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Archive for the ‘Development’ Category

Domain registration surge suggest e-commerce vitality

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Moniker.com reports 40,000 domain registrations in the last two months, up from 7200 in the same period last year. That’s another sign that online business is booming as entrepreneurs realize that going online puts you only 1 click away from 600 million people.

Advertising reverb on blogs

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Buying blogads delivers lots of things: boat-loads of cost-effective clicks, face-time with opinion makers, 150X200 pixels plus 300 characters of text…

Blog advertising also creates an intimacy traditional media can’t match… or doesn’t want to match. This weekend, five bloggers who had sold ads to the John Kerry campaign asked Kerry to disavow TV ads linking Howard Dean to bin Laden.

“We write this open letter as a group of bloggers whose audience you respect enough that you advertise on our web sites,” they began.

The provenance of the attack ads was murky and seemed entwined with Kerry’s operatives. “We feel it is incumbent on you and your campaign to make it clear that this kind of attack is unacceptable,” wrote bloggers Atrios, Talkleft, NathanNewman, Oliver Willis and Pandagon.

The Kerry campaign has since disavowed the ad.

Blogging: dumpster diving for facts and opinions?

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Rick Bruner reports: “Steadily, we are furnishing our entire apartment with things our neighbors have thrown away. Not broken-down junk covered in coffee grounds and rotten cabbage. Stuff you’d actually want inside your home. Or we would, anyway.” Click to read what Rick and Adi have salvaged, including their huge recent coup.

(Blogging resembles scavenging: finding pieces of treasure in the stuff that other people discard or ignore?)

Home equity loans boom

by henrycopeland
Monday, December 15th, 2003

Wow, the volume of home equity loans has tripled since 1999.

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IBM moves 5000 programming jobs

by henrycopeland
Monday, December 15th, 2003

WSJ: “…International Business Machines Corp. has told its managers to plan on moving the work of as many as 4,730 programmers to India, China and elsewhere. The unannounced plan, outlined in company documents viewed by The Wall Street Journal, would replace thousands of workers at IBM facilities in Southbury, Conn., Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Raleigh, N.C., Dallas, Boulder, Colo., and elsewhere in the U.S.” And: “A former IBM executive in India, Pawan Kumar, now chairman of closely held vMoksha Technologies PLC, an outsourcing firm there, says IBM has 9,000 people in India and plans to increase that to 20,000 by the end of 2005. Mr. Kumar says the cost advantages of hiring Indian programmers aren’t as large as the salary differentials imply, because building in India requires more investment in infrastructure and more spending on supervision to smooth communications between U.S. customers and workers in India. He says the true costs amount to about $100,000 in the U.S. and $50,000 in India for people to do the same work.”

Political landscapes

by henrycopeland
Saturday, December 13th, 2003

Fun links: Farm belt. Southern Lowlands. Upper coasts. The datasharing revolution.

Alternate history: Mcblog in 1972

by henrycopeland
Thursday, December 11th, 2003

Dave Winer obliquely suggests McGovern would have won in 1972 with blogs.

What other alternate histories could be explored? Would the Nazis have been stronger or weaker in a blogging Germany? Would a blogging Alfred Wallace have outshown Charles Darwin? Would the blogging Buddha have swamped Jesus? Could KingGeorgeIII.blogspot.com have hung on to the colonies?

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(Image borrowed from Scripting.com.)

Adjustable rate noose

by henrycopeland
Thursday, December 11th, 2003

The uptake of adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) has doubled in the last year, now accounting for one home mortgage in three, reports CNN. When rates head higher, which is inevitable with $600 billion yearly government debt sales looming, these folks are going to get squeezed out of their homes. The bankers who push ARMs on people should be ashamed.

Zeyad’s independent Iraqi news service

by henrycopeland
Thursday, December 11th, 2003

Jeff Jarvis writes about Zeyad, an Iraqi blogger:

Thanks to the Internet and weblogs — and a little help from the community there — it is possible for one man in a country just coming out from under dictatorship and war to speak to the world, to exercise free speech, to help spread that free speech, to report news, to make news, to build relationships, to create understanding. That is the moral of the story of the blogosphere: All that is now possible. Anyone can do this. Any of us can support it. All it takes is one person.

Jeff helped Zeyad get started back in October and is rightly proud. Here is Zeyad’s site and here’s his post about yesterday’s anti-terrorism demonstrations.

— warning —

Ok, stop here if you don’t want to see me rant again about corporate media versus real blogging.

–end warning–

(For context, folks in places like Davos wonder can “Mainstream Media Co-opt Blogs?” More optimistically, some bloggers like Jarvis think corporate media can incorporate blogging. I disagree: the New York Times can’t blog.)

Zeyad’s blog offers a prime example of things corporate media can not do. It can’t pursue absurd dreams. It can’t get other people excited and linking in. It rarely strays from the rest of the corporate pack. It can’t speak with sustained passion. It can’t converse and it can’t pay people to converse.

Corporate media ain’t human. It is a machine, a legalism. It’s an it.

Blogging is not a technology — blogging is the brainstorming human spirit, unadulterated by corporate filters and armor, linking to kindred spirits. Corporate media can’t do that.

History of online news (since 1960!)

by henrycopeland
Wednesday, December 10th, 2003

Steve Outing points to David Carlson’s interesting timeline of online news.


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