Author: Serkadis

  • Fast & furious investor changes; YSP & HVCC update; Florida broker applications skyrocket

    pipeline-press

    rob-chrisman-daily

    One never knows when the subject of mortgage banking will pop up – like yesterday. There I was at the Sundance Ski Resort (the one owned by “Bob” Redford) with my son. (He was there to snow board, I was there trying to figure out an opening paragraph for today’s commentary.) I had my 2008 Mortgage Bankers Association canvas computer bag, with “Freddie Mac” printed on it, when up walked a fellow who started asking me about it. It turned out that he is the son of David Glenn. Mr. Glenn was ousted from his job as president and COO of Freddie Mac in 2003, over six years ago, pre-bubble. It turns out that he is doing the same thing now that many other mortgage folks are doing: buying and flipping distressed properties – probably here in Utah.

    Look, just because the kids are off from school doesn’t mean that investors are taking any time off from making changes.

    US Bank’s Consumer Finance Wholesale Mortgage Division came out with their policy on Manufactured Housing Financing (no First Time Home Buyer, minimum 680 mid score for both borrowers, maximum 80% LTV, maximum loan amount $200,000, no single-wides, etc.)

    BB&T tweaked their USDA Guaranteed Rural Housing 30 Year Fixed Product. (BB&T stands for “Branch Banking and Trust Company” in case you’re ever asked.)

    Suntrust and Affiliated told everyone that they discontinued their Flex 18% MI product lines.
    GMAC updated their Fannie Mae Fixed 7.1 & 8.0 product line guidelines.

    more news on Wells wholesale, Union Bank, Flagstar, Franklin American, YSPs, NewBridge Bank, Florida law change, GSEs, HVCC, the markets, and joke of the day … <<< CLICK HERE TO READ

  • REPORT: Buick aiming to look younger, see other people (under 70)

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    2011 Buick Regal – click above for high-res image gallery

    We interrupt our regularly scheduled “Buicks are for old people and lascivious golfers jokes” to tell you that the average, median age of a Buick buyer is 70 years old. Compare that to the average age of a new car buyer: 52. Obviously – and no offense to you septuagenarians out there – seventy ain’t sexy. And as the first rule of twenty-first century marketing (and light beer commercials) dictates: sex sells.

    That said, there is a glimmer of hope if you look at the brand’s recent sales trends. Take the 2010 Buick LaCrosse. The median age of its buyer is 52 years old. That’s a decade and a half younger than the average Buick buyer, but still a full three years older than the industry average. However you pull apart the numbers, that’s good news for Buick.

    Buick’s new boss – 42 year-old Brian Sweeney who just took over the Buick/GMC division from the nine days and out Michael Richards – wants to lower that age even more. His plan? In a word, Regal. Buick plans to use “experimental marketing” when they pitch the new Regal to potential customers.

    We don’t yet know what that means in specific, but Buick feels they helped pedal the new LaCrosse to a younger-ish audience by showing the car at, “coffee shops, art fairs and wine festivals.” Can we therefore expect to see the Regal at tattoo parlors, dive bars and yoga studios? We wouldn’t rule it out. Well, we would rule out the dive bars. And the tattoo joints. Either way, pitching “Not your grandfather’s Buick” is a hard sell.

    [Source: Automotive News – sub. req.]

    REPORT: Buick aiming to look younger, see other people (under 70) originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dragon Age: Origins DLC due next week

    Since completing your stint in Ostagar, the place has been serving as nesting and breeding ground for hordes of unfriendlies. With a quick jump to the online stores next week, you’ll have a bigger reason to brandish

  • Americans Are Unemployed Because They Don’t Have Any Skills

    stressed_worker

    Many argue that America should go back to manufacturing products, 'like it used to', forgetting that American manufacturing output has actually kept growing over the last two decades even though manufacturing employment has shrunk.

    Thus they argue that more Americans should be working in manufacturing, rather than other things, as if this would be a solution to unemployment.

    Some even romanticize the day when an unskilled laborer could earn a high middle class salary.

    The Economist's Free Exchange blog issues an extensive take-down of this entire line of thinking.

    Free Exchange: [Emphasis added] Consider the employment question first. Mr Scheiber writes about the importance of manufacturing jobs, saying:

    The beauty of manufacturing is that wages and productivity aren't necessarily tied to education level. A person with a high school diploma (or less) can make a middle-class living in the manufacturing sector.

    But there's a big problem here. Mr Scheiber wants a sector that pays high wages for unskilled work to increase its share of American employment. That doesn't add up. Employers have a major incentive to either shift those jobs to places where labour costs are low or to eliminate those jobs via automation. Mr Scheiber writes as if the decline of manufacturing employment is a tragedy because low-skilled manufacturing workers could earn a high wage, but in fact manufacturing employment has declined precisely because low-skilled workers were earning high wages. It's odd to imagine that wages could diverge from productivity over the long-term; that's simply not sustainable.

    ...

    The trouble is not that the manufacturing sector is shrinking. It is that America is struggling to produce enough skilled workers. Bringing back manufacturing jobs won't fix that.

    Thinking of wages as prices helps understand both why unemployment happens and how it can be solved. If there's a romanticized utopia of the American 1950's it's probably because A) it's exaggerated and B) was unsustainable. You can't expect to earn 10x more money than most people in the world with manual labor in a factory. If it happened in the past, it was good timing and luck, not the norm.

    At the same time if you're wondering where new employment is needed, then look no further than the jobs which pay the most. Their high salaries scream labor shortage, or more precisely skilled labor shortage. There are tons of high paying careers in the U.S., which by their high salaries signal that they are undersupplied and need more people.

    This doesn't mean that struggling Americans shouldn't be helped. It just means they should be helped in the right direction. To do otherwise is to create even worse unemployment problems in the future.

    Read the extensive Free Exchange article here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Pontiac and Saturn Prices Slashed by 46%

    If you’re in the market for a great deal one a new car, this might just be your lucky day. Forget about Japanese models or hybrid cars and head over to the Pontiac and Saturn dealerships.

    As long as you don’t mind the fact that the two brands are pretty much history, you should know that General Motors is offering dealers huge incentives in order to move a few thousand unsold vehicles, Wall Street Journal wrote.

    According to the paper, the dealers received on Decemb… (read more)

  • NHTSA Investigating Toyota Prius Faulty Braking Reports

    The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has received a few dozen complaints from owners of the current generation Toyota Prius accusing defective braking, The Detroit Bureau (TDB) reported.

    The public opinion has become extremely sensitive to safety issues related to the Japanese manufacturer. This is due to problems with the accelerator pedal which generated a 3.8 million vehicle recall, corroborated with an excessive corrosion issue (sometimes causing brake failure) t… (read more)

  • G.S.M. encryption hacked


    Karsten Nohl, a PhD from the University of Virginia, looking dreamy above, has broken A5/1, an algorithm to encrypt G.S.M. cellphone conversation. The hack follows a few steps including the use of a distributed key-gathering sytem to capture and decoding of a number of G.S.M. 64-bit encryption keys, the kind of keys that most cellular operators still use.

    The hack could be negated by upgrading to the 128-bit A5/3 algorithm, although when cellular providers are cite copyright and the illegality of cellphone intercepts as reasons to ignore Nohl’s work, as they do in this NY Times piece, you have to wonder if they’re not actually scared pantsless.

    The Tech Herald has much more info on the hack, which began in August, 2009.


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  • Big 3 are still kings of full-size pickups, have 91% of market

    Despite the fact that Detroit automakers are moving their focus towards compact, fuel-efficient cars, and away from full-size pickups, the segment still makes up more than 20 percent of sales by the Big 3 and could play a big role in helping Detroit recover in 2010.

    According to data from Autodata Corp, through the first 11 months of 2009, full-size pickup sales have been down 31.2 percent while the overall industry declined 23.9 percent. Nonetheless, Detroit automakers sold 91 percent of all full-size pickups during the period.

    Dealers and manufacturers are hoping for a rebound next year as foreign automakers, with models like the Toyota Tundra and Nissan Titan, have failed at stealing significant market share from Detroit’s Big 3.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Free Press


  • Green Star Products’ Review of 2009 – CNNMoney.com (press release)

    Green Star Products' Review of 2009CNNMoney.com (press release)"The Company's income spans several industries, including ethanol and biodiesel biofuel production; algae biomass production and its derivatives; …and more »


  • Tim Cook gets $12.3M for watching Apple while Jobs was out

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    Apple COO Tim Cook has received $12.3 million in Apple stock for stepping in as CEO during Steve Jobs absence earlier this year.

    Considering its been a rough couple of years for the economy and many CEOs still got large salaries for doing very little, it’s nice to see Cook being rewarded for, you know, actually doing something and producing results.

    In 2007 and 2008 Cook earned stock awards worth $7 million and $6 million, respectively. This year for Tim closes with a $12.3 million stock award plus a $100,00 salary raise (up to $800,000 from $700,000) and a fat cash bonus of $800,000. Total compensation for 2009? $14 million.

    Steve Jobs took his usual $1 salary and a $1 bonus. But don’t worry, he’s doing just fine with his 5.5 million shares of Apple (AAPL) stock, which closed Monday at another all-time high of $211.61 a share (that makes Steve’s shares worth a cool $1,163,855,000).

    TUAWTim Cook gets $12.3M for watching Apple while Jobs was out originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Apple drops MacBook to $899 for students

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    Just a quick note that the online Apple Store has quietly dropped their white MacBook from $949 to $899 for students, teachers, and faculty members.

    The white polycarbonate MacBook specs remain at 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2GB DDR3 memory, 250GB hard drive, SuperDrive, and the NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics card.

    Other Macs and accessories seem to have retained their previous student pricing. It’s only $50, but if you’re an education customer in need of a cheap Mac this is a nice post-holiday gift from Apple.

    TUAWApple drops MacBook to $899 for students originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 09:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Eight trends to look for in 2010

    (Editor’s note: Dave Kellogg is CEO of Mark Logic, an information infrastructure software company. He submitted this column to VentureBeat.)

    Given the tumultuous events of 2009, it’s easy to forget the world didn’t come to a standstill. Life continued and Silicon Valley kept innovating.nostradamus

    2010 hopefully won’t be as tumultuous, but should be exciting. Here are my predictions on eight trends that will surface next year:

    Corporations will deploy technology for advantage, not cost: As the economy recovers, organizations will – for the first time in nearly a decade – look to information technology as a means of gaining competitive advantage as opposed to a means for simply reducing cost.

    Social networking will divide: People will settle into a pattern of using different social networking platforms for different purposes.

    The notion of a single social graph for work, personal and other activities separated only by the friend-type of the linkages is dead. Facebook, assuming it doesn’t continue to make heavy-handed privacy mistakes, will end up owning the friends category. LinkedIn will own business colleagues, but will have to share status-ing with Twitter.  Boutique networks should own other activities, perhaps with Ning as the underlying platform across those networks where users don’t mind and/or desire a common profile.

    But social network fatigue will set in: While teens will continue to use social networks as telephones, social networking amongst the middle-aged and working crowd will lose some of its luster. Despite Facebook succeeding where Classmates failed, the novelty of reconnecting with long-lost high school friends will fade as will the “I’m at Safeway in the meat department” status message.

    In some ways, social networks shouls settle back more into the Plaxo vision of permanently connected address books than the hipper vision of a constant communication platform.  Twitter will suffer also – and not just from the “Iranian Cyber Army.”

    Cloud computing hype will peak: Passing Gartner’s “peak of inflated expectations,” Cloud Computing will begin to dive into the “trough of disillusionment.”

    The types of cloud (e.g, public, private, virtual private) will begin to stabilize as will the number of as-a-service acronyms.

    Strategic cloud consultancies like Appiro and cloud interconnection companies like CastIron should begin to clean up as pragmatic customers seek to define sensible cloud strategies that leverage the best of many options and combine them.

    The database market siege will build: The attack against the once-sleepy $15B market controlled by Oracle, IBM, and Microsoft will continue to build. While Oracle will reluctantly honor its MySQL promises for the European Union, Postgres will gain momentum among those worried about MySQL’s mid-term future.

    Specialist database systems from vendors like Aster Data, Mark Logic, and Streambase will continue to eat the edges of the market while new database-as-a-service cloud offerings will commoditize the core.

    The NoSQL movement will continue to gather steam, leveraging Hadoop as an “un-database” for those frustrated with either classic relational database technology or high oligopolistic pricing practices.

    Google will show signs of weakness in search: As spammers gain ground in the cat-and-mouse game of search engine optimization, it will continue to get harder and harder to, for example, find a dishwasher on Google.

    With substantial investment, some impressive technology and a good deal of persistence, Microsoft will do some damage to Google with Bing.

    While Google is a long way from death by-a-thousand-cuts, the first hundred cuts or so will come from Bing, “decision engines” (such as machine-learning upstart Hunch) and human-powered “answer engines” like Mahalo or Answerville from Amazon.

    The XML silent revolution will continue: Without a shot fired, XML may well take over as the principal underlying file format both within the enterprise and across the Internet.

    As the latest suites from Microsoft, Adobe and others continue to penetrate the market, more and more information will, often unknowingly, be stored in an XML format.

    New industry standards such as XBRL for financial reporting and HL7 for health records are driving the need for information infrastructures that mange both traditional data and this reservoir of XML-based unstructured content.

    Disclosure: Yes, this is good for my company, but the dynamic opens the door to a range of tools and services to help companies extract greater value from data.

    Mobility will take off – further: With the combination of new devices, higher-speed mobile networks and new location-aware technology, mobile applications will continue their ascent next year.

    Augmented reality will go mainstream by combining the camera, the screen and the GPS into the devices, turning one’s mobile phone into not only a communication and web surfing device but also a “head’s up display” to guide you through life.

    Regardless of how these 2010 predictions play out we know one thing is certain: The tech industry will always bring challenges to the status quo.


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  • XBMC 9.11 makes your open source home theater look shinier




    The developers behind the XBMC project have announced the official release of version 9.11, codenamed Camelot, a major update that includes an improved user interface theme and a number of new features.

    XBMC is a cross-platform media center application that is distributed under an open source license. Originally designed to run on Microsoft’s Xbox gaming console in 2003, the program has evolved to run on conventional desktop computers and has attracted a considerable audience of users and developers. Although it lacks DVR capabilities, it supports a broad assortment of media playback and library management features.

    Read the rest of this article...


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  • 2009 Auto Industry Wrap Up

    CHAPTER 1: GM – THE NEVERENDING STORY
    CHAPTER 2: CHRYSLER AND FIAT – A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN
    CHAPTER 3: FORD – THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD    
    CHAPTER 4: PORSCHE AND VOLKSWAGEN – DAVID MEETS GOLIATH
    CHAPTER 5: TOYOTA AND HONDA- THE JAPANESE SURPRISES
    CHAPTER 6: BMW AND DAIMLER – HOLDING THEIR LINES
    CHAPTER 7: RENAULT AND NISSAN – ZERO EMISSIONS APPROACH
    CHAPTER 8: HYUNDAI AND KIA – CHEAPER, BUT BETTER
    CHAPTER 9: THE PATH THAT LIES AHEADread more)

  • Facebook Becomes the Number 1 Site in the US for Christmas

    Which is the most popular web site in the US? Normally, if you’d answer Google, you’d be right. On Christmas day though, it looks like Facebook managed to pull off the seemingly impossible, dethroning Google as the most visited online destination. At least that’s what analytics firm Hitwise is saying, interestingly enough, on Twitter.

    “Facebook was the most visited site in the US on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. 1st time the site has been the #1 visited US site ever,” Hitwise wrote in a tweet. Of course, this was just for two days and Google isn’t in any immediate danger of being overtaken by the social network.

    The most recent numbers show that Facebook is the fourth largest site in the US having just passed AOL last month. Google, Yahoo and Microsoft sites still manage to get well over 100 million unique visitors every month in the US and Facebook still has some work cut out before challenging these top players.

    If it manages to keep up the growth it has been seeing, especially in the past year, the time when Facebook is the number one site in the US may come soon enough, perhaps even next year. And with no sign of slowing down, it may very well reach this goal.

    In fact, when it comes to individual sites, which is what Hitwise is measuring, Facebook is the third larg… (read more)

  • SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio

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    Here’s another first for Ford after the revelation of its motion-capturing software: The Blue Oval will be the first to offer iTunes tagging through iPods on SYNC-equipped vehicles. Right behind the announcement of mobile Internet connectivity being added to SYNC, this will go along with the package of mobile apps the carmaker will reveal at CES next month.

    The way it works: if you you have SYNC with HD radio, when you hear a song you like on an HD station you can press the ‘Tag’ button, and the system will note the track. When you plug your iPod in, it will suck up all of those tracks in a ‘Tagged’ playlist. You can have another listen through them and then buy the ones you want from iTunes.

    There are other makes of vehicles that will let you record songs directly onto the car’s hard drive for a fixed amount of time, but you can’t really do anything with the recording after that. Ford’s setup won’t get you that immediate satisfaction, but it will save you a few steps. You can read the press release on the new – and free – feature (provided you’ve paid for SYNC and the HD-equipped head unit) after the jump.

    [Source: Ford]

    Continue reading SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio

    SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 10:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Watch: Final Fantasy XIII full battle gameplay

    There have been many battle gameplay vids for Final Fantasy XIII, but there aren’t a lot that show you what it’d be like if you’ve actually got the game. Since those in Japan already do, we can

  • Career Builder: Employers Planning To Replace Bad Workers With Cheap New Ones

    unemployment tbi

    Latest data from Career Builder shows that the number of employers planning to reduce headcount has nearly halved to 9% from 16%.

    Meanwhile, about 20% of employers now expect to add workers, as opposed to 14% previously.

    Reuters: “There’s definitely an uptick. The number of employers who say they’re going to add full-time workers is up from last year, and that is very good news,” said Michael Erwin, senior career advisor at CareerBuilder.

    Yet 61 percent of employers said they do not plan to change staffing levels, showing a degree of caution, he said.

    Still, the outlook is a mixed bag for those lucky enough to still have jobs. Top-performers (or those in with the boss) should do well.

    Reuters: Fifty-seven percent of employers expect to see higher salaries for existing employees in 2010, down from 65 percent in 2009. Also, 29 percent plan to increase salaries in offers to new employees, down from 33 percent in 2009.

    Yet underperformers (or those who missed a few too many golf outings) could be replaced.

    Reuters: As to bonuses, medical coverage and matching 401k contributions, the survey found 37 percent of employers plan to cut benefits in 2010, up from 32 percent who trimmed in 2009.

    Many employers — 37 percent — said they plan to take advantage of the large labor pool and replace low-performing employees in 2010.

    Thus there’s a rub: while some firms might keep headcounts stable, they might still fire and hire in order to tweak their work force. They certainly have the luxury to do so; supply vs. demand favors employers right now. At least they’re increasingly planning to hire.

    Read the full article at Reuters here.

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  • Los nuevos intermediarios en la televisión y el cine por internet. Tendencia 2010

    Open Screen Project

    La integración entre televisión, cine e internet no sólo se va a saldar con nuevas formas de consumo (bajo demanda, ver la tele y navegar a la vez) y de distribución (por internet frente a la TDT) sino también está comenzando a trastocar el poder de los intermediarios actuales como ya sucedió con la música. Si empezamos a ver a los canales actuales como lo que son – agregadores de contenidos de otros, con un pequeño porcentaje de producción propio, a los que el estado concede un mercado acotado – podemos entender que en el entorno de la TDT se encuentren muy cómodos, pero que el escenario del vídeo por internet les aterre: tanto por la aparición de nuevos intermediarios mejores conocedores del medio como por la comercialización directa de los productores de contenidos que no los acaben necesitando para la distribución.

    Su tabla de salvación estaría – cómo no – en cambios legislativos que extendieran el status quo al vídeo en la red, salvaguardando la escasez ficticia de las licencias de TDT. Si esto no sucede o la intervención del estado no es lo suficientemente protectora – crucemos los dedos por que así sea – el paulatino acercamiento a la “tele del salón” de nuevos actores hace que el aspecto del futuro del negocio de la televisión no se parezca demasiado a lo que hemos venido viviendo en nuestro país. Los nuevos intermediarios en la televisión y el cine por internet pivotan sobre los tres elementos clave para hacer negocio en este ámbito: experiencia de usuario, cambios en la distribución y control sobre el canal. Según conjuguen estas variables, serán capaces de hacerse con un espacio en el salón de casa y articular un negocio a partir de él. Veamos

    Control sobre el canal

    Cuando hablamos de nuevos intermediarios nos referimos tanto a los que ofrecen un dispositivo para conectar a la tele del salón, como a los que son un servicio de distribución de contenidos online. En el primer caso, tenemos quienes apuestan por un control más fuerte de qué puede hacer el usuario como las consolas de videojuegos, a partir del cual ofrecen el acceso a contenidos de pago y quienes sólo quieren favorecer a la tienda propia pero permiten que existan otras opciones. A más control, menos posibilidades de que el usuario te escoja como opción preferente, pero también más posibilidades de que ofrecer el dispositivo te permita hacer negocio; por contra, quienes dejan la puerta abierta a cualquier fuente de internet dan más valor al usuario de entrada, pero tienen complicado que no sea un servicio online quien haga las ventas / alquileres.

    Sezmi

    Experiencia del usuario en la televisión por internet

    La tele tradicional ofrece una experiencia de usuario inigualable, es sentarse en el sofá, pulsar el botón y listo. Si se quiere competir en la distribución de contenidos, todo lo que sea alejarse del estándar pone más difícil el ocupar el papel de intermediario. Aquí también hay que tener en cuenta el valor del “enchufar y listo” frente a opciones en las que uno se monta un ordenador, lo configura y lo mantiene. Las soluciones actuales basadas en “descargo por P2P/descarga directa en el ordenador y luego lo paso al disco duro multimedia” o “enchufo un ordenador a la tele del salón para hacer lo mismo”, son escogidas por la libertad que ofrecen de utilizar el contenido bajado de la red, pero probablemente sean cada vez más farragosas de ejecutar.

    También deberíamos esperar que crezca la demanda de contenidos de nuevos creadores del vídeo por internet, de los Nikodemo, Balzac.tv, Malviviendo y compañía. El poder ofrecer acceso a los mismos y un escenario donde estos hagan negocio debería ser también una variable a considerar.

    Los nuevos distribuidores del cine y la tele por internet

    Desde hace años asistimos a una dura pugna por liderar este terreno. Con Hulu la industria de los productores de televisión ya demostró que no quiere otro iTunes, pero es un modelo que tiene varias asignaturas pendientes como es decidir si cobrar y qué hacer con los intermediarios que quieren llevarlo al salón donde competiría con la televisión por cable americana.

    En un escenario intermedio entre Hulu y los Megaupload / Megavideo tenemos a Youtube, que seguirá siendo un actor ineludible: todo el mundo quiere tener al servicio universal de vídeos en su solución, pero el negocio pasa por acuerdos con los productores que todavía no están resueltos, los grandes no quieren quedar en manos de Google y para los pequeños no escala el negociar uno a uno. Finalmente Megaupload / Megavideo y similares tienen un futuro a largo plazo poco claro, con tanta presión por parte de la industria y unos gobiernos animados a imponer mayor control en internet, tienen difícil hacer una transición hacia servicios con acuerdos con los creadores de los contenidos.

    Televisor Philips

    Candidatos

    Candidatos a nuevo intermediario hay muchos, sólo glosar algunos destacados y sus posibilidades.

    • Las consolas: parten de una posición privilegiada al estar ya conectadas al salón de casa y tener un índice de penetración muy importante. Sony y Microsoft llevan años teniendo esto más o menos claro y ofreciendo soluciones bajo demanda de contenidos audiovisuales, incluida la alta definición. Su punto débil frente a otras soluciones más abiertas es el control de lo que puede hacer el usuario a la hora de acceder a servicios online.
    • Los fabricantes de set-top boxes: entre los que hay de todo, completamente abiertos a quienes son clientes de su propio servicio. Dentro de este grupo podemos destacar a Boxee, Telebision, BluBrain, Roku o AppleTV. Todos comparten su escasa penetración en el mercado de momento (algunos ni siquiera han salida) y la dificultad de encontrar la solución a la ecuación “apertura / negocio”.
    • También tenemos a quienes optan por tener un HTPC completo, tanto hecho a medida (seremos la minoría) o soluciones de fabricantes como el Acer Aspire Revo.
    • Los propios fabricantes de televisores, como Sony o Phillips.

    Flash en la televisión

    Y dejamos algunas variables a evaluar. En la experiencia de usuario también pensará en cómo se plantea y qué valor aporta internet en el salón de casa, si pensamos en una televisión social a lo Boxee, si el usuario demandará experiencias interactivas o querra una web reducida a la recepción de datos a través de widgets.

    En este 2010 apostaría a porque todo este ecosistema de nuevos intermediarios va a poner toda la carne en el asador para hacerse con hueco cerca de la televisión del salón. Si lo consiguen y la legislación lo permite, los actuales agregadores – también conocidos como canales de televisión – deberían empezar a pensar en que es una batalla en la que lo tienen complicado a largo plazo.


  • Hollywood Goes Hydrogen Using Jetstream Wind

    Forget about Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt driving up to a movie premier in a BMW Hydrogen 7. Forget about Cameron Diaz, Jay Leno, Will Ferrell, Arnold Schwarzenegger and even Prince Charles driving hydrogen cars.

    Apparently New Mexico is the new Hollywood and a 35-foot film truck will be using hydrogen gas to cook food for the crew and have an oxygen bar to keep stars and staff alert. The hydrogen and oxygen will be created from wind turbines from Jetstream Wind that will electrolyze water to create hydrogen and oxygen for the film truck.

    According to the Hydrogen Journal, “The truck will also supply oxygen (generated when water was electrolysed with electricity from the wind turbine) for ‘oxygen bar therapy’ to actors and film crew so they can breathe it directly. This is thought to increase energy, stamina, concentration and alertness, promote relaxation, ease headaches and hangovers and make skin look fresher.”

    New Mexico is often used for the on-location shooting of major motion pictures. The name of the film has not be disclosed yet, nor the actors or director. Leave it to Hollywood to come up with a creative use for electrolysis of water. And, let’s hope that sniffing a little pure oxygen is all they do on set.