Category Archives: Technology

Where Does Wall Street Add Value?

I had lunch today with a guy I share office space with. He is a partner at a small investment bank and has spent his entire career at various investment banks, helping companies raise capital. He is part of Wall Street, and Wall Street pays for his house and his kids’ private schools. And yet even this insider, when our conversation turned to proprietary trading and hedge fund, he remarked “What do those guys really add to society? They don’t build anything. They don’t allocate capital. They just make money from gaming the market.”

It’s true. When we discussed Renaissance Technologies’ 45% annual return since 1988, I noted that there are 90 PhDs, mostly in physics and computer science, working there. Think of the great things those guys might invent if they were trying to grow something other than their bank accounts.

iPad A Mixed Bag

I’m a little late in commenting on the iPad, but I did want to make a couple of quick points.

First, for those who call the iPad a PC-killer, think again. The iPad may be great for consuming information, but it’s not so good if you have to actually create information. In other words, if all you need is to browse the web, read things, and type a few emails, the Pad could be your everyday machine. If, in other words, you are a techie who wants a toy, or possibly a senior executive who reads documents but doesn’t create them. But if you actually have to produce work – documents, presentations, spreadsheets, accounting reports – then you are still going to want a device with a full-sized screen and keyboard, and the ability to easily cut and paste among the various applications. In other words, you want a real computer.

Second, the population of people who only need to consume information is probably pretty high, and the Pad pricing is low enough to appeal fairly broadly, so it could be a successful product. Could. But the tech business is littered with the carcasses of products that had feet in two different markets, but weren’t entirely comfortable with either. Too big to fit in a pocket but too small to be really useful can be an unpleasant place to be, as my friends at OQO can attest. And if the Pad is an incremental gadget, rather than a replacement, as my first paragraph indicates, that too will cause problems, since it limits the market to those willing and able to acquire a new device. Finally, using a custom chip designed in-house certainly can improve performance, especially because of hardware/software integration, but as countless companies have learned, the in-house approach leaves you falling further and further behind the cost curves of your competitors. Just ask Jonathan Schwartz of Sun, who lost his job when Oracle saved Sun from oblivion.

That being said, if anybody can defeat the tweener curse, it’s Apple.

Is Twitter Destroying Civilization?

Vanity Fair recently ran an article about “tweethearts,” who are women leveraging their popularity on Twitter (and their looks) into more popularity, and potentially business opportunities. Apparently the article is somewhat controversial, since it makes the women appear to be twits more than twilebrities, but given how the women posed for the article photo (see below), I’m not sure they can complain.

But I want to focus on how these women emphasis the speed and brevity of Twitter. Read these two quotes:

  • “Facebook is just way too slow,” says Stefanie Michaels, a twilebrity from Brentwood, California. “I can’t deal with that kind of deep engagement.”
  • “Sometimes,” says Julia Roy, a 26-year-old New York social strategist turned twilebrity, scrunching her face, “when you’re Twittering all the time, you even start to think in 140 characters.”

Um, hello? Facebook is too deep? You think in 140 characters? That sounds like the brain of a Golden Retriever, not a businessperson. So using Twitter makes you shallow and unable to think complex thoughts? If constant Tweeting turns people into vapid soundbites, making us a nation of Tila Tequilas instead of George Wills, then we are on the road to ruin. There are serious challenges facing this country, and they won’t be solved through discussions made up of 140 character Tweets. We need more depth, not less.

Tweethearts, courtesy of Vanity Fair

Short Links Getting Safer

I am always hesitant to click on those shortened links that Bit.ly and TinyURL produce, because who knows what sort of Russian porn-gambling site they might lead you to? As if I need the NSA crawling over me any more than they already are.

But today TechCrunch reports that Bit.ly at least is teaming up with three anti-spam services to help make their short links safer. TinyURL will likely have to pursue similar efforts or they will quickly lose market share. So link away, my Twittering friends.

I Agree With WSJ Op-Ed — Amazing!

This is truly a miracle! For the first time in memory, there is an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal with which I actually agree. Mostly. And it’s by Holman Jenkins, who is usually such a tax-cutting, market-loving, poor person-hating cretin that I am often amazed he is even literate. But here we are on the same page. He expresses his views in his usual caustic and hyperbolic fashion, but I’m on board with his analysis.

The issue is net neutrality, and the possibility of FCC regulations on the matter. Jenkins points out that while there is a theoretical possibility of carriers favoring their own content over 3rd party content, this has yet to actually happen. He also notes that carriers invest billions in the infrastructure needed to carry ever more data, and that they need to recoup that investment. Finally, he points out that if carriers do not charge differential rates to content suppliers, the obvious solution is to charge differential rates to content users, namely charging more for heavy bandwidth users, which is clearly an equitable solution. In all cases, I agree with Jenkins.

This is also rare for the Journal, but the first two letters to the editor regarding Jenkins’ column, which can be found here, are also quite reasonable.

Follow Up to Markets & Health Care

Just a quick link to this article by a pediatric cardiologist giving both data and anecdotes on what bad consumers we all are when it comes to health care. Something to keep in mind as we look at more market-driven approaches to our health care system.

iPhone Bad For the Psyche?

I recently saw a magazine ad for the iPhone. This ad was promoting the app store, and was specifically pushing small business apps. “Helping you run your small business, one app at a time” was the headline of the ad. This post isn’t about the iPhone per se, although my friends know how I mock their Apple toys, and how I compare the iPhone to the Range Rover: overpriced, unreliable, and purchased primarily for brand status. Hmmm, maybe I should compare it to a Gucci purse instead….

Anyway, the point is not the iPhone; the point is some of these ridiculous apps. I call them ridiculous because they do things that nobody needs to do while mobile. Let me list a few here:

  • Nomia: Get help picking a business name, finding available domain names and running trademark searches.
  • Analytics: See how your website is doing with reports showing visitors, page views, etc.
  • Credit Card Terminal: Accept customer credit card payments right on your phone.

Here’s the thing: I do run a small business, and I have never had the urge to do any of those things while mobile. When I’m analyzing my website or processing orders, I’m doing it at my computer, so that I can make adjustments or run things through my accounting software. I can certainly imagine circumstances where one might want to do such things while on the run, but those circumstances are rare.

Some might say: why be tethered to your computer? But I retort: why be connected all the time? Do you really want to check your website performance while at the beach? I relish the chance to disconnect. As more and more Americans are complaining about lack of time to think, or play, or spend with their kids, do we really need to be online more? Instead of apps that let you look at your website stats while on the bus, maybe Apple should promote apps that remind you to read to your children.

Is Healthcare Rationing Inevitable?

Yesterday’s NY Times magazine preview had a thought-provoking article by Peter Singer on health care rationing. Singer clearly comes at this from an extreme position (this is a guy whose fame is due to weighing hypothetical lives against each other), but he raises some excellent points. I’m not sure where I come down on rationing, and how it might work, but it’s clear that spending $50,000 on new drugs that only extend life by a few months is not a sustainable system. As congress gets ready to debate the health care bills coming out of committee, we should all start thinking about how America pays for health care, and reading Singer’s article is a good place to start. You only really need to read the first half. In the second half he goes into his usual shtick about disabled people vs. fully abled and goes off point.

The Internet and Democracy

I have always been something of an internet contrarian, claiming since 1996 – despite having worked in the internet industry the entire time – that the whole thing is overrated. And now, finally, I have someone on my side. Harvard law professor Cass Sunstein, who President Obama named head of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, recently published a critique of the internet.

Specifically, Sunstein claims that the Internet creates self- reinforcing communication systems, in which internet users choose to associate solely with like-minded individuals, thereby reducing the diversity of opinion to which they are exposed, and so become more and more fixed in their viewpoints. Sunstein is not the first to discuss this, and it seems fairly common sense that single-viewpoint exposure will narrow one’s range of beliefs.

But Sunstein adds empirical data from several studies he has worked on. He had groups of Democrats and Republicans fill out surveys and then enter discussion groups with like-minded citizens. After the discussion groups, they again filled out surveys. The post-discussion surveys showed significant decrease in diversity of opinion relative to the pre-discussion surveys. Again, this shouldn’t surprise anyone, but it’s good to have the data to back it up.

Taking this concept a step further, Sunstein comments on the negative impact these self-reinforcing systems have on democracy. For him, the free flow of ideas is the essence of the democratic process. He quotes Alexander Hamilton, who believed “the jarring of opinions” would help promote thoughtful deliberation and curb excesses.

But in a world of Fox News and the blogosphere, is Sunstein simply tilting at windmills? Have Hamilton’s jarring opinions been swept away by the internet, much like travel agents and your daily paper? To some extent, and I say this with a heavy heart, I think the answer to both those questions is yes. It’s hard to see a Fox Newser switching to CNN, just as I don’t visualize a lot of Daily Kosers heading over to Ann Coulter’s pleasant little blog.

Of course, the editors of various online publications could address this by adding opposing viewpoints to their mix. Perhaps Daily Kos could add a couple of conservative columnists, or even have a “Conservative’s Corner” on the home page. But would that even help? According to Sunstein, only 2% of Daily Kos readers are Republicans so it might be too late. And it might drive away Daily Kos readers, who could leave to visit a site that caters more purely to their liberal views.

If editors of politically tilted websites and publications can’t, for business reasons, add diverse opinions, then maybe we all need to do it ourselves. Perhaps each liberal should read one conservative article a day, and vice versa. Of course this will take discipline, and sometimes even holding our noses, but if it helps promote a Hamiltonian jarring of opinions, isn’t it worth it?

Content is King, and Always Will Be

Here in Silicon Valley, folks like to believe that technology demolishes all old business models. And if those old business models are based in New York or Los Angeles, then the Valley partisans love it even more.

Which is why we continue to hear talk about how the internet will destroy old media, with YouTube replacing television and record companies falling by the wayside. There is a modicum of truth to this talk: old media companies definitely have to change their business models, and some will be unable to adapt.

One thing the internet won’t change, and can’t change, is that content is king. Ultimately, people care about content. Music, video, the written word: in all cases, consumers care about the content itself, not the business model behind it, not the distribution technology, not even who owns it. Users want material that entertains or informs them; how it gets to them is purely a matter of convenience.

Take iTunes and the iPod, for example. Yes, they are wreaking havoc on the traditional music business. But if Apple had not convinced record companies to sell their music on iTunes, it wouldn’t have been successful. No matter how cool the iPod looks, and how easy iTunes is to use, they would have flopped if nobody could listen to their favorite music on them. An iPod without music is a white paperweight.

Or you might recall back in May 2000, when Time Warner, the cable company in New York, dropped ABC from the cable system in a dispute with Disney over money. Who backed down? Time Warner. Why? Because their customers went ballistic when they couldn’t watch the ABC show Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, which was the hot show back then. Viewers didn’t side with ABC or Time Warner – they just wanted to watch their show.

Even in user-generated content – the current revolution – my thesis holds true. On YouTube it is the funny or sexy or interesting videos that rise to the top. People watch that which entertains them. Likewise on blogs. The blogs that have grown from one guy’s ideas (i.e. this one) to actual media companies (i.e. DailyKos) did that because they were popular. Readers liked the content, shared it with friends, and boom – the blog is a hit. Nobody cares that it’s a blog per se, only that it’s interesting.

Digression: please note that this process of good bloggers rising to the top is not so different from the old media process. The classic career path in newspapers was that a writer would start at some small local paper, and if they were good, they might move to a larger paper, and then to a large market paper, and then to the NY Times or Washington Post or some other top paper. In that process, though, the promotion decisions were made by editors. In the blog world, promotion decisions are made by the readers.

What are the implications of content’s primacy? First, it means that the owners and producers of content have more leverage than Silicon Valley thinking gives them. The ability of distribution systems to restrict access to content is limited, whether the distribution system is cable companies, as in the example above, or telephone companies or Google. However, that is true only of content that users already know they want, like American Idol or the latest 50 Cent song. For undiscovered content, the story is different. Like a tree falling in the forest, content in some ways doesn’t even exist until people watch it (or hear it or read it). So for new content, a distribution network that can discover or promote appealing content has great leverage. This is what traditional TV networks do so well: find or create compelling content (CSI, Survivor, etc.) and introduce it to a wide audience.

This theory does not mean that great content is invincible. Fundamental business rules still apply, namely that your content must generate revenues greater than your cost of creating that content. Newspapers are an interesting case. People have clearly demonstrated that they want local news; although circulation is dropping, most newspapers are still widely read in their home towns, and newspapers’ internet sites are generally growing. Revenue streams, however, are disappearing, as internet players siphon off the lucrative classified ad business and major display advertisers (department stores, car dealers) suffer through their own problems. But the cost of producing that content – paying journalists, printing papers – is not going down at all. So even though readers want the newspaper content, the question is whether newspapers can generate sufficient revenue to cover the costs of collecting and distributing their news content. The head of McClatchy newspapers has laid out this dilemma best (full disclosure: I am friends with McClatchy’s CFO), but is still struggling to find a workable solution.