
HD-DVD vs. Blu ray - still playing fast-and-loose with the numbers…
June 22, 2009 by T-Bone · Leave a Comment
In case you hadn’t heard, HD-DVD is still more popular than Blu ray! Wait, does that make any sense at all?
“Currently, 11% of Americans own an HD-DVD player, while just 7% own a Blu-ray player.”
According to the chart, that might be technically ‘true’, but only if you willfully disregard that the Sony Playstation 3 is, also, a Blu ray player. Adding BD Players and PS3 ownership bring Blu-ray to 16%, not 7%. Along those same lines, a XBox 360 with the HD-DVD external drive is, also, a HD-DVD player, bringing HD-DVD ownership to 14%. Still, something is fishy…
There are a number of odd things about this survey, like Playstation 2 ownership dropping 2% when, by most accounts, PS2 outsells PS3. In March 2008, Toshiba, the sole provider of HD-DVD players and technology, abandoned the format and ceased all production. Yet, according to this chart, between 2008 and 2009, ownership of HD-DVD players nearly doubled - despite no one manufacturing any players. The US has a population of approx. 300 million people. For the installed userbase of HD-DVD players to nearly double would mean that Toshiba had about 13-14 million HD-DVD players in unsold inventory… we’re talking about 24.6+ million square-feet of inventory, with an MSRP value of about $30m.
Like I said, there is something very fishy about this survey…
This just in - ‘thousands’ protest Iranian election
June 15, 2009 by T-Bone · Leave a Comment
The MSM continues to prove it’s irrelevance… I think the protests are a tad beyond ‘thousands’.
Nothing could help relations between Iran and the United States more than standing with the people who have had their election stolen…when the drama in Iran plays itself out, they will remember…
This just in - CNN/most MSM drops ball on Iranian election story, Twitter recovers and scores.
June 14, 2009 by T-Bone · Leave a Comment
On Friday, Iranian’s went to the polls to vote in their Presidential election. Most of the mainstream media outlets have had tragically poor coverage, but CNN has had a near black-out on the story. It’s only today that CNN has begun covering this election - on-air and online… and mostly tossing out information that was available yesterday. Right now, about 25% of the “Today’s Headlines” section of the CNN home page are about the Iranian election. Also, in that same section, is an interesting question/story - “Do journalists Twitter too much?” Interesting because, over the last 48 hours, Twitter users have been tearing CNN a new one.
On Twitter you can ‘tag’ your Tweets, to make them easier to find when someone does a search on Twitter, and an amazing number of people have taken to using “#CNNFail” over the networks lack-of-coverage on the election story. Of course, there is no editorial-process on Twitter… and it’s hard to say how much of these “#iranelection” Tweets are true, or propaganda… are dorms really being attacked? Are the opposition candidates under house-arrest? The point isn’t that the ‘news’ on Twitter is accurate, the point is that there is ‘news’ on Twitter about the Iranian election. And, the traditional ‘news’ organizations, at a time when they most need to demonstrate their utility, are completely, and totally, missing what is, potentially, the story-of-the-year - Iran’s very own Tiananmen Square.
What does a scary chart look like?
June 8, 2009 by T-Bone · Leave a Comment
It looks like this… how low can you go?
Don’t be evil! Oh, wait…
May 19, 2009 by T-Bone · Leave a Comment
For years, Google’s corporate motto was, interestingly enough, “Don’t be evil”. Interesting in that Google hasn’t been exactly angelic… they allow pretty much anyone to infringe on trademarks, unless that trademark happens to be owned by Google. Recently, researcher Ben Edelman discovered a pattern of Google inflating performance metrics for its AdWords advertising platform, and in such a way that - conveniently - allows Google to bill clients for traffic, Edelman claims, that the advertiser should have received free. Now, it appears that Google is turning their mathematical algorithms to determine… wait for it… which of their existing employees are likely to quit and go to a different employer.
I guess it’s a good thing that Google has, quietly, dropped “Don’t Be Evil” as their motto…







