News Of The Day 7/18/2011

Borders is liquidating. The NewsCorp scandal gets weirder. Amazon goes textbook lender. It's a bizarre day today.

Economics/Geekonomics:
Now the S&P is threatening to downgrade a bunch of financial companies in the US. Why they aren't threatening the Eurozone is a good question – and my guess is they think they don't need to.

Law Schools are jacking up tuition while people flock to them in a way that is making folks question just how valid this is. I also question how good it is to put students into debt who are then more likely to sue the crap out of you. A good read for econo-demographics.

Comics:
. . . and Superman sort of has two storylines at DC comics one thats more origin and one that's current and in current continuity he's single again. Also it sounds like they're back to having the Kents dead. This really doesn't give me hope for Superman as a relatable character anymore, so that's one strike against the semi-reboot for me.

Media:
. . . and the News Corp Hacking Mess gets worse as a major whistleblower is found dead though the guy apparently had problems (including drinking and drug issues). If his death is indeed one of those things, it matters little, since this is going to add napalm to the fire. The political, technical, culture, and media fallout of this is likely to be immense.

Of course LulzSec got on on this and hacked the Sun to display a fake Murdoch death notice. Considering A) the unpopularity of News Corp, B) the fact they were involved in hacking, and C) this is high profile? Expect more hacking attempts and then some.

Publishing:
Borders is liquidating. It's pretty much over with at this point.

Remember the Kindle is great for 'drunk reading.' as a quote from a larger article notes. Having ordered books in the bathtub, I'm inclined to agree. I wonder if this "feature" is something people may try to exploit more in the future.

Amazon does Kindle textbook rentals, which is another potential money-printing opportunity for them, and a great move to get an edge on competitors. Remember those Amazon tablets and inevitable ecosystem? It just become a student dream. Side note – send them a damn resume already, and wait to see who tries a countermove.

Social Media:
An analyst downgrades LinkedIn values slightly. This is not entirely unreasonable – I love LinkedIn, it's a great company, but I think they got a little overvalued in this market – and a downgrade of 15% seems more than reasonable. Maybe we've got enough people looking out to keep from having a very big bubble, and that makes me slightly less concerned.

Technology:
MoboTap, makers of the Dolphin web browser, score $10 million in funding. They make a good product – and are working on more – so I'd consider them a potential employer – and one that may lock up markets pretty well.

Video:
Is Netflix trying to kill the DVD someone asks Eric Garland of Big Champagne (while I pretty much answer "yes, duh"). Worth reading – and Garland's best point (of many) is that the split produced by the price raising puts pressure on content holders to stop treating streaming as second rate.

Side note, Garland's company tracks media and sounds pretty cool, so you might want to send them a resume at their website.

Video Games:
Lolapps and 6waves merge and you can be pretty sure they have their sights set on companies like Zynga. This also produces a powerful cross-Ocean alliance that can reacha lot of people. They're also profitable companies and apparently ambitious. Watch out Zynga, and investigate this new combined entity for opportunities.

QUESTION OF THE DAY: So who will be first – if anyone – to challenge Amazon in the e-textbook lending space?

Steven Savage

In Which I Fear I Was Wrong About HR

So as you've managed to guess if you've . . . well read this blog or know me . . . I'm big on careers, job searches, etc.  I'm big on geeky careers and jobs.  It's not just making money and paying bills, I'm big on helping people find meaningful work in their lives.  Assisting people in finding their ideal, true careers, means a lot to me as it's about meaning in life.

However, as I help people, one truth seems to come up again and again – namely that recruiting and HR sucks so badly it has an event horizon.  If you didn't get that that's a black hole joke, you may be at the wrong blog, by the way.

Read more

News Of The Day 7/15/2011

The German's aren't happy with the US' debt ceiling, Harry Potter sets a record, the six million dollar man is back . . . there's a lot going on!

Economics/Geekonomics:
Guess what? Germans aren't happy with America's debt ceiling mess. Our political stupidity is threatening our economy, the global economy, and looks to permanently damage the country's political standing. Keep watching, because a failure means not only a double-dip recession, but a need for a political as well as economic recovery.

Movies:
OK, disclaimer: I loved Burrough's 'Mars' novels in my youth; how can you not love a crazy-romantic mixture of swordplay, romance, action, aliens, science-fiction, and of course Tars Tarkas, the best four-armed brother-in-arms EVER? OK, I'm biased.

Anyway the trailer for the John Carter movie is out. I'm tentatively intrigued as it seems to have it's own style, be rather understated, and Lynn Collins is totally making me buy her as Dejah Thoris. So why is this important? Because the 'Mars' series is A) very formative to Space Opera, and B) eleven freaking novels long, begging for a lot of series and takes.

If this film succeeds it could open up people's interests in old-school SF like Skylark, Lensman, and more. That's a mineable and rich amount of material. If it fails, it'll annoy a LOT of people and probably put the kibosh on retromakes for awhile.

I of course want it to succeed. William DeFoe as Tars Tarkas is awesome.

On to Harry Potter, the second Deathly Hallows film set a midnight box office record.

Publishing:
A look at why Sony's e-reader isn't a Kindle Killer and what they messed up. How bad? Well I keep forgetting there IS a Sony e-reader and this is me. Sony's had a lot of stumbles lately, this is another one that does make me nervous.

Remakes:
OK, I'm not sure I can get behind a Six Million Dollar Man reboot as 'The Bionic Man.' However with Kevin Smith helming it, I'm tentatively confident. With the retromakes lately, if this works look for a possible movie or TV option.

Security:
The Pentagon lost 24,000 files in a cyberattack on a contractor. Contractors are actually a big point of vulnerability, period. I'm waiting for the fallout from all these hacks and outages as I can't think people are standing by and not wanting to pass laws, improve security, freak out, etc. I just don't see it yet – are we so passive now? Or do we accept this?

Social Media:
MUST READ: Has Facebook missed it's IPO window? The article says it hasn't, but notes all companies has their time, and Facebook is being nibbled at by time and Google+. If Facebook has indeed missed an ideal window, an IPO could be disappointing – and dangerous.

It looks like Microsoft has some social networking tool in the works.

Video Games:
Hmmm. EA raised debt to purchase PopCap though it did have cash on hand. Do they have other plans that are going to need the money?

QUESTION OF THE DAY: So why do you think EA went into debt instead of spending cash?

Steven Savage