Archive | June, 2009

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Apple Wants You To Know Steve Jobs Is Back At Work

Posted on 30 June 2009

steve-jobs-back-gogle-news
Steve Jobs is officially back at work, according to Apple PR. Even though he had a
“>liver transplant
earlier this year, a detail which was leaked to the Wall Street Journal and conveniently reported on a Friday night after the markets had closed. Last week, Jobs was spotted back on Apple’s campus and was even quoted in a press release! Today, Apple is hammering home the message that Jobs is back on the job, telling multiple news organizations from ABC News to Bloomberg to the New York Times to Reuters the exact same canned quote (sometimes attributed to spokesman Steve Dowling, sometimes not).

Steve is back to work, Jobs is at Apple a few days a week and working at home the remaining days. We are very glad to have him back.

Hopefully, he is working from home more than from the office until he is fully recovered. But what is all of this messaging about? When Jobs took his medical leave of absence in January, he said he would return by June 30. This is Apple’s way of telling investors that he kept to that deadline despite the seriousness of his operation. The official story is that he is back, even if only part-time. But honestly, if he took another six months, would anyone blame him?

Apple’s stock has always been tied closely to Steve Jobs, but if the past six months have taught investors anything it is that the company’s fortunes are tied even closer to its products. And Apple’s products are on fire right now. Over the past six months, the stock is up 82 percent.

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Apple’s iPhone Optimized User Guide

Posted on 30 June 2009

Apple's User Guide If you are looking for a way to learn a little bit more about your iPhone or maybe have a question about how a specific feature works…you might want to check out Apple’s iPhone User Guide. It is a nicely iPhone optimized user guide with a ton of info. The User Guide’s web address is http://help.apple.com/iphone. You have to be on an iPhone or iPod Touch for the Guide to display correctly.

ScreenShots

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Non-Programmers Can Create an iPhone Newsreader App With TapLynx

Posted on 28 June 2009

TapLynx_logo.pngHave you ever wanted to create an iPhone app, but can’t code your way out of a wet paper bag? Users of NewsGator’s NetNewsWire iPhone news reader will have to wait a little longer for the next version of that application because its creator, Brent Simmons, has been busy working on a new iPhone framework called TapLynx. The goal of TapLynx is to help users generate topic-focused media applications for the iPhone without any programming required. The first application, created by Simmons, has already been built for All Things Digital.

Fans of NetNewsWire who have been patiently waiting for an updated version shouldn’t have to wait too much longer. The next generation of the NetNewsWire iPhone app, which promises to have added functionality like the ability to mark news items as unread and send articles to Instapaper, is said to be based on TapLynx.

According to NewsGator’s Brent Simmons:

“The idea behind TapLynx is that you can take a collection of feeds and some artwork, make choices about colors and gradients and behavior (all in a configuration file you edit), then create an iPhone app. Without doing any programming.

But you can do programming if you want to — use TapLynx as the base and add more features. (In fact, that’s what I’m doing with NetNewsWire 2.0 for iPhone — it’s a custom app built on TapLynx.)”

TapLynx_screenshot.png

Being able to rapidly develop customizable and unique iPhone apps with no need to learn Cocoa is great news to those of us who are interested in building such apps, but know very little about developing them. We are anxiously awaiting for TapLynx to make its way out of beta, but meanwhile you can sign up for the SDK here and the company will let us know when it becomes available. Be sure to follow @taplynx on Twitter.

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The Top 100 Networked Venture Capitalists

Posted on 28 June 2009

jurvetosn-friendship-wheel

Do venture investors with the biggest and best networks end up producing the best returns? An academic paper from a few years ago by Yael Hochberg, Alexander Ljungqvist, and Yang Lu titled “Whom You Know Matters: Venture Capital Networks and Investment Performance” (embedded at the bottom of this post) suggests that is the case. They looked at historic venture returns and found that “better-networked VC firms experience significantly better fund performance,” as measured by how many of the companies in their portfolios exited via an IPO or acquisition.

A venture firm’s network in the study was defined as being made up of all the other venture firms who co-invested with it in funding rounds. The more co-investors a venture firm has, the better its network. The better its network, the better its overall returns. The correlation between the size of a venture firm’s network and its returns may have something to do with better access to deal flow, talent, advisers, potential customers, and potential exits.

If this is true, then who are the most connected venture firms and angel investors today? Vijay Dondeti, a graduate student in bioinformatics, applied the analysis in the Hochberg paper to about 2,700 investors in CrunchBase who participated in over 3,300 startup funding rounds between 2006 and 2008. He scored each investor based on how well connected they are to other investors as well as how well-connected their co-investors are to other investors. “In summary,” says Dondeti, “to get a high score, you need to co-invest often with others that also co-invest often.”

So which venture investors have the best networks? Here are the top 10:

1. Draper Fisher Jurvetson
2. Sequoia Capital
3. Accel Partners
4. Intel Capital
5. First Round Capital
6. Dag Ventures
7. New Enterprise Associates
8. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
9. Benchmark Capital
10. Ron Conway

Draper Fisher Jurvetson takes the top spot. Will its returns beat everyone else’s, or is it just that its spray-and-pray investing strategy gives it an advantage in this type of ranking system? Top-tier firms such as Sequoia, Accel, Kleiner Perkins, and Benchmark also score highly, as does First Round Capital and angel investor Ron Conway.  Other individual investors a little further down the list include Reid Hoffman (No. 18) and Marc Andreessen (no. 31).

Below is a ranking of the Top 100, or you can review the entire data set for all 2,700 investors here.

(Image: Flickr/Steve Jurveston)

Rank VC Investor Raw Score Scaled Score

1 draper-fisher-jurvetson 6721 100.00

2 sequoia-capital 6608 98.33

3 accel-partners 6505 96.80

4 intel-capital 5849 87.03

5 first-round-capital 4881 72.62

6 dag-ventures 4857 72.28

7 new-enterprise-associates 4746 70.61

8 kleiner-perkins-caufield-byers 4695 69.8

.

9 benchmark-capital 4685 69.71

10 ron-conway 4484 66.71

11 charles-river-ventures 4124 61.37

12 goldman-sachs 3926 58.42

13 redpoint-ventures 3915 58.25

14 general-catalyst-partners 3814 56.75

15 bessemer-venture-partners 3622 53.89

16 index-ventures 3469 51.62

17 khosla-ventures 3258 48.47

18 reid-hoffman 3232 48.10

19 sigma-partners 3227 48.01

20 mayfield-fund 3186 47.40

21 oak-investment-partners 3150 46.87

22 norwest-venture-partners 2996 44.57

23 lehman-brothers 2983 44.38

24 greylock 2946 43.83

25 highland-capital-partners 2917 43.40

26 jafco-ventures 2912 43.33

27 omidyar-network 2856 42.50

28 fidelity-ventures 2841 42.27

29 sap-ventures 2831 42.12

30 venrock 2742 40.80

31 marc-andreessen 2462 36.64

32 lightspeed-venture-partners 2446 36.39

33 roger-ehrenberg 2412 35.89

34 foundation-capital 2404 35.76

35 shasta-ventures 2395 35.63

36 us-venture-partners 2378 35.3

.

37 union-square-ventures 2336 34.76

38 canaan-partners-3 2298 34.19

39 atlas-venture 2285 34.00

40 bay-partners 2277 33.88

41 menlo-ventures 2263 33.67

42 mohr-davidow-ventures 2230 33.18

43 interwest-partners 2224 33.10

44 globespan-capital-partners 2209 32.88

45 trident-capital 2203 32.78

46 steamboat-ventures 2183 32.48

47 focus-ventures 2166 32.22

48 atomico-investments 2096 31.18

49 spark-capital 2083 30.99

50 draper-richards 2076 30.89

51 amadeus-capital-partners 2041 30.36

52 greycroft-partners 2039 30.34

53 allen-and-company 1991 29.62

54 founders-fund 1979 29.45

55 meritech-capital-partners 1974 29.38

56 dcm 1974 29.37

57 labrador-ventures 1924 28.63

58 european-founders-fund 1856 27.61

.

59 esther-dyson 1844 27.44

<
/tr>

60 jeff-clavier 1802 26.81

61 3i-group 1784 26.55

62 motorola-ventures 1764 26.25

63 jeff-stewart 1749 26.03

64 mission-ventures 1740 25.88

65 cisco 1734 25.81

66 time-warner-investments 1729 25.72

67 comcast-interactive-capital 1726 25.68

68 marc-benioff 1692 25.18

69 martin-varsavsky 1685 25.07

70 betaworks 1684 25.06

71 polaris-venture-partners 1682 25.02

72 trinity-ventures 1673 24.89

73 bezos-expeditions 1667 24.80

74 hummer-winblad-venture-partners 1624 24.17

75 hearstcorporation 1612 23.99

76 presidio-stx 1604 23.86

77 y-combinator 1596 23.75

78 sutter-hill-ventures 1567 23.32

.

79 baseline-ventures 1552 23.09

80 advanced-technology-ventures 1549 23.05

81 wellington-partners 1543 22.96

82 walden-international 1533 22.81

83 granite-ventures 1518 22.58

84 hercules-technology-growth 1504 22.38

85 morgenthaler-ventures 1497 22.28

86 northgate-capital 1491 22.19

87 battery-ventures 1486 22.11

88 scale-venture-partners 1486 22.11

89 crescendo-ventures 1456 21.66

90 emergence-capital-partners 1451 21.60

91 azure-capital-partners 1445 21.51

92 mike-maples 1433 21.32

93 glg-partners 1428 21.24

94 ariel-poler 1418 21.10

95 vantagepoint-venture-partners 1414 21.04

96 north-bridge-venture-partners 1407 20.94

97 matrix-partners 1405 20.90

98 bluerun-ventures 1405 20.90

.

99 waldenvc 1399 20.82

100 rustic-canyon-partners 1384 20.59

.

e="http://viewer.docstoc.com/">
Whom You Know Matters: Venture Capital Networks and Investment Performance

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How Facebook Could Create a Revolution, Do Good, and Make Billions

Posted on 27 June 2009

Great bruising battles between powerful antagonists is good for media. It “sells papers,” as we used to say, or “generates clicks”, as we now say. When you mix in a love triangle and jilted lovers, well, the audience just goes wild. And Wired did a great job in its piece on Facebook, Google, and Microsoft: riveting stuff. But the thought that kept coming back to me is that Facebook’s bravado, its “grand vision” talk, is what you would expect from a concept-level startup. Surely by now, about 6 years into its venture, Facebook should show some substance? It is time to deliver some real financial results. The concept-level talk is great for attracting capital and talent. Facebook has done that brilliantly. But the point of attracting capital and talent is to be able to generate financial results.

Give It Time? Too Important to Rush?

Anybody who criticizes Facebook’s financial results gets accused of being small-minded, of missing the point, of (gasp!) “not getting it.” In digerati circles, not getting it is like having body odor. Facebook is changing the world, they say. It is a new form of communication, akin to the printing press. Once you get to scale, profits always follow. Google created a service without knowing how to monetize it.

In fact, far too much money has been invested (in both Facebook and hundreds of “me too” ventures) based on that one premise, that “Google created a service without knowing how to monetize it.” The statement is true. If it had not devised the AdWords revenue model, Google would perhaps have sold some kind of enterprise search technology to Fortune 500 companies and rented banner ads on its home page. With AdWords, it found the perfect native revenue model for search, meeting two contradictory needs at the same time:

  1. Do not irritate or interrupt the user, and even occasionally add value for the user.
  2. Provide a compelling value proposition to paying customers.

The problem is that Facebook does not seem to have a clue how to do that. Google did not wait 6 years to unveil AdWords, and when it did unveil it, revenue and profit took off like a rocket. Facebook keeps trying. But to date, its attempts look weak and subject to diminishing returns.

There is a world of difference between increasing returns (what Google gets) and diminishing returns (what Facebook gets with its current strategy). That one-word difference equals billions of dollars.

Email Permission Marketing 2.0 Won’t Cut It

At Federated Media’s Conversational Marketing Summit in New York a few weeks ago, Mike Hoefflinger, Director of Product Marketing at Facebook, gave a talk titled:

Adventures in the Funnel: Awareness, Consideration, and Intent in Media that is Social
Facebook’s new director of product marketing presents his case for why advertising must engage, rather than exhort.”

In a conference full of great case studies, this was a weak presentation. It sounded like Email Permission Marketing 2.0. Yes, email is all spammed out. Yes, every trick in the SEO/SEM book has been tried. And “tradigital”, as social media mavens call it, looks old and tired. But Facebook’s revolutionary alternative is to allow consumers to invite brands to communicate with them, like we used to invite companies to send us emails. That would get over-used and spammy in a heartbeat. Highly innovative brands would do well, as they always do in a new medium, but the law of diminishing returns would apply. By the time this model scaled, and it would have to if Facebook wants to move the revenue needle, users will have switched off in droves.

These are the diminishing returns. The more the model scales, the more it will irritate users, and the more users will switch off, and the sooner growth will slow down and reverse. As with email, Facebook can “make up for this with volume.” But unlike with email, which is virtually free, Facebook has to pay money to serve each user.

Sorry, “Coca-Cola wants to be your friend” is in no way an enduring revenue model. If it sounds phony, maybe that is because it is phony.

The one lesson from social media marketing is that authenticity matters. What no one has shown — and methinks this would be impossible — is how to scale authenticity.

This is where behavioral marketing supposedly comes in. Wired calls this the “third rail of Internet marketing.” Back in March 2008, we wrote about the toxic mix of legislation and user backlash that hinders behavioral marketing. Or, as Wired puts it, “As the Beacon debacle showed, there is a fine line between ‘targeted and useful’ and ‘creepy and stalkerish’ — and so far, not enough advertisers have been willing to walk that line.”

Facebook Should Be Genuinely Radical

Facebook talks a great game about helping the world to communicate. It tries to sound like a group of benevolent revolutionaries. But then it turns to really old-fashioned tools to make money. Its basic message to marketers seems to be, “We have ‘em locked in. Yep, Google can’t see them, so we are the only way to get to them. And not only that, we can tell you what every one of them is doing and saying right now. Step right up, folks!”

The one thing that Facebook has on its side is trust. Users trust the company with their real identities. That is massive. Break that trust and bye-bye.

If it were really radical, Facebook would use that trust to good advantage and really turn the tables. It could show users how to do better business with big companies and with each other. That would be radical. Facebook could create a revolution, do good, and make billions in the process.

This is where I move from easy (critiquing) to hard (suggesting an alternative).

To be revolutionary, to disrupt a market, be prepared “to be misunderstood for long periods of time.” That is Jeff Bezos speaking. Or, to quote Mahatma Gandhi, “First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win.”

One revolutionary who has been banging his drum for over a decade is Doc Searls. He became famous as one of the authors of The Clue Train Manifesto. Ten years ago, those authors heralded “The End of Business as Usual.” Eerily prescient, they spoke of social media before it existed. Now that social media has arrived and is everywhere, they may be disappointed to see that business is very much as usual. They are seeing that when 300 million people get together to communicate, the end result is (drum roll, please)…

“Coca-Cola wants to be your friend.”

For many years, Doc Searls has been promoting a radical alternative that he calls vendor relationship management (VRM). In simple terms, it the inverse of CRM. We first wrote about it here back in October 2007; its Wikipedia entry is here.

VRM is a wonderful idea that has largely been ignored, despite a passionate and highly talented set of true believers. It has limited traction, but hasn’t seen the breakthrough it deserves.

Mark Zuckerberg, meet Doc Searls. No fee for the introduction, please. Do you two know each other? Are you already working something out?

VRM has suffered from sounding a tad academic. Proponents have not been able to show its relevance to real consumer needs. But relevant it is, particularly to three types of consumer-facing companies. I call them “the three horsemen of the consumer-
clypse”:

  • Phone companies,
  • Health insurance companies,
  • Credit card companies.

I know, I know: there should be four horsemen. But these are the only three that come to mind.

These are companies that:

  1. Have services we cannot live without in a modern consumer society,
  2. Nickel and dime us and tie us up in knots because of the simple reality that a big company can out-negotiate the individual consumer.

Or, as the Beatles put it, more eloquently:

“You’re holding me down,
Burning me round,
Filling me up with the rules.”

The VRM model says, “I, the consumer, will tell you, the vendor, the terms under which I am willing to buy your product or service.” A lovely idea. Consumers who have felt burned for decades would love it. It would do particularly well right now, when times are tough, and particularly in emerging markets where Facebook is growing and in which traditional consumer marketers (i.e. US marketers) are not interested because the consumers there are not rich enough.

Would phone, health insurance, and credit card companies love VRM? No, they would hate it, and resist it in every possible way… until, that is, they are faced with 300 million Facebook users all saying, “My way or the highway.” Then those companies will see things their way. It’s called clout.

The terms don’t have to be outrageous. Companies have to make money, after all. If the price is genuinely too low, they won’t play. This is less about the base price than about the nickel and diming pettifogging rules that you supposedly “agreed to when you clicked on that form.”

In fact, the terms should be such that you would accept them the other way around, in which case they could even be used for peer-to-peer business as well. If a bank wouldn’t loan money on those terms, would any peer from your network do so instead?

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iPhone 3GS Jailbreak & Unlock Possible via 24Kpwn Exploit

Posted on 27 June 2009

Dev TeamGreat news! It looks like the same exploit used to jailbreak the 2nd Gen iPod Touch will work on the the new iPhone 3GS. No date on when it will be released but now that we know it can be jailbroke it shouldn’t be too much longer. Here’s what the Dev Team has to say:

About 5 hours ago (Thursday evening, less than a week after the 3GS launch), we were able to verify that the 24Kpwn exploit that the hybrid team used on the iPod Touch 2G is still applicable to the bootrom of the iPhone 3GS. That means we can use the same sort of technique used by our current redsn0w tool to jailbreak and unlock the iPhone 3GS.

This is great news, but how did it happen? Why didn’t Apple fix this in their normal cat&mouse fashion? Well it seems this bootrom was cut in about the August 2008 timeframe, so the unintended early reveal of 24Kpwn earlier this year didn’t affect the iPhone 3GS.

You can read more at their website at blog.iphone-dev.org

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Google Voice Starts Sending Out More Invites Today: Here is What You Can Expect

Posted on 27 June 2009

google_voice_horn_logo.pngIt’s been a long time coming, but according to a message posted to the Google Voice Twitter account this morning, as well as a posting on the Google Blog, Google is getting ready to open up its free Google Voice service to more users. According to NBC’s Janet Shamlian, who did a piece about Google Voice for the Today Show this morning, the service might actually open up for all U.S. users today – though as much as we would like this to be true, we think the reporter got this part of the story wrong. If you haven’t done so already, however, now would be a good time to get your invite request in, as Google will first let in users who requested invites before opening up the service to everybody.

We have used Google Voice ever since it was still GrandCentral (Google acquired GrandCentral in July 2007) and couldn’t be happier with the service, so here is our rundown of what you can expect once you get your own Google Voice number.

Just a few days ago, we reported that Google had acquired about 1 million new phone numbers, so we aren’t too surprised that the company is getting ready to open up the service to more users now.

google_voice_transcripts.png

How Does it Work?

Just like GrandCentral did when it was still available, Google Voice (GV) will assign you a new number, and then you can set up GV to forward calls from this number to your cell phone, home phone, or office.

For calls within the US, GV also allows you to place free calls, though instead of running through a flash widget or a desktop app, GV will actually call your phone and then place the call, so you will still use your cell phone minutes. Google Voice also offers cheap international calls with prices that rival those of Skype and Vonage.

Nothing on your own phone changes, of course, so when you place a call, your home or cell phone number still appears on your friend’s caller ID, though you can always opt to call your own GV number first and then connect the call from there.

GV features a Gmail-like, stripped down interface that puts transcribed voicemails and recent calls at the center of the screen, with the ability to also see recently placed and received calls, your contacts, and other standard features you would expect from a telephony app.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4Q9MJdT5Ds]

Our Favorite Features

  • transcribed voicemails: whenever somebody leaves a voicemail, GV will transcribe the message as best it can (this only works for English right now). These transcripts are then forwarded to your email account and you can also opt to receive an SMS notification.
  • listening in to voicemails: whenever you receive a call and decide to let it go to voicemail, you can also choose to listen in and even pick up the call if it turns out to be an important message. This feels just like the old days when answering machines with tapes were still a novelty.
  • call screening: one neat option in GV is the ability to screen calls. If you activate this feature, callers will be prompted to leave their name once they call, and once you pick up the phone, GV will play the name back and you can choose if you want the call to go to voicemail or if you want to actually speak to this person. You can opt to let all unknown callers who are not in your Google address book go through this procedure or just those calls from callers who have blocked their caller ID.
  • recording calls: at any time during a call, you can press 4 and the call will be recorded. This only works for calls you receive on your phone for now, and doesn’t work for outgoing calls.
  • conference calls: just ask participants to call your GV number and once more callers call in, you can just conference them in – this works for up to 4 callers.
  • switching phones: if you want to switch phones during a call (say you took a call on your home phone and decide you want to take a walk and continue the call on your cell), just press * and all the other phones will ring.
  • SMS: you can send and receive text messages from your GV account
  • integration with Google Contacts
  • it just works: the call quality is good, we didn’t experience any outages during the last few months, and calls aren’t dropped. GV does what it says it does, and it does it well.

But What About Making Calls from my Phone?

As we mentioned above, making calls from your own phone will still display your old caller ID, but at least if you have an iPhone, you do have the option to use GV Mobile, which provides a nice phone interface and comes in a free (iTunes link) and paid version (iTunes link).

A Few Things We Would Like to Change

  • the ability to set your cell phone to display your GV number in the caller ID  – this is still a big barrier for users who might otherwise be willing to switch. As long as your old number still appears in the caller ID, others will continue to call you on that number and will continue to route around your fancy new GV account with all its bells and whistles.
  • no call chains: you can’t set one phone to ring first and then, when nobody picks that up, transfer the call to the next number (GrandCentral offered this feature)

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

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Flicker (No, Not That One) Bares Its Stats In An Attempt To Get Rich

Posted on 27 June 2009

picture-316Flickr, Yahoo’s photo property, is one of the largest picture sharing services in the world. However, if you were to ask a group of random people how you spell its domain, a high percentage would likely tell you F-L-I-C-K-E-R. That’s not surprising, but it’s undoubtedly longstanding a headache for Yahoo. And now the people who own Flicker.com are looking to capitalize on it.

If you visit the site, you’ll see that it now exposes its traffic stats in the lower right-hand corner. It’s a blatant attempt to make money, at the very least from advertisers willing to throw links on the page. Or presumably to get someone to buy the domain.

Here are the stats they publish:

Flicker by the numbers:

Unique Visits:
3.6MM /yr

Source:
Direct Navigation (95.74%)

Outbound Clicks:
400K /yr

CPC Keyword Values:
(Photography equipment)
$2.50 -$3.00 /click

Daily Value to Advertisers:
$2700.00 – $3300.00

(Data is approximate, tracking by Google Analytics)

Below that is a link to contact them.

You’ll notice that over 95% of the traffic comes from direct navigation. That’s because if you Google “Flicker,” you’ll find flickr.com first, and flicker.com nowhere to be found on the first page of results. And that means that millions of people each year are typing in “flicker.com” likely expecting flickr.com. Certainly, that’s worth something, and Flicker knows it.

But the people who own flicker.com probably shouldn’t hold their breath for Yahoo to buy the domain anytime soon. After all, they’re busy selling off their own killer domain names on the cheap to make money.

And so the site is resorting to rather shady tactics. While its main page claims that it’s down for maintenance, there’s a Twitter button right next to that to tweet out that it’s down for maintenance. You might think that most sites wouldn’t want people to know that they’re site is down, but not Flicker. That’s because they clearly want people to advertise on their new “down” website.

And it’s working, look at how many people are actually tweeting this garbage out. You can be sure that a lot of them think Yahoo’s Flickr is down, and they’re just trying to let others know. Flicker has its own Twitter account that highlights all these tweets.

On the site below its maintenance message, you’ll find a bunch of links to camera equipment (the same group Flicker directly appeals to with its ‘CPC Keyword Value’ stats). And just to keep things even more shady, all of these links are bit.ly shortened links.

Update: As commenter Noah points out, some of those Bit.ly links aren’t exactly bathing in traffic. This one has only 500 clicks in the past two weeks.

picture-125

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Is Execution More Important than Vision?

Posted on 27 June 2009

A few years ago, Max Levchin—of PayPal and Slide fame— told me there were two kinds of entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley: Those who work tirelessly and are great at execution, and those who are visionary and truly create new ideas—and sometimes new markets. Levchin put himself in the former category. Indeed, a lot of Slide’s success has just been the result of doing a better job ripping off ideas from competitors like RockYou. He put Evan Williams of Blogger and Twitter in the latter. At the time, Twitter was only a techy phenomenon, but Max noted that unlike a lot of other Web 2.0 companies, Twitter was one of the only ones doing something untested and new.

With all the hyperbole about Twitter today, if I asked you whether the executor or the visionary would wind up being more successful, nearly everyone would say the visionary. But—as Levchin no doubt knew when he made this point—the visionary is usually the one that gets the shaft in Silicon Valley.

Napster changed the music world, but it was iTunes that profited off of it. Google was one of the last companies in the Internet bubble to try their hand at building a search engine—and was laughed out of some VCs’ offices as a result. Palm pioneered the smart phone, not Blackberry. And Friendster was the social network pioneer before Mark Zuckerberg even entered college.

What about Apple? Well it was visionary when it came to the computer, but what turned the company around was the iPod and the iPhone—both just way better versions of MP3 player and smart phones. You can extrapolate it to enterprise software too: Is it i2, PeopleSoft or Siebel that ended up reaping top dog rewards for creating the software that now runs every single large company? Nope. It’s SAP—a company great at applications but horrible at underlying technology—and Oracle—a company great at technology but horrible at applications.

Of course, you can’t talk about this issue without bringing up TiVo: The company that revolutionized how we watch TV and dramatically altered the business model of nearly everyone in that medium, whether it’s cable companies, networks, or advertisers. What was its reward? The company has mostly limped along losing money as competitors ripped off their idea and gave boxes away for free. Most people who use the verb “TiVo” have never even owned a TiVo.

Tom Rogers, TiVo’s CEO, granted a rare interview to NBC’s Press:Here, and he laid out his vision for why TiVo is getting stronger. First there are the financials: It finally turned a profit on net income last year, and a healthy one at about $100 million. Second, there’s the stock: It’s up from a November 16 low of $4.60 a share to nearly $11 a share. But the big question is where future growth will come from. Who doesn’t have a TiVo who wants one at this point?

In essence, Rogers says the company’s future lies in three main areas: Getting way more content than just broadcast and cable on their box; pioneering Internet-like market research on what people watch down to the second they start fast-forwarding through a commercial, and cooperating with TV stations to come up with ways to get their advertising message across that people will actually consume. The heavy lifting here won’t be innovation as much as it’ll be tough execution. Of course the company could always get bought. But given the stock bump, that’s probably not in the offing any time soon.

It’s not surprising that the focus is on programming and TV-partnerships since Rogers is a TV guy, not a techy. He was a long time NBC executive who co-founded CNBC and MSNBC. Notice in this clip how deftly he bats aside the question I asked about product innovation and why TiVo was so late to the HD game. The full episode can be viewed in the Bay Area on Sunday morning on NBC or here now.

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The Web Collapses Under The Weight Of Michael Jackson’s Death

Posted on 27 June 2009

michael-jacksonIn terms of well-known celebrities, few are bigger than Michael Jackson. Love him or hate him, pretty much everyone on the planet knows him. And that caused big problems for a lot of huge websites today with the news of his passing.

It was probably to be expected that Twitter would struggle as reportedly hundreds of thousands of tweets came in about Jackson in a very short amount of time. While I only got a couple actual Fail Whales, the site was really sucking wind for much of the hour that people were trying to get information about him. But Twitter was hardly the only site that was struggling.

Various reports had the AOL-owned TMZ, which broke the story, being down at multiple points throughout the ordeal. As a result, Perez Hilton’s hugely popular blog may have failed as people rushed there to try and confirm the news. Then it was the LATimes which had a report saying Jackson was only in a coma rather than dead, so people rushed there, and that site went down. (The LATimes eventually confirmed his passing.)

Meanwhile, CNN wasn’t down, but failed for another reason. CNN first said that Jackson was revived (see screenshot at the bottom) before going to the hospital.

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Update: And just in case you didn’t believe this story is dominating the web right now, 9 of the 10 trending topics on Twitter are MJ-related. The lone exception is Ed McMahon, who also passed away two days ago. Meanwhile, Twitter search seems to be running about 20 minutes behind.

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Update 2: And here’s a tweet in kind of poor taste from Google Maps API team: “Sad about MJ & FF? Cheer up by watching some Geo I/O talks.” Way to promote yourself at the expense of someone’s death, Google. Classy.

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Update 3: And Google has apologized.

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Update 4: And now Twitter has had to remove features like Search on its main site to stay afloat.

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