Tapped

Tapped Caught this stickered pay phone with my cell (can you tell I’m dying for a phone with a better lens?) while racing to catch a train tonight — a reference to Bushco’s wiretapping compulsion. “Your conversation is being monitored by the U.S. government courtesy of the U.S. Patriot Act of 2001, Sec. 216, which permits all phone calls to be recorded without a warrant or notification. For more information, visit crimethinc.com.” Apparently these have been available for a while, though it was my first encounter. Effective culture jam.

Music: Lagbaja :: Mummy Hi

makestreams

I’ve written a brief shell script to automate the task of batch-processing piles of QuickTime movies for use with QuickTime Streaming server. makestreams adds metadata, adds hint tracks, and generates .qtl reference movies for all files in the current directory. Requires the qtmedia and qtref command-line binaries only present in OS X Server.

Music: Can :: Cascade Waltz

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The Economics of UGC

How do the User Generated Content sites do it? How can Flickr, YouTube and the like possibly make money through limited revenue options while simultaneously giving away absolutely massive piles of storage and bandwidth?

Economies of scale kick in big-time, and there’s still a lot of unused capacity out there, but you have to wonder how sustainable it is to allow users paying very little or nothing at all to dump the entire contents of their Flash memory cards onto Flickr every day. Not to mention the fact that uploading 13 nearly identical pictures of your cat onto Flickr rather than one pollutes the quality of the datastore for all users (I’ve never understood why Flickr doesn’t strongly limit the number of images that can be uploaded per day, forcing people to edit their collections).

Some discussion in TWiT episode 47 about Yahoo’s purchase of Flickr and how they’re now finding it an economic albatross. Photo printing from Flickr is an obvious revenue opportunity, but according to a TWiT insider, 10 million Flickr users generate about 80 print orders per week. News flash: People are there for the community, not for abstracted printing possibilities. But once you invite people to upload their lives into your service, you’re committed, no backing out.

Despite seemingly problematic revenue opps, Yahoo! is continuing their UGC/Web 2.0 purchasing spree: they apparently have an offer on the table to buy Digg. UGC is a critical aspect of Web 2.0, and they can’t afford to miss the boat.

The recent proliferation of free massive storage systems has changed user expectations for all hosting systems. Alex King, on user expectations at FeedLounge:

When I hear someone say “a service like this should be free”, it feels a little like they are saying “your time and investment are worth nothing”. I know it’s not personal, but to make a really great product, you have to invest yourself personally.

Birdhouse struggles with this too. For example, we simply can’t offer a webmail system as good as GMail’s (for any amount of money), and we sure as heck can’t offer 2GB of storage to anyone who comes by and asks. But due to the quality of modern webmail systems like Yahoo’s and Google’s, people just assume that all webmail will be of similar quality. Without truly massive investments and economies of scale, small and medium-sized hosts are stuck offering Web 1.0 technology in a world that already expects Web 2.0 quality and scale.

But it goes beyond webmail: Now that Google and Yahoo (and soon Microsoft) are making quick inroads into the web hosting business, the picture isn’t pretty for smaller hosts. What we can — and do — offer is excellent hand-holding and custom setups that the cookie-cutter monoliths can’t offer. And while the bandwidth and storage we provide may seem puny by comparison, I haven’t met a customer yet who actually felt cramped by our offerings – 500MBs is a huge web site… unless you’re throwing a ton of audio and video around.

I’ve been experimenting with UGC for nine years at the Archive of Misheard Lyrics, and have made money from it. Not big money, but some. But I’ve had the advantage of being able to do it on a high-impressions/low-bandwidth model – lyrics pages are tiny chunks of text in a database. And unlike free-for-alls like Flickr, I exert editorial control over the content, and don’t let just anything onto the site*. I know that UCG can be a workable revenue model, under the right conditions. But how this scales to unlimited free photo/video/audio hosting remains to be seen.

* Although in the past I’ve used volunteer editors, some of whom have let huge numbers of unfunny lyrics into the live pool; the current user voting system (which I guess is a bit Web 2.0 itself) will eventually correct for that.

See also Nick Cubrilovic: The Economics of Online Storage.

Music: The Minutemen :: Futurism Restated

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The Omnivore’s Dilemma

J-School professor and Birdhouse user Michael Pollan has written a new book, The Ominvore’s Dilema: A Natural History of Four Meals:

In this groundbreaking book, one of America’s most fascinating, original, and elegant writers turns his own omnivorous mind to the seemingly straightforward question of what we should have for dinner. To find out, Pollan follows each of the food chains that sustain us—industrial food, organic or alternative food, and food we forage ourselves—from the source to a final meal, and in the process develops a definitive account of the American way of eating.

The book has recently been reviewed by the SF Chronicle, The Washington Post and Salon. I’ve done a lot of work on Pollan’s site over the past few months.

Pollan will be on NPR twice this week: Tuesday on Fresh Air with Terry Gross, and Friday on Science Friday. Check your local listings for times.

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NYT Goes Wide

The New York Times has finally launched their redesign, and it looks like the envelope has just been pushed in terms of screen width — the design is 975px wide. Which means it won’t fit horizontally onto 800×600 displays. Which means they’ve decided to shut out (or inconvenience) 20% of their audience (although one can imagine that NY Times readers are wealthier than average and that they thus have a lower-than-average percentage of readers at 800×600).

Update: Jack Shafer says the new NY Times design is so good that he’s canceling his print subscription. P.S.: Just realized that washingtonpost.com is also 975 px wide. When did that happen?

Music: Mekons :: (Sometimes I Feel Like) Fletcher Christian

Open Source DRM

We’re not accustomed to hearing the words “DRM” and “open source” in the same breath, but get used to it. Eliot Van Buskirk, for Wired:

… open-source DRM is exactly what Sun Microsystems has proposed, with its DReaM initiative. Its goal is to promulgate an open-source architecture for digital rights management that would cut across devices, regardless of the manufacturer, and assign rights to individuals rather than gadgets.

Strange bedfellows yes, but the initiative is backed by no less than Larry Lessig, and will be fully Creative Commons-compatible. The big question is whether major players will adopt it. With France putting the skids to Apple’s DRM silo and Denmark threatening to follow suit, the world is waking up to the albatross of data lock-in. Traction for DReaM has the potential to finally break its back — at least as far as MP3 players go — and open things up. But some think DReaM doesn’t include enough guarantees that existing rights won’t still be abused:

Sun’s DReaM “Usage Scenarios” document says that its fair-use mechanism is purely optional for rights holders.

Fair use is optional? Even under open-source DRM? And this has Lessig’s backing? Strange world. Still, open source DRM is better than the alternative.

Music: Mighty Sparrow :: Russian Satellite

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Chevy Tahoe Mashups

When Chevy and the producers of The Apprentice decided to leverage the interweb’s hidden creative juices by letting people mix canned video clips of the Chevy Tahoe and generate the next big SUV commercial, they apparently misunderestimated the even greater collective disdain for SUVs. Now they’re facing a dilemma: Play host to dozens of (sometimes hilarious) anti-SUV ads, or censor them. To their credit, the negative ads have remained online, though Chevy isn’t providing an interface onto them — you’ll have to rely on Goog to dig them up.

A bunch of links at treehugger.com, like this gem: You live in the city, chump, and this: Be honest…

WPBlogMail Released

My surgical reconstitution of MTBlogMail as WPBlogMail (bottom-up rewrite to take advantage of WP APIs and to run leaner, cleaner) has been humming along happily for a couple of weeks now, so I’m calling it stable. Just added the script to the WordPress Plugin Database.

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