Top Items:
Scott Karp / Publishing 2.0:
Content Businesses Don't Scale Anymore — Can anyone think of a content business — meaning a company that produces original content — that has scaled dramatically in recent years? I can't. Look at the businesses that have scaled — Google, MySpace, YouTube — all platforms for content, but not producers of content.
RELATED:
Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
The Economics of Disaggregation — Peter Brantley pointed on a private email list to "a nice article in slate on the disaggregation of content in newspapers, with several nice insights, including a remark on the lack of novelty of some of the problems facing the industry." He quoted:
Clive Thompson / New York Times:
Open-Source Spying — When Matthew Burton arrived at the Defense Intelligence Agency in January 2003, he was excited about getting to his computer. Burton, who was then 22, had long been interested in international relations: he had studied Russian politics and interned at the U.S. consulate in Ukraine …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Yahoo Gets Trashed By Users — Yahoo took a beating by users angry over the new Yahoo TV product in the comments to their own blog post announcing it. Even a former head of Yahoo Entertainment, Erik Schwartz, chimed in with his own bashing and suggesting that Yahoo has lost its way.
Discussion:
Deep Jive Interests, Digital Micro-Markets, Scripting News, Profy.Com, JD on EP and digg
RELATED:
Jeremy Zawodny / Jeremy Zawodny's blog:
Don't F**k With Simple — Especially when "simple" is synonymous with "useful". — Alternative title for this post: Let Users Preview Changes! — If you haven't been following the uproar, Yahoo! TV recently released a new design without offering up a beta test or preview …
Dan Mitchell / New York Times:
A Bubble Watcher Watches Google — COULD Web 2.0 be fast becoming Bubble 2.0? It's hard to say, mainly because of the lack of a yardstick to measure the value of most Internet companies. — Compared with the late-'90s technology boom, there are few initial public offerings and thus …
David Taylor / Gaming Target:
Can the Wii Save the Adventure Game? — In the 1980s and early nineties, the adventure genre was the king of computer games. In the 80s, if you were a PC owner not playing King's Quest then you might as well be a communist. However, with the rise of home console's popularity combined …
Donna Bogatin / Digital Micro-Markets:
Google: $31 billion local winner? — Is Google destined to be the defacto leader in the $31 billion global local search and online classified advertising market opportunity? — Many still believe Google will dominate any opportunity it sets its sights on, and it is eyeing seemingly all of them.
Loren / Incremental Blogger:
Inkable Sidebar Gadget in Vista using WPF — I decided to take a break from setting up my new Vista development system and try out some coding for a bit instead. — Today, I played around wtih Vista Sidebar Gadgets. I wanted to see if it was possible to leverage Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) in a sidebar.
Warner Crocker / Life On the Wicked Stage:
The Second Annual Life On The Wicked Stage Ink Blot Awards — In preparing for The Second Annual Wicked Stage Ink Blot Awards, I realized that it would be tough to write anything better about my motivation for creating them than I did in year one. What I wrote then is still …
Roland Piquepaille / Roland Piquepaille's …:
A new wide-angle lens for video surveillance — If you're a photographer, chances are high that you bought one day a wide-angle lens, commonly called a 'fisheye' lens. And if you're like me, you might have used it to take a dozen of pictures before putting definitively the lens into a drawer …
Mike Musgrove / Washington Post:
Video Visionaries Meld Traditional TV and the Web — Is TV moving onto the Internet or is the Internet moving onto TV? As the lines between the two begin to blur, it's getting harder to tell. — Fans of Comedy Central's "South Park," for example, can still watch the latest episode by tuning in on Wednesday nights.
Darren Murph / Engadget:
Acer's AT3705 becomes first LCD TV to receive Viiv certification — While we're still firm believers that nobody is exactly certain what all this Viiv fuss is about, Acer has been labeled the first producer of a Viiv-certified LCD TV, which "tests for compatibility of networked media devices …
Discussion:
CrunchGear
Cyrus Farivar / Engadget:
LG debuts "ebook" concept laptop with OLED screen, liquid fuel — As much as we like to write about the play-by-play of gadgetry innovation, it's a sad truth that some devices, like laptops, really haven't changed much since their debut in the 1980s. LCDs, a mainstay of all laptops since that period …
Paperghost / The SpywareGuide Greynets Blog:
Myspace Phish Attack Leads Users to Zango Content — A while ago on the Spywareguide Blog, I covered a technique being used in Peer to Peer land involving URLs being embedded in Quicktime movies, which would then pop open a website. This has now been taken to the next level …
Think Secret:
With Photoshop CS3 just months away, new details emerge — More than one year after Think Secret first reported details of Adobe Photoshop CS3, sources recently disclosed that as development enters its final months features have remained true to what Adobe originally planned.