of The U.S. Now Playing FarmVille (http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/23/zynga-and-7-eleven-strike-multi-million-dollar-branding-deal-10-of-the-u-s-now-playing-farmville/)
"In total there will be more than 30 branded items in store, ranging from cups, bottles water, a signature ice cream and more. Consumers will be able to connect back to the social games by using their product redemption codes for limited edition 7-Eleven goods within FarmVille, Mafia Wars and YoVille."
http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/23/the-third-disruptive-wave-tcdisrupt/
"Venture capitalist John Doerr, who is arguably the most successful venture capitalist of all time, told me this during our briefing call for Disrupt: Zynga is the fastest growing business Kleiner Perkins has ever invested in.That was said by a man who's firm has invested in Google. And Amazon. And AOL, Compaq, Electronic Arts, Flextronics, Genentech, Intuit, Lotus Development, LSI Logic, Macromedia, Netscape, Quantum, Segway, Sun Microsystems, and Tandem, among many, many others.
First thing tomorrow John Doerr is going to outline why he thinks that is happening. He'll talk about the Third Wave. The First Wave was personal computers and the wave of disruption that caused. The second wave was the Internet, ditto. We are now, says Doerr, in the Third Wave.
What exactly is the Third Wave? It's the tectonic shifts we're seeing in mobile platforms (read his post here about the iPad), the social graph (particularly Facebook), and online commerce. All of these things are related and being accelerated by each other (Facebook is the largest mobile application, Zynga leverages Facebook and also stokes Facebook growth, Groupon is social/flash commerce, etc.)"
I think the the Third Wave is simply social media. Social media is the killer app.
5 years from now, Facebook and Zynga's models won't work any longer.
They basically use first-mover advantage to essentially swindle people out of their privacy and their $$, and have gotten away with it so far.
The more fascinating phenomenon to me is how social media is going to kill the consumer PC business.