News Of The Day 12/2/2011

And this is our last day of "regular" news. We're going to be moving towards a different format:

  • No more daily roundups. Instead the individual members (and those of you regular readers that contribute articles) will focus on posting news – and analysis – as it happens and as they deem necessary. This will be more erratic, but let's face it, the news is erratic anyway.
  • More specialized. We're going to encourage people to post on their specialties.  That means we want YOU to join us!
  • All the time. No more news bound to one day – we're going to try and do it as it happens.

And now – the news! In kind of the above format (but still a roundup)

Economics/Geekonomics:
Massachusetts engages in a lawsuit against the big banks over foreclosure and loan violations. This also includes nightmare-shell-org MERS. This might well shatter any settlements out there, and the assessment of Yves Smith sounds like it's pretty tight. However . . .

GMAC said they won't do mortgage lending in Massachusetts and is encouraging other banks to follow. Of course with things like Move Your Money this could backfire. San Jose moves a lot of money out of big banks, there's a move afoot in Portland for similar activities, so bullying like this could backfire big time (especially if it produces a state-by-state cascade).

Geek Law:
HTC and Samsung get hit by a lawsuit over the recent tracking software scandal. Congress, in the form of Al Franken, is already on this mess, so it has a chance to go big and get quite scandalous – and it doesn't help that Carrier IQ seems to have lousy PR. Not sure where this one is going to go, but it seems a lot of companies are worried, so their actions may have impact (or throw napalm on the fire).

Mobile:
Did you notice verizon building a bandwidth empire? Probably not. Well, they are. This could mean plenty of expanded opportunities, as well as additional regulatory and competitive attention. Of course based on the above little tracking incident, I'm betting on more regulatory attention – depending on the political situation.

Tablets:
The Asus Transformer prime is looking sweet though the software doesn't seem to keep up with it. I'm impressed with what I've seen, and based on my past experienced with Asus, this machine has me tempted (and the last time I shelled out that much money was for an HD TV). Based on this and a LOT of other reviews it's sounding like the Transformer Prime is competitive with the iPad . . . except with software. Then again, that's a good niche for your career, isn't it?

The Kindle Fire basically is second only to the iPad at least in the short term. Again "short term" – so lets see what the results are. It's going to promote Amazon, sure, but it could promote non-iPad tablets in general (like, say . . . the Transformers Prime). I understand it's app store is kind of fussy though.

Video Games:
Zynga's IPO is December 16th. I figure by about mid-January the drop of stock price will occur. We've seen this with Groupon (despite a rebound), Zynga's got problems, and the market is too short-term focused. I can't see how this will work out in the long-term (short-term of course some people will make out like bandits). I'm concerned enough about Zynga I'd put them on the "do not work for" list as is, but think a pump-and-collapse of stocks could make them even less desirable. Also, watch what happens to their stocks as it could kill IPO enthusiasm.

Steven Savage

Skyrim: Dragons and Superheroes?

(Originally published at Comics Bulletin)

I'm playing the most awesome superhero game.

I'm a man with strange powers in a  troubled world.  As I journey around engaging in may battles, helping people, I can see my effect on the world.  My powers grow, I gain allies, and find disturbing truths.

I'm playing a wizard type character in Skyrim, the fantasy RPG that's the latest in the Elder Scrolls series.
After wandering around for gods-knows-how-many hours, I'm wielding massive powers as my character evolves beyond a simple wizard to a powerhouse.  Gameplay changes.  People in-game react to what I do.  It feels . . . a bit like being a superhero.

Read more

News Of The Day 12/1/2011

A new month, but plenty of news!  Plus some format experimentations!

Economics/Geekonomics:

A Chase banker describes the Predatory Lending that went on.  Normally I'd be concerned this'd get missed, but as people are more aware of the problem it may increase awareness.  His statements pretty much confirm what most people knew – the system was corrupt, predatory, profit-driven, and had nothing to do with anything but filtering money upward.  Hopefully his story will get more people to come forward about these issues – and as we move into election season, we may see more play about them.  Have I mentioned working at the big banks is probably a bad idea?

Law (Geek Law?):

The Senate is apparently the place really bad bills go, including one that may (or may not) gut the 6th Amendment.  It is probably going to be vetoed by the Predisdent anyway, and it's a legal mess, but it's one to be aware of considering the recent spate of bad policy (SOPA/PROTECT-IP being prominent right now).  I'm almost surprised there's not more uproar over this, but then again that'd go into our pathetic reality-show politics.  I'm thinking any of us with a law/geek law interest need to pay attention here – along with everyone else.

Mobile:

AT&T may shed half the customers it'd get if the T-mobile deal ever goes through, just to keep the dea going.  Apparnelty they want that bandwidth/infrastructure bad and will do anything to get it (considering how they're constantly lambasted, it makes sense).  AT&T is clearly feeling the heat from the competition, and this move might be bad for current T-Mobile/AT&T employees as they shed and reorg.  It may also change things in the mobile market as services (hopefully) improve.

Publishing:

What an incredibly mixed bag of news for Barnes and Noble.  Nook is doing better, they had a loss, but not as bad as expected.  B&N seems to have the strength to endure its hardships – and has something of a strategy – but it's also clear they have problems.  I'm still positive on them for employment – and want to see what they do with their business plans since they'll challenge amazon and may just push the envelope.  But right now, not exactly that great (and no, I don't expect this will lull competitors into a false sense of security).

Video:

Kill your cable?  How about drop your television?  For the first time ever, according to Neilsen, television ownership declined even if time watching is up.  This is getting a lot of attention but the increase in descrease (or whatever) is kind of small, so I don't think we can predict any trend yet (I want to see how this goes over the next 2 years).  This story may get a lot of play and a lot of hysteria, so here it is for the sake of rationality.

Video Games:

OK let's put it simple – Skyrim development tools are going to come out for the PC.  It will be available through Steam and have mod management.  You can also damn well bet that this is something to watch because it's a very public case of mod support for a massive hit (that apparently has a rough map of the entire continent of the setting which suggests planned mod-friendliness).  This is something everyone in gaming has to observe to see what happens, how it's supported, how it's abused, and how it plays on success.

Steven Savage