Tor

I installed and started playing with Tor over the weekend. It’s a pretty cool P2P system for anonymizing your online tracks and includes a very ease to use proxy for your online traffic courtesy of the EFF. I’ve noticed things slow down a bit – though perhaps a small price to pay for cruising around securely. My only issue is how I will need to customize the proxy (it’s Privoxy and comes with the OS X installer) to allow for ads (yes ads), referrers and cookies. Without these tools, it becomes difficult to do certain things – like edit or delete a page in WordPress.

I do like it though and have to see if after reading the documentation more deeply, I can create a balance of privacy and accessibility.

Comcast – Ads on Demand?

Even as a free channel, I just can’t see this being all that popular. The only time people actually look forward to commercials is during the Superbowl. I’d like to see more creative ways to integrate messaging within content – either as a story component (though perhaps less crass than the Apprentice) or product placement (Alias and 24 are good examples).

Digital cable subscribers in the Baltimore area will soon be able to watch commercials when they want, as Comcast Corp. will launch the area’s first advertising-on-demand service during the second quarter this year.

Baltimore will be just the second market to receive the offer, after Comcast’s hometown market of Philadelphia. Digital cable subscribers who, for instance, are hunting for a new car can get more product information from this longer format ad versus a 30-second commercial.

Otherwise, advertisers may miss out on key consumers who want their product but are not watching television when an ad airs, Comcast officials say.

Marketing experts say the move heralds a new era in television advertising, which is feeling the squeeze from digital video recorders and even Comcast’s own video-on-demand service, which allow consumers to bypass commercials.

Executives at Comcast Spotlight, the firm’s advertising sales division, will pitch the service to 30 firms over the next three weeks. These include local, regional and national advertisers who want to reach Baltimore consumers, said Jeff Basler, director of sales at Comcast Spotlight. [bizjournals.com]

ISBN RSS Search Feeds

Inessential: A cool thing at isbn.nu—RSS search feeds for books. Any search result that lists books can be subscribed to.

Totally cool way to keep tabs on books by subject, author key words and of course the ISBN. Great if you do research professionally or as a student.

Managing my compulsive desire to check email

I was reading a post the other day at 43 Folders and it really got me thinking about how I manage my email.

I currently have just under 2000 messages sitting in my inbox – unfiltered and waiting action (file or delete!). I also had Mail checking each minute, sound on and Mail Appetizer floating on top of things to let me see what mail was pumping in. Currently Mail checks 8 accounts as well.

I’ve since turned off the sound, hidden the dock and de-activated the mail appetizer plugin. I now manually switch to mail, which checks at 5 minute intervals (I like to reply immediately when possible). I am considering a longer interval – something I need to work on for sure. I seem to be switching over at a greater than 5 min interval so far which is good…

In addition, I’ve switched how I use email on my Treo from always on to poll each 30 min, with the obsessive manual check for good measure.

Today’s (minutes ago) wraps the second day of this usage pattern and I honestly feel that I was able to focus more on a few tasks rather than constantly switching over to mail. Man it’s distracting to do things the way I was and probably feeds my desire since it’s just always working on a loop.

Extra Bonus — I love the new found dock space. Maxing the screen space for windows is really nice and something I should have done a while back. I’ve got to get my inbox filtered down to a minimal number of messages as a priority to feel I’ve mastered this more… and it won’t hurt to get the withdrawal effect to go away from not seeing the second a new message arrives.

Recent Software Goodies

I’ve been pretty busy lately and have left a post hanging for a few days… I have had a chance to use with some good software and thought I’d at least share.

The team at Slashdata has been very busy.

SplashBlog is a great way to run a photo-blog from your Palm device. They have a hosted solution which works great and can upload and sync images from your SD card as well as as you shoot them if you like. At the moment the only blog software supported is Typepad, but more will likely follow.

SplashMoney has been updated though still in beta. You can now update your account info over the air which is totally cool – and secure thanks to both SSL and RSA. What’s great is that you can be free of Quicken if you want updated financial info on your accounts. There’s an excellent list of supported banks and financial institutions.

WordPress has been updated to an official 1.5 and I’ve cleared the nightlies that have run here for a long time. All seems quite solid and the update is recommended for all WP users.

Failures of Technology Marketing, Opportunity for Apple

Michael Gartenberg sums up a few thoughts I’ve also had over the past few years. While Tivo is cool it’s far from a success. Microsoft Media Center is very cool, but also still a niche product. Apple has the brand, the product design and software know-how to design and deliver a mass-oriented living room grand slam. Until they do though there will continue to be a variety of options that get close, but involve a fair degree of user involvement and wife frustration.

One of the themes I keep coming back to is the failure of tech companies to market well to mainstream audiences. There’s been a loss of the ability to appeal to both passengers and sailors. Some folks are doing this well and reaping success. Don’t believe me? How many flash based MP3 players are folks willing to wait 4-8 weeks to purchase? How many TiVos (or any DVR for that matter) were sold over the last seven years? (our research says it’s about a 4% install base) See my point?

If Apple believed that consumers are interested in consuming digital content (as opposed to creating movies and music) other than music (and they are), I believe they could be dominant. Not strong. Not a player amongst many. Dominant. It’s a good thing for Microsoft and others that Steve Jobs doesn’t believe in a 10′ UI for PCs, or that consumers are interested in recording TV shows or movies on a personal computer (for TV playback) or in mobile video. [Michael Gartenberg]

What am I Missing?

Carlos Salcedo: Aspect ratios have nothing to do with black bars on your TV sets. They are about the need of a film maker to show his visual and artistic intention of his film. Would you crop Abe Lincoln from Mount Rushmore because you don’t want black bars on your TV set and he does not fit within the 16×9 area of the set?

Where’s my Firewire??

For some reason, Time Warner Cable in NYC has decided it would be better to “personalize” the cable boxes they offer and remove access to both Firewire and DVI ports. I don’t have a DVI enabled HDTV, but if I did I’d be pissed I could not use it… I do have a few Firewire enabled computers and I’d like to put them to good use recording programming for my growing Mac media center.

By law / mandate of the FCC consumers are supposed to be able to get a Firewire enabled set top box if requested and that would be great and simple if Time Warner actually offered them. How does one go about requesting something that is not being cleared by the carrier? It’s not exactly like cellular where you can at least bring an unlocked phone to your account.

The thing that gets me is that Firewire is capable of obeying the Broadcast Flag, so in theory the content I might be recording would be protected with the same rights management as other digital systems. I say in theory as I have no way to test things. I know it’s quite possible and relatively simple to build a collection of HD movies and TV programs with the appropriate storage. I can’t be the only one here… At the moment I am limited to converting through S-Video to MPEG-2 or 4. A nice digital stream all the way home would be just perfect.

AT&T Beats Vonage to SOHO

Andy notes AT&T’s push into SOHO with CallVantage…

AT&T Begins Marketing VoIP to the SOHO Community

The SOHO market represents a very large, and really untapped marketplace for VoIP. While I half expected Vonage to come out with an offering, it seems that AT&T beat them to the punch.

On the surface the new product offering appears to be very well thought out, and leverages the already existing infrastructure AT&T has for VoIP. [VoIP Watch]

Google can find your way

Google Maps looks totally awesome. You start with a map of the US, double click a place you want to see and zoom in… it’s pretty fast considering it continues to render in the window as you do everything. Currently does not work in Safari but it’s apparently on their list…

Why not to Pay the Napster Taxman

Pretty interesting analysis on the Napster To Go service – especially interesting after seeing their spots in the superbowl. As someone who digitized his whole collection I can fully relate to this. I still wouldn’t mind topping off the tank though, but I guess I would prefer it come through iTunes so I could continue have a single, simple management system for all of my music.

From where we sit, the math doesn’t break down terribly well in Napster’s favor.

Let’s take a look at consumer A. This consumer goes to Amazon.com and does a search for Creative – one of the Napster supported music device makers – and picks up a 20GB player for $249.99. Let’s assume he keeps the device for three years, paying Napster all the time. That’s $538 for the Napster service, bringing the three-year total to $788.19.

Consumer B types iPod into the Amazon.com search engine and finds a 20GB device for $299. Apple doesn’t offer a subscription service, so this customer has to buy songs at the 99 cent rate or at $9.99 per album. Subtracting the price of the iPod from the $788, consumer B would have $489 left over for music. That’s roughly worth 489 songs or 49 albums.

We posit that during this three-year period both Consumer A and Consumer B will actually end up with close to the same number of songs on their devices. Customers do not, as Napster suggests, pay $10,000 to fill their iPods with 10,000 songs just because the capacity is there. They take their existing music, CDs and MP3s, and put that onto the device first, then later add iTunes songs as they go along. A Napster customer would have a similar mix of old music and new downloads.

The big difference here is that after the three years are up, Consumer B has something to show for his investment. He still owns the music. If the Napster customer stops paying for the service, his music is all gone. He’s paying $179 per year to rent music. This isn’t high quality stuff either. It’s DRM (digital rights management)-laced, low bitrate slop. [The Register]

Superbowl Ad Coup

The Beer wars continue as expected in the Superbowl this year…

I thought it was pretty amazing that Miller not only directly referenced the new Budweiser Select beer, but they did so in an ad that appeared two times before Bud ran their own spot. Not sure how much was luck and how much was paid placement, but it certainly makes you question the Bud product.

Still thinking about the commercials as they roll…

I though the Go Daddy ad was pretty lame. Hot chick, almost reveals breast and obviously not net-literate. I’m sure Go Daddy’s Parsons thought it was great… As someone who was actively involved in that space for quite a few years, in my opinion, it was a waste. I guess they are just trying to bust (pun intended) out of the existing customer / convert customer.

I can’t believe how much money Career Builder is spending… that’s 3 so far a nice 7.2 Million on ads.

I did like the P Diddy Diet Pepsi ad. I also liked their iPod Promotion spots. They continue to be hip without forcing it on you.

An Open Letter to palmOne

Dear palmOne –

Lately a number of us have become increasingly more frustrated with your marketing and communications efforts dealing with the Treo 650 release. I appreciate there are complexities working within carrier restraints based on contractual obligations, but I don’t understand your decisions to simply refuse to communicate directly with your core user base.

There are few devices that have captured attention as much as the release of the upgraded Treo. Many existing users have coveted the device, though few have had success acquiring information about the version of the device they would like to have – let alone the device itself. You seem to have made a considerable effort to attract early adopters to events, even encouraging and tempting them with coupons for discounted new units, yet offering no information in return for collecting our credit card info.

As of this week you had yet to even release the full allotment of Sprint Treo 650’s to Vienna Channels, leaving about 200 people without a new Treo. It’s hard to understand how 200 units hurts the relationship with a carrier when these very customers would be either establishing or extending their existing contracts with Sprint.

The GSM version has been a complete disgrace. There are only about 500 people who have ordered either an unlocked or Cingular version of the Treo 650. This is a very low number and one that again could not possibly damage a relationship with a carrier hoping to sell many thousands if not hundreds of thousands of units. Based on some limited quantitative research, these are mainly existing Treo or Palm users looking to upgrade, not new customers. They are also people who attended an event per your invitation and responded to your offer to order a new device at a welcome discount.

The event I attended was in the beginning of October 2004 and since that time there has been zero contact from you. There has only been limited contact from Vienna Channels your fulfillment partner as well putting them in the uncomfortable position of having to direct us to a self-service page which lists the same “no answer” we’ve been hearing all along.

I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt and round the total numbers up to 2000 total Treo 650 units sold directly through the event channel. Not exactly a stellar success in big picture terms is it? Why not embrace these individuals and take advantage of the free press and word or the early adopters would most likely bring based on their own usage. That would certainly increase the visibility far beyond the few total sales generated… Instead you’ve left many of us high and dry.

Recently you invited much if not the same exact group of people to a Highlights event from the fall Road Show and instead of presenting highlights, you chose to represent verbatim the show we had all seen. It was clear from the number of questions (you chose to answer in private no less) that this was not the expected show we had taken the time to view. What is going on inside there? Have you simply given up, or have you just decided that we’ll all just upgrade anyway so why bother? You realize that palm is far from the only choice and devices from other manufacturers exists with and without palm software that can also integrate into our digital lives… Microsoft has been extremely aggressive getting new releases of the OS out on devices with an extended list of partners. Symbian just announced the latest version of their operating system with an array of hardware parters and I have to tell you it sounds great!

By the time you ship the unlocked units “many” of us have ordered, it will be the end of Q1 2005 according to the news you’ve shared with Vienna Channels this week. That’s 5 months after we ordered our new units! I’m sure many companies wish they could secure orders for a future product so far in advance.

In an ideal market, you would embrace and properly communicate with the palm and specifically Treo community. There are quite a few community news and gadget sites, not too mention personal blogs that all receive an enormous volume of traffic and could be a considerable extension to whatever limited marketing you’ve done. BTW — I thought the TV you ran this past year was a waste of effort and money given the cost of media and the lack of targeting in such a channel. That however, is a topic for another conversation….

Give us what we want, palmOne. Ship the GSM and the Sprint Treos today. There is no reason to wait longer and there is certainly no reason to think that less than 2000 units will hurt anything… it’s barely scratching the surface of what I presume are some grand sales goals. Give back to the community that has supported you. We have been waiting.

Yours truly,
Jonathan Greene