Raja Jasti’s Blog - Renaissance Thinking

March 28, 2009

Youtube video quality sucks

Filed under: Entertainment, Internet, Media — Tags: , , , — Raja @ 12:39 pm

Youtube may be the king of online videos, but its video quality sucks. You can see it for yourself. Here is a movie that I made in HD that I upladed to Youtube, facebook and Vimeo and see the difference in the quality.


Jewel Thief from Raja Jasti on Vimeo.

I uploaded the same file to all three sites. The difference is day and night. It may be that youtube compromises on the quality since they serve so many more videos. But if you are a film maker then you hate to see the quality effecting user experience. I hope Youtube catches up on the quality front.

Update: Actually Youtube doesn’t play HD version by default. If you click on the HD button on its player, then you can watch the HD version. But the throughput is bad and it buffers like crazy.

Genius behind google chrome

Filed under: Entrepreneurship, Trends — Tags: , — Raja @ 12:25 pm

Financial times has a fascinating article about Lars Bark who lives a quiet life in a remote part of Denmark but is a major player behind the google browser chrome.

The drive from Copenhagen has taken longer than expected, and the farmhouse is hard to find. Lars Bak, its owner and a programming genius to his peers, made his home here for a reason – he doesn’t particularly want to be found. His ­Alsatian, Mickey, isn’t pleased to see us either: the dog has to be restrained before I even think about stepping out of the car.

It’s a cold December day in Denmark. We are further north than Edinburgh, but the sky is the uniform grey you see in the East Anglian fens. Bak seems uncomfortable as we shake hands, and I get the feeling that he wants me nowhere near the part of the farmhouse where he lives. Instead, we go into the vaulted room with the brown leather sofa. Nowadays it is a home cinema, but before that it was the office where Bak did his programming. The temperature is only slightly warmer than outside. I shiver as I take out my notebook. “So, what do you want to know?” Bak demands. We have four hours to go.

Lars Bak isn’t a household name – or at least this one isn’t. There’s a better-known Lars Bak in Denmark who’s a professional cyclist. But this Bak will have a more profound impact on your life than any sportsman. His most recent computer software program, called V8, is part of the Chrome web browser, a lynchpin in the business plan of Google.

I like the riveting way the story was told. This is the beauty of the world we live in. You can live anywhere you want and still make a major difference. That is the real story.

Flickr founder’s new startup: Hunch

Filed under: Entrepreneurship, Internet — Tags: , , — Raja @ 12:06 am

Caterina Fake, founder of the popular photo sharing site flickr, is working on a new startup called hunch. Techcrunch has reviewed the site. The site is a decision support system for people having questions on a topic.

Earlier today Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake announced the release of her latest startup, Hunch, in private beta. The site revolves around helping users make decisions spanning a wide array of topics. To help users make their decisions, Hunch presents them with a brief series of questions that have been submitted by other members, using their responses to help them make their ultimate decision. It’s a great idea that combines the crowd-sourced nature of Wikipedia with services like Yahoo Answers.

Given Caterina Fake’s previous success her new startup is getting a lot of press coverage, most of it positive.

March 27, 2009

Jonathan Miller, Former AOL CEO, joins News Corp.

Filed under: Media — Tags: , , — Raja @ 11:57 pm

Jonathan Miller, former CEO at AOL, joins News Corp. as its chief digital officer.

Jonathan Miller, the former CEO of AOL, is taking over the digital assets of News Corp., we’ve confirmed independently - his new title will be CEO of Digital Media. This will include Fox Interactive Media and other duties. Peter Levinsohn, the current president of Fox Interactive, will be leaving his current position but will remain at News Corp.

This is more than a little ironic. Miller currently works with Ross Levinsohn at Velocity Interactive Group - and Ross Levinsohn was the head of Fox Interactive before Peter Levinsohn took the position in late 2006.

This means Miller is now running MySpace and other News Corp. digital assets, making him MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe’s fifth boss in the last few years.

Miller was under contractual obligations with AOL not to work with AOL competitors until this month. Time Warner vetoed his appointment to the Yahoo board of directors last year under the agreement.

Web music startups

Filed under: Entertainment, Entrepreneurship, Internet, Media — Tags: , — Raja @ 9:27 am

Mike Arrigton has an interesting post on the sorry state of affairs of music startups.

Online streaming music startups are in one very sorry place. On demand streaming rates range from .4 cents to 1 cent per stream - this is what the startups pay to the labels every time they play a song for a user. Add bandwidth and storage costs on top of that, which aren’t trivial for services that want to stream music quickly on demand. The result is hundreds of millions of dollars flowing from venture funds to startups to labels. Little of it makes its way to artists, and advertising revenues only cover a tiny portion of the fees.

The labels don’t care if the startups make money, lose money or go out of business. All they want is to make enough money to extend the ultimate surrender date as long as possible. That’s when we’ll finally see the economic reality dictated by the Internet impose itself irrevocably on the music industry. Unless draconian laws are created and enforced that put people in jail, or worse, for file sharing. And even that probably won’t work.

Anyway, these crazy economics are making the music startups skittish. MySpace Music, the biggest player in this space, may be spending $2 million or more per week to the music labels based on their own statistics that they’re streaming over a billion songs a week. They’re streaming rate is likely to be the best in the industry, and it almost certainly isn’t lower than .4 cents per song. There is no way that they’re making that much in advertising revenue.

The hope is that downloads, ticket sales, merchandise and ring tones will make up the difference, but what we’re hearing is that very little incremental revenue is being made from these other revenue sources.

That means there’s no chance for these startups to work until the labels reduce, significantly, the streaming rates they’re charging. Or agree to radically different business models. There’s no sign that is happening any time soon.

If the large music companies are in trouble and the web startups that are disrupting them are also in trouble then there is a problem. I guess the only company that seems to be making money in music is apple. Is it possible that the internet disruption would swallow the whole music industry? I don’t think so. What we are seeing is the period of uncertainity where the industry is trying to adjust to the radical shift brought upon by the internet tidal wave. It sure is taking a long time for the industry to adjust. A great deal of  that has to do with music labels trying to control the distribution using legal strong arming of consumers and small partners. The sooner they embrace the internet and create an ecosystem where small companies thrive the better for the industry. Until then apple will be eating labels lunch.

Update: FT has a nice article on the squeeze that web startups are facing from advertising and labels.

Being overconnected

Filed under: Mobile, Trends — Raja @ 9:14 am

Kids of this generation are mobile and web native in the sense that they do not know of a time when these technologies did not exist and they are an integral part of their lives. They are always connected with their friends. Can there be a thing called being overconnected? Apparently so. Ars Technica reports of a study that seems to support this phenomenon.

Young people who embrace mobile tech can feel overconnected

Young people have done a good job of integrating technology into their lives, but they are also the ones who are most concerned about being overconnected. This finding is part a new report from the Pew Internet & American Life Project, The Mobile Difference, which discusses how different groups of American adults treat the latest trend in connectivity.

While 61 percent of the adult population is perfectly fine accessing the Internet through a stationary PC, the remaining 39 percent is active in adopting mobile connectivity. Pew breaks the latter chunk into five groups: Digital Collaborators, Ambivalent Networkers, Media Movers, Roving Nodes, and Mobile Newbies. There’s little variation in the percentage breakdown of these groups—Roving Nodes makes up the largest at nine percent of the adult population—though their favorite ways of using technology while on-the-go vary.

Screen Gazing

Filed under: Media — Raja @ 8:39 am

We spend an aweful lot of time in a day watching some screen or the other. It could be TV, computer, cell phone, GPS device, display at a grocery store etc. Can you guess how much screen gazing does an average american do? 8.5 hours, NYT reports.

IN a world with grocery store television screens, digitally delivered movie libraries and cellphone video clips, the average American is exposed to 61 minutes of TV ads and promotions a day.

Some people may think that amount seems excessive. But “people don’t seem to be getting up and running away,” said Jack Wakshlag, chief research officer at Turner Broadcasting.

In fact, adults are exposed to screens — TVs, cellphones, even G.P.S. devices — for about 8.5 hours on any given day, according to a study released by the Council for Research Excellence on Thursday. TV remains the dominant medium for media consumption and advertising, the study found. The data suggests that computer usage has supplanted radio as the second most common media activity. (Print ranks fourth.)

The council was created by the Nielsen Company but has an independent board. The $3.5 million study, paid for by Nielsen, sought, in part, to determine whether media companies needed to address new forms of media measurement.

That is 50% of our waking hours. Unbelievable is all I can say.

Disney to join Hulu?

Filed under: Entertainment, Internet, Media — Tags: , — Raja @ 8:32 am

Hulu, a joint venture between NBC Universal and New Corp, may add another media giant to its owneship. Paid Content, reports that Disney is in talks with Hulu on taking an equity stake in the company. If this happens Hulu will probably have access to all of disney owned content.

imageThe Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS) Company could wind up with an equity stake in Hulu in exchange for adding ABC programming to the NBC Universal-News Corp joint venture, a source familiar with the situation tells paidContent. It’s not clear how much of Disney’s television programming is involved beyond ABC—a second source says all Disney content has been discussed but it centers on ABC; other possibilities could include ESPN (not likely given ESPN’s reliance on license fees from cable operators and others) and, if not the Disney Channel, some offshoots. The discussions, dormant for a while, have picked up again recently and are described as “serious” by both sources. A third source close to the situation said the discussions with Disney are “definitely real”—and more so than before—but cautioned against saying any deal has been reached.

March 26, 2009

Skype coming to iphone

Filed under: Internet, Mobile, Technology — Tags: , — Raja @ 9:44 pm

Om Malik reports that skype will be coming to iphone soon.

Exclusive Heads up: A few months ago, I asked Skype CEO Josh Silverman when was he going to launch the iPhone version of the P2P voice and IM service that has now been downloaded more than 405 million times. He smiled and said, “Stay tuned.” And so we did.

A tipster — a very reliable one — tells me that Skype is almost ready to launch that iPhone version, perhaps as soon as next week. CTIA Wireless, a large mobile industry trade event, kicks off in Las Vegas next Wednesday, so perhaps the announcement will be made there. I am working on getting more details, as well as screenshots of the service. 

Om Malik as usual does a great job of uncovering this one.

Google integrates Youtube and TV ads

Filed under: Internet, Media — Tags: , , — Raja @ 9:39 pm

Google wants to make it easier for advertisers to put their ads on youtube and tv by linking them.

Google (NSDQ: GOOG) is testing a system that would let advertisers easily put their ads on TV and YouTube, according to The Wall Street Journal. The service—called Google TV Ads Online—is expected to launch in the next several months. Currently, via a Google service called Google TV Ads, advertisers can create traditional TV ad campaigns online. By linking Google TV Ads to ads on YouTube, the “company is hoping to make it easier for bigger-brand advertisers to spend across both services, which are under pressure to ramp up their business,” The Wall Street Journal says.

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