Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Last week's week in review

Hi there. I posted this review on the Total Content and Media web site last Friday. For the record I'm putting it here, too. If you are interested in seeing it on the site, or to read fresh news for this week, click here.

The week ending 12 January was dominated by news coming out of two technology trade shows in the U.S.—the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and the MacWorld Show in San Francisco.

But first a look as some other interesting things this week: HarperCollins is following in the footsteps of other News Corp subsidiaries and investing in the digital world. If it’s half as prescient as Fox Interactive with its MySpace buy, it’s picking a winner in NewsStand.

EMI is continuing to bleed. This week’s news is even lower than expected profits after a dud Christmas and the departure of two of its top executives. Will someone please put this music giant out of its misery already?

YouTube got barred
, and then re-released, on the Brazilian market. I point this story out because of the uproar it caused when it was banned (for running a racy video clip), and to show how hard it is still to control content on these very popular sites, and to show how easy it is to simply shut them down.

And in the still young IPTV world, a few little beeps: BT hired an ex-Sky executive to beef up its sports coverage, and Deutsche Telekom seems to be having some problems getting subscribers to its TV service. Some are pointing out that IPTV is a doomed business, but I’m sure that both of the aforementioned operators hope they can do as well as one of their smaller neighboring incumbents, Belgacom.

Now on with the shows…. In Vegas, the story was all about the digital, connected home, which according to reports is finally becoming a reality.

That top-line story was bolstered by an avalanche of announcements from media companies, device makers and every one in between about deals, new services and new products. (Type in CES in our search window to get the full whack.)

Yahoo seemed to be particularly rampant on the news front, with lots of releases concentrating on mobile phone deals as well as key agreements to provide its hitherto Internet-only content to television, and vice versa. I suppose it has a lot of catching up to do to get close to Google again.

It’s a testament to the power of Apple right now that the MacWorld show had almost as much heft in terms of media coverage—mainly because of Apple launching two products that has all other consumer electronics rivals and practically everyone else in the digital media value chain watching closely: a new phone, currently being called the iPhone—which is not really a phone but a multimedia device; and a product called the Apple TV--which is not really a TV but something that links to your set to let you watch all your digital content there.

The phone seems to have attracted the most attention, most likely because it looks like it could potentially become be a successor to the hugely famous iPod—not only can you play music on it, and use it as a phone, but you can effectively use it like a little portable computer, complete with wifi access and even Apple’s operating system behind it all.

People of course are citing all sorts of reasons why the iPhone will need a lot of tweaking before it flies off the shelves—price and form factor being the two main areas of criticism. But even if Apple does not stay on top with this particular product, it is pushing the boundaries for what other portable device manufacturers should be fervently developing next.

Apple’s new baby has also attracted some secondary attention, in the form of a lawsuit that’s been filed by Cisco, who says it owns the name iPhone. Given the numerous announcement that came out in advance of the MacWorld show about how Cisco is going to try to become a Big Name in the consumer market, specifically for digital/connected home products, I can’t help but wonder if Cisco’s suit was another way of it trying to steal a little bit of the limelight being generated by its Bay Area neighbor.

Particularly since many observers suspect the whole kerfuffle will be settled out of court anyway.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,