"I think FairUse4WM is a good thing for the industry -- it demonstrates
that the entire world doesn't turn upside down when there's no effective
protection on content. I doubt subscription based services are impacted...the
value of a subscription is the continuing access to new titles, which isn't
dependent on the protection. "
Tuesday, 27 November 2007
Why FairUse4WM was a good thing for the content business
Posted by rick at 14:28 1 comments
Labels: content, drm, fairuse4wm, microsoft
Friday, 23 November 2007
Sarkovsky in probably futile bid to stop online piracy
Posted by rick at 13:56 0 comments
Was Natwest Bank hacked last week?
Posted by rick at 00:47 0 comments
Tuesday, 20 November 2007
Should we trust the home office with our data?
It's an uncomfortable truth within the new information economy that often data security is frequently treated in a cavalier and slack fashion. From my personal experience I have worked in organisations that would be quite happy to fling fifty grand at a new firewall, but would also allow thousands of unencrypted customer data records to be biked around on recordable CDs.
Similar instances are abundant.
Private information just isn't treated as the gold-dust that it is. We would never dream of transporting bank notes by courier, but data is often a different matter.
Will this lead to a dramatic re-evaluation of e-government, with a corresponding rolling back of centralised access to information? Somehow I doubt it.
Posted by rick at 12:46 0 comments
Friday, 16 November 2007
Why the chasm between the study and the lounge chasm saves Hollywood from meltdown
There was something faintly ludicrous about Warner Music withholding their content from the launch of the Nokia music service this week. The supposed reason for Warner's unexpected coldfeet was Nokia's other interests in the file-sharing site Ovi which is laughable but from my experience not at all surprising.
The short answer of course is that the whole music business is just a wafer away from total disaster. If you think the adjustments and consolidations we've seen so far are significant then just wait until the generation that grew up not paying for anything hits their thirties.
The video industry, while probably equally shafted in the long-run, is on a slightly slower time-line and in the short-term it's sheltered by the fact that nobody has yet put together the killer combination of hardware, software and ease of use that brings free file-sharing into the living room.
The study/lounge chasm is what keeps the DVD industry riding high. It goes like this:-
1. Most people have PCs and broadband on a desk in one room - that's where we watch Youtube and do our file-sharing. It's easy to get free files to here.
2. Most people have TVs and DVD players in another room - that's where they watch movies sat on the sofa.
Bridge rooms 1 and 2 and you have a winner and you can wipe 50% off Warner Video's next profit statement. Currently it's just too hard to move that movie from the study to the lounge. So people rent and buy DVDs, watch Freeview, and the Warner Video christmas party is still on.
Some people will say "Windows Media Centre!" at this point, and while it's a steadily improving piece of kit, it falls down on the facts. Using a PC with a remote is like typing with boxing gloves, and sitting with a wireless keyboard on your lap is a recipe for RSI. I've seen some studies that show that the majority of people who buy Media Centre PCs stick them in their studies anyhow and use them as high-end desktops.
Maybe two computers linked by wireless is the answer - but that's economically unfeasible at the moment for many people - and this has to work mass market to be a solution. The two computers option falls down again as anyone who's configuring a home network to link them together will tell you. It can be done. You just don't want to be the one doing it.
Intel had some interesting ideas here with Viiv, a flawed concept that had its heart in the right place for trying to make wireless networks easy to configure in the home. But Viiv has gone very quiet recently. Actually make that "dead".
Burning DVDs on your PC to play in the DVD player under the telly? For those with patience only and the industry obsession with CSS has next to killed this already for the legal download providers.
Some kind of smart terminal set-top box in the living room that can download movies and play them back may be the answer, and BT is probably nearest to this currently in the mass-market, but you'll still need a proper PC to do the file-sharing unless BT put Bit-torrent on BT Vision. They won't.Media extender type set-top boxes are another option, but again currently the amount of configuration required both on PC and set-top box is too high a barrier - and they're expensive. And mainly crap.
But when some bright spark works it out, expect the end to arrive swiftly. What price a total collapse of the physical DVD industry? A return to reliance on theatrical income for major movies, and a slashing back of production costs for everybody else?
Unthinkable? Maybe - but then who would have predicted live performance being such a proportionately big part of so many music acts income 10 years ago? Radiohead giving their music away with an honesty box? Large parts of the population streaming music all day for free a la Last.fm?
And of course most of the people in the world are living in this copy-rightless free-for-all state already. As the picture shows maybe it's time for Hollywood to stop taking their public for a free meal-ticket and come back to the real world.
Posted by rick at 14:31 0 comments
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
Is the game up for Babelgum and the video minnows?
Posted by rick at 15:04 0 comments
Monday, 12 November 2007
FTSE falls reveal the unspoken
Posted by rick at 14:45 0 comments
Friday, 9 November 2007
Robot cars fight it out in the ghost-town
There's no doubting the technical skill of this year's entrants in the US Military Robot Car Competition, but it's probably worth a little pause for thought about where this all leads.
So the minute you declare victory, the local youths pop down to the regional equivalent of B&Q, jump on Google - and half an hour later are planting a bomb by the side of the road.
Thursday, 8 November 2007
Seeing as I'm covered in petrol...
www.blinkBox.com;
Despite the fact that we've parted company - this still made me larf.
V. funny Mr Sisam.
Posted by rick at 01:31 0 comments
Tuesday, 6 November 2007
And so to the Autumn festival...
This morning I attended my kids' Harvest festival, except no I didn't - I attended their Autumn Festival. I'm not sure this is a politically correct name-change - just more perhaps a reflection that in these days of supermarket strawberries from Zimbabwe the idea of a seasonal harvest is slightly obsolete.
I wonder whether this is how the old Pagan festivals morphed out of existence. For years our forebears would turn up for a good old Yule knees up, then it was just a mid-winter hoe-down, and before the olde englanders knew it the Christians had nipped in and we had the twelve days of christmas.
Anyway it was an enjoyable, if random celebration, which was heart-warming to see - although I'm not sure if the pensioners who sat in the reserved seats in the front two rows really understood the relevance of the three High School musical tunes tacked on the end, and belted out with gusto by years 3-6.
Still they went home with a box of very assorted groceries to help them out so I'm sure they were happy. If they liked soup and beans that is.
Posted by rick at 16:03 0 comments
Monday, 5 November 2007
Near death firework experience...
So the moral of the weekend is - don't put two rockets into one launching tube.
Obvious to many, but apparently not to my brother-in-law who tried aforementioned trick on saturday night.
As the first rocket sailed into the sky it blew the other back down just enough to prevent it gaining altitude. The second rocket flew through the air in a gentle arc of 15 feet or so before landing at the feet of the massed ranks of parents and toddlers standing on the patio. It then exploded with one piece bouncing off my brother-in-laws forehead, our poor mate Phil's eyebrow, into the kitchen and onto an interior glass door before bouncing out onto the patio again, where it came to rest under my father-in-law's chair. The other piece went past my left ear before exploding a yard away.
I couldn't hear for about 30 seconds in one ear, Phil now has a burnt eye-brow, and brother in law one (innocent party) then nearly kicked seven bells out of brother-in-law 2 (dud rocket launcher).
Nice.
Order was soon restored however, and we all lived to tell the tale. Kids now have a healthy respect for fireworks to the extent that my youngest is now nearly too scared to hold a sparkler.
This may be a positive to take from this. Sort of. Maybe not.
Posted by rick at 00:44 0 comments
Thursday, 25 October 2007
Alternative Cadbury's gorilla ad...
Endearingly silly remix. Made me smile.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pUnIvwyrfLg
This all raises the question of whether it'll be ok to like Phil Collins again soon.
Posted by rick at 00:49 0 comments
Wednesday, 24 October 2007
Near HD on Youtube
Here's a neat hack for the nerdy to bypass Youtube's standard low quality video playback standards.
Examples:-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoVkD2k4byM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34tQi8HIpsA
How to do it:-
http://forum.videohelp.com/topic336882.html
Cool, let's all double Youtube's bandwidth bill...
:-)
Posted by rick at 00:48 0 comments
Tuesday, 23 October 2007
Some things end
So after not blogging for a while I decided it was time to dust off the keyboard and get back to work.
The reason for the long break? At the start of the summer I went from being the second oldest man in the company to being the oldest ex-employee. Working for VCs can be tough...
Still it was good fun working for Blinkbox and we parted on amicable terms (or at least I think we did!). Sometimes you learn the most from the things that didn't go quite right, and I definitely learnt a ton while working there. So good luck to them. No, really!
Anyway back at work now after a summer of reflection and relaxation, and on to new challenges. New job is also in a great location near Victoria, which is I'm starting to find out fantastically close to some of London's most beautiful locations for eating lunch-time sandwiches.
Chicken and avocado on a bench in the autumn sun in St. James Park takes some beating. Bliss.
Posted by rick at 12:05 0 comments
Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Sweating on the tube? TFL has worked it out...
It seems like the age old issue of how to cool the tube has finally been solved. A while back a mysterious empty cage appeared at Seven Sister's station on the Victoria line where I often change trains on the way home. A typed sign on the side informed commuters that it would be part of "TFL's ongoing commitment to cooling the tube".
Much debate at work - would this be connected to the much vaunted "ice under seats" innovation trailed across the papers a few weeks ago?
Now, the secret is revealed - the answer to the problem is a BIG FAN.
Genius.
Posted by rick at 04:34 0 comments
Monday, 11 June 2007
Bicycle repairman
A weekend of fixing children's bicycles - largely unsuccessfully.
Posted by rick at 00:53 0 comments
Thursday, 31 May 2007
Campervan now fixed
www.blinkBox.com
My camper van is now fixed after it's unfortunate Dartford tunnel meltdown. Basically it dumped all its coolant in the middle of the Dartford tunnel leaving me with a choice between being on every traffic report in the country or soldiering on to the otherside with the temperate gauge going off the dial.
I chose the latter - result a banana shaped cylinder head and a nasty trip to the machine shop.
Grant from Jack's Garage assures me that it'll all be fine now. Honest.
I approach it's first long run with fear and trepidation.
Posted by rick at 01:44 0 comments
Labels: camper van
Monday, 14 May 2007
Big mac
And so on Sunday afternoon to Leytonstone for the latest Maccy-ds kids party.
This is the third time we've headed out east recently and this time it's Alicia's turn to be celebrating. After negotiating the usual total grid-lock at the head of Leytonstone high-street we arrive ten minutes late.
The sweet smell of weed wafts from the black guy with the hoodie smoking by the door before we head inside to party central. The layout is split - turn left and you end up in the party-play area, turn right for food and cultural melting pot.
We deposit Dylan to the left with Alicia's mum, before Megan and I run across to the nearby Tesco's to buy the card we forgot to buy on the way here. We return with what we feel is the world's best card (complete with plastic necklace - cards have moved on from badges with dangerous pins it seems) - only to lose points by spelling Alisha's name wrong.
Megan and I leave Dylan to it for a bit and as we munch doughnuts next door Megan points and laughs "Look at that funny lady dad she's wearing a bib! Do you think she has Down's Syndrome?" Said lady is approximately 2 yards away.
Anyway so after a bit we head over to join Dylan in the climbing frame/play-bit - I sit down and chat to Tom's mum for a bit. Anyway two seconds later who arrives but the bib-wearing, down's syndrome lady who also seems to have a few tattoos. Turn's out she seems to be either "a bit simple" (is that un-pc? duh who knows) or out of it - it's hard to tell - she tells Megan she's had a few drinks so can't go on the climbing frame, could Megan play with her daughter? Megan proceeds to do this and gets on with her daughter like a house on fire.
At one point they run off back to the bib-ladys table next door, and instinctively I bolt after them. Megan is hiding under a table with the bib-lady's daughter, and at the table sits bib-lady another older lady who seems to be bib-lady's mum. She half mouth's an apology as I retrieve Megan and scold her for running off out of my sight.
Is she apologising for bib-lady, bib-lady's alleged drinking or accidentally hijacking Megan? I'm not sure but I'm a bit baffled all round by the whole experience.
I don't see the bib-lady again until we're leaving, as we walk out I can see her randomly hugging stranger's children.
Sometimes I have no idea what's going on.
Posted by rick at 00:25 0 comments
Friday, 11 May 2007
Thursday, 3 May 2007
Ebit-doh
So the creditcard link is now live - and we have billed our first revenue! Shame it came off the company creditcard as we tested the link.
Anyway pre-alpha final, final release is today. The team are pumped and we're really starting to get a view of how much we need to do before "go-live".
Adrian our COO is hassling me for plans endlessly, and constantly coming up with "great" ideas - personally I think he needs his own blog so he can expend some of his excess energy there. He should have another conduit for this energy tonight at the company drinks - but unfortunately I can't make it, which is a shame because I would have loved a jar or two to celebrate a productive week.
Posted by rick at 07:30 0 comments
Wednesday, 2 May 2007
Packing and penalty shoot-outs
So yesterday was a day of good fortune - some good steps forward at work as we pinned down another part of the content puzzle, and moved closer to tomorrow's alpha release. Yay!
The production hardware is also proceeding full-steam ahead and the datacentre guys seem to be pulling their weight well. Double yay!
And then in the evening after a stultifying evening of packing kids clothes for the weekend away, Adrian's beloved Chelsea were knocked out of the Champions League - can life get any better?
And following on from yesterday's post - Frank Lampard 5 stars? No way Jose! And more relevantly Zoe turns out to be not the only one impressed by his manly charms - even John Terry seems to have noticed - http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2007190786,00.html
Posted by rick at 04:22 0 comments
Tuesday, 1 May 2007
Back to work
Back to work monday and all coming together nicely for the alpha trial - although our developers have pointed out that our new agile process after careful analysis is really rather like the old process with lots of cards. This of course is deliberate and allows us to add more agility as we go along without major upheaval. Honest.
At home kids are still in the grip of football card mania. This allows added leverage for difficult tasks such as going to bed as the threat of football card confiscation strikes the fear of god into them. Also two interesting football related revelations:-
1. Liberty's uncle is Rio Ferdinand - (3 star player card rating)
2. Megan's mate Zoe (aged 7) secretly fancies Frank Lampard (5 star player card rating).
Posted by rick at 05:26 0 comments
Labels: premiership trading cards
Monday, 30 April 2007
Weekend away
After a brief sojourn in the pub with Brad while I waited for Hammersmith to cease to be one long carpark I drove down to Devon to stay with my parents.
Posted by rick at 05:19 0 comments
Labels: brixham
Friday, 27 April 2007
First post
Ok, so after another night of unrelenting coughing and wheezing on the sofa downstairs so as not to disturb the kids, I've packed for the weekend at my folks, jump-started the car and now I've finally stumbled into work.
Blinkbox is pretty much on track - content is starting to flow, the development team are really pulling together, and the production hardware is a week away from commissioning. Yay!
Time is still our enemy, and the disaster recovery strategy is proving a little onorous, but we will prevail.
We cannot fail.
Posted by rick at 03:40 0 comments
Labels: blinkbox, disaster recovery, jump-start