Unfortunately, this is mostly true…
Youtube
Delilah Video Post
With the little one growing and exploring more and more every day videos are a ton of fun to watch and create now. These are some of the ones I’ve made (all on my iPhone using iMovie) that sort of show her progression. I try to keep them short and to the point so they’re all under 1 minute (& most are under 30 seconds). The embedded Youtube player is a playlist, so I’ll keep adding to it as I upload more videos.
At the time of the creation of this post there are 6 videos to watch in the playlist.
Time Warner Has a Problem
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.
- By Phone: (585) 756-5000 or toll free 1 (800) 756-7956
- Chat Online
- By E-mail: Go here and click ‘Show E-mail Form’
- Send in your Ideas by E-mail
- Jeff Simmermon (Director, Digital Communications) by E-mail
- Jeff Simmermon on Twitter
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.
The Cloverfield Case
Rachel and I saw Cloverfield on Friday. It wasn’t planned, in fact I didn’t have a whole lot of desire to see it at least not until I heard everyone’s reaction. That being said my friend Brian called and begged us to go (read: asked if I want to see it) so naturally I didn’t want to disappoint.
Cloverfield was awesome. I thought the hand held cameras would distract you from the storyline and takeaway from the overall movie. It had the exact opposite effect. The movie simply couldn’t have worked as a regularly filmed movie, at least not successfully. The reason it worked so well is the home movie added a very personal touch. In the beginning you laughed with the characters and in the end you cried with them all because you felt you were watching your best friend’s Youtube video. The movie also portrays our current generations desire to document everything and J. J. Abrams doesn’t hide that this was part of his motivation for the movie style.
I haven’t been a fan of a movie’s ending in quite a while but Cloverfield’s ending is the only way I can imagine it. That’s not to say it doesn’t leave you with a sense of ‘WTF’ and ‘damn I hope they don’t make a sequal’ but it works regardless.
If you haven’t seen the trailer I’ve embedded it for your viewing pleasure below.
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Feed Oriented Browsing
How do you browse the internet? It’s a funny question to ask really, but you’d be surprised at the different ways people will respond.
- I look at the front page of Digg
- I check my friends new Del.icio.us bookmarks
- I search
- I visit my bookmarks and see if there is anything new of interest
- I browse my friends profiles on Facebook
- I check MySpace updates
- I watch top rated YouTube videos
- I see whats new at CollegeHumor
There are many many many more ways to browse the internet and far too many to list here.
I use none of these and yet all of them. I prefer to call how I browse the web Feed Oriented Browsing or FOB for short. It’s something I’ve only begun doing this year. As my final post in 2007 I thought I’d share it.
What is Feed Oriented Browsing? It is a way of browsing the web that gives you the most relevant and up to date information at your fingertips without looking for it.
How can I get the information I want without looking for it? It’s not as hard as you might think. Instead of checking if there’s new information, you are told that a website you found interesting in the past has a new update.
Everytime you go to a website you already make a relatively quick decision on whether or not the site contains relevant information for you or not. It could be the information is not immediately useful but could be used as a reference in the future or it could be the answer you’re looking for right now. Normally, in these cases you would bookmark it either in your browser or using a web service such as del.icio.us.
Bookmarks are stale and not useful. We all know that technology in general changes so fast what you know today is outdated tomorrow. Since Bookmarks point to a particular page this means that information is likely to be outdated by more relevant and better information somewhere else. Does this mean you should just forget the site and move on? No! Your mind has already made the determination that the site contains relevant and useful information. Chances are the website you found is likely to share new information that you will find interesting and relevant in the future. This is the power of Feed Oriented Browsing. Instead of bookmarking a stale link to the site, add the site’s feed to your Reader. If the site doesn’t have a feed create one using a service like feed43 or feeditiy. Often times the feed will contain items that does interest you and items that don’t interest you. If that’s the case use a tool like feedrinse or yahoo pipes to clean up the feed so that it best matches your interests.
The real benefit of FOB appears after you’ve built up a good set of feeds. At that point you can stop browsing the old way all together. Instead use your reader to find new relevant sites. If you like discovering new feeds and new sites still, rather than searching for common phrases all the time, subscribe to a feed of your search. You can easily do this on sites like Digg and Del.icio.us. You can subscribe to searches or tags so that if a new item appears in that list you’ll get notified. If you’re using FOB correctly it will be rare that you need to leave your reader except to discover a new feed and even that is possible within some readers.
Observe your browsing habits. If the first thing you do after leaving your reader is visit the front page of Digg then it’s time to subscribe. If you then hop over to your friends blog to see if he posted last night… it’s time to subscribe.
It takes time to build up a good list of feeds. Making the switch to FOB doesn’t happen over night. You begin the process by visiting your reader first every day. Only once you’ve read all the items or marked them as read should you move on to the other sites you use.
Once you adapt this method of browsing the web it will truly change your web experience. A few months ago I read a study that made a bold claim that 2 out of every 3 ‘clicks’ on the internet were wasted because the content at the other end of the link had not yet been updated (I cannot speak to the accuracy of the numbers but the point is clear regardless). Meaning if someone checked a particular website three times in a day chances are that the website would only be updated one of those times. What a waste!
Often times you search the web to find the answer to a particular problem. You find an excellent resource that tells you exactly how to solve your problem and then forget all about that site again. If you have the same problem in the future you can always get back to that site by searching again right? Well, maybe. Search indexes change and you may or may not be able to remember the search you used. However; If you subscribed to the feed for the site, that piece of information will be in your reader and if you use a reader (such as Google Reader) that allows you to tag and search items it will be incredibly easy to find.
In addition to finding old pieces of information, it is likely that the site that had that great piece of information for you in the past will have more great information for you in the future. If you subscribe you’ll see new information posted by them whenever they update which means you’ll get new information before you even realize you need it.
if you subscribe to every feed you come across won’t your reader get so bloated its unusable? Yep. That’s why you need to be selective in your feeds. Determine whether or not the site has relevant information to you or not before subscribing. To find out if the site has other useful information browse for a moment and see if any other articles besides the one you’re looking at are interesting. If not then don’t subscribe simply use del.icio.us or digg or some other such service to bookmark it. You have already subscribed to your bookmark feed right? If so then that one article will show up in your reader and nothing else from the site.
Once you subscribe to a feed your job is not done. That feed needs to satisfy your interest. If it doesn’t then it needs to go. I give every feed I subscribe to one month. If i don’t receive at least one more piece of relevant and interesting information within one month of subscribing then that feed is gone. Additionally if the ratio of articles posted to articles I find interesting is too low I either attempt to clean it up with feedrinse or yahoo pipes or simply unsubscribe.
Hopefully Feed Oriented Browsing will get you started on the road to a better web experience. It has certainly helped me.
If you’re struggling with feeds and need to learn a bit more before you dive in check out this great video presentation entitled RSS in Plain English. RSS is a type of feed.
If you found this post interesting you might like to subscribe to my syndication category in which I try to post tips to help you deal with all the available feeds out there.
Youtube Subscriptions via RSS
You’re probably aware of the subscriptions feature in YouTube. It allows you to ‘subscribe’ to users (or channels) who’s videos you enjoy. This means when you sign into YouTube you’ll get a list of videos updated by the users or channels you’re subscribed to.
This is great but unfortunately YouTube doesn’t provide any other subscription update notification systems besides logging into the site itself. For someone like me who doesn’t like to visit sites without a particular goal in mind this is annoying to say the least. I’d much rather know there is a new video I care about before visiting YouTube.
At first I thought YouTube simply didn’t support syndication of any kind. However; with a little bit of searching I found they have a whole list of different types of RSS feeds that are available. You can create an RSS feed for anything from a ‘tag search’ to the ‘Top Rated videos.’ They don’t yet have a way to create an RSS feed of your subscriptions. That’s where I come in.
I’ve used Yahoo Pipes to do things in the past but most of them were very custom and not usable to anyone but myself without quite a bit of effort. This time around I thought I’d make one that’s parameterizable to allow anyone to build an RSS feed of their subscriptions. I have created a pipe that does just that. You simply provide your username and the number of videos you want displayed in the feed. The Pipe does the rest and you can subscribe to it using any feed reader you’d like.
I’ve published it on Yahoo Pipes public page and you can now use it as well. So check it out and let me know what you think!
Zamzar Converts Your Files
A few days ago a friend asked me how to embed YouTube videos into a powerpoint presentation. I assumed it wasn’t possible but I went searching anyway. I didn’t come away with a miracle but I did come away with a new tool for my arsenal. Zamzar will convert any that you either upload or send it a URL to. Zamzar is also smart enough to convert embedded items such as YouTube and MetaCafe videos. They have a whole slew of other sites that are supported in a similar fashion. Don’t think Zamzar is just for videos though. Oh no, they support word processing conversion, compression type conversions, image conversions, video conversions and music conversions.
Zamzar is your one stop shop to convert your files.
The way it works is really quite simple and eloquent. You fill out the from on their main page (shown below), click ‘convert’ and wait for the E-mail. The E-mail will contain a link to the downloadable converted file(accessible by anyone who has the link, so feel free to forward it to friends or whatever).
Be careful the converted file is only available for 24hrs. That’s probably how they keep their costs low. If you’re interested in storing your converted files on their system, they do have pay plans available with pricing for just about everyone.
Disclaimer: Like everything these days, the service is in ‘Beta’ and as such it might come with a few bugs. I also know the site has some pop-up ads so don’t turn off your pop-up blocker.
Custom Youtube Players
A few week ago Youtube came out with custom players. I thought they were interesting but never gave them much thought. A few days ago I played around with them and found out some very neat features.
You can assign a playlist to a player. This means you can assign all of your videos to a single player, or just a subset. You can even assign videos you’ve found and watched that aren’t yours.
You can assign videos after the fact. Because it works off a playlist you can assign videos to that playlist after you’ve created the player and they get added to wherever you’ve embedded the player.
To create your own custom player goto my players and click create custom player. You’ll then be prompted with several options most important of which is the Content. Simply select the playlist, or group of videos (my videos or my favorites) you wish to include in your player and click ‘select.’
Once you’ve filled in all the options all you need to do is click ‘generate code’ and then copy and paste the code to wherever you want the player displayed. It’s very easy and its a powerful tool. I created the player below out of my posted videos. It will always be updated with my most recent videos.
http://www.youtube.com/cp/vjVQa1PpcFPs2iw3cqJ9pL9VChYoCF0vhlvxJabC9_0=
A Little bit of this and a Little bit of that.
From Youtube’s Staff Picks of the week:
Im not anti-social, Im just not user friendly
If you want to know how to get the best deal on your Cingular plans and phones, Take a look at the 7 Confessions of a Cingular Sales Rep. It’s worth a read, and some of the tips would probably work with more sales reps than just Cingular.
A while ago I wrote about how Toshiba was going to be including solid state drives (or SSD’s) in some of their laptops. The biggest drive they had thus far was 32gb. Samsung just released a 64gb drive with some crazy performance specs. Check it out.
Continuously Variable Transmissions (or CVT) have been around for a long time. In fact snowmobiles have been using them since they were originally created. Just recently some incredible advancements have been made. I just read about a new implementation on a Bike by Ellsworth. They call it the Continuously Variable Planetary Drive. Be sure to watch the video, it’s very interesting.
If you’ve got money to burn I suggest you either throw it my way or buy one of these million dollar laptops.
Matt was talking about how he wanted to have a conductor game for the Wii. A while ago I saw a video with people conducting using the Wii. Yesterday I ran across the Wii Loop Machine. Pretty interesting the amount of stuff it can do and how easily.
Youtube has announced the winners its first official Youtube Awards. My favorite is the following:
how to freak out other drivers:
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