Category: News

  • Merry Christmas, Meagan Donahue. You Are Going To Machu Picchu

    A month ago we ran a contest giving to give away a 7-day adventure trek for two to the ancient Inca ruins of Machu Picchu. As we wrote back then:

    . . . the winner will be climbing a mountain in Peru to the fabled Inca city of Machu Picchu. Well, you and a guest will actually be on horseback most of the way, and staying in WiFi-equipped luxury eco-lodges. But you can walk part of the way just to say you hiked the Inca trail.

    This 7-day adventure for two, which is worth about $7,000, is being donated by the tour operator Mountain Lodges of Peru in conjunction with ekoVenture, a marketplace for “experience travel” (read our recent post on them).

    And we have a winner, reader Meagan Donahue. Merry Christmas.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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  • More tests, more results, still waiting…

    I posted an introduction the other day about my daughter Samantha.

    Here is where we are right now-

    Her fasting glucose on Monday was 86. Her glucose tolerance test came back after two hours at 497.

    We were sent back to the lab yesterday. Her fasting glucose yesterday was 87 or 89, I can’t remember and then in the afternoon they did a random glucose test and that number came back at 156. She had not eaten much yesterday, and I was afraid it would be almost another fasting test. She refused breakfast, had half of a half of a ham sandwich for lunch, snacked on a small slice of cuban bread and butter and had one See’s candy (we were with family for Christmas Eve during the day). She also drank one Caprisun.

    I would guess it was about 2 hours after she ate that we went for the random test.

    Her regular doctor will be back in the office on Monday. We’ve been talking to her nurse practitioner all last week. I’m hoping we start to get some answers.

    Elizabeth

  • Happy Holidays from egmCarTech

    Drunk Santa

    We wanted to let you know that we’ll be taking a day off today to celebrate the Holidays with our families. We should be back tomorrow with some new content. Happy Holidays from everyone here at egmCarTech. Drive home safe from wherever you’re driving from.

    While you’re here – check out one of our favorite videos of a drunk Santa getting pulled over. Also, let us know what you found under the tree this morning in the comments section after the jump.

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Christmas Day…how’s your sugar?

    After a total binge yesterday I have been on my p’s and q’s. For lunch I concentrated on the low carb stuff–ham, collards(no fat), small amount of potato salad, a taste of carrot casserole(made with splenda), olives. And I’m totally satisfied. My 2hrpp was 80 so I feel a small snack coming on. I’m pretty proud of myself, given how bad I was yesterday.

    So, how *you* doin’?

  • iPhone … in an iPhone

    Filed under: , , ,

    Here’s a nice post-Christmas mind bender for you — it’s created by a company named Ogmento (they specialize in augmented reality applications — get it?) and is an iPhone app that creates an augmented reality version of the iPhone. In other words, they put an iPhone in your iPhone so you can iPhone while you iPhone. Dawg.

    Why did they do this? Apparently it’s a promotion for the iPhone launch by Orange Telecom in Israel. But it’s pretty crazy — the iPhone inside the app even runs apps, though they’re just still pictures. And it’s a little disappointing that you interact with the fake iPhone via the real iPhone’s touchscreen. If it really was an augmented reality demonstration, wouldn’t you interact with the augmented reality iPhone just by moving your hand in the air where it should be?

    Maybe that’s too mind-melting after a relaxing Christmas day. At any rate, enjoy the crazy video above. This isn’t anything we’ll see coming to the App Store any time soon, we’re sure, but it’s just the kind of thing to get your mind up and running again after all that egg nog and holiday cheer.

    TUAWiPhone … in an iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Sloppiest Drug Companies of 2009 (GENZ)

    Broken Vial

    As healthcare reform hits a historical turning point (for better or worse), Jim Edwards at BNET Pharma reminisces about some of the most screwed up drug companies’ in 2009.

    They’re a nice reminder of how dangerous investing in drug companies can be. You really never know what kind of huge, random disaster is going to pop up.

    Such as this:

    BNET Pharma:

    Genzyme (GENZ) Your company holds a monopoly on a drug for Gaucher’s disease. It’s a license to print money. How do you screw this up? Do what what Genzyme did: Introduce a bunch of garbage — literally bits of rubber and metal — into your drugs. Have this come after one of your sites was infected with a virus. Get two new drugs rejected by the FDA and have a third one dropped during R&D. Meanwhile, make sure your CEO spends the year enriching himself with a $10 million stock sale on top of $50 million in compensation over the previous three years. That’s why Genzyme ended the year with Genzyme’s founder calling for CEO Henri Termeer to resign.

    Continue reading the five worst drug companies at BNET Pharma >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Camaro exterior designer Sang Yup Lee moves to VW/Audi

    Filed under: , , ,

    Sang Yup Lee

    GM designer Sang Yup Lee has left for the enormous and vast wilds of the VW empire. Lee was the exterior designer of the 2010 Camaro, 50th Anniversary Stingray Concept, Buick Velite, and he worked on the C6 Corvette. Having spent time with him on a few occasions, we can also say he’s an all-around great guy.

    His new position, as chief exterior designer at the Volkswagen/Audi Advanced studio in California, will begin next month. Lee will report to Executive Design Director Jens Manske, and is apparently is charged with ‘inspiring’ the merged design divisions. We look forward to a future of brawny, haunchy, badass VWs, even if only in concept form.

    [Source: Car Design News]

    Camaro exterior designer Sang Yup Lee moves to VW/Audi originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 17:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Why and How Embargoes Work in Tech Blogging

    stringfinger.jpgAn embargo is something that tech companies use to set a time when their product will launch and the press can publish their reviews of it. Embargoes aren’t as simple as they sound and they aren’t uncontroversial, either.

    We believe they can be a good idea, though. Below we discuss why and share thoughts about how we think an embargo can be run well. If you’ve got comments to share, don’t be shy, that’s what the comments section of a blog is for.

    Sponsor

    redux_150x150.png

    Editor’s note: This story is part of a series we call Redux, where we’ll re-publish some of our best posts of 2009. As we look back at the year – and ahead to what next year holds – we think these are the stories that deserve a second glance. It’s not just a best-of list, it’s also a collection of posts that examine the fundamental issues that continue to shape the Web. We hope you enjoy reading them again and we look forward to bringing you more Web products and trends analysis in 2010. Happy holidays from Team ReadWriteWeb!

    Why Embargoes?

    Not every announcement needs to be embargoed, but complicated ones involving new technology can benefit from such an exercise. Tech blogging is really competitive, some blogs won’t write later about something discovered by one of their competitors. None of us like to, we don’t want to give our readers the impression that we’re slow on the news or have people skip our posts because they already read about something elsewhere.

    Here’s why embargoes can be good.

    • They give multiple blogs a chance to review a technology in depth, instead of making it a race.
    • This means readers get to read multiple perspectives on an interesting topic. Different bloggers have different strengths and ways of looking at things.
    • Embargoes lead to more total coverage than exclusives. If you’re someone for whom the only thing that mattered in high school was to win the approval of the most popular kid in school and you want to extend that philosophy into your work life as an adult – then the richness and breadth of your work and life experience will suffer accordingly. Exclusives are the tactic of people with weak products and of reporters who compete better in bullying than in writing.

    How to Run an Embargo

    This is one way to do it, but we think it’s a good way.

    Ask Writers if They Want Pre-release Info Under Embargo.

    lolbear.jpgSending an email briefly describing what’s being launched and asking if a writer wants more pre-release info under embargo is a good way to entice people into engaging in conversation and to receive an explicit reply accepting the embargo.

    A lot of people have been sending emails lately with all the information in them and asserting that it’s embargoed until a particular time. Apparently accepting the embargo is assumed, but it seems a stretch to hold someone responsible for something they haven’t agreed to.

    Additionally, having a conversation is much more effective than shooting out one complete email and crossing your fingers.

    Right: From ICanHazCheeseBurger, a blog you can always trust with an embargo.

    Make Sure The Subject of the Embargo is…Embargoed

    There is no sense in telling writers they can’t write about something that’s publicly available on the front of your website until a later date. An embargo involves an agreement hold off writing until a given time – in exchange for a chance to take a look at something before it’s publicly available. If it’s live and easily found – then anyone could find it. Thus anyone could write about it and it’s fair game at any time.

    Reach Out to Bloggers Large and Not so Large

    A handful of top blogs in any niche are used to receiving press inquiries. Medium sized, up and coming blogs, usually only get spam or press releases for unexciting things. Offering to include an up and coming blog in an embargoed release is a sign of respect that will be appreciated. It will lead to more coverage, more links, and more perspectives. Readers don’t read every post on the big blogs, many people will discover you through a post on a smaller blog or they will take the time to read about you after noticing that a number of people have written about your launch.

    There’s a sprawling network of tech blogs online and ideally your release would hit big and medium ones with such compelling news that an even larger number of smaller blogs would follow up with posts of their own. Blogging is a long tail world – choosing instead to put all your eggs in one basket (with an “exclusive,” for example) isn’t necessary or necessarily in your best interest.

    That said, the only incentive bloggers have to respect embargoes is that they want to receive more embargoed information again in the future. It’s serious or aspiring news-type blogs that have that incentive.

    Send the Info and Offer to Talk

    Some companies refuse to send launch info unless a blogger agrees to talk to their CEO on the phone. Co-incidentally, those CEOs are often particularly obnoxious. The best PR agents will accept a request to just send out a release and other pertinent info – along with an offer to talk. Many times it won’t be necessary.

    What is much more helpful is to make yourself available in the days and hours leading up to the embargo to answer any questions that come up. Providing a phone number, email and IM contact info for someone who can answer questions promptly is a big help.

    Then, Lift the Embargo!

    At the agreed upon time, push whatever you’re launching live and go check out your blog coverage. Best practices for engaging with that coverage are subject enough for several other blog posts.

    Questions

    Will Bloggers Respect My Embargo?

    If you do it right, they most likely will. At least 95% of the embargoes we see get respected by all the blogs that were included. Some are better than others, a few are downright awful. You can figure it out. Most are great, at least in our field.

    What Do I do If A Blogger Breaks My Embargo?

    There’s a number of ways you can handle it but here’s one option. Leave a matter of fact comment on the post (”This was embargoed until 4 hours from now and I would have appreciated it if you could have respected that.”) and then let the other blogs you’d reached out to know that the embargo has been broken. You probably don’t need to tell them by who, they’ll check and find out on their own. Then they’ll either run their story about you, or if they hadn’t written it yet then they may not cover you at all.

    Then ask yourself honestly if this was actually your own fault due to unclear or inconsistent communication. All serious news bloggers try to respect embargoes because that’s part of the business. Sometimes they are thick headed, though, and that’s how it goes.

    How Much Lead Time Should I Give an Embargo and What Day of the Week Should It Lift?

    It’s up to you but we’d recommend three days lead time, lifting Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday – depending on an honest assessment of how exciting your product is. It’s a crap shoot.

    That’s How We See it, How About You?

    The above is just one take on embargoes in tech blogging. We know there are lots of other ways to look at it. See, for example, Louis Gray’s excellent post this month where he makes similar arguments in more detail or pro-journalist Mathew Ingram’s contrary post Embargoes: Thanks but No Thanks.

    Thoughts? Feelings? Suggestions? Leave them in comments, because that’s one of the things that makes blogging such a great form of media.

    Title image: Untitled, CC from Flickr user Lauren.

    Discuss


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  • USB 3.0-infused DisplayLink products coming in 2010

    DVI, HDMI and DisplayPort may be enjoying the spoils right now, but the world’s most popular port may just give ‘em a run for their collective dollars by the end of next year. DisplayLink, which enables monitors to receive signals via USB instead of through one of the more conventional cables, has been mildly successful with USB 2.0 at the helm, but a whole new world is about to open up with the introduction of USB 3.0. As you’ve no doubt seen by now, the third iteration offers up over ten times the bandwidth of v2.0, which would obviously allow for great resolution support when channeling video. In reality, USB 3.0 is the first USB protocol that could support a legitimate high-def video stream, and it’s expected that a prototype device will be shown at CES next month transmitting content at up to 4.8 gigabits per second. In theory, at least, USB 3.0-enabled DisplayLink would allow vast 30-inch panels to be connected to netbooks via USB without having to rely on a sub-native resolution, but then again, said netbooks will probably need a GPU with a bit more oomph than the current Ion can provide. Not like that’ll be an issue for long, though.

    USB 3.0-infused DisplayLink products coming in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 16:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What’s Link Cloaking and Why is it so Important?

    If there’s one characteristic that defines a good internet marketer, it’s adaptability. The online marketing world moves so fast — faster than any other industry around — and those that make their fortunes online always move faster than anyone else. From the arbitrage heydays to the modern era of CPA affiliate products, top internet marketers are always looking a step ahead, and are always looking for the ultimate advantage.

    There’s one aspect of internet marketing that attracts its fair share of controversy and discussion. It’s link cloaking, of course, and the discussion is around whether it’s really necessary for affiliates. For those who don’t know, link cloaking is simply a visual disguising of affiliate links, leading the URL to appear as an in-site page, when in reality it’s an outbound link. Why is this so important to affiliates? Well, let’s have a look.

    To begin with, link cloaking is important for affiliates that make most of their sales through blogs and personal recommendations. A large portion of affiliates, particularly those who operate large scale online companies, keep a personal or professional blog. While it’s rarely their major income source, most affiliates occasionally use promotional links on their blog. The problem is that many readers are instantly skeptical of what they view as paid recommendations. Whenever they mouse over a link’s anchor text and see an affiliate code, they back away and don’t make a sale.

    This is where link cloaking can help with a direct sale. Rather than having readers shy away from a great product, link cloaking can help marketers direct reader to the product. When they see an inbound link with a domain that they trust, they’re sold. All that’s standing between them and the sale is the quality of the product itself.

    Secondly, link cloaking is essential for certain marketing channels. While Google Adwords has often been a favorite for affiliates, they’ve recently changed their policies and appear to be taking a harder stance on affiliate products, particularly those with unclear conditions and slightly misleading terms. While this isn’t a problem for most affiliates — the majority of whom promote products that fall well inside the terms and conditions — some affiliates are having trouble getting their PPC ads to show, after being struck with a poor quality score.

    This is where link cloaking can again save the day. Rather than having a direct link leading to an affiliate page, direct-to-offer PPC advertisers can cloak their links and have them redirect through their own server. This isn’t just perfect for avoiding the infamous Google slap, but also for adding tracking data and inter-offer landing pages.

    There’s a third, top secret, advantage to using link cloaking. While most affiliate websites offer long-term cookies, few will cover multiple products. With the right strategy, you could incorporate multiple affiliate links into a single cloaking redirect, leaving you with the potential to earn twice as many commissions per clicker. Alongside the other great benefits of link cloaking, this really sweetens the deal, and makes link cloaking an absolutely essential practice for serious affiliates, full-time internet marketers, and dedicated online entrepreneurs.

    To learn more about link cloaking, check out the free Cloak & Dagger Affiliate Secrets report. Feel free to distribute this article in any form as long as you include this resource box. You can also include your affiliate link if you sign up at Phantom Link Cloaker.



  • 5 Reasons Why YOU Should Be Cloaking Affiliate Links

    Becoming a top affiliate marketer is hard, especially when you’ve got endless competition snooping in on your methods. The affiliate marketing industry is tough, and without guarding your secrets it’s easy to see them spill out for everyone to apply, mastermind, and earn from. There’s nothing more disappointing than seeing your hard work pay out for someone else, which is why it’s absolutely essential to clock all of your affiliate links.

    While cloaking sounds like an ultra-difficult procedure, it’s really pretty simple. By using some intuitive link-cloaking software, you can have all your affiliate links pointing right at their targets, without your buyers even knowing. If you’re still not sold on link cloaking, these five reasons should have you begging for a simple cloaking solution.

    1. Cautious buyers can smell an affiliate link from miles away.
    It’s true. We’ve read so many blogs, seen so many recommendation pages, and viewed so many ‘review’ websites that we’ve become cautious of affiliate links. It’s just the nature of recommendations; while some people trust personal recommendations, others back away from a sale when it looks like a paid commission. With link cloaking, every one of your affiliate links is disguised, so buyers won’t be worrying about buying from a commission-generating source.

    2. Affiliate managers love to steal commission data.
    Data theft is a sad truth of the affiliate world. As helpful as most affiliate managers are, there are always bad apples who scrub sales, steal data, and milk your campaigns for their own commissions. Affiliate networks need to know that you’re not sending fraudulent traffic, but they don’t need to know exactly where your traffic is coming from. Link cloaking can help you avoid the potential theft of your traffic sources, and minimize the chances of your commissions going missing.

    3. Without cloaking, hackers can steal affiliate information.
    Did you know that there are pop-ups out there designed to do nothing other than detect affiliate links and substitute one account number for another? That way, whenever a sale is made, you’re not getting credit. Instead, the commission credit goes to a hacker, who carefully planted adware on a user’s computer. Since cloaking takes your affiliate link out of the URL bar, hackers can’t access the data, and automated scripts like this are powerless when it comes to stealing your commissions.

    4. Cloaking is essential for good affiliate monitoring.
    You are tracking your data, aren’t you? If you’re using self-hosted tracking software such as 202, you need to be cloaking your links too. Whether you’re running traffic through a landing page or directly to the affiliate page, setting up tracking alongside your cloaking makes it easier to monitor user behavior, track conversion rates and EPC data, and split test different types of linking and landing pages.

    5. Cloaking can help with SEO.
    We’ve all experienced Google’s recent crackdown on affiliate products. When your pages are indexed, any affiliate links could be hurting your ranking. It’s a little unfair, that’s for sure, but it’s the rules that we’ve got to play by. By cloaking your links, search engines are powerless to detect any affiliate products, and you could end up getting a better ranking, or for PPC users, a better quality score.

    To learn more about link cloaking, check out the free Cloak & Dagger Affiliate Secrets report. Feel free to distribute this article in any form as long as you include this resource box. You can also include your affiliate link if you sign up at Phantom Link Cloaker.


  • Here’s Lookin Atcha!!!

    This is a set of pics of my eyes, including ones of the backs of my eyeballs. This was part of my eye examination when I participated in the Joslin Medalist Study. Have any of you ever had pics like this taken?

  • Chapura’s PocketMirror Now Version 2.0, Syncs Tasks

    Tasks Screen of Chapura PocketMirror Version 2

    In my earlier review of Chapura’s PocketMirror program, I noted that while memos had been added to the data types that the program could synchronize between the Pre/Pixi and Microsoft Outlook, tasks were still only a promised upgrade. There were also some performance issues I noted.

    Recently, version 2.0.0 of PocketMirror hit the App Catalog and, along with the latest version of the Windows desktop portion (which can be downloaded here), the program now syncs tasks as well as memos, calendar events and contacts. As with memos/notes, PocketMirror’s syncing maintains categories across the two platforms, and can also support timed notifications (which work on the Pre even when the program’s card is not open). Also as with memos, though, Chapura provides/requires its own standalone application for tasks, which is understandable, given the limits of the Pre’s own native Tasks and Memos programs.

    In my brief look at the new version, it appears that the memo application has been improved as well. The noticeable delay between the app launching and the memos being displayed is essentially gone, and the synchronization of memos seems speedier. The program still lacks sorting capabilities beyond categories (I would like to be able to sort by date created, not just alphabetically), but hopefully that will appear in a future release. There is also still no way to put a separate icon for Chapura Memos and Tasks on the launcher screen, but the Preferences menu does allow you to choose which element (Memos, Tasks or Sync) will appear when the program is first launched, with the others easily accessible via icons at the bottom of the screen.

    Unfortunately, with the new tasks feature set comes an increase in price, from the former $29.95 to $39.95 (although the upgrade is free for purchasers of the earlier versions.) While it is certainly pricier than most standalone Pre apps, it is comparable to other desktop utility software, or to similar synchronization packages such as Mark/Space’s The Missing Sync, and likely reflects the greater complexity and support burden of a desktop/smartphone combination software product.

    Even at its higher new price, PocketMirror remains an extremely useful addition to webOS for users of notes (and now tasks) in Microsoft Outlook, as it adds the synchronization features for those elements that Palm failed to provide for the Pre and Pixi. For previous purchasers, the upgrade is both free and quite welcome.

  • Raising a healthy, happy, well-mannered parrot takes knowledge.


    Did you just get a new parrot or are thinking about getting one?
    There are some very important things that you should know about parrots. To raise a healthy, happy, well-mannered parrot check out
    Click Here! To check out Raising Polly

    When you buy Raising Polly, this is what you’ll get:

    The ebook, “RAISING POLLY: How-to Raise a Healthy, Happy, Well Adjusted Bird.”

    Plus you get 2 Free Bonus Gifts
    FREE AUDIO copy of “RAISING POLLY.”

    FREE BONUS BOOK, “TRAINING YOUR PARROT.”

    Maybe you already have a parrot. Then you know how intelligent they can be. If you’re looking to train your parrot to do some tricks, the bonus ebook, “TRAINING YOUR PARROT:12 Simple Tricks Any Parrot Can Learn!” is for you.

    I taught my African Grey and Jenday Conure to wave in one day! My African Grey is only 1 1/2 but, my Jenday Conure is 11 years old. It doesn’t matter what age your parrot is, they can still learn.

    Click Here! To check out Raising Polly

    You won’t be disappointed!



  • GSE Bailout after Christmas Eve Market Close

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

    ( part 2 click here)

    reading the BOLD RED TYPE pretty much sums it up.

    A pretty nifty move as no congressional support is needed. – BC

    cumberland1

    special Christmas day posting by David Kotok: Government by Stealth: the GSE affair continues – David Kotok – … We didn’t plan on writing today but are doing so to be sure our clients and readers and the especially the 300 worldwide journalists on our list see the action just taken by the Treasury Department under Secretary Geithner.  It was clearly designed to minimize the press coverage of the changes in the GSEs.  This item was released after the closure of the healthcare debate and after the extension of the debt limit passed and after the president left for his Hawaii trip.   Sent out on Thursday afternoon, Christmas Eve, the press release outlines the many changes that Treasury is making because of the worsening conditions of Fannie and Freddie.  And it paves the way for the recognition of losses in the hundreds of billions in the GSE mortgage pools where the face amounts of the mortgages exceed the property market values or foreclosure amounts. … – Cumberland Advisors

    ————

    istock-analyst

    US Tsy Unveils Changes to Programs Supporting Fannie,Freddie – The U.S. Treasury waited until markets closed Christmas Eve to announce a series of changes to its support of the housing-related government sponsored enterprises, which it says will ensure stability of the secondary mortgage market without increasing expected taxpayer exposure. … But they said it should give current and future investors in mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by GSEs and GSE debt assurance they can continue to purchase that debt with confidence in the solvency of the institutions. … – iMarketNews.com

    ————

    washington-post

    U.S. promises unlimited financial assistance to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac – By Zachary A. Goldfarb – The Obama administration pledged Thursday to provide unlimited financial assistance to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, an eleventh-hour move that allows the government to exceed the current $400 billion cap on emergency aid without seeking permission from a bailout-weary Congress.  The Christmas Eve announcement by the Treasury Department means that it can continue to run the companies, which were seized last year, as arms of the government for the rest of President Obama’s current term.  – Washington Post

    ————

    boston

    US removes $400b cap on aid to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac – By J.W. Elphinstone – … So far, taxpayers have shelled out $111 billion to the pair.  Yesterday, Treasury officials said the cap would be replaced with a flexible formula. The goal is to ensure the two agencies can stand behind the billions of dollars in mortgage-backed securities they sell to investors. .. – AP Boston Globe

  • Why so few paid Android apps? Blame Google Checkout

    android-market-16-smThe new monthly report on location-based apps from Dutch app store analytics firm Distimo and American location-detection technology maker Skyhook Wireless opens with a striking stat: Only 21 percent of the location-based Android mobile apps in Google’s Android Market app store have a price tag. Most are free.

    Why is that? After all, Apple’s app store has over 100,000 apps, of which 57 percent have a price tag. And BlackBerry’s store is 49 percent paid apps. Doesn’t anyone want to make money off the hot new phone platform?

    Distimo co-founder and CEO Vincent Hoogsteder says it’s combination of two factors. “First, Android Market has significantly more free applications because of Google’s less strict approval process,” he emailed me. Apple’s mystery-box methodology can take weeks to approve — or reject — an app. The system has delayed product launches and prompted some developers to abandon the iPhone.

    Getting an app into Android Market is much less of a dice roll. Also, Android’s open-source operating system attracts software developers who enjoy giving away their works, rather than trying to make a sideline business out of them. These factors raise the ratio of free apps in the Android store compared to iPhone or BlackBerry.

    Second, Hoogsteder says that from his experience working with app developers, Google’s requirement that payments be made through Google Checkout has put off many of them.

    distimo“The majority of iPhone users have a credit card attached to their iTunes account and are therefore able to buy applications in the Apple App Store with just one click,” Hoogsteder said. “Users with an Android phone use their regular Google Account, which does not require them to sign up for Google Checkout. The first moment the user is asked to provide his credit card details is after he actually decides to buy a first app in the Android Market.”

    Having to haul out a credit card and type it into a phone, or go to a computer to do it, is enough of a hurdle that Hoogsteder believes many Android phone owners choose to stick with the free apps instead. App developers, seeing that the paying Android customer base are much smaller and less spendy than their iPhone counterparts, don’t rush to build an Android version of their app.

    15392v5-max-250x250So what’s it going to take to change that? Hoogsteder thinks carrier billing, where Android app purchases show up on your phone bill instead of your credit card, will get people to start buying. T-Mobile began offering carrier billing for some phones earlier this month.

    He also thinks the pending arrival of hugely popular paid iPhone apps, such as the $50-and-up turn-by-turn navigation apps from TomTom and Navigon, will get Android users to punch in their credit cards and become regular paying customers of Android Market, and will socialize the idea that yes, it’s OK to give your Droid your MasterCard number.

    Me, I think carrier billing won’t catch on in America the way it has in Hoogsteder’s Netherlands. Americans have balked for years and years at having purchases billed to our phone service contracts. We don’t trust the phone companies not to run up the tab with service charges and taxes, or to make expensive billing errors.

    I also think pundits underestimate the power of the Google brand beneath which Android sits. We’re used to getting mind-bendingly powerful, delightfully innovative tools from Google for free. Never mind that Android apps are built by third parties, not Google. To most people, Android equals Google. Since when have we paid Google for anything?

    [Screenshot: Engadget]


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  • Merry Christmas Everyone!

     Steph_holiday09

    Hope all of you are enjoying food, festivities, and loved ones! Tis the season for gratitude.

    Thank you for your readership. It is a wonderful gift 🙂


  • Merry Christmas Everybody

    christmas2.jpgGreetings! On behalf of the GigaOM family, I wanted to take a moment and wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. I hope you are all resting and taking a much-needed break after a very hectic 2009. More importantly, the end of the year is a good time for all of us to focus on what really matters — our families, loved ones and relationships. Merry Christmas!


  • Homebrew, the perfect gift for command line lovers

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    If you’re an OS X user who spends as much time on the command line as you do in the GUI, you’re probably familiar with the MacPorts and Fink package management projects, making open source software easier to compile and run on Mac OS X. You may also be well-aware of the shortcomings of these projects when it comes to future-proof package management. A new, open source project called Homebrew may be exactly what you’ve been looking for. If you’re not a lover of all things CLI, send a link to Homebrew as a great (free) last-minute gift for the Terminal-lover in your life.

    My favorite thing about Homebrew is its ability to function perfectly well with /usr/local as its base directory, installing packages in their own folders but linking them to /usr/local/command. This makes them manageable with existing command line tools. Homebrew can work out of any directory you like, if /usr/local isn’t your cup of tea. Installed packages are optimized and stripped based on your architecture, and makes great use of libraries you already have installed or that came with the system, reducing duplication and speeding up download, compile and install times significantly. Add in the zero-config installation, an already-extensive list of “formulas” (packages), a greatly-reduced need to sudo anything, and a Ruby-based framework for creating your own formulae and you’ve got a killer package for extending your command line toolset.

    Homebrew is available for free on GitHub, and the main page has complete instructions for various types of installation (and reasons why you’d pick each one). Check it out, and have a merry CLI-mas!

    TUAWHomebrew, the perfect gift for command line lovers originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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