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Monthly Archives: July 2006
Vint by John
John Battelle interviewed Vint Cerf for Business 2.0 but because Fortune ran an interview the piece was spiked and it has ended up on his.site for all to read – for free.
MSN and Yahoo! speak to each other
After what seems like a lifetime, Yahoo! and MSN finally announce a beta service where users of both services can view each others’ online status and exchange messages. It only works with Messgenger Live and Yahoo!’s lastest version. Still, it’s a start!
Here’s eWeek’s take on the story
Wikipedia RSS
Micro Persuasion reports that Wikipedia has added RSS. As Steve Rubel points out, this means you can easily track revisions on articles about things which are important to you – people, brands etc.
Google health plans?
If this (from VC Ratings) is correct Google’s health portal plans, the subject of some speculation, may be more extensive than originally thought.
bbc.co.uk costs 36p
The BBC’s annual report is out and among other things it confirms that 36p from our £126.50 licence fee was spent on bbc.co.uk (over £72m.)
b2b Top 100
BtoB Magazine has a list of the top 100 people in the b2b space. Don’t be too disappointed if you find you aren’t on it…. 🙂
M&A in media is hot….
PaidContent is quoting the JEGI database reporting that there were 315 deals totalling more than $37bn in value in the first half of 2006, more than a third up on the same period last year (by value). More detail from PaidContent here.
FT merges on- and off-line production
FT To Axe 50 As Online-Print Merger Happens – from PaidContent.org
The Financial Times plans to cut 10% (about 50) of its 500-strong editorial staff as it merges its online and newsprint operations…the job losses will be mainly in production, as the reporting operation was integrated several years ago.
The long tail vs Pirates
Some thoughts from Rafat following the publication of The Long Tail which coincided with the all-time-record opening weekend of Pirates of the Caribbean which brought in $132m.
The conclusions: Blockbusters will continue to succeed even as niche media proliferates…a long-tail world doesn’t threaten the whales or the minnows…It threatens those who cater to the neglected middle, such as writers of “mid-list” fiction and producers of adult dramas. Also, competitive economics aren’t going away. As long as people herd, there will be blockbusters in one form or the other.