Friday, June 22, 2007

Article on Greenfield in Web Video Universe

There was an article published today by Web Video Universe on Howard Greenfield's outlook for mobile in next few years:

5 Trends to Watch in Mobile Video

June 21, 2007
By Troy Dreier

The growth of mobile video is an inevitability, and the only question about its rise is "when," not "if." If you're wondering when cell phone video will finally find a mass audience, read this list of five trends to watch.

To get a handle on the rise of mobile video, we spoke with Howard Greenfield, an industry strategies and columnist, and the president of Go Associates, a consulting firm for digital media companies.

more ...

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Virtual Chataqua - The IPTV Big Tent

It's an honor being invited and participating in Chataqua online book forum to field questions and present the case for IPTV and New Media circa 2010 as I see it. I'll post some of the material here soon, but for now anyone is welcome to join for free at:

http://www.virtualchautauqua.com/









By the way, YouTube 2008 (user-gen video influence on the next year's elections) is already a hoot to follow - exhibit A: Hillary meets Sopranos:






Monday, June 04, 2007

IPTV for Beginners

Though we may be nearing what Rupert Murdoch calls "the golden age of media", there's a hurdle ahead. Between today's cacophony of web-video services and the promised land of seamless interactive programming is the maturing of a little thing called IPTV.

Well, that's what I think. My new column for CNET is now online with the full editorial...


WebWatch

IPTV for beginners

Opinion: We have a long way to go...

By Howard Greenfield

Published: Monday 4 June 2007

Though everyone's making big predictions for IPTV's uptake, the services are still a long way off. Howard Greenfield outlines the forces which will bring this upcoming tech to life.

Though we may be nearing what Rupert Murdoch calls "the golden age of media", there's a hurdle ahead. Between today's cacophony of web-video services and the promised land of seamless interactive programming is the maturing of a little thing called IPTV.

In an industry just beginning to understand how to slam video down broadband pipes to achieve new, improved television experiences, there's still advertising and revenue requirements to meet, still a few speed bumps before reaching the new media ecosystem.

In fact, the last time I checked, we're all still beginners here, only a short way along from the black-and-white I Love Lucy days inception of the medium.

We're all IPTV beginners here.

Huge growth is anticipated. IPTV households are expected to grow worldwide from around seven million to 48 million between now and 2019 - a 60 per cent annual growth rate over five years, according to market researcher Infonetics.

Yet between central office and broadband network to set-top and living room lurk quality issues. Scalability challenges still stand between what we have today and a smooth service reaching millions that can meet or beat the existing broadcast experience and deliver true web/TV 2.0 personalisation and interactivity.

(continued on CNET/Silicon.com)

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Digital Books - 'End of the Gutenberg Supply Chain'

Amazing report from BookExpo America this week.
First line says it all ("John Updike would not be pleased.").

The whole book world may not be pleased.
Read on.
-H

[excerpt]
Waxing Philosophical, Booksellers Face the Digital
By MOTOKO RICH
Published: June 4, 2007, New York Times

John Updike would not be pleased.

Google and Microsoft had large presences at BookExpo America. [
Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times]

“This could replace the entire supply chain that has been in existence since Gutenberg,”
--Jason Epstein, the former editorial director of Random House on the Espresso Book Machine

(continued - click here)