Friday, June 20, 2008
Prediction
Prediction: Sometime in July, Hillary Clinton will make a Shermanesque statement regarding her candidacy on the ticket as Obama's running mate. Something on the order of "I have contacted Sen. Obama to let him know that I am categorically not interested in a spot on the 2008 ticket, and will not accept if asked."
This will be a face-saving move for her as she faces the fact that Obama doesn't want her on the ticket—probably even coordinated by Hillary and the Obama campaign. And it will begin the process of letting the Hillary supporters down slowly, before the convention. They have to be comfortable with this idea before then, else there'll be backlash and disappointment during the big show in Denver when someone else is named as running-mate, and that won't be good PR.
Monday, June 16, 2008
Sucky Domain Registrars
Like most internet geek types, I own a few domains—waldronfaulkner.com and a handful of others. And over the years I've worked with three different domain registrars, each one evil in their own way. Network Solutions was solid and trustworthy, but a giant pain in the ass to use.
I switched to Register.com for ease of use several years back, but they're expensive.
So I tried GoDaddy.com. Oh, GoDaddy, is there any any revenue stream you won't aggressively push?
Last April GoDaddy was in the news for some evil practices. The governing body for domain names, ICANN, took some action against them. In short, they were "locking down" domain names for 60 days after a user's contact information changed. The Catch 22 is that under ICANN rules, users must keep their contact information up to date, else risk forfeiture of their domains. GoDaddy's practice effectively forced some people into a situation where they'd have to either renew with GoDaddy or risk losing their valuable domains.
Even though I know GoDaddy was both ugly and evil, I still now prefer them to Register.com because the price gap is ridiculous. Register.com is still on this $35/year price point, whereas the rest of the industry is down in the sub-$10 range for individual domains. Register.com didn't get left behind in the rush to reduce prices industry-wide; instead of reducing their prices for users who were already accustomed to paying $35/year (idiots like me), they simply re-branded their service under new names, with different sites, and got competitive there, instead.
But what do I do with the domain that expires in 2 days? I don't want to leave it with Register.com because they're too expensive. I'd rather not transfer it to GoDaddy because they're ugly, shameless, and potentially evil. I considered switching to Google's registration service, but the sign-up process made it a little unclear what I was getting... it's associated with Google App Engine, and it wasn't clear whether I'd be able to just use the domain registration part without also transferring my existing sites to the App Engine infrastructure. They wanted to give me a new email address in the domain I was transferring... an email address I already have and use, in fact.
So I decided to transfer yet another domain to the potentially evil GoDaddy, from Register.com. I learned that Register.com has its own evil ways. In order for GoDaddy to complete the transfer, I have to provide an authorization code provided by Register.com. How do you get this code? You have to call them on the phone. After they do the standard verification-dance, they send you a different code to your email address. Then they ask you to repeat the code to them before they send you the real code you can use in GoDaddy's transfer process.
I've worked in a good number of consumer-focused Internet businesses. A good rule of thumb is that each step you put a user through, about half will drop-off. This is true both in the positive direction (don't make users go through a multi-stage sign-up process if you want to increase adoption) and the negative direction (if you make them call you on the phone before they cancel, fewer will cancel). Some of those consumer Internet businesses were also mature businesses, and I know what it is to push the revenue envelope. I know what it is to flirt with the line between increased revenue and dubious business practice, but Register.com crosses the line with this retarded, two-part authorization code thing. Lets review:
a) they email you a code
b) you repeat the code to them, ostensibly to prove that you have access to the email account.
c) they email you a different code
Huh? This verbal repetition of the code accomplishes nothing. They could have just sent me the real code. Access to the email address didn't need to be proven.
Now, I could see this process being implemented if someone just called them up and told them to send the code to some random email address, but this was the email address of record for the account.
So far, I've spent about an hour on this, working between the two sites, making phone calls, checking email etc., and I'm still not sure it's done.
Please, if you have experience with a domain registrar you actually like, please do let me know who they are... I'll transfer all my domains, maybe even all at once, instead of just when they get close to expiration.
I switched to Register.com for ease of use several years back, but they're expensive.
So I tried GoDaddy.com. Oh, GoDaddy, is there any any revenue stream you won't aggressively push?
Last April GoDaddy was in the news for some evil practices. The governing body for domain names, ICANN, took some action against them. In short, they were "locking down" domain names for 60 days after a user's contact information changed. The Catch 22 is that under ICANN rules, users must keep their contact information up to date, else risk forfeiture of their domains. GoDaddy's practice effectively forced some people into a situation where they'd have to either renew with GoDaddy or risk losing their valuable domains.
Even though I know GoDaddy was both ugly and evil, I still now prefer them to Register.com because the price gap is ridiculous. Register.com is still on this $35/year price point, whereas the rest of the industry is down in the sub-$10 range for individual domains. Register.com didn't get left behind in the rush to reduce prices industry-wide; instead of reducing their prices for users who were already accustomed to paying $35/year (idiots like me), they simply re-branded their service under new names, with different sites, and got competitive there, instead.
But what do I do with the domain that expires in 2 days? I don't want to leave it with Register.com because they're too expensive. I'd rather not transfer it to GoDaddy because they're ugly, shameless, and potentially evil. I considered switching to Google's registration service, but the sign-up process made it a little unclear what I was getting... it's associated with Google App Engine, and it wasn't clear whether I'd be able to just use the domain registration part without also transferring my existing sites to the App Engine infrastructure. They wanted to give me a new email address in the domain I was transferring... an email address I already have and use, in fact.
So I decided to transfer yet another domain to the potentially evil GoDaddy, from Register.com. I learned that Register.com has its own evil ways. In order for GoDaddy to complete the transfer, I have to provide an authorization code provided by Register.com. How do you get this code? You have to call them on the phone. After they do the standard verification-dance, they send you a different code to your email address. Then they ask you to repeat the code to them before they send you the real code you can use in GoDaddy's transfer process.
I've worked in a good number of consumer-focused Internet businesses. A good rule of thumb is that each step you put a user through, about half will drop-off. This is true both in the positive direction (don't make users go through a multi-stage sign-up process if you want to increase adoption) and the negative direction (if you make them call you on the phone before they cancel, fewer will cancel). Some of those consumer Internet businesses were also mature businesses, and I know what it is to push the revenue envelope. I know what it is to flirt with the line between increased revenue and dubious business practice, but Register.com crosses the line with this retarded, two-part authorization code thing. Lets review:
a) they email you a code
b) you repeat the code to them, ostensibly to prove that you have access to the email account.
c) they email you a different code
Huh? This verbal repetition of the code accomplishes nothing. They could have just sent me the real code. Access to the email address didn't need to be proven.
Now, I could see this process being implemented if someone just called them up and told them to send the code to some random email address, but this was the email address of record for the account.
So far, I've spent about an hour on this, working between the two sites, making phone calls, checking email etc., and I'm still not sure it's done.
Please, if you have experience with a domain registrar you actually like, please do let me know who they are... I'll transfer all my domains, maybe even all at once, instead of just when they get close to expiration.
Friday, June 6, 2008
My Prediction* For The WWDC
"Oh, and one more thing... we'll be offering these cool new iPhones in both GSM and CDMA versions, and we have deals in place with each of the major US mobile carriers, so we can offer you an iPhone for your existing Verizon Wireless, Sprint, or T Mobile account."
How might this happen, in light of Apple's famous Five-Year Contract with AT&T?
Two possible scenarios:
- The actual contract between Apple and AT&T might be very flimsy. Details as to what the contract contains are sketchy. It might be as weak as "we agree to do this deal exclusively with AT&T for five years, unless we opt out of it in June of 2008." Why would AT&T have gone for this? Because a real contract might not have been on offer, and this version at least allowed them announce a five-year exclusive deal. The announcement allowed them to convert a ton of Apple fan-boys/girls after the initial release—fan-boys/girls who might otherwise have waited around for a year or more to get a phone with their existing carrier, which would have been bad for both ATT and Apple
- Or say the contract with AT&T isn't flimsy. Apple could still get them to agree to nullify the first contract in exchange for their cutting AT&T in on a piece of every non-ATT iPhone sold in the US. There could even be a different cost structure for non-ATT phones (dovetails nicely with rumors of an AT&T subsidy).
Face it, Jobs needs a "one more thing" that'll catch even the most speculative fan-boy predictors by surprise. This would certainly do that, and simultaneously provide an announcement worthy of mainstream media attention, not to mention an avenue for increased iPhone sales volume, which is likely necessary to meet the goal of 10 million by end of 2008.
* Prediction = Wish
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Stanford Launches Venture Fund
Standford has launched an on-campus venture fund: SSE Ventures.
In business school I took a course called "Managing Innovation", which I had hoped would focus mostly on a subject I consider to be a personal specialty: the difficulties of leading teams of highly intelligent, curious, independent individuals toward the accomplishment of a unified goal. In fact, we studied only a little in that line, but focused much more on the organization of innovative networks (network in the non-geek sense), and communities.
One thing we studied at length was the phenomenon of communities—usually attached to a geographic area like Silicon Valley or the Boston Rt. 128 corridor—becoming super-innovative powerhouses supporting the virtuous circle of technological invention, successful businesses development, and high returns capital investment which then feed back into the system.
Nations, states, and regional communities often try to synthesize these communities from scratch, by offering tax- and other incentives to would-be entrepreneurs, hoping to spark creation of a technological center akin to Silicon Valluy, which lead to higher rates of employment and transform the local tax base.
If my memory of the class serves, the following components are all requisite (but do not guarantee) for such communities to develop and flower:
In business school I took a course called "Managing Innovation", which I had hoped would focus mostly on a subject I consider to be a personal specialty: the difficulties of leading teams of highly intelligent, curious, independent individuals toward the accomplishment of a unified goal. In fact, we studied only a little in that line, but focused much more on the organization of innovative networks (network in the non-geek sense), and communities.
One thing we studied at length was the phenomenon of communities—usually attached to a geographic area like Silicon Valley or the Boston Rt. 128 corridor—becoming super-innovative powerhouses supporting the virtuous circle of technological invention, successful businesses development, and high returns capital investment which then feed back into the system.
Nations, states, and regional communities often try to synthesize these communities from scratch, by offering tax- and other incentives to would-be entrepreneurs, hoping to spark creation of a technological center akin to Silicon Valluy, which lead to higher rates of employment and transform the local tax base.
If my memory of the class serves, the following components are all requisite (but do not guarantee) for such communities to develop and flower:
- Academic centers of technological innovation
- Access to ready capital
- A few seed power-house businesses in the specific vertical where the community will excel
- A culture of cooperation and collaboration, rather than secrecy, ownership and protectionism.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Why Google might be in the Skype business
There's a not-so-outlandish rumor going now that Google might acquire Skype from eBay.
There are multiple reasons why Skype would make a good addition to the Google portfolio... which is good because there weren't any good arguments for the eBay acquisition. I'm particularly interested in two of those reasons: one makes sense if you take Google's "don't be evil" code of conduct statement on face value, and another if you think of Google as the scheming Dr. Evil of the technology space.
In the Don't Be Evil scenario: the relevant ingredients are these:
This is the scenario many pundits see as the crowning logic on the transaction.
However, there is a Doctor Evil scenario to consider as well.
The idea of conversationally-contextual ads was mocked in a recent April Fool's Day joke on the AdSense blog. But the Doctor Evil scenario is much more in keeping with Google's core business than the Do No Evil scenario, and technologically easier for them to implement in the near term. The Do No Evil scenario involves carriers or other provisions for wireless bandwidth, plus completion of the Android platform (which is open), plus handset makers who must provide the devices on which Android will run. That's a lot of messy relationships and agreements. Easier to just acquire the core components you need and go from there.
For both scenarios: if there's anything we've proven over the past 10-12 years, it's
that a pay-for-service model will spiral toward zero revenue if there
is a cheaper/free ad-supported model in competition to it. So
Google-powered voice ads, to go along with free Skype service, targeted
to you based on your browsing (if not your conversations) is not at all difficult to envision.
Get ready for "free" voice service... the most annoying free voice service you could imagine!
There are multiple reasons why Skype would make a good addition to the Google portfolio... which is good because there weren't any good arguments for the eBay acquisition. I'm particularly interested in two of those reasons: one makes sense if you take Google's "don't be evil" code of conduct statement on face value, and another if you think of Google as the scheming Dr. Evil of the technology space.
In the Don't Be Evil scenario: the relevant ingredients are these:
- Linux-based Skype client
- Linux-based Android mobile OS (the so-called "Google Phone")
- Open-access to 700 MHz wireless bandwidth or white space spectrum
- Grand Central (Google acquisition in July 2007)
- Goog-411
This is the scenario many pundits see as the crowning logic on the transaction.
However, there is a Doctor Evil scenario to consider as well.
- Skype service in its current form as a PC-based voice & video client
- Voice-to-text analysis software added into the Skype client
- Google AdSense
- Double-Click (Google acquisition completed March 11 after FTC and EC review)
The idea of conversationally-contextual ads was mocked in a recent April Fool's Day joke on the AdSense blog. But the Doctor Evil scenario is much more in keeping with Google's core business than the Do No Evil scenario, and technologically easier for them to implement in the near term. The Do No Evil scenario involves carriers or other provisions for wireless bandwidth, plus completion of the Android platform (which is open), plus handset makers who must provide the devices on which Android will run. That's a lot of messy relationships and agreements. Easier to just acquire the core components you need and go from there.
For both scenarios: if there's anything we've proven over the past 10-12 years, it's
that a pay-for-service model will spiral toward zero revenue if there
is a cheaper/free ad-supported model in competition to it. So
Google-powered voice ads, to go along with free Skype service, targeted
to you based on your browsing (if not your conversations) is not at all difficult to envision.
Get ready for "free" voice service... the most annoying free voice service you could imagine!
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Music Discovery: Bon Iver
What will my eleven week-old think of me when he's a music-obsessed teen and learns that, even though I hold a degree in music, I never seem to listen to it much? Poor kid will be disgusted with me, and rightly so. Perhaps as disgusted as I was with my parents, who had a lovely stereo system but owned only "Sgt Peppers" and the entire Herb Alpert catalog—and never listened to either.
Right or wrong, I'm blaming my musical complacency on lack of "discovery". The few times I've been excited about music again (music other than my own compositions, that is) has been when I discovered something new. So I've decided to go hunting for new music because I have no intention of being as out-of-it as my own parents were, and it won't be that long before my son grows old enough to realize how out-of-it I currently am.
So I'm taking you along for the ride. Here we go!
I find a lot of interesting new-to-me music via the KEXP song-of-the-day podcast. Recently in their feed:Bon Iver (on MySpace, and bio here).
Bon Iver (pronounced eevair, as in French for winter, intentionally misspelled) is the brain-child of Justin Vernon, and emerged from his spending a Thoreauan, isolated winter in northern Wisconsin as he faced-down some inner turmoil. Rather than simply "hibernate", which had been the original plan, he recorded nine songs, which he released as the Bon Iver album For Emma, Forever Ago.
The first song, Skinny Love, is just beautiful. An mp3 is here (can't vouch for its legality). You can also stream the song on his Virb page, and his MySpace profile. His album, For Emma, Forever Ago, is on Jagjaguwar records, and is available digitally on Amazon, as is the CD.
A trained musician such as myself should be well capable of explaining why a piece of music appeals to him. Over the years I've drifted further and further away from music that appeals to me intellectually, and back toward music that appeals on a visceral level. That was going to be how I avoided the question of why I like this piece of music, because I honestly didn't have it in my really analyze this piece of music. Seems at odds with the spirit of the song, anyway. But then I learned the back story of Justin Vernon and his isolated winter, and the appeal began to make sense even without an analysis of the music. I've been most prolific with my own songwriting (and most successful) during introspective times of my life, when I've intentionally isolated myself. I'm not going to compare my own music to this one song or album, but at least the motivation and the recording style are familiar to me. Maybe that's why this song reaches me.
Purists who get off on hearing the imperfections of hand-crafted recordings—first-take kind of stuff, complete with creaks & pops—will love this album. So will people who get off on super-promising "freshman" releases... you know, people who love to be disappointed by sophomore releases.
Anyway, please enjoy this song, Skinny Love, and check back soon for other "discoveries", new and old.
Right or wrong, I'm blaming my musical complacency on lack of "discovery". The few times I've been excited about music again (music other than my own compositions, that is) has been when I discovered something new. So I've decided to go hunting for new music because I have no intention of being as out-of-it as my own parents were, and it won't be that long before my son grows old enough to realize how out-of-it I currently am.
So I'm taking you along for the ride. Here we go!
I find a lot of interesting new-to-me music via the KEXP song-of-the-day podcast. Recently in their feed:Bon Iver (on MySpace, and bio here).
Bon Iver (pronounced eevair, as in French for winter, intentionally misspelled) is the brain-child of Justin Vernon, and emerged from his spending a Thoreauan, isolated winter in northern Wisconsin as he faced-down some inner turmoil. Rather than simply "hibernate", which had been the original plan, he recorded nine songs, which he released as the Bon Iver album For Emma, Forever Ago.
The first song, Skinny Love, is just beautiful. An mp3 is here (can't vouch for its legality). You can also stream the song on his Virb page, and his MySpace profile. His album, For Emma, Forever Ago, is on Jagjaguwar records, and is available digitally on Amazon, as is the CD.
A trained musician such as myself should be well capable of explaining why a piece of music appeals to him. Over the years I've drifted further and further away from music that appeals to me intellectually, and back toward music that appeals on a visceral level. That was going to be how I avoided the question of why I like this piece of music, because I honestly didn't have it in my really analyze this piece of music. Seems at odds with the spirit of the song, anyway. But then I learned the back story of Justin Vernon and his isolated winter, and the appeal began to make sense even without an analysis of the music. I've been most prolific with my own songwriting (and most successful) during introspective times of my life, when I've intentionally isolated myself. I'm not going to compare my own music to this one song or album, but at least the motivation and the recording style are familiar to me. Maybe that's why this song reaches me.
Purists who get off on hearing the imperfections of hand-crafted recordings—first-take kind of stuff, complete with creaks & pops—will love this album. So will people who get off on super-promising "freshman" releases... you know, people who love to be disappointed by sophomore releases.
Anyway, please enjoy this song, Skinny Love, and check back soon for other "discoveries", new and old.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Why Zipcar Rules
On my other blog, which is about the advent of fatherhood, I once posted an argument in favor of my wife and I spending $750 for a baby's stroller, on the grounds that it provided an alternative to spending more than $180,000 in car and parking-related expenses here in parking-deprived Boston.
So we bought the stroller and justified it by continuing to use short-term car-rental company, Zipcar, rather than buying a car. We love Zipcar.
Today, Consumer Reports published new data that calculates car ownership costs for every model they track. So I looked-up the little Subaru Outback model Mary and I have been eying, and did some math*. I learned that for what it would cost us to own and park a Subaru Outback, we could:
For us, this isn't even close. In all of 2007 we spent just $788 on Zipcar. In 2006, we spent a lavish $1267, which included unlimited use of a small SUV for the week of our wedding. On average over those two years, we spent a bit more than $1000, which was less than 10% of the projected cost to actually own and park a car. Sorry, but the extra convenience of never having to return the car on a deadline just isn't worth 10 times as much money.
We continue to love Zipcar.
* To find my annual cost to own an Outback, I took the total 5 year cost of ownership published by consumer reports, added a conservative $325 per month for parking, and a modest 10% increase for living in Boston (insurance, fuel, repairs all cost more here in Mass, especially in town). To find my annual cost for Zipcar, I took their annual fee ($50 here in Boston), and prorated their membership application fee ($25). For hourly-rate Zipcars I used $11/hour (we usually use $10/hour cars, but sometimes we go for the $12/hour models). For daily-rate Zipcars I also split the difference between $78/day and $85/day cars, and used $81.50
So we bought the stroller and justified it by continuing to use short-term car-rental company, Zipcar, rather than buying a car. We love Zipcar.
Today, Consumer Reports published new data that calculates car ownership costs for every model they track. So I looked-up the little Subaru Outback model Mary and I have been eying, and did some math*. I learned that for what it would cost us to own and park a Subaru Outback, we could:
- Use hourly Zipcars for 20 hours per week (using the hourly rate)
- Reserve Zipcars for 11.5 full days per month (using the daily rate)
For us, this isn't even close. In all of 2007 we spent just $788 on Zipcar. In 2006, we spent a lavish $1267, which included unlimited use of a small SUV for the week of our wedding. On average over those two years, we spent a bit more than $1000, which was less than 10% of the projected cost to actually own and park a car. Sorry, but the extra convenience of never having to return the car on a deadline just isn't worth 10 times as much money.
We continue to love Zipcar.
* To find my annual cost to own an Outback, I took the total 5 year cost of ownership published by consumer reports, added a conservative $325 per month for parking, and a modest 10% increase for living in Boston (insurance, fuel, repairs all cost more here in Mass, especially in town). To find my annual cost for Zipcar, I took their annual fee ($50 here in Boston), and prorated their membership application fee ($25). For hourly-rate Zipcars I used $11/hour (we usually use $10/hour cars, but sometimes we go for the $12/hour models). For daily-rate Zipcars I also split the difference between $78/day and $85/day cars, and used $81.50
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