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‘BusinessWeek’ Don’t link to us

20 Aug 2010

According to the user agreement on BusinessWeek’s Web site, a user may not:

Gawker points to the example of SmugMug CEO Don MacAskill, who writes in his blog that after being interviewed for a feature story in BusinessWeek, he was expressly told not to link to the story. “Yes, that’s right, an ad-driven publication doesn’t want us to drive traffic to them,” he says in his blog. In addition, he was urged to review the company’s user agreement.

BusinessWeek apparently doesn’t need anyone to help it boost its Web traffic.

According to a blog post on Gawker, BusinessWeek not only asks people not to link to its site, it specifically directs them to its user agreement that prohibits the practice of “deep linking.”

While some online publications have a policy on deep linking, it’s pretty unusual to enforce it. Most sites obviously consider it a boon for page views and look on it favorably, as long as the content is credited to the correct source.

“use or attempt to use any ‘deep-link,’ ’scraper,’ ‘robot,’ ‘bot,’ ’spider,’ ‘data mining,’ ‘computer code’ or any other automated device, program, tool, algorithm, process or methodology or manual process having similar processes or functionality, to access, acquire, copy, or monitor any portion of BW.com, any data or content found on or accessed through BW.com, or any other BW.com information without prior express written consent of BW.”

MacAskill speculates that BusinessWeek’s stance is the result of corporate red tape, and not something that would be embraced by its reporters and editors. “To spend all of this time and energy on their articles, only to have the crazy business people make it impossible for people to read their work, must be incredibly trying,” he says in his blog.

Dell earnings down 17 percent

20 Aug 2010

“This is a very significant dynamic in the server market today that I don’t think Wall Street has caught up with,” he noted.

This post was updated at 3:50 p.m. PDT with comments from Michael Dell and analysts.

Revenue was $16.43 billion for the quarter, an 11-percent increase from a year ago. That was helped by a big boost in shipments of the company’s hardware–up 19 percent worldwide.

But Wall Street didn’t like what it heard: Dell’s stock was down more than 10 percent to $22.50 in after-hours trading.

But a bigger issue for the IT industry in general is the current conservative spending climate. Gladden said its business with large corporate customers and state and local governments has seen the most slowing.

Dell’s strength has traditionally been in the enterprise market, and it says it will continue to grow its services business to take advantage of growing demand from its current roster of customers.

Dell does not provide guidance to Wall Street for the forthcoming quarter, which makes analysts more than a bit nervous. That was quite obvious on the earnings call Thursday, when analysts repeatedly asked Gladden and CEO Michael Dell about why the company was so aggressive in trying to gain market share in Europe, and didn’t have the profits to show for it.

“But it’s conservatism that’s been relatively consistent for the last six months,” he said. It jibes with what rival Hewlett-Packard reported during its earnings call last week, when CEO Mark Hurd said he didn’t see much of a change between last quarter and the current quarter.

New CFO Brian Gladden presided over his first earnings call for Dell.

Regarding the company’s consumer business, it is still in the growing stages. Margins on consumer notebooks continue to decline, as do the average selling prices. But, demand for consumer notebooks are growing in many markets, including new ones like China and India. The key will be Dell’s ability to exploit that better than their rivals, HP, Lenovo, and Acer.

Gladden said repeatedly that there was “more work to be done,” to improve profitability and decrease costs. To that end, Dell still isn’t done with layoffs. The company said in early 2007 it had a goal of lowering headcount by 8,900. As of now, they’ve reduced staffing by 8,500. The last 400 will be gone by the third quarter, according to Gladden.

Dell’s CFO did say not to expect improvements in profitability in the consumer business for another four quarters. And that’s fine, according to Gartner’s Stahlman.

The CEO’s repeated response was that the company is seeing gains in market share as a result, but still has some fine-tuning to do in regard to pricing.

“It’s correct that Dell has focused on enterprise and consumer will follow in their priorities. That’s the right thing for them to do,” he said.

In sum, Dell is still trying to turn itself around. While the previous quarter’s earnings results may have been more reassuring to investors, the company is still undergoing change internally and they don’t have every wrinkle ironed out.

“When you’re restarting growth, it’s an imprecise process,” Dell said. “We see some parts of our business where we were probably a bit too aggressive, (and) we’re modulating for that now.”

Dell began its dedicated cloud services business 18 months ago, and has acquired big-name customers like Salesforce.com, Facebook, Yahoo, and Microsoft. It’s an area Dell is growing quickly, but it’s also one that Stahlman believes is not well-understood by the financial analysts watching Dell.

Despite lower-than-expected profits, Gladden called it “a great growth quarter” for Dell. The cost of growth in Europe in particular, he said was partly to blame for this quarter’s results. In other words, in an attempt to gain share in both consumer and enterprise markets, Dell spent more than it did last year.

With shipments up in all markets, they say it’s working. Specifically, Gladden pointed out servers and notebooks. Server shipments increased 19 percent, and notebooks 44 percent. The company has increased its global retail presence from basically nothing a year ago to having its products on shelves in major electronics chains in the U.S., Europe, China, India, and more.

Though Wall Street appeared fixated on costs of driving up the company’s notebook business in Europe, it’s missing the larger picture, according to Gartner analyst Mark Stahlman. Specifically, Dell’s growing cloud computing business.

Dell on Thursday reported its second-quarter results, and the company admitted it had more work to do to improve its performance.

Its second quarter profits were down 17 percent to $616 million, from $746 million a year ago. Dell reported earnings of 31 cents per share, missing analysts’ expected 36 cents per share.

But Gladden did say that his company is beginning to see some of that slower spending spreading to Western Europe and Asia.

Hands-on with Boxee A gorgeous social-media viewe

19 Aug 2010

Tuesday, I got a peek at Boxee, a personal media center that’s currently in private alpha. My colleague Greg Sandoval wrote about it shortly after it was unveiled last week, but it’s worth delving into what I think will be the next big thing in media center software.

So what does Boxee do? If you’ve ever used Joost, it’s somewhat similar. You can plug in feeds of Web videos and browse through them, complete with video thumbnails and meta data. What makes it different is that it taps into your local media like videos, photos, and music you have saved on your hard drive. Both layers of media (online and offline) are wrapped up together with a social network of other Boxee users, so if you like something you’re watching you can recommend it to friends. Ronen said one of his influences for this was watching TiVo and its built-in recommendation feature, and wanting something that was tailored more toward people who are using services like Delicious and Facebook, and are sharing links with one another all the time.

Created by a small team of just under a dozen developers, the framework for Boxee is actually a project that was already in use in hundreds of thousands of machines around the world: Xbox Media Center. This software was created by gaming enthusiasts who had modified first-generation Xboxes to run it once it was sent over to the machine through FTP. When installed it would transform the box into a media server, which is what Boxee will do with your laptop or desktop computer.


Boxee in action from Josh Lowensohn on Vimeo.

What makes the platform particularly exciting is that it’s been built with developers in mind. That means anyone can work with the source code and create their own plug-ins, skins, and alternate interfaces. There’s already a plug-in created that integrates Muxtape (as you can see in the video above), along with music from Last.fm, both of which can be controlled with an Apple remote if you’re on a
Mac–as is the rest of the interface.

While media servers like Windows Media Center, AppleTV, MythTV, SageTV, and others compete for attention and consumer dollars, Boxee founder and CEO Avner Ronen told me he thinks Boxee’s got the upper hand because it’s not requiring you to purchase new hardware, install it in place of an operating system you’re already using, or buy into a marketplace/device being pushed by its creators. It’s also completely free, although Ronen says a premium version later down the line is not out of the question.

For now Boxee is Mac-only, but coming in just a few weeks is the Linux version, with a Windows version to follow in the fall. That’s not the end though, Ronen’s plan is to get it into set-top boxes, gaming consoles, and eventually televisions. In the meantime, if you want to get your hands on it you can sign up for the alpha here. I’m told people are being let in on a weekly basis, so you’ll have to exercise some patience.

BMC to buy BladeLogic for $800 million

17 Aug 2010

BMC said the software will be added to its existing product portfolio and bring it a “significant, high-growth revenue stream.”

Update: In an interview, BMC CEO Bob Beauchamp and BladeLogic CEO Dev Ittycheria said the combination of the two companies will create an integrated suite of products that will allow IT professionals to more quickly install and change applications.

The acquisition comes at the tail end of a wave of consolidation in the data center software field, which started out earlier this decade.

“The ability to have this closed-loop model for break/fix and change reconciliation is a powerful concept,” Ittycheria said.

Systems management company BMC Software on Monday said it intends to buy BladeLogic for $28 per share, or about $800 million net of cash acquired.

Beauchamp said the vision is to allow people to provision applications in minutes, a task that sometimes can take months.

Last July, Hewlett-Packard said it would spend $1.6 billion to buy data center automation firm Opsware, a company founded by Marc Andreesen. Several other smaller companies with niche tools have been bought by other hardware providers, including IBM, Sun Microsystems, and EMC.

With the growing complexity of data centers for running public Web sites or corporations, IT professionals need productivity tools to manage their operations.

BladeLogic, which went public last year under the ticker BLOG, makes tools for automating jobs in data centers, such as configuring servers and provisioning storage appliances.

Mahalo gets live news ticker

17 Aug 2010

Regardless, I think the new live blog feature is smart for Mahalo, and a precursor to a new round of one-upsmanship in live news coverage on the news portals, as their teams try to figure out how to get users to stick to their sites for longer times per visit.

The ticker will have a page of its own, with a live news desk and chat room.

Calacanis told me that the Mahalo home page has been getting some traction as a repeat destination site for visitors, and he wanted to get those, and other, users to stick on the site for longer. He also believes that news is a major driver of Internet traffic. So he’s adding the ticker, and aims to have 20 updates an hour running through it. There will be eight people staffing the feature, with four to eight online at any one time, around the clock, every day of the year. “We’re going to live-blog every single thing in the world,” Calacanis says.

The new Mahalo home page will have a live ticker of news from around the Web, staffed 24/7 by a team of eight.

Calacanis says he’s not yet worried about monetizing this feature. He believes it will make the Mahalo site more sticky, which will drive clicks to pages that carry advertising. (I’ll have more on online advertising in a future post.) With a claimed four years of operating capital in the bank, Calacanis says he can afford to experiment and aggressively launch new features. He also said he’s looking forward to, possibly, picking up distressed online properties–either companies that are having trouble raising operating capital now, or projects that he expects the big online companies will soon be interested in offloading as not core to their business.

Each ticker item will be flagged by content area, and eventually the pages for those areas (like politics, sports, and weather) may also get tickers, as may high-traffic pages such as those for political candidates during an election.

Friday at the Future of Web Apps conference in London, Mahalo CEO Jason Calacanis is set to announce an interesting update to the curated Web directory. The front page will get a ticker, or in modern terms, “live blog,” of news items, updated in real time by a dedicated team.

The ticker will have a dedicated page of its own, as well, with more live features: during certain hours of the day, a Web cam will be pointed at what can only be described as an anchorperson, and there will be a chat room where Mahalo users can talk about the news.

Yahoo shares jump as Microsoft decision awaits

17 Aug 2010

Microsoft, meanwhile, wasn’t as lucky–falling 0.54 percent to $29.24 a share. The software giant dipped even further by 0.24 percent in after-hours trading.

In the meantime, Yahoo is up a respectable 4.35 percent in Friday morning trading at $27.98 per share, while Microsoft has been bouncing back and forth between positive and negative territory this morning. Microsoft’s stock is currently down 0.34 percent at $29.30 a share.

Adding a little background to their share performance this morning, over the last 24 hours, reports have surfaced that Microsoft is leaning toward a “hostile” tender offer for Yahoo, while the Internet company could announce a search ad deal with Microsoft’s archrival Google next week.

Update: Friday, May 2, at 1:57 p.m. PDT

Public companies tend to roll out their huge news either before or after the markets open. And Microsoft falls into that corporate titan category.

The pitch this week has become more fevered after Microsoft’s ultimatum for Yahoo to respond by Saturday came and went and Microsoft said it anticipated making an announcement this week on its next course of action. Well, this week is almost over.

If Microsoft acts like a number of any other corporate America titans, chances are it’s not likely to announce any “big” market-moving news until after the bell closes–at the earliest.

Yahoo investors, you may want to cool your heels.

Yahoo closed the day with a sizable 6.92 percent gain to finish up at $28.67 per share. And in after-hours trading, it continued its ride, gaining an additional 1.12 percent to reach $28.99 a share.

Reports Friday that Yahoo and Microsoft finally entered into serious merger talks gave the Internet search pioneer a huge lift in its share price.

SAP claims 100 of Oracle’s customers have defected

16 Aug 2010

It’s a bit pathetic to watch proprietary behemoths slug it out over saturated markets. SAP just went on the offensive in one such skirmish, announcing that 100 of Oracle’s Hyperion customers are buying SAP for performance management with the intention to replace Oracle. (As Josh Greenbaum notes, the real story here may not be the customer defections, but rather the fact that conservative SAP is taking the gloves off at all to smack Oracle around.)

Or would Oracle et al prefer that open-source vendors clean up on these emerging markets?

This is fine, but I’d prefer to see press releases that announce that 100 net new customers were created through a differentiated product and licensing strategy. You know - the sort of thing that open source does.

Alas, Oracle’s consolidation play suggests that the big enterprise software vendors struggle to see the market in terms other than zero sum. IBM is looking abroad to developing economies for growth, and surely Oracle and SAP are doing the same. But what about here in the US? Or Western Europe? Surely there are new markets to be created here, too?

commentary

Why the MPAA and RIAA can’t stand college students

15 Aug 2010

Unfortunately for them, that simply won’t happen. Realizing this, both organizations made a conscious decision to vilify college students in the hopes the rest of us would jump onboard. We didn’t.

According to a recent report from the Associated Press, the Motion Picture Association of America–Hollywood’s antipiracy wing–admitted to releasing data that was not only factually incorrect, it grossly overstated the impact college students have on the movie industry’s losses.

The main reason the RIAA and MPAA can’t stand college students is actually quite simple–they’re the easiest target. How many times have you heard organizations blame so many of the world’s problems on the 18 to 25 crowd? A quick history lesson on what happened in the ’70s should be enough to satisfy that assertion.

Sadly, the MPAA and RIAA just don’t like college students. In fact, why would they? After all, isn’t this the group that, according to RIAA spokeswoman Cara Duckworth, “has reached a stage in life when their music habits are crystallized, and their appreciation for intellectual property has not yet reached its full development”?

The MPAA and the RIAA are two organizations that should be looked upon with the greatest amount of distaste and downright condemnation. Trust me, they’re really that bad.

“The 44 percent figure was used to show that if college campuses could somehow solve this problem on this campus, then it would make a tremendous difference in the business of the motion picture industry,” an expert covering the case said. The new figures prove “any solution on campus will have only a small impact on the industry itself.”

I simply don’t understand these organizations. Instead of being the bastions of progress in an age where everyone can see that a change is coming, the RIAA and MPAA have decided to insult college students and cite faulty statistics to back up their ludicrous claims.

College students represent change, innovation and a new way of thinking. The MPAA and the RIAA represent two industries that would like nothing more than to go back to the days of no video media and vinyl–their comfort zones.

Let’s face it: The 18 to 25 crowd represents change and innovation. It represents a new way of thinking and the condemnation of the old guard. And it’s the old institutions like the movie and music industries that can’t seem to grasp that the change that’s occurring–the right to own your own digital media after purchasing it–is a rogue tidal wave that will eventually lead to their demise.

Why haven’t these organizations focused on the real pirates who cruise in gunships overseas and account for well over 15 percent of that revenue loss the MPAA is so quick to mention? Even better, why doesn’t the MPAA realize that the 15 percent loss is nothing compared with the incredible box-office losses it’s incurring because of crappy movies and skyrocketing ticket prices?

So why do the MPAA and the Recording Industry Association of America focus so much of their time on college students? Is there something that these disgusting organizations aren’t telling us? Are college students really that bad? Sadly, it’s just another example of these organizations trying to vilify the easy target when the real violators are left to roam free.

The MPAA claims its original figure citing a 44 percent loss due to college piracy was inflated by a whopping 29 percent. In fact, the MPAA admitted that the actual impact college students have on the industry’s revenue loss is just 15 percent.

ISPs agree to block access to child porn sites, ne

14 Aug 2010

Earlier in 2007, Cuomo joined a group of New York lawmakers in introducing a bill to crack down on the presence of sex offenders on the Internet, specifically on sites where they could get in touch with minors.

Internet service providers Verizon Communications, Sprint Nextel, and Time Warner Cable have agreed to block Internet newsgroups and Web sites nationwide that disseminate child pornography, The New York Times reported Monday.

Part of the plan is to shut down access to Usenet newsgroups known to traffic such images, as well as Web sites that host child pornography.

The move–part of an agreement with New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo expected to be announced Tuesday–will affect customers across the country, the newspaper reported. Negotiations are reportedly continuing with other ISPs.

Cuomo has made safety of children on the Internet a priority of his office. He subpoenaed Facebook in September 2007 after his office conducted an undercover investigation that he said yielded a slow response from the social network to complaints of harassment and inappropriate conduct. The subpoena eventually led to an agreement between Facebook and the attorneys general of 49 states.

The agreement was reportedly reached after the attorney general’s office threatened charges of fraud and deceptive business practices when the companies ignored investigators’ complaints.

(Update June 10, 1 p.m.: We’ve learned some details about what’s going to happen. Time Warner Cable will pull the plug on tens of thousands of Usenet discussion groups after the N.Y. attorney general’s office found child porn on 88 of them. Verizon and Sprint plan to limit Usenet, too. –Declan McCullagh)

“The ISPs’ point had been, ‘We’re not responsible, these are individuals communicating with individuals, we’re not responsible,’” the newspaper reported Cuomo as saying. “Our point was that at some point, you do bear responsibility.”

Q&A Jeff Howe on ‘crowdsourcing’

14 Aug 2010

We saw like Wal-Mart try to do this, and it created fake entries about kids who were buying Wal-Mart products. Any of us who track stuff like this thinks, “do you have no one smart in your entire organization? You’re the largest employer in the world.”

On Tuesday, Howe published his first book, appropriately titled, Crowdsourcing: Why the Power of the Crowd Is Driving the Future of Business. And as he prepares to storm the book world on a promotional tour, he is also giving interviews far and wide about the topic. On Tuesday alone, he writes on his blog, he will speak on 27 different radio programs around the country.

Suddenly, every corporation wants the crowd to create their own ads, and that’s often a disaster. Everyone wants to throw out a shingle and create a social-networking site.

It’s really exemplified by MDotStrange, who literally created a feature-length movie that got screened at Sundance in his little studio apartment in San Jose, using software that he’d presumably pirated and with a budget of zero dollars. It was simply labor, and that means that the game is open to anyone.

You wrote that diversity of experience trumps expertise. Why is that?

Howe: Well, these aren’t my ideas. I’m merely re-presenting what are pretty standard collective-intelligence principles. A diverse group of problem solvers will almost always beat a homogeneous group of problem solvers. The reason is, very smart people tend to come from the same institutions, and they tend to try to solve problems in the same way. And sometimes that works, but often, it doesn’t.

The essence of crowdsourcing is to take an overwhelming task, and by breaking it up into little chunks and distributing it to a large number of people, it becomes feasible. The good ideas rise like cream to the surface.

(Credit:
Daniella Zalcman)

And the fact is they probably don’t. So those companies will get out, or they’ll get smart. As crowdsourcing continues to penetrate the mainstream, more companies will use it, but only the smart companies will succeed at it.

So there is more opportunity?

Howe: There’s enormous opportunity for amateur filmmakers with talent. The bar is no longer, “Do I have access to 16-millimeter film or enough money to get it developed?”

You write in the book about the success of the low-budget Web TV show, The Burg. Does that success create more opportunity for people working outside the mainstream system?

Howe: Absolutely. We’re seeing the emergence of a different kind of complex ecosystem where some shows have the very highest production values but other shows look better with lower production values, and so it just an aesthetic, and the fact that aesthetic exists means that people without a big budget can exploit that.

You have a lot of people who can do low-end design. You know they can create a logo. They can lay out a Web page, even though they’re not professionals. They’re adequate enough that they can make a supplementary income doing it or do it for fun, which is why photography works: because a lot of people love to take pictures.

You talked about Gannett being one of those news organizations, right?

Howe: I think Gannett has done smart stuff. It’s the largest newspaper publisher in America, and it has made some smart community-oriented moves. But Gannett just laid off 1,000 people, so the fact that it’s engaged its readers doesn’t make it immune from market forces.

One of the elements of Howe’s defining crowdsourcing was a new understanding of how, when brought together to utilize collective intelligence, big, disparate groups of people working on a common task can be extraordinarily productive and deeply creative.

What diversity of experience brings is, even if someone may not be well-versed in that subject matter, she is able to apply her expertise from another subject matter entirely and say, “Well, you know, but wait, what if we try this?” And when you have a crowd, because you have the power of large numbers, there are times that taken as a whole, they excel because they are trying so many different things all at once.

One example you talk about where a business is getting it right is the Netflix Prize, where Netflix offered $1 million to the first person who could improve his or her recommendation engine by 10 percent. What makes that your favorite problem-solving network application?

Howe: Because it got such a robust response very quickly, and it showed what brilliance was out there in the crowd. It’s got all the elements of crowdsourcing. I was only theorizing about this two years ago, so to see practice mimic theory in this case was gratifying. And it was great to the see that the contestants were collaborating with each other, despite the fact that they were helping competition.

Last week, Howe and I spoke about where this crowdsourcing phenomenon fits into our world. I had hoped to ask him to spell out the differences between his book and that of Surowiecki, but before I could, he had to leave to be with his family at his home in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Howe’s book publishes on Aug. 26 and is based on a 2006 article he wrote for ‘Wired’ magazine.

Jeff Howe’s new book ‘Crowdsourcing,’ explores the power of people who collectively work on projects even when they’re strangers to each other.

In 2006, Wired magazine reporter Jeff Howe published a story about a phenomenon he’d been following in which the power of large numbers of people was being harnessed to make things happen that hadn’t been possible before outside the auspices of corporations or other big institutions.

Dell receives about 9,000 ideas, and some 500,000 people vote on them. And what those votes do is drive the best ideas up to the top. A lot of those ideas suck, but you don’t have to read them, and Dell doesn’t have to take action on them.

What are the best industries for crowdsourcing?

Howe: It has totally transformed stock photography. So the question I pose in my book is, “Is stock photography the canary in the coal mine?” We might be beginning to see this with graphic design. I don’t know yet because I haven’t done the reporting on it, but it’s at least something similar.

How will crowdsourcing change in the next few years?

Howe: We’re seeing Crowdsourcing 2.0 emerge, a more intelligent form of crowdsourcing. Dell is using it intelligently. But I see a lot of the early adopters getting out of it.

He likes to talk, for example, about how a large number of people are now able to take great photographs, thanks to their high-end but relatively inexpensive cameras. This enabled a new kind of stock photography world to emerge–one that seems to be doing away with the traditional model in which only a select few photographers could have their work collected by stock photo agencies.

That, maybe, was the chief differentiator of Howe’s discovery from James Surowiecki’s Wisdom of the Crowds: that far-flung people are able to achieve great things outside the box.

Since this meritocracy is opening up doors to everyone, how can endangered businesses like journalism save themselves?

Howe: By thinking creatively and streamlining. Journalism faces a lot of challenges. The advance of the crowd is only one of those. But smart news organizations are realizing that having their readers engaged in the media production process–in a richer, more sophisticated way–is its own end. It sells papers, it sells Web sites, it brings readers in.

Crowdsourcing is also having a big impact in corporate science, through companies such as InnoCentive and YourEncore and, you know, my suspicion is that it will continue to migrate into other fields, especially creative services.

He called the phenomenon “crowdsourcing,” and the term quickly caught on, joining others, like “tipping point,” “wisdom of the crowds,” “the long tail” as household phrases for the ways that things were changing all around us, often thanks to the democratizing reach of the Internet and the commoditization of tools, like high-quality digital cameras, that had previously been out of reach of most.

If you have the talent, you can make it. This is one of the central themes of crowdsourcing: There’s a meritocracy, where people count no matter whether they have the connections or the budget or expensive equipment. And it’s everything from astronomy to science to graphic design to photography to writing.

(Credit:
Random House)

Q: Is there a bit of a tragedy-of-the-commons element to crowdsourcing, to content on YouTube and things like that, where the 80-20 rule–that 80 percent of content is low-quality–governs?
Howe: There’s an antidote to the 80-20 rule, and it’s that the crowd filters itself. I just put up a blog post about Dell IdeaStorm, which is just a modern-day suggestion box.