2010 Goals

Ok, so my 2009 goals were a bit lame despite my efforts. Here’s to a better set of goals for this year and therefor better results! Some of these stem from what I see as some personal failures in 2009, others are just brand new.

Join an activity group on a regular basis. this can be anywhere from Geocaching to Flickr meetups to the ADK club outings to toastmasters. The point is to do something on a regular basis in order to forge some new relationships. We’ve started with ADK but we didn’t keep up with the meetings.

Don’t hesitate when given an opportunity. If I want to do something, do it, if I don’t, likewise. This is something I really need to work on.  I tend to flip flop and wait until the last minute to make decisions on things like this.

Run a profitable Photography business. Given my goals of last year this one almost seems comical. However my first income will be coming in 2010, and my planned expenses are minimal, just some equipment rental for said income. This probably won’t be hard to do.

Do 2 weddings. Along the same lines as above. I’ve got one booked already and I have another possibility. I’d like to start booking some more but if I can manage 2 this year, maybe I can double that next year and then really get something going. If you know someone looking for a Photographer please let me/them know!

Finish the work in the basement. this isn’t a real finishing job, it just means some cleaning (a LOT), implementing some better storage solutions, doing some wiring work and fixing the lighting situation. Still though, some things I’ve been dragging my feet on and just need to get done.

Buy a new house. We pretty much need a miracle for this to happen without selling our current home(which we don’t want to do). We need to though, we’re outgrowing our current home. Not so much the floor plan, but the yard and the storage. That along with a new member of the family coming soon pretty much necessitates a new, bigger house. which brings me to my next goal:

Do everything in my power to ensure the well-being of our new child. This is pretty self explanatory but something not everyone might think about is:

Lead by example. We can’t hope to have a child with healthy habits if we don’t first develop them ourselves. This applies to everything from sleeping properly to exercising regularly to only watching extremely minute amounts of television. This might seem too broad to be a goal, but the idea here is to simply be aware of my decisions and their implications on my own life and for the little one.

Lose 20lbs by May. Lose Another 20 by the end of the year. The first 20 I’ve done several times and isn’t really that difficult for me. the second 20… that will put me back to my junior year of college weight, and will be far more difficult to do. I don’t think keeping it off will be an issue since I’ll have done it by (re)developing better habits, NOT a diet.

Some carry-overs from last year:

  • increase the size of our emergency fund (again!)
  • complete the first floor of the house
  • sell at least one photo
  • EXPERIENCE one sunsets or sunrises a month.  This means actually watching and enjoying it, not just noticing out a window.

2010 is going to be a really exciting year!

Get PlayOn For $19.99

PlayOnWe’ve been using PlayOn for a few months now.  It’s made a nice addition to our Media Center, Netflix & Xbox 360 (media center extender) Television viewing.  Having access to Hulu through PlayOn has pretty much made the DVR unnecessary.  I’m not sure what the future holds for Hulu access given their (vague) pricing announcement, but assuming it’s not too crazy I highly recommend PlayOn.

Right now they’re running a promotion to give the gift of PlayOn so if you’re interested just let me know.  $19.99 isn’t too bad a deal either, remember it’s a one-time-only cost unlike your Cable bill.  I’m not buying though, so you’ll have to pony up the 20 bucks.

Time Warner Has a Problem

time warner chokes

The Problem

Time Warner has a few problems.

The first and most important is their bandwidth capabilities.  As my good friend Brion mentioned recently, Bandwidth is a measurement of speed, it is NOT a measurement of consumption.  It’s a simple fact that the speed you get from Time Warner is shared and therefore even though you pay a premium price for 10Mbps DOWN and 384kbps UP you’ll be lucky if you get half that at prime time.

The plain and simple truth is that Time Warner has oversold the bandwidth they can provide.  At the same time they’ve been slow to react to the increasing market demand.  Rather than concentrating on decreasing the number of users per node, they’ve concentrated on improving their end user speed ratings, which is nothing more than a marketing gimmick.  This has resulted in increasing the demand and a false representation of their bandwidth capabilities. This comes at a time when they should be decreasing the burdon on their network in order prepare for the future.

And that’s only the first problem.

The second problem is that Time Warners’ primary source of revenue is dying.  Mainstream media is slowly but steadily moving online.  Hulu now provides most of the same content you can get from network television, Netflix now allows you to stream movies and television shows directly to your PC or TV and over the air HDTV is of superior quality and easy to get.  Time Warner, and cable TV companies in general, are behind.  They’ve chosen to hold on to their old business plan instead of moving into the 21st century.  The lack of progress Time Warner has shown in adapting to their new environment reminds me of Kodak’s slow progress in moving into the Digital era.  It almost killed their business entirely and it will destroy Time Warner unless they do something.

The Descision

Time Warner has made their move.  They’ve decided to put the burdon on us, the consumer, and carry on business as usual. Everyone is probably aware of their tiered bandwidth plan by now and that’s only the first step.

Time Warner is capitalizing on the direction the world is headed in.  They recognize that everything is becoming digital.  They recognize that their current business model is dying.  Getting their pricing plan in place now puts them in a perfect position to drastically increase their profit margin in the future.

In a time when bandwidth and overall networking costs are shrinking, and the cost of running the fastest network on the planet is only $20 for each household passed…Time Warner is failing to produce.  They haven’t announced Docsis 3 for any of their markets and they haven’t decreased the households per node to a reasonable level.

Time Warner Cable’s chairman and chief executive recently stated:

the Internet as it exists today – even our networks … will require an enormous investment … a tiered approach is one way to raise that additional money

It seems to me since Time Warner is posting record profits of $1.07 billion they could already be investing in improving their network, without pushing the cost on the consumer for something they should already be providing.

The Effects

The effects on your pocketbook WILL be drastic and Time Warner WILL make more money. Lots more. They’ve reported that 14% of the customers in their first test (in Beaumont Texas) went over their limit and were charged overage fees. What they’re NOT telling everyone is that the trial in Beaumont was for new customers only. So, of new customers approximately 14% received overage charges. Of those that received overage charges Time Warner has stated that the average overage was approximately 19 Gig which equates to $19/month (Business Week Article). Remember that this was Beaumont Texas which has a total 44,361 households according to the 2000 Census. Compare that community with the Communities they’re rolling the tests out to now and you’ll have a much different picture. In Rochester NY the numbers will be far higher. The High Tech community is booming here and with the number of Technology School graduates in the area the cost for consumers will go through the roof.

Innovation will be stiffled.  Once the usage of bandwidth is being tracked and billed people will think twice about networking every device in their home.  They’ll think twice about using services that keep their computers synchronized with other computers outside their network.  They’ll think twice about running new bandwidth intensive applications such as new video streaming systems.  Whether Time warner likes it or not this IS the direction the rest of the world is going.

Families with kids (especially teenagers) and small business owners will be hit the hardest.  These days some teenagers spend more than half of their life online.  Sites like Facebook & Youtube consume enormous amounts of their time and their parents bandwidth.  Lots of teenagers have turned into minor stars as a result of these sites.  If the amount of time they are allowed to spend on these sites is rationed it’s likely some of these emmergent stars would never get started.

Small business owners, specifically those who work from home, such as photographers and videographers need to download and upload hundreds of gigs of data on a monthly basis.  Will Time Warner require these people to limit the number of clients they can help in a given month, limiting the amount of income they can generate?

Other Options

Time Warner has other options they just don’t like them. 

To immediately solve the problems they could drop the speed of their average customer.  They obviously wouldn’t like this idea because it’s a marketing and public relations nightmare.  They’ll get complaints left and right and they’ll be seen as the underdog in a market they currently dominate (fictitiously).  What this would do however; is put less stress on their network and give their customers a more consistent speed rather than the rollercoaster they have now.

Rather than tiered bandwidth usage caps they could implement more bandwidth (speed) tiers.  Currently they have 2 levels in the Rochester area.  Standard (10Mbps) and Turbo (15Mbps).  Since the average customer probably wouldn’t even notice, why not place them in a lower tier, say 5Mbps or even another optional 1Mbps?  This could temporarily solve their current problems while they take the time to improve their network.

To fix the problem in the long term they need to improve their network.  They need to begin the process of rolling out DOCSIS 3.  Upgrading is a one time cost.  If their billion dollar (net) business isn’t profitable enough to do this, then give the consumers an option to foot the bill themselves.  I’d gladly spend a small amount of money to upgrade the connection to my house to the 150Mbps that japan is getting, especially if it’ll only cost me $20.   They’re already profitable now, even if they foot the bill themselves they’ll be profitable after.

What to do Now

We need compitition.

Fortunately Frontier is taking the recent announcment of tiered broadband usage caps as an opportunity to push their own unlimited connection.  This is good news.  It means there’s a chance.  The unfortunate part is they are the only competition and they have a few large downfalls.  One, you must have a landline.  Two, your speed can vary greatly, depending on your distance to the closest node.

To really give Time Warner a run for it’s money we need FIOS.  Unfortunately Verizon does not have a connection to the main Internet Pipe in Rochester.  Rochester’s telephone network is owned and operated by Frontier and in order for Verizon to setup shop they’d need to spend an extreme amount of money to setup a main hook into the Internet backbone.  Essentially Verizon has no reason to set up shop in Rochester at the moment.

One of the best ways we can combat the plan Time Warner has put into place is to get government involvement.  Write to the leaders in Rochester, call the Mayors Office ((585) 428-7045).  Tell them to sponsor infrastructure improvements, give tax breaks to new providers that come into the area, give breaks to companies that improve their abilities etc.  Anything the local government can do to improve the Internet infrastructure will be a long lasting and visible improvement which we can see a real Return on investment, unlike the Renaissance Square (which likely won’t make any more money for the city).

Call and write to Time Warner.  Tell them how you feel and that you understand that they need to improve their network, but placing a residual burdon on their customers is not a good way to go and will only hurt them and us in the long run.

Whatever you do, don’t stand for it.  If it comes to it, vote with your pocketbook and switch from Time Warner, even if you’re not hitting their highest cap you will eventually and let them know you won’t stand for it by no longer doing business with them.

Visit sites like StopTheCap and get involved!

DO IT!

Whether you think so right now or not, this is important.  Internet usage is only getting started.

Time Warner Resources

Local (Rochester NY) Government Resources

UPDATE: Stop the Cap just posted a letter from Time Warners Chief Operations Officer with a lot of useful information.  I’ve harvested the contact information from this letter and added it to my list of Time Warner Rescources.

Books

I’ve been watching a bunch of Jeremiah episodes lately.  I can’t believe I missed this series in 2002-2004.  It’s quite good, and reminds me a bit of Jericho (surprise surprise, Jeremiah was canceled).  Anyway… I just watched the episode titled “Out of the Ashes” in which a bunch of thugs are attempting to rid the world of books.  Kurdy (one of the main characters) gives a quick little speech which I thought holds a lot of meaning even in the world we live in.

How are we to know where we’re going if we don’t know where we’ve been?
these books are a bridge to our past
they allow us to touch other lives
generation upon generation, artists, philosophers, poets
If we let them die, we’re burning those bridges
If we let these words die, we are killing our history as well as our future

Stuffed Monkeys

Every time this commercial comes on TV and I’m within 50 feet of Rachel she hits my arm and tells me to watch. I’m not joking, every time. I’m hoping that maybe if I share it here and admit that ‘yes dear its cute’ she’ll let my shoulder recover.

SideReel

sidereel logoI just discovered a new site today called sidereel. As far as I can tell they don’t archive videos they just archive links to videos. Every (popular) TV show you can think of is there, along with links to every episode. The more popular the show the more links they’ll have, and the more versions of the particular episodes. They have all the shows from today (Lost, Jericho, Firefly etc) but what I found most impressive was their collection of old shows such as The Muppets. They also have links to movies but I have yet to try those out yet.
Some of the links are dead, others link to videos with foreign sub titles. In some instances they link to the particular networks version, but often that requires you to watch some advertisements and install some proprietary video software. This is an evolving (beta) service though so I can only imagine it will improve over time.

This just made me think about the current state of television and video entertainment in general. With services like this emerging and even better ones (Hulu comes to mind) yet to come we’re getting closer and closer to the streaming world. All that is left is to hook the current internet video sites into your TV and the battle between Blueray and HD-DVD becomes moot. With the ability to watch (stream) any show or movie you want at your fingertips who would want to own a limited library of tangible objects?

A big argument against streaming media has always been that people want to own something tangible. While I can see that argument for the older generations even mine, that need is ending. Todays generations are growing up owning videos and mp3s downloaded in iTunes and Zune. Once they become the buyers in the market the tangible need will disappear. This day is coming sooner and sooner and the market needs to wake up to it.

The Office Flasher

If you didn’t happen to catch the latest episode of ‘The Office’ it was fantastic! Check out the clip below for a quick highlight. If you Did watch it (or after you’ve watched the clip) call this number: 1-800-984-3672. It’s the number printed on the flier/poster in the episode.