Wife Approval Factor

I just switched us back to Verizon for local and now LD and as well as regional calling. AT&T had a similar plan at a similar rate which we’ve used for the past few months, but for some reason the way the voicemail works on AT&T really interfered with Call Waiting and our building intercom making them indistinguishable. I heard a fair bit about how much of a pain this was but rarely noticed since I am not home during the days and also since I spend a small amount of time on the home phone.

AT&T found nothing wrong but clearly something was causing a problem where there was previously nothing. We’ve had Verizon for almost 5 years prior to the switch and never had an issue like that. I guess there’s something to be said for being the local guy in certain instances – like when they did the actual wiring here. Not something I considered when we made the switch intially, but something I considered frequently when hearing about the issue repeatedly.

Wife Approval Factor – 1 / AT&T – 0

Think I’ve had enough…

Of Google AdSense. I’m not making any money on it and I might as well get my site back to just my own content. At first I thought it might pay or offset my monthly hosting charges but I’ve yet to hit that level for a single month. I’m sure they won’t be missed…

what’s been going on…

I know I have not been posting much since the powerbook lid snapped and for good reason… I’ve been advised not to close the lid and move it around as it may actually break completely off. We are still negotiating the repair – whether it is possible and how much it will cost if so.

Since I can’t move it around, my normal level of intense computing has been reduced as a result. It’s interesting when your usage patterns change without you making a conscious decision. I don’t normally work on our home computer (but the older one) which I’ve really tried to make as much my wife’s as possible. She uses it during the day and evenings and even when I do a quick thing or two I don’t generally log in choosing instead to use it as she would. For now though I am back to logging in as myself to use my browser and my bookmarks – plus my own saved passwords in Mozilla.

In the meantime, I’ve used a recently updated RSS Subscription file I read in NetNewsWire and uploaded it to my Feed on Feed site for consumption while at home (NNW is at the office on my laptop). I’ve used a subset to do a complete overhaul on my blogroll as well.

Guess that is about it… just waiting this one out hoping a new system is in my cards.

Cosmic Connection??

My three year old 15-inch Titanium Powerbook suffered a significant blow tonight.

As I opened it to do some work, the hinge cracked open on the right side wiping out the screen. It’s shut down resting wondering if in fact this is the sign that it will be officially retired knowing that it’s replacement was officially announced today.

I can only hope that in fact this is just the kind of breakage that warrants replacement through my company’s IT. No idea what it costs to replace. And actually not happy that it broke. I had quite a bit I wanted to accomplish tonight instead of watching TV.

Finally!

Apple has finally decided to come through with a proper update to the 15″ powerbook!! It has everything you would expect – Firewire 800, 400 and USB 2.0, the illuminated keyboard, airport extreme, bluetooth and superdrive.

Now I just need to make my case to IT to try and get an upgrade of my 3 year old machine…

the iServe (redux)

Frank has really expaned his iServe idea (from November)… I’d love to see what he’s envisioned in my house. I agree with him on the value to small work-groups, and as a guy working in a company that has many small work-groups and owns a few XServe’s, I think we’d likely buy a few iServe’s in addition to our XServe’s.

[inluminent/weblog]

After thinking about this idea for 30 seconds I realized it’s exactly what I would want to have at home! I have the iMac set up basically as a server now for some basic needs but have struggled with how to get things like an LDAP server running so my wife and I can share a sync-able contact file. I’ve already had to create machine level directories for us to share iTunes and iPhoto libraries across the user accounts. A true home server would be fantastic – but not at the price of the work xserve.

Study Reveals Growth for iTV Advertising

A study released this week by BrightLine Partners predicts that interactive television (iTV) advertising initiatives will become integral to television advertising strategies over the next 12 months.

BrightLine’s study takes a look at the current pace of deployment in digital television services as well as the frequency with which marketers are using enhanced television advertising. It finds that the number of marketers incorporating interactivity into their television advertising is growing substantially. In fact, because of a newly demonstrated commitment among television programmers to offer enhanced television advertising opportunities, the study suggests we may actually be entering a new phase of growth in marketers’ use of such advertising, ranging from interactive banner ads on channel guides to sponsoring the program enhancements for a show’s entire season.

Sponsoring Websites with content synchronized to broadcast remains a leading approach, the study found, a reflection BrightLine believes of marketers’ increased desire to fully integrate brands into programming. This desire, combined with the ongoing push to find innovative new ways to target and reach consumers, will lead advertisers to embrace new television advertising techniques as never before, the company predicts.

“The sheer number and variety of enhanced television advertisements and sponsorship makes spotting the trend challenging,” says BrightLine Co-CEO Jacqueline Corbelli. “When you aggregate the data, however, the big picture and its implications look clear and compelling: By the end of 2004, it will become unusual for major advertisers not to be deploying such initiatives.”

Some specific findings:

  • More than 30 networks, including all major broadcast and most major cable networks, now air some form of one-screen and/or two-screen enhanced programming
  • Interactivity is generating higher viewer retention during commercials, better brand recall, and a more loyal fan base; all of which translates into more valuable on-air inventory and revenue
  • The benefits of interactivity deemed most important to marketers are the potential for better viewer retention during commercial breaks, greater brand recall, and new lead generation possibilities

[iMedia]

First Mover Disadvantage

Forbes Online has an article this morning that discusses TiVo and the slower than expected adoption rate of the device given all of the praise:

“That’s really remarkable,” says Adi Kishore, a media and entertainment analyst for the Yankee Group in Boston. “I can’t think of any product that has had the satisfaction levels it has had but has been as sluggish in terms of the growth of the market. It’s certainly unusual for a product to have this kind of enthusiasm from the community that’s using it without being able to tip over and really become a mass-market phenomenon.”

Currently, TiVo, which hit the market more than four years ago, serves fewer than 800,000 subscribers. Only about 1% of America’s households employ TiVo or similar digital video-recording products, according to the Consumer Electronic Association. By comparison, market penetration for DVD players has hit 41% and is rising, making it one of the most rapidly embraced products in history.

The article goes on to argue that TiVo suffers from a first mover disadvantage: it’s a product that will create a market but only appeal to early adopters who will quickly churn out to the next greatest thing. There is no doubt that TiVo has had to create this market itself and suffers from the same arrows in the back that have taken many pioneers down.

But to me, TiVo suffers from another great entrepreneurial problem — it’s a feature, not a product. I have the bundled DirecTV/TiVo and it works beautifully. Rather than purchase a normal satellite receiver, I got one with TiVo inside. No integration issues, no separate device. TiVo is great functionality, but it needs to be built into TVs, DVD players, cable and satellite receivers. It’s too hard a value proposition to explain and too complicated a device to set up on its own.

[VentureBlog]

Hard to argue that it is a feature, not a product now that I have been experiencing DVR technology inside my cable box… TiVo might be easy to install if you are a regular prosumer. For the average Joe, getting behind the TV, rigging some cables including a remote mouse and a phone cable (when you might not already have a jack back there) is not that great.

Speaking of the average Joe… TiVo has done a terrible job marketing themselves. I can’t think of a product that has to continually be explained in EVERY article written about them, years after release. Some traditional Direct Marketing would have gone a long way in assisting adoption. Fortunately for TiVo, they have a Plan B, which is the licensing of their software… Unfortunately, others have copied the technology (my cable box DVR is not TivO). I doubt people will actually care what brand of DVR software is inside their set-top box. In many cases you cant choose your box anyway unless of course you are selecting between cable and satellite.

remembering

As I watched the memorial events this morning I was overcome by emotion following the moment of silence when a young boy read a poem in honor of his father.