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View Article  MADCast: Yahoo and eBay Strike Alliance

Mike and Allen discuss the implications of theYahoo-eBay partnership announced this week.  Is it a partnership that could have been forged awhile ago or an alliance necessitated by today's circumstances.




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View Article  MADCast: Google and Yahoo: Contrast and Comparison

In this installment, Mike and Allen talk about Yahoo in Google in the wake of their respective analyst/press days. 

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View Article  MADCast: Real's Streaming Patent and Something about EMI Publishing and Skype's Pending Online Retail Store

With the first item, Allen and Mike ruminate (aloud) on what Real Networks' freshly minted patent for online streaming video will mean to the nascent online video market.

As for the second item about EMI and Skype? Beats the heck out of us.  We're going off of one press release.

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View Article  Yahoo Answers -- Is there something there?

In today's installment, Mike and Allen trade shots over a curious new addition to Yahoo's stable of beta products, Yahoo Answers. What does it mean to extend to the online world the physical world experience of asking a general question to a group of people? We try to provide . . . an answer.

 

 

 

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View Article  Yahoo! Widgets
I am a big fan of Widgets. In fact, when Apple first showed me its Widget engine, I saw it as the ultimate ability for a user to bypass funky Web browsers and connect directly to content. After Yahoo! bought Konfabulator, it was only a matter of time before it launched a full-scale Widget service. Here it is
View Article  Starz Unveils Vongo

The most interesting thing about the Starz announcement of its new download service is that it puts Microsoft back in the spotlight. Will 2006 be a battle between Apple and Microsoft focusing on devices and DRM technology? Apple has a large lead (understatement of the New Year) in the world of devices, but the word on the street is that Microsoft has done a lot to enhance its portable media software technology.

 

Stay tuned.

View Article  AOL and Google Tie The Knot???

If published reports are true, the intrigue surrounding the AOL-MSN-Time Warner-Google courtship has reached a conclusion: Google will buy a 5% stake in AOL and remain AOL’s primary source for advertising. MSN becomes the bridesmaid and Yahoo! (who was never seriously in the mix) moves along its separate path of Internet media dominance.

There are many moving parts here:

1. Google may covet AOL’s large base of email and IM users. The conversion process from aol.com addresses to gmail and Google Talk accounts could be relatively easy given Google’s technological savvy. Such a move puts Google on par with Yahoo! And MSN (Hotmail) in the vital path of creating a communications layer that allows users to store, subscribe to and share content.

2. Given AOL.com’s path toward becoming the leading video portal, Google will accelerate its play in the business of extending its ad platform to deliver ads to video clips and Podcasts. This would challenge such players sas Lightningcast and Eyeblaster in this space. Also, it puts pressure on Yahoo! to move quickly to extend its ad platform.

3. This puts AOL’s dial-up business into the spotlight. With this move further down the .com path, what is the company to do with its approximately 19 million dial-up customers? A likely scenario is for AOL to offer its dial-up customers on a discounted basis to Verizon, SBC, etc.. and allow the telcos to offer former dial-up users their “768” DSL service that sells for $14.95 a month. There are some issues here given some of the existing relationships between Yahoo! & MSN with the telcos.

Yahoo! is not likely to respond with anything major. For MSN, in the midst of another reorg which again puts its Portal strategy in play, we’re likely to see an acceleration in its Windows Live efforts to keep pace with its competitors.

View Article  Yahoo! Announces 2005's Top Searches

After seeing the top searches from Yahoo! for 2005, I think it’s time for me to go on vacation and get-reoriented to the real world. There are no top searches from the world of politics, critical world affairs or even such events as Hurricane Katrina. It makes you wonder if anyone over the age of 15 searches the Web.

 

The Yahoo! Search 2005 Overall Top 10 Searches:

1. Britney Spears

2. 50 Cent

3. Cartoon Network

4. Mariah Carey

5. Green Day

6. Jessica Simpson

7. Paris Hilton

8. Eminem

9. Ciara

10. Lindsay Lohan

View Article  MADCast: Tagging, Yahoo and consumer-to-consumer taste sharing

In this edition of the MADCAST, Allen and Mike discuss tagging and consumer-to-consumer taste sharing and their importance to the next stage of growth in media industries.

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View Article  Post-Turkey Day MADCast: TV over the web, IPTV

Today, Allen and Mike return from the holdiday weekend after  extended travels to places like Phoenix Muni and the western suburbs of Chicago (Mike, that is).  What do we have to talk about? TV over the Web which is different than IPTV. Yes, yes it is different. 

Listen and see what we mean.

 

 

 

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View Article  Google Base

Google officially announced Google Base today (see below). My take? Well, it’s party eBay, part Craigslist and part this crazy Web 2.0 notion where every tags his/her own content and everyone else adds their tags along the way. At this point, the community tagging is missing here, but I am sure it’s to come.

 

Also, it appears to be part of Google’s “open” strategy in that the company applies as few limiting standards are possible to cut down on the typical friction required to get anything done on the Web. It’s like the company’s IM strategy in which it used an open (XMPP) standard to encourage as many developers and third parties to become part of the federation. Google can afford this approach because of its massive ad revenue flow. It will get even better for Google once it opens up the Google Wallet as a payment scheme. That has to be coming soon as well.

 

Google Base is an extension of Google’s existing content collection efforts such as our traditional web crawl system, as well as Google Sitemaps, Google Print and Google Video – all which enable content owners to easily make their information searchable via Google. The goal of Google Base is to improve the overall quality and breadth of Google Search results by collecting even more information about a wider diversity of content.

 

Similar to a database, Google Base enables content owners to describe and assign attributes to it the information they upload and uses this meta-data to better target search results to what users are looking for. For example, if a chef chooses to upload their very best recipe for tamales he/she can further describe that recipe with a photo or by assigning attributes such as “medium-spicy” or “spicy.” When a user searches for the word [tamale recipes] from the Google Base homepage they will be presented with a list of recipe results accompanied by a list attributes at the top of page which enable them to further refine their search to “medium-spicy” or “hot” tamale recipes.

 

Google Base also creates a new opportunity for content producers to submit any kind of information even if it’s not a web page or online. This could range from an old family photograph to a large database of museum artifacts both of which may not have been previously accessible online. As part of the early-stage beta, Google has been working with a variety of commercial and non-commercial information providers. Some of which include:

 

  • ArtNet an online art information source and marketplace is uploading information on artworks, artists, galleries and auction records.
  • CareerBuilder an online job listings site is uploading its listings with various attributes including geographic location, field of profession and other information.\
  • Collegeboard.org not-for-profit membership organization is uploading free information for students and parents about college admissions, financial aid, college selection, and other college planning resources.
  • StepUp a local shopping services company uploading product lists from a variety of local retailers so that people searching can learn where to by products from stores near them.
  • World Resources Institute an environmental think tank is uploading links to data on sustainability issues such as climate change, human health, and resource consumption.

 

View Article  MADCast: Digitizing Libraries, Open Archive, Microsoft, Google

Allen and Mike take on recent announcements from Microsoft and others that outlined various efforts to digitize and make searchable all the print material that exists, and then some.

 

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View Article  AOL, Weblogs and TV Over The Web

Looks like AOL has purchased Weblogs. For the few naysayers out there who believe blogs aren’t real or worth looking at or investing in, this should end all speculation. Everyone is on board. Podcasting is really close behind; major announcements regarding big ticket players and Podcasting are on the horizon.

 

But, I am most interested in TV over the Web (as opposed to IPTV). It’s the REALLY hot opportunity. Blinkx and Brightcove stepped up big time this week, and you have to think Google isn’t far behind (especially given its airing of “Everybody Hates Chris.”). I know I am working on a few TV channels to be distributed over these new non-politicized networks. For example, do you think I could get every baseball blogger to syndicate (or carry) my upcoming videos of Arizona Fall League? We’d all make money.

 

Stay tuned!

View Article  MADCast: Playing with Google's Money, MS-AOL, Music

It's an end-of-the-week grab-bag. (A marketing person would refer to it as a "synopsis of important industry events." Somebody else, like my mother, might label this 'cast nothing but garden variety rumor mongering.)

In any event, Allen and Mike share their recommendations on how Google could spend the $4 billion they just raised in their secondary offering.  Allen muses on the rumors about Microsoft and AOL.  Mike muses more about the Future of Music Summit in D.C.

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View Article  Yahoo! Launches Hot Zone

Pretty cool stuff, but it makes me miss "The World's Most Dangerous Places" with Robert Young Pelton. His interview with Ahmad Shah Massoud is one of TV's greatest moments. The book (which I own) is available on Amazon.

 

View Article  eBay & Skype?

I just don’t see the match between eBay and Skype. The other players who recently jumped into the VOIP game—Yahoo!, MSN, etc..—have fully fledged consumer communications platforms which include email (with a lot of storage), Instant Messaging and voice chat. eBay has none of those vital ingredients. In addition, there is no social network platform or blogging platform upon which it can build.

 

Honestly, I think a company such as Myspace or Friendster is a more viable candidate to buy a VOIP company. I doubt it’s in Myspace’s future and I doubt Friendster has that kind of money. It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

View Article  MADCast: Of Things Moving at Warp Speed: TV

In today's episode, Allen and Mike admit that the past few days worth of news in the media world have left them slack-jawed at the speed with which world of TV is morphing.

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View Article  MADCast: Incumbent Media Titans and Microsoft's Search Imperative

Is it surprising that incumbent media titans shunned "new media" executives at an exclusive media industry gathering? Can Microsoft catch up to Google?

 

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View Article  MADCast: A World without Browsers ? ? ?

Allen expounds on the possibility of a world without browsers.  Mike listens and learns.

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View Article  MADCast: Digital Media's Abuzz but Where's Microsoft?

Today's MADCAST finds Allen and Mike musing about Microsoft's ability to rekindle the competitive juices to claw its way back to a leadership position in the digital media world . . .

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View Article  MADCAST from July 20, 2005

...Wherein Allen and Mike discuss Microsoft and the challenges it faces.

Editor's note: This is a repost of an entry that was plagued by technical issues. We think those problems have been solved. Mostly...

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View Article  MADcast: NewsCorp Courts The Digital Future

At long last, the hiatus is over. Allen's back from vacation.

In today's MADCAST, Allen and Mike engage in rampant speculation regarding NewsCorp's future after its purchase of Intermix and the company's announcement of an Internet division to handle online business for its sports, news and entertainment properties.

Why it seems like just yesterday that we were reading about Rupert Murdoch telling his fellow captains of the media industry and the Internet was changing everything...

 

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View Article  Google and Online Payments

The buzz is that Google is working on an online payment business to compete with Paypal. If so, it seems to me it would be to support Google's new media business. How else could they charge people to view all those uploaded videos? If you have uploaded videos, you could note that it allows the video producer to indicate that he or she wants to charge for viewing. A new payment scheme makes sense.

 

View Article  A New Video Program: Media Challenge. Today's Topic is AOL

As of today, I am launching a new program, “Media Challenge.” Here’s the way it works--I am going to record a one minute (or so) take on a media topic of interest. Mike McGuire, my friend and research partner, will also provide a “starter” take which, more often than not, will differ from my POV.

At that point, the program becomes like a Wiki in that I welcome anyone to send in their take which we’ll post to the site arranged by topic. Topics and takes will be added on a weekly basis (or so, given we’re approaching vacation season).

I can take just about any sort of video file. Send them to me at allen_weiner@yahoo.com

Today’s topic is AOL.

Enjoy and please, participate.

 

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View Article  Amazon: The Content Company?

Mike and I long have talked about Amazon as a major player in the media landscape. They had a cool movie series and now are delivering a concert in honor of their 10th anniversary. We're still waiting for some definitive media strategy.

 

View Article  MADCast: AOL Opening up to the Portal World?

Wherein we discuss AOL's transition from subscription-only to open portal.

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View Article  New Web Browsers on the Way?

The below is true. All the Portals are looking to create new "browsers" or plaforms that allow consumers to easily look at various media files without inconveniently changing "players" based on file type.

Yahoo! Inc., owner of the most-visited website, may consider developing its own Internet browser to help attract more users and advertisers to its websites, chief executive Terry Semel said.

View Article  Is It Too Late for Lycos?
Maybe not. Lycos has some interesting Portal elements in place that, with the right marketing, could re-elevate them to a more competitive status. I especially like their community stuff and multimedia search. Remember when Lycos was considered one of the top Portals? They practically invented search.