Jeff has a tremendous post here. Long, but worth it.
Lines up with my view of the world, big time - as anyone who has been listening to me for the past, oh, two years, and has been playing any sort of follow-the-money already knows.
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Monday, June 26
by
Stuart MacDonald
on Mon 26 Jun 2006 01:04 PM EDT
Jeff has a tremendous post here. Long, but worth it. Lines up with my view of the world, big time - as anyone who has been listening to me for the past, oh, two years, and has been playing any sort of follow-the-money already knows.
Thursday, June 22
by
Stuart MacDonald
on Thu 22 Jun 2006 10:30 PM EDT
The good people at the Globe and Mail have taken it upon themselves to do a feature on me in this Thursday's edition of their new Report on [small] Business Magazine. It's the second time they are putting it out, and in keeping with their main and respected Report on Business Magazine, they are devoting the last page to something called "Exit Strategy". The people they featured last time were Caterina Fake and Stewart Butterfield of Flickr, who sold to Yahoo! This time? It's me. Now, I don't know what they are going to say (Simon Avery is the author, and a photog followed me around for 3 hours a few weeks back) so I guess we will all learn together on Thursday. All that I will say is that if it is good, it's true. And if it is not, it's clearly all out of context :-) UPDATE: I am yet to see the paper version since I was travelling, but here is the link. For clarity, contrary to the facts layed out in the piece, I didn't calculate airline yield as a child - I was older than that. And, I didn't move to Seattle to work for USA Networks, but for Expedia, Inc., although Diller had bought us by that point. Also that was in 2003 not 2004. And, I didn't actually bring Signature Vacations online - I was about 6 months into that project when I moved on to Expedia. Tags: globeandmail, reportonbusiness Wednesday, June 21
by
Stuart MacDonald
on Wed 21 Jun 2006 03:27 PM EDT
Heading to Ottawa for a CIRA meeting, watching Argentina vs. Netherlands on the 'puter via wifi and a slingbox. 24:13 in. Both teams playing well. Feed sorta dodgy, but on the whole...man, this ROCKS. ps: If you applied for a spot on the CIRA Board, we are meeting to discuss who we will put forward tomorrow. GO HOLLAND! Update: here's a sample of the quality of the picture. Not bad, for wifi on a moving train. Update 2: Ended in a 0-0 tie. Caught the last bit here in the Ottawa train station. Is this the future of media? Well, something like this sure feels likely...
Friday, June 2
by
Stuart MacDonald
on Fri 02 Jun 2006 12:37 AM EDT
It all sounds a little like what happens when you get competitors trying to figure out how to work together and keep a Genie in a bottle, all at the same time. Goat rodeo. And who loses? The potential customer, and category adoption overall. Now, I get that infighting and arrogance on the part of the studios may well be a big part of the problem here (as Carlo at Techdirt says), and their seeming inability to move beyond just allowing people to watch on their computer screens is a biggee. But - and maybe it's just me - given this brave new broadband planet we are living on, where convergence is just really starting to start and new forms of media are only now starting to pay their own way as money follows the audience, could it be that now might not be the best time to be getting out of the movie download business? Maybe, say, fixing it might be an idea? See also Tim Lee's blog. Tags: movielink |
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