Thomas Hawk's Digital Connection

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Twitter is Damn Addictive

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Twitter / thomashawk Man, I've really been enjoying Twitter the past few weeks. Twitter is a site where in something like 150 characters or less, you let your friends know what you are doing *right now* (which in my case is listening to "Dead, Drunk and Naked," by the Drive by Truckers and blogging about Twitter).

Anyways, it's highly addictive. If you are on Twitter or a thomashawk.com reader feel free to check it out and add me.

My Twitter page is here.

Laughing Squid's Scott Beale and Former Corbis CEO Doug Rowan on Scoble Show

Portrait of RobertPhotoAlbums and more with Doug Rowan and Scott Beale | ScobleShow: Videoblog about geeks, technology, and developers Robert Scoble interviews Laughing Squid's Scott Beale and Doug Rowan, former President and CEO of Corbis (the number two stock photography company in the world started by Bill Gates).

Doug is now working with something called ZoomAlbum which allows you to print small photo albums with your ink jet printer. Scott, who now has almost 15,000 photos on Flickr, talks about his motivation as a documenter of Web 2.0.

Ladybug, Ladybug

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Today while out on a hike with my boys Jack and Will and my aunt and uncle we came across the most amazing swarm of ladybugs. There must have been millions of them in the wild covering a tree and a giant blackberry patch. To see more of them you can check out my set of photos of them here.

Ladybird, ladybird, fly away home
Your house is on fire and your children are gone
All except one, and that's Little Anne
For she has crept under the warming pan.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

Our Decay

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Baby

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More shots from the Los Angeles Natural History Museum here.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Want to Buy a Ferrari for $20,000? No, Silly, not the car, the PC

Laughing Squid's Scott BealeLaughing Squid's Scott Beale Hosted on Zooomr

eBay: Acer Ferrari 1000 Laptop with Windows Vista Ultimate (item 160068144458 end time Jan-04-07 13:15:11 PST) Holly Cannoli Batman, $20,000 for an Acer PC?

Well Scott Beale came up with a great idea on what to do with his Ferrari notebook PC that Edelman gave him as a "present" and then Microsoft wanted back. He's decided to auction it off on eBay with the proceeds going to the EFF. The winner also gets a Laughing Squid t-shirt (as fashionably modeled here by Scott's wife Lori) and bumper stickers.

This is great news because the EFF is a terrific and deserving organization (even if they don't share my enthusiasm for free wi-fi in San Francisco).

Right now the high bid is over $20,000 for the computer. Then again, I'm not sure that I'd trust the top bid as being serious when it's coming from someone named sillygoose109.

Still, I hope the auction stays legit and people see this as a terrific high profile way to make a donation to the EFF.

Slashdot
AND digg have picked up on this.

Now, want to make this story even better? Someone (Apple themselves, a Mac forum somewhere, etc.) should donate a high end MacBook Pro to this auction as well. The twist would be that the winner wouldn't get both computers, but would get to choose between the Acer Ferrari or the MacBook Pro. Let's make a horse race out of it and see who wins.

The MacBook Pro could be a limited edition with the EFF logo etched on it.

Wouldn't it be a lot more fun to see whoever wins this donation be the ultimate high profile decider over what machine is better, the MacBook Pro running OSX or the new Ferrari Vista laptop?

If the winner chose the MacBook Pro then Scott could just send the Ferrari back to Microsoft.

4 Music

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WSJ's Walt Mossberg: Comcast DVRs Suck Ass

Personal Technology - WSJ.com:

"So, why not just stick with the high-definition DVR supplied by the cable company? After all, while it isn't free, it's cheaper than the TiVo.

The answer is that, at least in my recent experience with the nation's biggest cable company, Comcast, the high-definition DVR it supplies is just awful. If cable boxes were sold at retail like consumer-electronics devices, the Comcast DVR I tested, built by Motorola, would get creamed by better competitors.

My Comcast box, a Motorola DCT3412 I, which Comcast rents for about $12 a month, holds a maximum of 15 hours of high-definition programming or 60 hours of standard programming. The TiVo holds up to 35 hours of high-definition programs or up to 300 hours of standard.

Also, the user interface on the Comcast box is crude and confusing -- nothing like the elegant interfaces people have become used to on their personal computers and devices like iPods. The TiVo interface, by contrast, is effective and attractive.

The worst problem is that the Comcast box flubs the basic functions of a DVR. It is maddeningly slow at responding to commands sent by the remote control to pause, play, fast-forward and rewind. You press pause and nothing happens. So you press it again. You try to return to normal speed after fast-forwarding through commercials and the unit takes so long to obey your command that you badly overshoot the resumption of the program."


Mossberg does mention the TiVo/Comcast deal which is supposed to provide a TiVo option for Comcast users in 2007. I'm hoping to get to try this out at CES this year.

Mossberg's criticisms of the new TiVo Series 3 by contrast include that it doesn't provide show portability (the TiVo2Go functionality on earlier Series 2 generation boxes -- you can thank your friends in Hollywood for that one) and the higher price.

Still, if money is no object for you (yeah, right), there is simply no comparison between the crappy generic DVR offerings and the Series 3 TiVo right now.

The new Vista CableCARD Media Center PCs will likely give the Series 3 a run for it's money but those won't be out until later this month. I probably won't buy one right away because I already upgraded to a Mac last month and all... (well unless one shows up on my doorstep without a return address, Microsoft, Edelman, are you listening? -- just kidding of course) but it will be interesting to see how they compare with the Series 3.

For another classic rant on the Comcast crappy DVR check out John Battelle's from a few months back.

Having people like John Battelle and Walt Mossberg call your DVR a smelly pile of poo just can't be good for Comcast. Now, if Comcast was smart, maybe they could just contact a bunch of bloggers and offer them free high def units and free service for a year to... uhhhh... check out... ummm.. their new HD "review" box. (again, just kidding, seriously, Comcast, don't do it, you'll get creamed).

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Digg Raises $8.5 million more in VC Money

VentureBeat � News site Digg raises $8.5M more, rejects evidence it has been gamed Matt Marshall broke a news story today that Digg has raised another $8.5 million in VC funding. Previously Digg had raised $2.8 million.

Nice work team digg.

Maybe She'll Help Me to Untie This

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How About Those 2006 Predictions!

Well, yes I know that technically we still have something like three days left in 2006 and I'll update this post if need be, but I figured today would be a good day to review how people fared with their 2006 predictions. Some of you may recall that at the end of last year I compiled a few of those predictions posts and came up with a number of predictions. Some of these predictions were subjective and so it's kind of hard to tell if they got it right or wrong but here's my best interpretation. Feel free to chime in if you think I get any of these wrong.

To my credit I resisted the temptation to make a bunch of predictions last year sticking to just a single one which I got wrong.

So....

Who got it really, really wrong.


1. Thomas Hawk: Yahoo will buy Digg. (should have, but of course did not).

2. Dave Winer: Apple will ship two generations of iPods. The first new generation, released in April, will have a satellite receiver built-in. The second will have a low-power FM transmitter built-in.

3. Paul Scrivens: Pricing for iTunes Music Store songs will change based on the popularity of the song. Some songs might go for $.29 while new hits will rise to $1.99. To appease customers, the album price will only raise a bit.

4. John Battelle: iTunes will begin to get the speed wobbles as the music industry decides it wants to control its distribution just like in the good old days.

iTunes growth actually remained very steady. They even hit the 1 billionth song downloaded mark in 2006. Rumors of it's decline did make their way recently into the blogosphere though. CNET reported a decline earlier this month.

5. Jason Calacanis: CNET will be bought by Yahoo or Fox Interactive/Newscorp.

6. Jason Calacanis: DIGG will be bought by CNET.

7. Paul Scrivens: Digg will be purchased by CNet for $5-8 Million.

Uhhh, I think Kevin and the boys are... um... going to need a little more than $5-8 million at this point.

8. Phillip Swann: DIRECTV Will Launch a Portable DVR

9. Jason Calacanis: Walt Mossberg will join the Engadget team.

Walt Mossberg is still kicking around that little paper called The Wall Street Journal best I can tell.

10. Jason Calacanis: Gawker will hit 20 blogs and get bought by Newscorp--Nick Denton will keep Fleshbot and retire for the third time before spinning the Fleshbot into an ipod video service claiming all the while that "there's no business in it."

Gawker was not bought by Newscorp.

11.Dan Tynan: As part of its ongoing agreement with NASA, Google will secure exclusive advertising rights to the moon, where it plans to run text ads on the lunar surface. To increase traffic, the search company will distribute free telescopes to every human on the planet.

WTF? This is just crazy.

12.HelloCompany: Google will buy Gannett and install its Click-to-call button beside every classified on the Gannett network.

13. Jason Calacanis: After obsessing over Google for years while writing The Search, John Battelle sells his Federated Media network to the them.

14. John Battelle: There will be one major new IPO that briefly gets the press talking about "the Next Google." But it won't live up to the hype.

15. John Battelle: Microsoft will gain five points of search share, at least.

According to an article in the Guardian last week, Microsoft Live Search could be renamed "Dead Search", "According to the latest Nielsen//NetRatings numbers for the US, Google now handles 49.5% of searches (up 31%) ahead of Yahoo's 24.3% (up 27%). However, MSN/Windows Live Search now has only 8.2%, and its share has fallen by 12%, year on year."

16. Pat McCarthy: Face-recognition photo application Riya will be acquired by a major player.

Nope, although they did turn themselves into a kind of place to go if you want to buy shoes I guess.

17. Dave Winer: Scoble will appear on Oprah.

This did not happen but I did hear he does a pretty cool photowalking show with this guy Thomas Hawk.


18. Phillip Swann: Yahoo to Buy TiVo.

19. John Battelle: Tivo and NetFlix will merge.

20. Blake Ross: In retaliation for Gore’s bold foray onto the Internet, George W. Bush will be the latest to come under fire for editing his own Wikipedia biography. Although Wikipedia will have implemented the most sophisticated algorithms to deter this kind of behavior, Bush will be caught because he will change all instances of “George” to “I”.

Uhhh... wouldn't be prudent.

21. Greg Linden: Wikipedia will be sabotaged by a spam robot coming over a botnet. The spam robot will makes millions of subtle, small changes to the articles, many of which go undetected for long periods of time. Unable to keep up, Wikipedia will be forced to shut off anonymous edits and place other controls on changes.

Not this year.

22. Shel Israel: Realizing that there is a better chance for one independent blogging tools and hosting service, Six Apart and Wordpress will talk merger. Wordpress will not like the idea, but will see that it beats getting gobbled or crushed by one of the giants of Google, MSN and Yahoo!

Not that I'm aware of. Although Six Apart did launch Vox.

Who got it kind of wrong:

1. Om Malik: iPhone, the real thing comes to market sometime in September 2006 time frame.

2. David Kirkpatrick, Fortune Senior Editor: Apple is likely to introduce a cell phone next year.

3. Shel Israel: The number of bloggers worldwide will exceed 150 million.

Note: As of Dave Sifry's last Sifry alert on blogs in October he said Technorati is now tracking 57 million blogs. We most certainly will add more but I doubt the number gets to 150 million by Dave's next analysis.


4. Shel Israel: Somewhere a blogger will break a news story that makes the world stop cold. He or she will be considered for a Pulitzer. But the committee will reject the idea, because the traditional newspaper managers who determine award recipients will remain adamant that bloggers are never journalists.

Ummm... not that I'm aware of.

5. Greg Linden: Flickr, Technorati, del.icio.us, and other popular tagging sites will find themselves under assault by spammers. Like with splogs, efforts to battle the influx of crap will be only partially successful.

Note: I've thought that delicious, Technorati, and Flickr have all remained remarkedbly spam free.


6. Oliver Thylmann: The Google Bubble will Burst. Google is immensely overvalued and that valuation will need to come down.

Google declined in price temporarily but the bubble has yet to burst and it ended up for the year.

7. Dave Winer: Google will make a deal with the Time-Warner movie companies, and start movies.google.com for on-demand distribution over the Internet.

They didn't do this exactly but they did buy YouTube.

8.Michael Noer (Fobes columnist): Xbox 360 will be a flop. Microsoft rushed to get its system out for the 2005 holiday season, and it shows. The launch titles are, at best, uninspired. Worse, Ubisoft is now saying that the 360 version of one of the most anticipated games, King Kong, is essentially unplayable on a regular TV and needs an HD set. Gaming blogs and Web sites are chock-full of complaints alleging that the 360 freezes, overheats and crashes.

Microsoft says that they are confident that they will hit their 10 million unit projection number by the end of the year. The units remain a popular hit with consumers.


9. John Battelle: Google will stumble, some might say badly, but it will be significant.

Everything seems to be aok down on the farm.

10. John Battelle: Mobile. I repeat my mobile prediction from last year, in the hope that it will come true this year: Mobile will finally be plugged into the web in a way that makes sense for the average user and a major mobile innovation - the kind that makes us all say - Jeez that was obvious - will occur.

This hasn't happened for me at least yet.

10. Roland Tanglao: No Flickr of video emerges.

Update: Roland chimes in and says that YouTube is not a Flickr of video.

There was this little site called YouTube.

11. Greg Linden: Microsoft will abandon Windows Live.

Not exactly, but they need to have better properties there if they hope to get anyone to actually use it.

12. Jason Calacanis: MySpace will host an awards show on MTV or Spike.

Not that I'm aware of.

13. Jason Calacanis: Newscorp (and maybe some other folks) might spin out their Interactive assets and take them public.

Nope.

14. Brandon Paddock: Newsgator will get bought by, or closely partner with one of the major search/portal/blog players - or by someone that’s trying to become one. Nope, although they did partner with

No. But they did announce a partnership with NBC for video.

15. Jason Calacanis: No podcasting company will have any significant success in 2006, but a number of podcasters will be offered great jobs at Sirius and XM Radio.

I'm not aware of any examples of this. In 2005 Adam Curry made a big splash when he signed with Sirius.

17. Phillip Swann: Voom Will Get a Re-Birth

I wouldn't exactly call their positioning with Echostar as a "Re-Birth"

18. Jason Calacanis: Someone will do the Wikipedia version of Weblogs, Inc. and and it will fail because it never reaches critical mass.

Not that I'm aware of.

Open to interpretation or I don't have the numbers readily at hand. Feel free to chime in with your comments


1. John Battelle: The pace of Internet startup acquisitions will not be as torrid as most entrepreneurs and VCs had hoped.

Any VCs or entrepreneurs care to comment, I'm not sure what their expectations were for this year?

2. Jason Calacanis: 30 of the 50 blog networks will fizzle out and/or die. Only one or two (other than Gawker) will break 20M pages a month. The blog network space is just way too crowded, and if you can't go big at this point you're gonna have a real hard time doing a *real* network (say 20 blogs or more). Now, you'll do just fine if you stay focused on a narrow niche that you can own.

I'm not sure on the traffic of blog networks.

3. Shel Israel: The greatest growth of all will come from non-professionals who create blogs to serve small groups of family, friends and colleagues.

Not sure where blog growth is coming from, although this is vague it seems to make sense.

4. Shel Israel: Each member of the so-called A-List will continue to increase the people who follow them. But they will each become less important, as the relentless growth of the blogosphere outgrows their readerships, giving them influence over smaller percentages of the total.

Would like to see some thoughts on if this has happened.


5. Dave Winer: Jason Calacanis will stay at AOL though Easter 2006, and then will resign to spend more time with his family.

Hmmmm... it didn't exactly happen that way but Calacanis is actually gone from AOL.

6. John Battelle: The China Internet Bubble will begin to deflate.

Not quite sure how to gauge this exactly, but overall China seems to be doing well. The Matthews China Fund returned almost 65% since the beginning of the year.


7.Phillip Swann: DIRECTV Will Emerge As the HDTV Leader

8. Pat McCarthy: Social news site Digg will expand into other content areas and media types and then will be acquired.

Digg definitely expanded into other content areas but they were not acquired.

9. David Kirkpatrick, Fortune Senior Editor: Yes, I love Google, but my first prediction is that a year from now we won't think that the search company is the invincible behemoth that we do now.

10. John Battelle: Google and Yahoo will both enter the video (nee television) advertising marketplace.

11. Phillip Swann: Several More HDTV Networks Will Launch in 2006.

12. Phillip Swann: Rear-Projection TV Sales Will Suffer in 2006 And Beyond.

13. Phillip Swann: But Rear-Projection HDTV Prices Will Drop Under $500.

14. Phillip Swann: New HDTV DVD players Will Be the Buzz of the Industry.

15. Phillip Swann: HDTV Sales Will Jump In the First Two Months of 2006.

16. Phillip Swann: The Plasma-LCD-DLP-SED Flat-Screen TV War Will Spur More Interest in HDTV.

17. Phillip Swann: The Networks Will More Frequently Promote HDTV As a Reason to Watch a Primetime Show.

18. John Battelle: Someone, and I do not know who, will make a big pile of Big Media video assets freely available on the web.

19. Churl: In 2006 we are going to lose our dog. Churl, I hope you didn't lose your dog man.

20. Phillip Swann: Microsoft Will Buy Its Way Into the Living Room.

I'm not exactly sure what Swann means by this.


21. Jason Calacanis: The housing bubble will deflate/burst (it's much worse now than people are saying) and consumer confidence and spending will be moderately shaken. This will create a pullback in consumer advertising which will result in a cooling of the media/Web 2.0 space and another round of main stream media layoffs (think magazines, newspapers, etc).

The housing market bubble didn't exactly deflate/burst, although last month was the first month in a long time that San Francisco at least recorded a drop in housing prices.

22. John Battelle: Vista will launch, and its much anticipated and feared desktop search integration will be viewed as anemic. The whisper as to why? Fear of the DOJ.... Vista launched for businesses this year but the more public consumer launch is not until next month in 2007. I have not heard a lot of DOJ concerns.

23. Jason Calacanis: Google Adsense for Podcasts and/or Video will debut in Q2/Q3 of 2006--Yahoo and Microsoft will follow shortly after that.

Google did announce a video Adsense type thing, but I'm unaware of a podcast advertising thing that they are doing. I'm not aware of any significant follow up response from Microsoft of Yahoo.

24. Shel Israel: After a few major metropolitan newspapers die, dailies will begin to understand that blogs are part of their solution, and will start incorporating neighborhood bloggers into their system.

Anyone have any evidence of this?

25. Phillip Swann: Porn HDTV DVDs Will Explode in 2006.

Not sure on this. Although some kind soul left a HD DVD copy of a porn version of the Pirates of the Caribbean in the room that I had at the Bellagio in early September of this year (thank you very much). Anyone have any statistics on porn HDTV DVDs?

26. Phillip Swann: This Will Be the Year of the Video Blog.

I'm not sure. We had the Vloggies and lonleygirl15, Ze Frank and Rocketboom. PodTech. But can anyone really name 10 different video blogs?


Who got it right.

1. Phillip Swann: CBS to Launch VOD Digital TV Channel.

CBS did in fact launch inner tube in May of 2006.


2. Phillip Swann: DIRECTV Will Shake-Up Its Executive Team.

This is still in progress but likely as Murdoch and Malone made major equity swaps with regards to DirecTV in the past two days making it unlikely that Murdoch will continue to run and control the DirecTV franchise.

3. Greg Linden: Microsoft will launch an AdSense-like advertising product in the hopes of undermining Google's business, but the product will fail to attract a large network in 2006 due to relatively weak ad targeting and low clickthrough rates.

Microsoft launched AdCenter in 2006.

4. Jason Calacanis: No RSS readers will be bought in 2006 because every major buyer has already built one.

To the best of my knowledge no major readers were bought in 2006

5. John Battelle: speaking of privacy, there will be a major court case involving the database of intentions that gets legislators talking about "protecting the common citizen" (or somesuch) from "the perils of unprotected Internet data mining" (or somesuch).

John cites a couple of cases saying he got this one right. There was also a big case involving executives at little old HP last year.


Who got it really right.


1.Jason Calacanis: Google's stock will take it's first significant hit (> 15% drop) at some point during the year, but not because of their earnings but rather some outside factor (think advertising slow down, terrorist attack in the US, tech bubble bursting, etc). Google's stock will end the year basically flat (+/-10%) while their earnings soar.

Google's stock price hit $471 per share on January 11th, only to drop down as low as $337 a share on March 17th (about a 16% decline). Today Google's stock price is at $465 a share, about 7% higher than it's closing price on the first trading day of 2006.


2. John Battelle: "Web 2.0" will make the cover of Time Magazine, and thus its moment in the sun will have passed. However, the story that drives "Web 2.0" will only strengthen, and folks will cast about for the next best name for the phenomenon.

Time actually named "You" as the person of the year referencing the Web 2.0 movement.

Umm... Remember that Free Laptop That We Gave You? Yeah, Well, Umm... Do You Think We Could Have it Back?

Marshall Kirkpatrick � Now Microsoft Wants Its Laptop Back Yesterday I wrote about Microsoft and Edelman handing out spiffy new laptops to bloggers after Scott Beale announced that he got one over at Laughing Squid. Scoble called the move Payperpost but also clarified his position calling the giveaway an "awesome idea." The usual Techmeme crowd chimed in, Slashdot and digg got hold of it and now it looks like Microsoft thinks the best thing to do is ask for them back.

Doh!

From Marshall Kirkpatrick:

"Marshall,

No good deed goes unpunished, right? You may have seen that other bloggers got review machines as well. Some of that coverage was not factual. As you write your review I just wanted to emphasize that this is a review pc. I strongly recommend you disclose that we sent you this machine for review, and I hope you give your honest opinions. Just to make sure there is no misunderstanding of our intentions I’m going to ask that you either give the pc away or send it back when you no longer need it for product reviews.

Thanks for your understanding, and happy reviewing,

Aaron *** "


Mike Arrington has also published the the email that he got from Microsoft

"Michael,

I’m working on getting some review PCs out to community bloggers, and wanted to include you. I’d love to send you a loaded Ferrari 1000 courtesy of Windows Vista and AMD. Are you interested?

This would be a review machine, so I’d love to hear your opinion on the machine and OS. Full disclosure, while I hope you will blog about your experience with the pc, you don’t have to. Also, you are welcome to send the machine back to us after you are done playing with it, or you can give it away to your community, or you can hold onto it for as long as you’d like. Just let me know what you plan to do with it when the time comes. And if you run into any problems let me know. A few of the drivers aren’t quite final, but are very close.

If you are game, would you send me your address and phone? I’m going to send this out next week, so if you will be travelling on the 22nd let me know where you’ll be, and I’ll send it there.

Thanks,

xxxxxxx"


Ha ha, "hold onto it as long as you'd like..." That's funny.

So where are we now?

This thing is starting to feel like a PR disaster. Bloggers are starting to smell blood and this thing very well may begin to turn into yet another episode of bloggers gone wild.

Scott writes: "I wonder why there was so much inconsistency regarding how the distribution of these laptops was communicated?"

So while we spend the next 24 hours deciding who gets tar and feathered (Microsoft? AMD? Edelman?) I think it's important to keep a few things in mind.

1. Every PR firm that exists and every company that courts bloggers pretty much wants the same thing. To influence you. Just because this is the tech business doesn't make it any different than any other business. Why do the big pharmaceutical companies put on big conference junkets? Why do politicians get taken on private jets to play golf at fancy resorts?

It is the job of a PR firm to influence bloggers. It is an interesting PR move to offer free laptops to bloggers but whether it works or not it is their job to try and influence you.

2. Giving people fast new 64 bit computers instead of software will make them have a much better experience with the computer. As I blogged yesterday, the biggest problem with Windows is the fact that it is an open system with an almost limitless number of configurations. By shipping a well tested known configuration Microsoft ups the odds that you will have a good experience on the PC rather than risk you would have a bad experience if they just sent you an upgrade disk to try and use on your crappy old Dell in the den.

Because it is a 64 bit machine and a powerful one they are also hoping that you will attribute that fast new computer feel to their OS when you write about their product (as they expect you to do!).

3. Is it ethically right to accept a laptop or any other product, trip, etc.? Scoble says yes if it's disclosed.

"Now, regarding blogger ethics. Did you disclose? If you did, you have ethics. If you didn’t, you don’t. It’s that black and white with me.

Did you sell your soul and you disclosed that? Fine. Now it’s up to the readers to decide whether anything you say is worth listening to. But you’re ethical.

Are you trying to hide that you sold your soul? That’s not ethical."


I'm still not so sure 100% on this. Would a journalist be allowed to accept a "gift" like this if they disclosed? Probably not. Would you get fired at the Los Angeles Times or the Washington Post if you took a free laptop and then wrote an article about it disclosing the fact that you got a free laptop? I'd suspect you would.

But where do you draw the line? Is is a dollar line? What about meals and travel expenses? What about schwag? What if you can't afford a new computer? What if a product that you want to test isn't available for purchase yet? Ed Bott says he normally doesn't take the stuff but made an exception in this case:

"So why did I make an exception in this case? Simple. Because I can’t buy a new PC with Windows Vista preloaded yet, and Aaron Coldiron from Microsoft offered to send this review unit. The note I got last week made the offer perfectly clear."

He also said though that he's not keeping it because he's a journalist and it would violate his code of ethics. He says he might give his to charity when he's done reviewing it.

"Bloggers come in all shapes and sizes with all sorts of motivations. I’m a journalist by training and by profession, and that dictates my decision."

Speaking of journalists, the New York Times is anal to a degree that even suggests avoiding having a drink with someone at their home or someplace else where they might pay -- even for just a drink!

"When we as journalists entertain news sources (including government officials) or travel to cover them, our company pays the expenses. In some business situations and in some cultures, it may be unavoidable to accept a meal or a drink paid for by a news source (for example, at an official's residence or in a company's private dining room). Whenever practical, however, we should avoid those circumstances and suggest dining where we can pay our share (or, better, meeting in a setting that does not include a meal). Routine refreshments at an event like a news conference are acceptable, but a staff member should not attend recurring breakfast or lunch meetings unless our company pays for the journalist's meals. Whether the setting is an exclusive club or a service lodge's weekly luncheon, we should pay our way."

Oh and what about the ethics of reprinting private emails? Did Mike or Marshall get permission to reprint the emails from Microsoft? Should they have gotten permission? Was it implied on the record? Interesting to see how they each handeled the email in a different way. They printed the email, but Mike xxxxx'd out the name of the sender entirely and Marshall left his first name Aaron but xxxx'd out his last name. Of course Arron Coldiron from Microsoft has already publicly identified himself in previous blog comments so this is probably not a big deal one way or the other.

Whatever the case, Aaron Coldiron, welcome to the blogosphere. You're going to love the new Google search results for your name in about 48 hours.

Now what's that thing they like to say about herding cats?

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Raoul Pop on Zooomr

Self-portrait Comeacross.info. One of our photographers over at Zooomr, Raoul Pop has written a very nice review on Zooomr. He wrote it on his blog and it was also picked up by Google news over at Blog Critics.

"Enough about me though. The most important thing is that there are great photographs on Zooomr. I'm amazed by the quality of the photos produced by Zooomr users, and I find more and more of them every day. Through Zooomr, I can contact the photographers and interact with them. I get inspired and my own photography gets better in the process. In short, I became part of an online community that supports my photographic efforts.

Let's review: Zooomr not only fulfills my photo sharing needs, but surpasses them by allowing me to improve my skills by being part of a wonderful online community, and on top of that, will soon give me the opportunity to sell some of my photographic work. Talk about a site that keeps on giving!"


Wow, Raoul.

It indeed has been great getting to know you on Zooomr and your support since the beginning has meant a whole heck of a lot. Thanks for sticking by us with our growing pains, making so many terrific suggestions on ways we can improve the site, and for helping to spread the word about the site.

Zooomr is going to be very different in Mark III. We think it will be much better and have a significantly stronger community presence. It's people like you though that make that community possible!

Thanks Pal.

San Francisco Chronicle on Yahoo, Flickr, Delicious, Jumpcut and the Rest of the Gang

Flickr Circa 2005Welcoming startups into Yahoo's fold / Web portal works to integrate the companies it has acquired Dan Fost over at the San Francisco Chronicle has an article out on how the integration of Yahoo!'s various social media properties is moving along and where it is headed in the upcoming (get it, upcoming) year.

Fost interviews Flickr chief Stewart Butterfield as well as Delicious' Joshua Schachter.

Some interesting tidbits from the article:

Flickr had 400,000 (I'm assuming registerd) users when they were acquired by Yahoo in March of last year and today they have over 5 million.

Comscore says Flickr is getting 18 million uniques a month (Outgoing Yahoo COO Dan Rosensweig had said Flickr gets 20 million uniques a month on Yahoo's last earnings conference call).

Comscore says Yahoo Photos is getting 41 million uniques a month.

From Stewart Butterfield: ""When you're growing at 70 percent per month, additional promotion from Yahoo isn't something we wanted," Butterfield said. Flickr needed to figure out how to deliver the right photos from hundreds of millions of images with billions of tags, he said."

From my own analysis, at least by one metric (number of photos online -- this info can be publicly obtained), Flickr grew by 9.16% last month. Flickr's growth (were it to run at the 70% number cited by Stewart monthly since their acquisition) would put their registered users at over 16 million vs. the 5 million reported today.

This might suggest that on a percentage basis Flickr's growth has significantly slowed. Still, Flickr is a machine adding roughly a little less than 1 million new photos a day on average to their service. Although the number of photos on the site pales in comparison to Photobucket and even even lags behind struggling Webshots, because of the emphasis placed on tagging and ranking photos combined with the power of their social network, Flickr probably has the singl emost significant collection of tagged, ranked and organized collection of photos that exists in the world today. This will likely yield significant advantage for Yahoo! image search once a successful integration of Flickr and Yahoo Image Search takes place.

Spending the Day at the Los Angeles Natural History Museum

RhinoRhino Hosted on Zooomr


The Los Angeles Natural History Museum has some of the best animal scene dioramas that I've ever seen. They have two large main galleries, one for North America and one for Africa. Dinosaur skeletons are positioned between the two main galleries. There is also an extensive gallery dedicated to California history in the basement.

I visited the museum on my recent trip down to L.A. for Christmas. I took three of my kids with me and they had a great time. Since I have a family membership to the Lawrence Hall of Science up here in Berkeley, my admission was free.

I took a bunch of shots of the animals and images and have them up in a gallery on Zooomr. I'll add more later as I have time.

Microsoft Handing Out Hot Slick Ferrari Laptop Bling to Bloggers

Well my good friend Scott Beale got one and Long Zheng is reporting a number of other bloggers have been receiving them as well, but it seems that Microsoft is handing out brand spanking new fast Ferrari laptops loaded with Vista to influential bloggers. Scoble calls it Payperpost.

Was Thomas Hawk offered one?

Nope.

I'm sure lots of other bloggers were not either though.

Of course, I am on Edelman's radar and have been included in lots of other Microsoft related things they have done in the past. Microsoft and Edelman are really good at including the bloggers.

I guess, of course, that little article about switching to a Mac a few months before Vista's big launch didn't help things. Ha.

Hey I will say this though. The Mac kicks serious ass and I bought the thing with my own money. And if I had to do it over again I would. It was $2,800 very well spent. It's the best computer I've ever used in my life.

Someone from Intel's PR firm did offer me a free high end laptop about 3 months ago as part of a group blog that they were putting together. The idea was that I'd use the laptop and then write about how I used it. I turned them down. Somehow it just didn't feel right to me. I also turned down Microsoft's offer to make me an official Microsoft MVP earlier this year. I'm not saying it's wrong to take the free laptop. I almost took the one Intel offered but in the end I felt conflicted.

On the other hand I did take the free 750 gig Seagate drive that Robert Scoble gave to me from Seagate. Seagate sponsors his Photowalking show. I'm not sure why that feels differently to me. Maybe it's because I was already using Seagate (and in fact had purchased three of the identical drives with my own money) and it didn't feel like the free drive would compromise my opinion of it. It was a pretty public thing, well disclosed, (we even filmed it and included it at the end of the last episode of Photowalking).

It should be noted of course that bloggers don't have to accept the free laptop to test it. They can test it and send it back. This takes the ethics question off the hand of Edelman I guess and puts it back into the bloggers.

I will try Vista in due time of course and write about my experience with it. Edelman's been very helpful sending me betas for Vista along the way but I've found the betas I've received so far to be pretty much unuseable. Not stable enough to really test.

In some ways, Edelman handing out these laptops to bloggers is smart. Why? Because they can control the quality of the Vista experience more than if the bloggers upgraded to Vista on their own machines. By equipping them with high end super fast laptops with known configurations, they are going to get more predictable performance, probably the best possible performance possible from the software. I went to a dinner that Jim Allchin put on for bloggers and he was testing it out on a Ferrari machine. It was damn fast.

My own view is that one of the problems with PCs vs. Macs is that Macs are closed systems and PCs are open systems. The luxury of a closed system is that you can more extensively test the hardware and software to make sure it works well together. With a PC on the other hand, as a more open system it can be used with vastly more hardware and software configurations. The result is that if someone somewhere was sloppy when they configured their driver then you get a bad experience. Sure component manufacturers try to get it right all the time, but there are millions of different ways to configure a PC and realistically they can't test every configuration.

Of course, I'll bet that the Ferrari laptops sent out have been tested to death and my guess is that they work very well. The more interesting thing for me to experience will be when I upgrade one of my PCs at home to Vista once it's out in January. I'd also be interested in seeing a post comparing how one of these free laptops compared to simply upgrading someone's old home PC.

Update: One thing I am a little confused about is how Edelman is involved in this all anyways. I've always dealt with Waggener Edstrom when dealing with Microsoft in the past.

Monday, December 25, 2006

Merry Christmas From Hollywood, California

Merry Christmas From Hollywood, CaliforniaMerry Christmas From Hollywood, California
Hosted on Zooomr

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Your Love Like a Meteor Shower

Your Love Like a Meteor ShowerYour Love Like a Meteor Shower Hosted on Zooomr

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Hundreds of Boomboxes to Make Outdoor Concert

Laughing SquidLaughing Squid � Unsilent Night 2006 Scott Beale has a write up on something called Unsilent night where hundreds of people will gather in San Francisco with boom boxes each playing separate music and march through the streets of San Francisco. Woah. Sounds very cool.

Blogtagged

bit blue blog: You got tagged! :: Andreas Bitterer :: Ok, I've been blog tagged. Mark Cuban says this is like doing the wave, but here goes.

I'm supposed to tell you 5 things about me that most people wouldn't know.

1. I'm the oldest from a family of seven children.
2. My first real job was working at Jack in the Box.
3. I road my bicycle from Oregon to Delaware cross country when I was 15.
4. I climbed Mt. Whitney, the highest mountain in the continental U.S., when I was five.
5. The first concert I ever attended was a Social Distortion concert at Fender's Ballroom in Long Beach in 1984.

I'll tag Netgear's newest blogger Dave Zatz-man, Davis Freeberg, George, Mr. Chalk, and Mark Cuban.

Photowalking with Flickr's Heather Champ

Heather and Her PolaroidHeather and Her Polaroid Hosted on Zooomr