My Writings. My Thoughts.

From London’s Creativity and Technology Conference

// November 22nd, 2009 // No Comments » // Bigger Picture

Nokia’s Mr. Greenfield discussed the concept of a network city, where data — might it be bureaucratic, health or traffic — harvested from urban systems can be fed back to change things like traffic patterns or building conditions in real-time.

“We need to stop thinking of the city as bricks that don’t communicate,” he said. “In the computer revolution, every constant in the world becomes a variable; everything around us is scriptable, which makes everything deeply interactive.” - AdAge

http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=140678

Google’s Schmidt Says AdMob Will Expand IPhone Ads

// November 11th, 2009 // No Comments » // Competition, Google, Mobile Computing

Nov. 11 (Bloomberg) — Google Inc. Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt said his company’s $750 million purchase of AdMob Inc. will expand sales of ads that appear in applications on smart phones such as the iPhone.

“AdMob is clearly the best of its ilk for applications monetization,” Schmidt said yesterday in an interview at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California. “We think that’s as strategic as search monetization, which, of course, we’re very good at.”

Together, AdMob and Google will be the largest mobile- advertising company, with about 30 percent to 40 percent of the market, according to Karsten Weide, an analyst with researcher IDC in San Mateo, California. The purchase will allow advertisers to get their brands in front of consumers who use games, personal-finance tools and music programs on the iPhone and devices using Google’s Android software, Schmidt said.

“One the key success points for the iPhone was this enormous development of apps, and particularly free apps, which are advertising supported,” said Schmidt, 54. “Now that we have our Android platform coming out, and really with some serious partners behind it, it will also be important to have that be true for Android as well as the others.”

Smart-Phone Apps

Google, owner of the world’s most popular search engine, is using stock to buy AdMob. After the deal is completed, the company plans to use cash to buy back $750 million of Google shares, Schmidt said. That would prevent the transaction from diluting investors’ holdings.

The iPhone, which Apple Inc. started selling in 2007, now has more than 100,000 applications. Google’s Android, a smart- phone operating system that was first offered on phones last year, has more than 12,000 programs. Verizon Wireless, the biggest U.S. wireless carrier, released a new line of Android phones called Droid last week.

AdMob ads appear within applications such as local business finder Yelp and music game Tap Tap. The ads typically are displayed as a banner at the top or bottom of the screen, and are also displayed on mobile Web sites. In June, Google started testing ads on applications, sharing revenue with the creator of the program.

Google also sells ads that appear when people search the Web on their phones for things like books, flat-screen televisions and vacations.

Sales of smart phones climbed 27 percent worldwide in the second quarter, even as total mobile-handset sales dropped 6.1 percent, according to researcher Gartner Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut.

Mobile Revenue

“Our mobile revenue is growing faster than our regular revenue,” Schmidt said. “All of the signs indicate a great success in this space.”

Google rose $4.59 to $571.35 at 9:39 a.m. New York time on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The stock had jumped 84 percent this year before today.

AdMob is Google’s biggest acquisition after YouTube, bought for $1.65 billion in 2006, and DoubleClick Inc., a $3.2 billion takeover announced last year. Schmidt said he doubts purchases the size of AdMob will become the norm, adding that Google will probably make an acquisition every month or so.

“There are relatively few companies that are worth that kind of money,” Schmidt said. “We are actively talking to lots and lots of potential small companies to help complete our vision.”

Google is hiring again after the company cut back during the recession, Schmidt said. The company had about 19,665 workers at the end of the third quarter, down from more than 20,000 last year.

“We are absolutely planning to increase our headcount and we’re aggressively trying to find the best talent as we did historically,” Schmidt said. “We are back in business –hiring people.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Womack in San Francisco at Bwomack1@bloomberg.net

The ‘Web Squared’ Era

// September 24th, 2009 // No Comments » // Bigger Picture, Internet, Mobile Computing, Software

Tim O’Reilly and Jennifer Pahlka 09.24.09, 12:19 PM ET

timoreilly_170x1701

It is hard to imagine that five years ago, neither YouTube, Facebook nor Twitter existed. But even then, as sites like Google, Amazon, Wikipedia and craigslist flourished, the characteristics common to successful second-generation Web businesses were becoming apparent: Their value was facilitated by software and created collectively by and for a community of connected users. These sites leveraged the Web not simply as a means to publish static documents but for the first time as a platform–which was significant in its generative properties as the personal computer was for desktop applications. The new sites also sparked a revolution in business, culture, society and, most recently, government.

Web 2.0, the name we gave this phenomenon in 2004 when we named our new conference, turns five on Oct. 5 (the anniversary of the first Web 2.0 Summit). In our ongoing quest to understand where technology is taking us, the milestone serves as an opportunity not so much to look back but to examine the landscape ahead. Whereas the advent of Web 2.0 marked a profound shift in the meaning of the Web, this next phase is less a new direction than an exploration of what becomes possible when the building blocks of Web 2.0 (such as participation, collective intelligence and so on) increase by orders of magnitude.

We call this step Web Squared. Continue Reading

Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg on the Value of Viral Loops

// September 21st, 2009 // No Comments » // Business, Facebook, Internet

mark-zuckerberg

By Adam Penenberg
This interview was conducted during research for my book, Viral Loop

While still a teenager Mark Zuckerberg coded and launched Facebook–a digital version of the traditional college facebook–in his Harvard dorm room in February 2004. Within weeks virtually the entire campus had signed up. He and his roommates, Chris Hughes and Dustin Moscowitz, then ported the social networking site to other Ivy League campuses, and the rest, as they say, is history. Today Facebook continues to grow at a frantic rate, with hundreds of millions of users across the globe.

Continue Reading