Wi-Fi Trains in the US

As I noted yesterday, there is a wi-fi train test happening in Europe… Well looks like Caltrans is adding service now to the Silicon Valley.

This is great stuff and I really hope that these tests are successful. It’s hard when you travel via train to run a stumbler and nab a connection — at a stop! If you could connect while working, things could be extremely productive… or not depending on how you wanted to use your time.

Planes, Trains …Automobiles??

Lizzie update

No great surprise: Lizzie Grubman won’t be on Howard Stern this week. Lizzie had scheduled it herself for Wednesday but then Lizzie’s people said, silly Lizzy, she forgot that she’s in Miami on Wednesday. She’ll reschedule. Uh-huh. [BuzzMachine]

PR’s PR

Howard Stern said this morning that Lizzie Grubman, people-mowing PR princess and ex-con, is going to be on the show this week. Howard said there was considerable debate about whether to have her, but, hey, she asked to come on and Howard is hardly holding back his disdain for her. He calls it: She is cocky enough to think she can handle Howard. She believes her own PR. [BuzzMachine]

Searching for the personal touch

A stealth start-up out of Stanford University is hoping to raise the heat on one of the toughest problems in Web search–and possibly out-Google Google in the process.

Kaltix was formed in recent months by three members of Stanford’s PageRank team–a research group created to advance the mathematical algorithm developed by Google co-founder and Stanford alum Larry Page that cemented Google’s fame.

PageRank has helped steer people to Web sites like no other search technology before it, harnessing the link structure of the Web to determine the most popular pages. Now, Kaltix hopes to improve upon PageRank, with an attempt to speed up the underlying PageRank computations.

That, in turn, could lay the groundwork for a breakthrough in a cutting-edge area of Web search development known as “personalization,” which aims to sort search results based on the specific needs and interests of individuals, instead of the consensus approach pioneered by Google. [Searching for the personal touch | CNET News.com]

Sounds like acquisition time for Google…

Comcast to extend 3mbps trials

The cable giant plans to expand consumer trials for a high-speed Internet service, the latest step in the Comcast’s effort to double the speed of its standard cable modem product. [CNET News.com Communications]

I’d take it! We usually get about 1MB on average through Road Runner (NYC) has spiked to 2MB on occasion. I’d even pay more for more speed… especially upstream.

IAB Joins in Snubbing DMA Over Spam Policy

The Interactive Advertising Bureau’s e-mail committee chairman plans to withdraw support to the IAB’s members for the Direct Marketing Association’s Council for Responsible E-mail’s long-awaited e-mail best practices document. This following yesterday’s report of resignations from within the DMA’s subsidiary organization, the Association of Interactive Marketing, in protest over the same controversial anti-spam policy. [marketingfix]

Verizon Wireless to offer branded WiFi through Wayport

Verizon Wireless today said it will offer a branded WiFi hotspot service through Wayport’s nationwide network. The service will be available for either $6.99 for a day pass or $34.99 per month for unlimited data use. Verizon Wireless said it is interested in expanding its WiFi coverage beyond the initial agreement with Wayport and said it will do so through additional roaming agreements. The carrier said it may also offer combined WiFi coverage through co-parent Verizon Communications’ payphone-based hotspot service in New York City but did not give any additional details. Verizon Wireless is the latest U.S. carrier to offer branded hotspot service though Wayport’s network. Both AT&T Wireless and Sprint PCS signed similar deals in recent months. [FierceWireless]

Location as Product Placement

When NBC airs its fall television lineup, Monday-night viewers will quickly become familiar with the casino’s shimmering gold towers and sumptuous high-roller suites. On Sept. 29, they will see Mandalay Bay playing itself in the “Fear Factor” gross-out reality show. Later that night, and each week thereafter, Mandalay will take on the fictional role of the Montecito Resort & Casino in “Las Vegas” — one of NBC’s top drama prospects this fall — alongside the show’s other star, James Caan.

All this attention is the fruit of an unusually close partnership between NBC, owned by General Electric Co., and Mandalay Resort Group, which owns Mandalay Bay as well as the Luxor pyramid casino, the Excaliber and others. The relationship is so close that Mandalay Resort Group President Glenn Schaeffer gets a cameo in “Las Vegas.” He plays the casino’s fictional owner, artfully named … Glenn Schaeffer. “I show up in foreboding moments and look pretty grim,” he says.

In a deal that has spawned plenty of favor-trading but no cash payments, NBC gets to film free of charge the Mandalay’s gambling halls and other rooms, in a city that makes ratings soar. “Fear Factor,” known for its gross-out stunts, is particularly popular with young male viewers, as is Vegas. “Vegas has a sexiness that appeals to our demographic,” says Matt Kunitz, the show’s executive producer. The “Fear Factor” crew and contestants received more than 820 room nights at Mandalay, Luxor and the Monte Carlo resorts, and 2,100 free meals, which Mr. Kunitz valued at about $400,000. “We couldn’t travel the show without that support,” Mr. Kunitz says, referring to the on-location shooting. The budget for a typical episode, filmed in Southern California, is about $1 million.

Marsha Thomason, Josh Duhamel and Nikki Cox in NBC’s drama ‘Las Vegas,’ coming this fall.

In turn, Mandalay gets a giant product placement built into the shows that can’t be zapped by viewers’ remotes or by recording devices such as TiVo, which is a hot issue in advertising these days. “It’s a great infomercial,” says Mr. Schaeffer. The casino’s Las Vegas-based ad agency, R&R Partners, estimates the one-hour “Fear Factor” is worth more than $10 million in paid advertising. [WSJ.com] (subscription required)