A Terabyte for a Grand?

Om Malik points to PhotoShelter, which is offering one terabyte of storage space for $1000 a year.  I just knew someone was going to start talking about Amazon S3, and Jeffrey McManus did- in a comment.

Om then correctly points out that no ordinary person has the slightest idea how to use S3.

Saying end users should use S3 for archival and backup storage is sort of like saying that Batman is giving away free cookies at the Batcave.

I’d want some assurances on what future PhotoShelter rates would be before I uploaded all that data.  I can also tell you from my MediaMaster experiment that uploading that much data would take approximately forever.

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Jimmy Wales on MySpace

Jimmy Wales, the founder of Wikipedia, says that MySpace will fail in a few years, though he does appreciate the momentum behind online communities.

He agrees with me that MySpace pages are ugly, saying that they hurt his eyes.  He goes on to say “there’s way too much advertising and they’re not really respecting their own community.”  Once again, that sounds a lot like Geocities.

I don’t know if MySpace will die, but I absolutely believe its relevance will diminish over time.  It has huge relevance now because it has so much of the young mindshare in this country- mindshare that advertisers covet.  Mindshare is ferae naturae, however, and no one can lay claim to it.  Just ask AOL.

His comments about MySpace come at the end of an interview about the history of Wikipedia and his new open source search engine project.

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Morning Reading: 4/21/07

Amy bought a cool fan.  I love retro stuff like that.

I really miss Deadwood.  Now comes word that the movies to finish up the stories won’t air until 2008, at the earliest.  No BSG in 2007.  No Deadwood.  At least we get a little Mal Reynolds fix via Drive.

James Kendrick doesn’t like reading one side of a conversation on Twitter.  He says it “goes against what makes Twitter so appealing.”  Amen.  We have the blogosphere for one sided conversations.

I’m not sure, but it looks like Gizmodo makes people audition for the right to post a comment.  No problem.  When I was a kid most of my buddies wanted to be firemen or policemen when we grew up.  Me, I wanted to be a commenter on Gizmodo.

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The Podcaster that Roared

Dave Winer, who is probably just in a pouty mood since he got dropped from my Twitter list, aims his longbow at Valleywag, all because Valleywag had the gall to say that the podcasting boom is over and Apple won.

Are you kidding me?  Nobody won podcasting, because nobody outside of the blogosphere cares a whit about podcasting.  Does anyone who doesn’t do a podcast listen to them?  There are geometrically more people getting rich by playing in the NBA than there are getting anywhere close to rich by podcasting.  And Dave wonders if the VC money will bet on podcasting?  Sure, as soon as they take a few street musicians public.  Get your Shakin’ Jake Woods bonds here!

Apple won podcasting on the way to claim the bigger mobile audio prize- the same way Sherman won Kennesaw Mountain on the way to Atlanta.

The podcasting boom, such as it was, is over for me.  I tried it for a while and actually got some props for the one I did.  But the effort/reward ratio for podcasting is about as out of whack as it can be.  Fred Wilson, another of my Twitter exiles, tried it and gave it up too, for many of the same reasons.  To be worth the effort, a podcast must have a big audience.  But it’s harder by far to create a popular podcast than it is to create a popular blog.  It’s a recipe for abandonment.

But anyone who doesn’t believe that Apple, via the iPod and its conjoined twin iTunes, has won the battle for the mind of North America (name the movie that quote came from for extra credit) as far as audio to go goes is in denial.  I know a lot of people in the real world who use iTunes.  I know no one in the real world who regularly listens to podcasts.  Yes I know about the northeast and mass transit and commute times and all that.  But what percentage of those folks choose a podcast over music?

So what if Dave invented or thinks he invented podcasting.  Put all the podcasters on one end of a room and the guy who invented Webkinz on the other end.  Set Fred down in the middle and see who he goes to.  VCs are great when it comes to cheerleading- it’s the way they seed the fields.  But they get a little pickier at harvest time.  I bet more revenue has been generated from the sale of those stuffed animals in the last month than has been generated by podcasting in the last year- or maybe ever.

There will always be some popular podcasts, just like there will always be some Tim Duncans and Steve Nashes.  But it’s not the place to go looking for an easy buck.

Buying a soon to be retired Webkinz is a much better bet.

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Step Away from the Lightsaber

I don’t get this so-called Google World in which a bunch of geeks sit around and watch some other geeks doing some nerdy and/or mundane activity.  Is this really the highest and best use for the blogosphere?  Is this the way we want to present blogging to the real world?  Next we’re going to be dancing around with lightsabers and calling it a documentary.

Do we really want to watch people drive around in their car?  Sure, I did it, with a bunch of other geeks, when Scoble took his little road trip.  But I found it profoundly boring.  More importantly, I don’t see any meaningful use for the permanent webcam beyond what traditional web-casting and YouTube already offer.  For one thing, the producers of meaningful content are not going to let some blogger webcast for free what they want others to pay for.  The other stuff is just (what’s the opposite of glorified?) home movies.

I’m not dumping on all web-directed video.  To the contrary, I like Scoble’s photo shoots with Thomas Hawk.  Mostly because I like to hear Thomas talk about photography.  But there’s no reason that sort of thing couldn’t be distributed via YouTube.  In other words, there’s no need for immediacy that requires us to watch those videos as they happen – or soon thereafter.

If the point is that webcasting your life can be done, fine.  So can building a ship in a bottle, but neither of them are edge of your seat entertainment.  If the point is that these videos are to TV what podcasts (another geeky endeavor that no one outside of the blogosphere gives a hoot about) are to radio, well I don’t buy it.  These video things are much more about the glorification of the people in them than they are about entertaining the people who allegedly watch them.

Here’s the point I’m getting at:  if it’s cool and fun, then let it be cool and fun.  There’s not one thing wrong with cool and fun.  But all the alchemy on Techmeme can’t turn cool and fun into big business.  If we want the blogosphere to be taken seriously, we simply can’t act like a glorified home movie is something important or revolutionary.  It’s not- and anyone who isn’t in one or hoping to divine gold from one knows that.

It just seems to me that the blogosphere, and particularly that portion of it with an audience, is becoming more tangential every day, when it should be striving to become less tangential.

There are a ton of better things for bloggers to spend their time doing than Trumanizing themselves.  It wasn’t all that interesting when Jim Carrey did it.

Put the lightsabers and the webcams down, and go do something useful and interesting.

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Rod Stewart

We went to see Rod Stewart tonight. I knew I liked his early stuff, particularly his work with Faces- a very under-appreciated band. What I had forgotten was how many other good songs he has recorded. I like his early stuff (pre-1980) better, but I enjoyed some of his newer stuff more than I thought I would- particularly his excellent cover of Cat Stevens’ Father and Son.

It was a very good show. My favorites were Dirty Old Town, from his first solo record (1969), and Stay With Me, from Faces’ A Nod is as Good as a Wink (1971). He played for a solid two hours, and did most of his big hits as well as a few covers, most notably Tom Waits’ Waltzing Matilda.

Good stuff.

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Thinking Blogger Awards

Mike Miller over at the excellent Be a Good Dad blog tagged me in the Thinking Blogger Awards meme.  Thanks Mike.

Here are 5 blogs that make me think, with a little commentary on each.

1) Nick Carr.  Nick was like beer to me in the blogosphere.  At first I didn’t like him at all.  But because all my friends read him and I thought it made me cool, I kept reading him.  Then, all of the sudden, I really started digging him.  Nick can turn a phrase like Cormac McCarthy.  Regardless of whether you agree with him or not, no other blogger writes as well as Nick.

2) Seth Finkelstein.  I admire people who show you how smart they are, almost as much as I dislike people who tell you.  I concluded a long time ago that Seth is smarter than just about anyone else.  And he is spot on most of the time.  No one listens to him, because they don’t like his message.  But he stays the course.  I really enjoy his blog. 

3) Susan Getgood.  When something brilliant or stupid happens in the blogosphere, Susan’s blog is one of the first places I go for a reasoned, well considered reaction/discussion.  Take this post, for example.  Plus, she is a sci-fi fan.    

4) Wally Bangs.  If Nick Carr is the blogosphere’s Cormac McCarthy, Wally is our William Gay.  He is a great southern writer, and as a musician who lived in Nashville back in the 80s, his stories about that era’s Nashville music scene are of great interest to me.

5) Doc Searls.  This may come across as pandering to an A-Lister, but I can’t do this list and not include Doc.  He is the most insightful tech blogger to ever pound out a post.  And as good as his tech stuff is, his life stuff is better.  Doc has changed my opinion about something in a single post more times than I can count- and those who know me will tell you that my mind is not the easiest thing to change. 

For those of you I tagged above, here are the rules of participation, should you wish to do so:

  • If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,
  • Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme.
  • Optional: Proudly display the ‘Thinking Blogger Award’ with a link to the post that you wrote (here is an alternative silver version if gold doesn’t fit your blog).
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Twitterage

Twitter-Logo-150x150

Here’s a little link love for my current Twitter list:

BlogBloke
Brad Kellett
Corey Akula
Chris Carfi
Gabe Rivera
James Kendrick
Martin Gordon
Mathew Ingram
Miles Evenson
Randy Morin
Ric Hayman
Richard Querin
Rick Mahn
Steve Gillmor
Stowe Boyd
Susan Getgood
Warner Crocker

People I’d like to add
(If I knew their Twitter ID)

Chip Camden
Dave Wallace
Dwight Silverman
Earl Moore
Ethan Johnson
Frank Gruber
Fraser Kelton
Karl Martino
Mike Miller
Nick Carr
Seth Finkelstein
Steve Newson
Tom Morris
Tom Reynolds
Zoli Erdos

Removed per my Pink Floyd Policy:***

Dave Winer
Fred Wilson
Hugh Macleod
Robert Scoble
Steve Rubel

*** I still subscribe to all of these blogs and, with the exception of Scoble’s self-Trumanization, I enjoy them.  As I discussed the other day, I want my Twitter experience to be different from the larger blogosphere- I don’t want anyone talking to me unless I have the ability to talk back to them.

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Google Gets Clear Access to the Airwaves

Google has signed a deal with Clear Channel Communications that will allow Google to place ads on Clear Channels’ radio stations.

Drew Hilles, Google Audio’s national sales director says:

This radio partnership with Clear Channel is a pretty big statement that Google is in the radio industry to stay and have a big impact.

Google has extended its online ad dominance by purchasing DoubleClick, and recently reached into the satelitte market via a deal with EchoStar.

The new deal calls for Google to sell a guaranteed portion of the 30-second spots available on Clear Channel’s 675 radio stations in top U.S. markets.

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Just Nod if You Can Hear Me…

justnodOne negative thing I have noticed about Twitter is that my Twitter page is filling up with conversations I can’t participate in because I follow people who don’t follow me.  Sort of like the blogosphere all over again.

My new policy: I’m going to remove people from my list who don’t reciprocate.

We already engage in one-way conversations in the blogosphere.  I want my Twitter experience to be better than that.

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