Microhoo: a marriage of two web 1.0 icons?

So Microsoft wants to own Yahoo.   Not exactly a wicked storm of excitement brewing in the web 2.0 world over that prospect, since neither firm has been especially innovative in the 2.0 movement. So what could we expect from this?

- A slow, multi-year put-down of Yahoo Messenger as users are transitioned over to Live services.

- A new ad-federation effort centered on Yahoo’s superior content services rather than on Microsoft’s lamer MSN-vintage stuff.

- A  further Windows-ization of Yahoo services. (Certain non-Windows OSs have always been excluded from parts of the Yahoo party.)

-  The Vista angle. The push for Vista will be aided by the mindshare Microsoft would gain vis a vis Yahoo’s content empire. Make a few things Vista-only, and the customers will come. Kind of reminds me of how Microsoft bought Bungie, a Mac developer who was designing a Mac game called Halo, and then promptly made their flagship project the killer app for the Xbox.

-  A bigger outlet for Facebook, since Yahoo’s got a slew of non-2.0 users to sell to, and Microsoft owns a sizable piece of Facebook.

The myth of telco bundling harmony (or, “Windstream sucks”)

Windstream co-markets Dish Network and offers cheapy Internet access as the hook. Only problem is, if Dish can’t deliver on your property due to an abundance of tall trees between your house and the satellite, you’re still stuck with the the Windstream cheapy Internet access–a problem I’m trying to sort out right now.  You see, Dish took a month to figure out they couldn’t put satellite TV service into my home, and then it was I who had to call THEM to find out as much.  By that time, Windstream was unwilling to refund the fees assessed for the unused (and still in the box) Internet service.  See, I prefer my Time Warner service for Internet, and wouldn’t switch to Windstream without a darn good reason (ie. bundle pricing for DSL and TV).

Worse, three different phone reps at Windstream told me three different things about the availability of a complete refund to my account because of the mixup. One told me it would be no problem. Another told me they could pro-rate the current month and knock the balance down a bit. The third told me just no, no, no.  What’s worse, the callback I requested from a higher-up never happened within 24-48 as promised by the rank-n-file I talked to.  That was a week ago. I currently have a consumer advocacy buddy of mine working on the matter.

Tagged Again: the Bucket List

Thanks for the tag Andy! 10 things I’d like to do this year:

1. Implement (and stick to) a regular regimen of jogging. I had it going pretty good last summer but these brutal north coast winters have a tendency to keep you indoors.

2. Land 2 or 3 new clients in the periodical publishing business. My company has a great consulting approach that shows how to integrate WordPress into a professional-calibre workgroup web publishing solution for people who make magazines and newspapers.

3. Hire a business development executive. Again, my company is growing, but our ambitions are very high, and we’re in this for the long haul. So grabbing and retaining a top-flight BDE is on my to-do list.

4. Get back to the tropics for a visit. Southern Florida would even be sufficient. I need some sunlight, man.

5. Get to bed by 11 pm every night. Nuff said. This might permit me enough energy to turn out another book!!
6. Get my hands an the new 810 Internet Tablet from Nokia and hack it into the best turn-by-turn navigation system money can buy.

7. Figure out how to get a contract-free, SIM-unlocked iPhone so I can poke around with the SDK when it shows up.

8. Get moved into a permanent office space. We recently moved out of our office in Elyria, OH, and we’re considering moving into the Great Lakes Technology Park on the campus of Lorain County Community College.

9. Figure out how to get uPnp working between the PS3, Wii, and Mac. So far, no luck.

10. Build a life-size Star Wars replica prop of some sort.

8 things you may not know about me

I got tagged by Phoneboy a few weeks back and didn’t continue the meme because I was bogged down with other stuff. Alas, I now have time, so here goes:

1. By June, my hair will be shoulder-length. Don’t believe it? On the solstice, I’m getting a buzz cut. All true.
2. I dropped out of high school in 1993 and later got my diploma endorsement from an adult education program in Detroit. I’ve since realized that school matters. I also realized that the publishing industry doesn’t care if you’re a drop-out, as long as you know how to write. How about that.
3. I own Best Technology Strategy Inc., an executive consulting and technology patent research company based in Cleveland, OH. My business partner is an Air Force Vet and a high school graduate and a college graduate ;)

4.  My favorite color is blue. Not sure why–it’s a serene color and there’s very little in nature that’s blue that’s not desirable. Blue sky, blue ocean, blue cheese. All very good stuff.

5. I have two of the awesomest people on the planet as my children. They are the most beautiful and perfect humans I have ever met!

6. My first computer was a Timex Sinclair ZX81. Second one was a Commodore 64. Third was an Amiga 500. It was all downhill from there.

7. I love Apple products but refuse to be a poster boy for Apple.  That’s why I don’t have one of those free Apple logo stickers in the rear window of my Pacifica.

8. I operate a recording studio in my basement for fun and practice music recording and production as a hobby.

I’ll tag some folks in the next post, gotta get moving! See you soon.

What iTunes can learn from hyperlocalism

There was a time when radio stations were independent license holders, when the guy at the local record store was who you went to for music-buying advice, and the most successful musical acts were sought after for intimate concert performance by a faithful, local audience.

Then came the era of superstardom, brought on by previously unparalleled success of performers like Elvis Presley, the product of the early national broadcast networks. Give me geographic ubiquity in mass media, and I’ll give you a superstar. American Idol shows us the formula for marketing a superstar: more is better. More TV audience, more distribution, more touring, and, perhaps most importantly, more mileage on the tour bus.

The notion of “if you can’t make it on the national stage, you just can’t make it in the music business” has been more and more true since the days of Ed Sullivan. The ‘discoveries’ and ‘big breaks’ that happened before the national broadcast networks were much smaller: a couple of kids playing guitar on a local radio station to a listening audience of only a few hundred would’ve been considered a big break in the days of Fats Domino and earlier.

This is localism, of course. The evidence of localism in the early recording business is all over the early art: Frank Sinatra sang songs about cities (New York, New York, et al) because it was the local community that patronized the pioneering artists in the art of recording back in those early days.

Times, as they do, have changed. Today, we have national and international superstardom as a requirement for commercial success in the music business–meaning that, for an artist, the availability of a viable entrance into the greater market is slim to none, and that, for the listener, the availability of locally relevant music choices is practically nonexistent.

Sure, there are local artists. Guys who finance their own recordings and dump tons of time and effort into the best production they can get: usually a local studio that charges thirty bucks an hour for a mixing engineer that’s got stars in his eyes. These guys often make good music, but because they aren’t willing to shlep along earning a hundred bucks a night for years, they go nowhere, their audience doesn’t typically rise dramatically, and they remain locked out of the larger scene, relegated to the unfortunate status of “indie”.

A while back, I wrote that iTunes ought to be on the forefront of promoting independent music in a hyperlocal way by allowing artists to submit their songs in the same fashion podcasters are enabled to submit their podcasts. That was a year or so ago. Not much has changed. iTunes’ cues are till taken from the big labels that represent the lion’s share of the music they purvey. Local or indie music gets little to no attention while the stars who are already stars get pushed over the top.

But the model of Web 2.0, the democratization of the web that was such a buzz concept in 2006, allows for a conduit like iTunes to return artist recognition to the state it was in before Ed Sullivan, before national television, before the domination of a handful of low-output record distributors who refer to themselves as studios.

But how?

- Allow indies to upload and manage their music profiles on iTunes in a fashion similar to iLike or MySpace.

- Equip GarageBand and Logic Express with mastering capabilites so that indie artists can give the best presentation possible on iTunes.

- Highlight indie artists in a geographic or hyperlocal fashion.

- Allow indie artists to compete on a level playing field–even setting their own price. Podcasts are free after all. Surely there’s a way to allow indie artists to distribute a few tracks for free, especially if it means increased revenue for the greater distribution system.

The net result, if local music were allowed to flourish, would be that the high cost of promoting and maintaining a big-label offering would shrink, international superstardom would be less of a pre-req for making money in Hollywood and Nashville, live performance would become a profit driver for the person doing the promoting (the label), distribution of recordings would diminish as the main revenue stream for the person doing the promoting (again, the label), and all studios, be they in Hollywood or Akron, could offer a high number of artist-products that are actually profitable.

And profit, in art and science, is the name of the game.

2007′s in the rear-view

Well it’s that time of year again. A few weeks ago I did retrospective of polls and voting results from the poll section of my blog.  It was prefaced with “part one” because I expected to be writing a second, more exhaustive look at the year that has just passed. Problem is, I don’t have the time to write such a retrospective.

I can tell you that for me, 2007 was one of the most turbulent and challenging years of my entire life–well it WAS the most challenging. So much happened so fast; the whole year seems like a blur when think about it all.

Blogging has been down, and I’ve been less in touch with the excellent people in my industry than I’m comfortable with, but I’ll excuse it, because my business continues to cook up new offerings and growth.  And that’s a good thing.  My priority list, in order of importance, goes something like this: my kids, my business, blogging, the music business, and dating.

But tonight I’m going to a prime steakhouse to “just chill” with my date and ring in the New Year the traditional way, the bubbly way. I’m more excited about 2008 than I am about what unfolded in 2007. The future is bright and baseball season is just around the corner… Happy New Year to all my associates, friends, family, and readers.

The Trillion Dollar Rethink

I LOVE that slogan. LOVE it. Whoever thought of it deserves a Guiness on me. Or a Miller Lite.

But it’s a great slogan because it so aptly describes the present state of high-speed communication. It captures the paradigm shift that we’ve seen just the last few years: that the network indeed is made of endpoints (people), but it serves the COMMUNITY of people. As community has usurped point-to-point in our view of networking, the Internet and telecomm are at a crossroads not likely to be reversed over in the coming years. Everything is changing, accelerating, pulling more mental capital into the evolving, democratizing, business-model-bending world of accelerated social communication…

…and the heaviest hitters in this industry are all going to be gathered at EComm 2008, March 12-14 in Silicon Valley. Not going? You should be. The biggest players are sending their brightest thinkers to tell you how the world of speed communication is growing. So are the smallest players. Speeches will be given and toasts raised while backroom conversations will hatch ideas that may just transform your world, perhaps even shaking up the foundation of telecomm, a global infrastructure in which we’ve invested a trillion or more to get us where we’re at now. The question is–what’s the next trillion going to do?

Find out in March.