Thursday, July 9, 2009

Best Buy/TiVo Partner To Push Home Entertainment

MediaPost: "Part of the new agreement will have the two companies developing a new cable set-top box, sold in Best Buy stores, that allows the retailer to deliver its own advertising message to TiVo subscribers."

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Mainstream media failing to make news understandable to public, says new report

Journalism.co.uk: "We were struck by the confidence that people expressed in the internet generally and Google specifically as the most trusted resource of explanation and analysis"

Friday, May 22, 2009

Pew Center illustrates how Craigslist is killing newspapers

CNET: "Not that this is big news but the Pew Center helps to illustrate just how devastating online classifieds has been on newspapers. A graph of newspaper classified ad revenue since 1980 to last year ... shows that the industry saw a high in 2000 with about $19.6 billion. Last year, newspapers recorded $9.9 billion."

Monday, May 11, 2009

Hulu's tug of war with TV

Los Angeles Times: "But in making a bid for the next generation of Internet- attuned viewers, Hulu's owners have strained their lucrative relationships with cable and satellite operators. Companies like Time Warner Cable Inc. and DirecTV Group Inc. pay cable networks billions of dollars each year to carry programming. Believing that they should have exclusivity because their payments support the enormous cost of producing TV shows, such companies have been pushing back against the Hulu freebies."

How the next internet revolution will save your favourite TV shows, newspapers and magazines

Times Online

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Brand Mentions Preferred over Ads

eMarketer: "Compared with banner ads, pop-up ads, e-mail offers and sponsored links, articles that include brand information were most likely to lead US Internet users to read—and act."

Bloggers: America's Newest Profession

WSJ.com: "In America today, there are almost as many people making their living as bloggers as there are lawyers. Already more Americans are making their primary income from posting their opinions than Americans working as computer programmers, firefighters or even bartenders."

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Techmeme founder: WSJ, NYT are aggregators

CNET: "'All successful Web publishers want their content quoted and linked,' Rivera wrote in an e-mail to CNET News.com. 'The benefits are clear. Some prefer that the quotes remain short...these are precisely the kind that Google and Techmeme use. So for AP and News Corp. to discourage quoting is a clue that they don't really get the Web and are in danger of shooting themselves in the foot.'"

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Wireless Connectivity Has Drawn Many Users More Deeply into Digital Life

Pew: "Not everyone has the wherewithal to engage with 'always present' connectivity and, while some may love it, others may only dip their toes in the wireless water and not go deeper."

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Social Media Outlay Still Small

AdWeek: "Social media had yet to prove its impact, using accepted measurement standards, in moving customers through the marketing funnel, Forrester said. That lack of proven impact has relegated efforts to the sidelines: 45 percent of respondents said their social media budgets are determined on an 'as-needed' basis."

Monday, March 16, 2009

Mobile Internet Becoming A Daily Activity For Many

comScore: "the number of people using their mobile device to access news and information on the Internet more than doubled from January 2008 to January 2009. Among the audience of 63.2 million people who accessed news and information on their mobile devices in January 2009, 22.4 million (35 percent) did so daily; more than double the size of the audience last year."

Friday, March 13, 2009

Where to From Twitter

Hitwise: "It appears that Twitter is being used as a social network and means of distributing content. This is by no means the only way it is being used - just one standout trend. Twitter.com's clickstream profile is much closer to a social network than to Search Engines or Email Services. Twitter's clickstream differs markedly from search engines in that relatively little traffic goes to retail websites and Education (i.e. Wikipedia). It is also different from Email in that less traffic goes to Dating websites and again, to retail and Business and Finance websites."

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Web Portals, Social Networks Lose Share in Ad-Spending Study

Advertising Age: "The question becomes how a brand can have a presence within social environments -- and that doesn't always include paid media."

Social networks more popular than email

USATODAY.com: "penetration for social networks and blogs was highest in Brazil where 80% of the online audience visited such sites. That compares to 75% for runner-up Spain and 67% for the USA. As the most popular social network globally, Facebook is visited monthly by three in 10 people across the markets in the report."

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Down with Facebook!

Weekly Standard: "Last week, my wife logged onto Facebook, took it in for about three minutes, shook her head, snapped her laptop shut, and sighed.

'What's wrong?' I asked.

'I don't know, it's not the same,' Alana said. 'I was into it at first. But then I realized, there's no longer any wonder, any intrigue. Everything's out there, on display. For years, you wondered, 'Whatever happened to so-and-so?' And now you know. All questions get answered. There's no more mystery.'"

Monday, March 2, 2009

Report: iPhone takes 2/3 of mobile Web in February

Ars Technica: "According to Net Applications' most recent survey of the mobile browser market, the iPhone OS commands nearly 67 of mobile browsing worldwide. Its closest competitors have yet to break double digits, with Java ME (which collectively represents the stripped-down browsers on most regular phones) leading the pack at 9 percent, Windows Mobile in second place at 6.91 percent, and Symbian and Android following closely with a tie for third at 6.15 percent. The mysterious 'Other' category accounts for 2.75 percent. What is perhaps most interesting about February's mobile OS market share numbers, however, is that the iPhone seems to have lost a little ground to the competition."

Niche Web Sites Buck Media Struggles

WSJ.com: "Several start-up Web sites such as SB Nation, Seeking Alpha Ltd. and HealthCentral Network Inc., which create and aggregate content about topics like sports, business and health, are recording sharp gains in visitors and -- in many cases -- revenue. They are outpacing other sites on similar topics through business models that allow them to create niche content with little financial investment. Many also are landing distribution partnerships with big media brands eager for cheap content during the recession."

The New York Times Battles a Googler for New Jersey

Valleywag: "Why is the Gray Lady building websites for the obscure suburbs of South Orange, Maplewood, and Milburn? Perhaps because those are the exact same towns Google executive Tim Armstrong picked for Patch, his local-news startup."

Hearst to Begin Charging for Digital News

WSJ.com: "A top executive at Hearst, which publishes 16 newspapers including the Houston Chronicle and Seattle Post-Intelligencer, said the company is mulling how much of its online offerings to keep free, while reserving some content exclusively for people who pay."

Technophiles are abstaining from Facebook for Lent

NJ.com: "Religious leaders and scholars across the country are encouraging the faithful to unplug from Facebook, MySpace and other sites in a virtual Lenten fast."