Monday, May 16, 2011

Writing in today’s New York Times, Jenna Wortham reports that:

The ultimate risk for the carriers is becoming “dumb pipes,” providing only the data connection and not selling any more sophisticated communications services themselves.

It’s not just a risk.  It’s reality.  Carriers are moving toward becoming dumb pipes, and there’s little that can be done about it, as consumers are demanding a volume of applications that carriers themselves can’t deliver.  Moreover, the carriers have ceded the tollbooth role to entities like Apple, who have a better understanding of both developers needs and consumer behaviour. 

It didn’t need to be this way. Long before Apple introduced its game changing App Store, voices in the next generation telecom community were asking for better developer support, developer programs, and common standards for building and selling mobile applications.  As Andy Abramson writes:

…just about every mobile operator gets offered the opportunity to have the new services first. Nary a business development professional doesn’t have access to their counterparts at all their major mobile telcos via their LinkedIn directory or from first person relationships so the fear of the rising tide of upstarts isn’t paranoia. It’s reality. Apple, Google, Microsoft, the Yahoo and AOL of old all had it figured out, and only IP communications is the future and they built their businesses that way.

Andy suggests that carriers get back into the services and applications game – sell the pipe at a loss, and charge for the applications.  But is it still true that mobile operators get offered the opportunity to have new services first?  Or is that a relic of yesterday, also?  I think it’s the latter.

Carrier product groups need to focus on the core data services that people buy today – internet, voice, television, security – and figure out how to be the best at delivering those bread and butter products to the customer.  In business it’s managed PBX, conferencing and collaboration, and call center.  Carriers need to deliver these core services better than the Valley, and at a better price than the Valley, in order to remain relevant.

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Post image for Spam blogs ruin the web for everyone.

Spam blogs ruin the web for everyone.

by alec on May 16, 2011

I keep an RSS search for terms like conference call, and conference calling.  It’s a simple way to keep tabs on competitors to Calliflower.  In recent years, though, it’s become a meaningless sludge pile of garbled English as SEO “consultants” create endless spam blogs by “respinning” content using a combination of thesaurus’ and reordering of sentences.

Take, for example, this gem from the spam blog called All Conference Calling.com, titled “Flat Rate Conference Calling”:

Flat rate conference calling is a service provided by a meeting phoning company which bills by toned prices. This particular rate usually includes a interferance per-minute charge, allowing companies the data of just how much they’ll spend per person per hour. How do we determine if flatrate conference calling suits your company?

To know flat rate meetings, you need to have a near take a look at how many associates you will use during a phone. In other words, the number of individuals will be logging onto these types of calls for each program? This can be hard if your company intends to hold a number of conference phone calls per month, each along with variable numbers of participants. For example, assume the first business call of the month will probably be using the panel associated with company directors. This might only be ten to twelve individuals. But, after this phone you may want to possess a session with your department mind there are gone 50 of these. Later that month, you want upon having a phone together with your entire employees, which is within the 1000′s! You can observe exactly where toned rate meeting phoning could be a issue.

What are “toned prices”?  “Interferance per-minute charges”?  The hyperlinks in this piece (all removed by me) simply link back to the main site.  The purpose of this “keyword rich” nonsense is to boost the search ranking for the main page, which consists of nothing but blog postings scraped from other people’s RSS feeds and advertising.  All Conference Calling.com is simply a way for it’s owner to make a few hundred dollars per month in advertising.  Multiple that by a thousand, and suddenly you have a business.

And how about this gem on “article” repository article2008.com.  Titled “Keep Away from Conference Calls that Waste Everybody’s Time”, it reads:

It’s slightly simple to have a conference call move awry. All it needs is a loss of ok planning. Positive, Convention calls are easy to make, contain much less bodily effort (via traveling), and save time. On the other hand, at the turn aspect, a conference name that may be badly controlled will certainly be a disaster. Just as in a regular meeting, everyone has to be informed, and everybody should come on time. Should you thought reaching a gathering late used to be unhealthy business etiquette, so is being late for a convention call. In any case, it’s merely a gathering in a different incarnation.

Grammatically mangled garbage spit out of a bot that uses a thesaurus to perform word substitutions to create new “original” content and game the search engine.  Just what is a “Convention call”?? To add insult to injury, the piece finishes with a hyperlink to a website on yeast infections.

What happened to the web of quality content?

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How do you sell advertising on a light bulb?

May 16, 2011

Kevin Krause asks “Is Google spreading itself too thin with Android and Chrome?”  The answer is absolutely yes and not just on the Android vs Chrome question.  Google’s celebration of the engineer is taking the company in all kinds of directions.  Light bulbs controlled by mobile phones? Self driving automobiles? Solar energy plants? How do [...]

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Cutting the TV umbilical cord

May 16, 2011
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It seems that more and more people are cutting the cable-TV cord these days.  Just this morning, Dianne Nice announced on the Globe and Mail blog that she and her husband would be pulling the plug on pricey TV bills at the end of this TV season.  Her rationale?  The bills are too high, she [...]

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