News Of The Day 9/19/2011

Calm news day? Nope, Netflix is making things complicated. Or Qwikster is . . . er, just read on . .

Netflix:
Well, let's start at the beginning, when Reed Hastings released an explanatory/apologetic letter about changes at Netflix. He explains DVD and streaming becoming different businesses, and that now DVD's are "Qwikster."

As you can guess there's PLENTY of reaction, and you can check the Techmeme roundup here.

Me, I recommend these Ten reminders about Netflix and it's state. Most importantly is it's going international with STREAMING ONLY.

Oh and don't forget – they're going to do game rental.

I'm still a Netflix backer because they've done pretty well, despite this crazy juggling, and as a pure business decision it's understandable. Could it have been handled better? Yes – Netflix's big achilles heel seems to be poor communication.

Now what this means for Progeeks:

  • Netflix is doing well but has made itself vulnerable temporarily – someone might be able to take advantage of that.
  • Netflix and Qwikster have separate headquarters – the former in Los Gatos, the latter in San Jose. If you're thinking of relocating, remember this – even if they're not too far apart.
  • Netflix is in transition, so though we're bullish on them for employment, this is a company going through change.
  • Netflix has it's problems, but so does the competition – but Netflix's problems seem to be of their own making in too many cases. That's good in one way – but bad in another if they keep doing this.

Whew, now back at it.

Economics/Geekonomics:
Keep following political news as President Obama has plans for changes in the tax code and a jobs program.

There's also a sit-in style protest on Wall Street. It's not getting a terribly large amount of attention – yet. It's focus is on a mix of general protest and reform, and they're taking inspiration from the uprisings in the Mideast. We'll see how this one develops both in general, and in use of social media and awareness.

Mobile:
AT&T wants to sell off some of it's spectrum to get the T-Mobile deal through. This seems to undercut some of their previous defenses, but also says they want this bad. Frankly I didn't expect them to go this far, and I'm wondering where this will end now. Worth a watch to see what happens to see what AT&T thinks is worth trading off.

Net Freedom:
Canada's government comes down on Rogers over throttling game traffic. Could be precident-setting for other countries.

Publishing:
MUST READ: News Organizations are doing their own publishing which of course is ease these days – and in fact many bloggers use their work to make books (Hey, I did it in my Best Ofs). An interesting read that helps you think about what publishing and books are – and were – and aren't.

Video Games:
Not surprising: DC Universe Online goes free-to-play.

QUESTION OF THE DAY: Let's get it out – Netflix, good move or not?

Steven Savage

News Of The Day 9/16/2011

Sorry folks, your reporter for a today is a bit under the weather, so this roundup may be a tad light.

Economics/Geekonomics:
This is unpleasant – Michael Bloomberg thinks unemployed graduates can mean economic-driven riots in 2013.  This fits Paul Kedrosky's predictions, and he's pretty level-headed.  I obviously hope not, but this was said in front of congress.  I'd watch this to see if this concern has legs and makes its way to larger media (as the US isn't handling it's economic problems very well I can see inappropriate reactions to this news).

A few thoughts on the continuing EuroCrisis to read.  I agree they're really trying to delay or soft-land the inevitable.

Mobile:
The AT&T/T-Mobile lawsuit draws in several states. I consider this a pile-on and think now it's not going to happen. Which leaves AT&T a bit more vulnerable, and other mobile carriers with an idea of where the boundaries are – and they'll plan accordingly.  Note, I consider all bets off if this gets into the political sphere, and it may well with the elections.

RIM continues to slump.  No one is surprised.  Allow me to reiterate – get out.  The people that thought RIM could turn it around are now wrong.

Publishing:
The picking over of Border's corpse is progressing.  Sad, but also important to follow. (EDIT: I had put Barnes and Noble, which I blame either on illness or seeing into a parallel universe.)

Social Media:
Some depatures from the Twitter board. Not sure if it means anything, but this is TWITTER, so we have to report on it.  I still wonder what their next step is as things are awful quiet.

Technology:
Google is working on it's own newsreader in the vein of Flipboard/Zite. I'm surprised it took them this long. Interesting questions – what of ads and will it be on iOS?  Google's disruprive approach means they're probably targeting this for a reason – so what is that reason?

Video:
Reflections on Netflix and it's pricing plan and occasional PR issues. Also a good note – TV in some ways IS improving.

Video Games:
71% of iPad Owners Play games. If you work on iPad games, you may now make a 'Ka-Ching' noise.

QUESTION OF THE DAY:Will RIM manage to save itself?

Steven Savage

Late Breaking Geekery 9-14-2011

And we've got a bit more news that rolled in . . .

Amazon has a content deal with Hearst.  If you think this isn't going to boost sales of the Kindletab (Tabkindle?  Kindlelet?  We need a nickname) you're not paying attention.  Hearst is huge and has access to a complete ton of content.  Takeaways:

  • Amazon has its fingers in big AND small publishing.  So they're covering a lot of bases.
  • This is a big deal and is free publicity.
  • Amazon should have your resume.

Wal-Mart acquires a mobile/social ad targeting startup known as OneRiot.  Sounds like they're interested in their data mining, but I'd note that WalMart is moving heavily into the social space – and having a mobile ad network can pay off in other ways.  Though I've waffled on the possibility of a Wal-Mart ecosystem, having the ability to, say, get ads on it could make it more viable.  Imagine if you will a free Wal-Mart tablet with ads . . .

Steven Savage