Thursday, November 29, 2007
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
The recipe
- a computer, or something that would allow you to use internet (like a brand new phone). If you have no idea what to purchase, go for a laptop and not for a desktop, as they're cheaper and more practical than ever.
- some additionnal equipments : a webcam, a headphone / microphone. Speakers might also be useful.
- an internet connection (obviously)
- softwares : Firefox. And that's it.
- a bunch of sites to start gettin the relevant information. Then gather the information on tools like bloglines, google reader or netvibes.
- then get yourself a personnal blog or wiki or anything else to start contributing to e-culture.
You rock.
Thursday, November 22, 2007
On the go
(ooh, nice)
About the hardware, the right equation is : things that fit in your pocket + things that can connect. I'm not interested that much in the software thing, but I keep an eye on the two major innovations on softwares for mobile devices : Apple OS on the iPhone (didn't want to talk about it but I have to say it's quite impressive) and the Google strike-back : android... meanwhile I'm thinking about upgrading to WIndows Mobile 6 (yeah).
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Youtube is the new TV.
There are lots and lots of famous "internet people". Here are some that you might not have heard of :
Mia Rose, a teenager from the UK. She sings covers (but some songs are written by herself) that she put on youtube. And then, BOOM, Ryan Leslie (a very famous Hiphop/R'n'B producer) signed her on his label NextSelection. How better can it have been for her ? It can be hard to believe but this cute 19-year-old girl has the second most subscribed youtube channel of all time (over 80,000). Not bad when you've started in you living room with a camera from bestbuy. When she started being famous, I happend to read in some blogs "In your face, Cowell !", and I liked it.
But let's be honest : this girl can sing. There's another girl who did quite the same thing : Esmee Denters. She did so well that she ended up singing with Justin Timberlake himself (me a little bit jealous) and signing in his label.
Plus, tv channels start picking things up on the internet to show it on tv. Which means being seen on internet = might be seen on tv. For example, on iTele, (a french news channel), I've seen a 5 minutes programme called iWeb, where a random man presents videos found on youtube or dailymotion (probably the ones with the most views), and just adds two or three words to the video, saying 'ha , see how funny is it'. I feel so sorry for him. On the other hand, medias and producers have also used internet in a more creative way : check out the lonelygirl15 story if you haven't heard about it yet...
Internet brought a new scale for fame and celebrity : are you famous enough to have your own wikipedia page ? Got your own youtube channel with millions of susbcribers ? Googleads on your blog make you richer than ever ?
You know what ? Internet just made it much faster and easier. In getting famous as well as in getting back as nobody. The thing is that unless you're talented, it won't work. The Warhol's "15 minutes of fame" has never been that true.
Fussbook ?
Facts :
- 55 million is only 1/4 of myspace users. Even if they made it really fast (average 250,000 new users per day), it might not grow this fast forever.
- 7000 applications : how many relevant applications ? (I mean, really useful)
- friends : thought it would be different from myspace. But it just turns exactly the same way (going to the same school or reading someone's blog makes him a friend. There might be something here in the difference between the meaning of "friend" through the cultures, continental europe vs. USA).
- advertising business : this might be the "no-return" point for Facebook. Nobody (on the users side) wanted advertising business in here. Soon you'll get indirect spam from your own friends telling you that they prefer this brand and not this other one. They call it social ads, I call it ads.
I don't care about the big amounts of money here. I think about the fact that it is just impossible to get something really advertising-free (or business-free or whatever you call it) when it comes to specific audiences and large groups of people. This was one of the web 2.0 promises. This is sad.
Thought it would be the next big thing, but but I don't really believe in Facebook now :(
Thursday, November 8, 2007
"No money no problems" is so wrong.
I don't like thinking that everyhing is going to be easier on the internet. Why would I be ready to lend $10,000 to someone called banana22 who just says "consolidation of debt" when the same person knocking at my door asking for the same thing would just get a punch in the face ? We're dealing with big amounts of money here.
This site is a living proof that people truely believe that Internet makes things more transparent and more reliable. There's been a lots of scams on the internet since its beginning. As a regular customer on online shops, I can't help but think about all these fake e-mails of people promising you'll be millionaires just by lending $5000 to some son of some rich politician somewhere in Africa. Plus some other ebay frauds. Just ask google.
To sum it up, I think that Internet is probably the best marketplace in the world (I found so many stuff to buy on eBay Hong Kong). For goods, DVDs, computers, information or creation... but not for money. Even with a third party.
What if I gave you my paypal adress and told that I need $5 for a poker game (or for lunch) ?
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Reading. Correction.
I am currently working in a company that has 65 employees. It is located in Paris, in the 15th district, on Maubert street. It aims at selling software for children. It benefits from governement subsidies to hire interns. This is how I got this job as a salesman. At the beginning, I was in charge of the marketing, but I switched
We sell a range of products under the brand Youngsoft. We have many marketing expenses. Our displays in the subway is one of the most expensive. Our RP department also has a very large budget. We produce our own ads with our copywriting staff, and we also publish our user handbooks.
Our quarterly results for this year have been largely profitable. The market we're in is very interesting right now, and that is why we make profit.
We would like to sell our products in Tahiti because we think overseas customers would be interested in buying it.
To sum it up, our future looks good because of our positive ehtics and interesting market niche.