The New Economics of Advertising

October 7, 2008

Linux not ready to replace Windows

Filed under: platform — Dash @ 3:11 pm

Linux ready to replace Windows? Not yet…

Posted by Ed Bott @ 11:28 am

Over at JKOnTheRun, James Kendrick uncovers a fascinating statisticoriginally published in Laptop Magazine:

Andy Tung, Director of US Sales for MSI … told Laptop that their experience shows that netbooks with Linux are returned four times more often than those with Windows XP.  This would indicate what others have already noted, many consumers pick up the cheaper systems and then realize that the Linux system is not what they are used to so they return it.

October 2, 2008

Good News For Big CDN Users, Bad News For CDNs: Prices Dropping

Filed under: platform — Dash @ 2:11 pm

Good News For Big CDN Users, Bad News For CDNs: Prices Dropping

Digital video companies and media conglomerates: Good news if you’re shopping for a little (or a lot) of content delivery services.

Pricing dropped significantly during Q3 for some of the middle-of-the-road (250 terabytes transferred/month) and larger (1000 TB/mo.) video delivery customers during the quarter, according to survey results published by industry analyst Dan Rayburn. Some highlights:

  • The biggest drop in pricing came for relatively smaller volume customers — 250 TB/mo. — where CDNs apparently courted them with cheap rates. Average pricing ranged from 20 cents to 35 cents per gigabyte delivered in Q3, down from the range of 40 cents to 55 cents per gigabyte delivered in Q2.
  • The next-biggest drop came for very high-volume customers — 1000 TB/mo. — where rates ranged between 2.5 cents to 10 cents per gigabyte delivered in Q3, mostly down from the range of 4 cents to 9 cents per gigabyte delivered in Q2.
  • Service pricing for mid-to-high-level customers, in the 500-750 TB/mo. range, stayed about the same.

Also noted: Limelight Networks (LLNW) was the “most aggressive with regards to price” while industry leader (by market share) Akamai Technologies (AKAM) was “coming in at almost double” to rival quotes. But what we don’t know: Who won which deals at which prices — and what this all means for Akamai or Limelight’s Q3 results.

September 19, 2008

Amazon to Launch Content Delivery Network against Akamai and Limelight

Filed under: book, platform, software — Dash @ 2:39 pm


Amazon to Launch Content Delivery Network

aws_logo_sep08.pngThis morning, Amazon announced that it would soon launch a content delivery network (CDN). This new service, which does not have a name yet, will be complimentary to Amazon’s existing web services and will work seamlessly with S3, Amazon’s online storage solution. Like most of Amazon’s web services, this new product will not require a contract and does not have any minimum-usage requirements. Amazon did not announce a specific launch date, but it expects the new service to be available by the end of this year.

With this new service, Amazon is going up against a number of established companies, including Akamai and Limelight, which are almost synonymous with content delivery. While these larger CDN providers tend to target enterprise customers, though, Amazon’s pay-as-you-go plan seems to be geared towards smaller businesses and developers who might not have a sustained need for a complex CDN solution.

Just like Amazon’s S3 and E2 shook up the market for online storage and cloud computing, this new CDN solution will surely drive down the prices for content delivery. At first, however, Amazon’s new service will not support streaming video or live broadcasts. Because of this, Akamai and Limelight don’t have to fear the competition with Amazon just yet, but we would be surprised if Amazon did not add more video specific features to its CDN in the future.

Preemptive Move

Interestingly, as Om Malik points out, New-York based Voxel just announced a CDN solution based on S3. Amazon rarely pre-announces new services, so we definitely agree that this announcement today should be seen as a preemptive move by Amazon.

September 1, 2008

Comparing Web Platforms – Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, Facebook

Filed under: platform, software — Dash @ 4:45 pm


Comparing Web Platforms

It’s great to hear that Marc Canter is writing a book, called ‘How to build the Open Mesh’. He’s been working for years on this vision with his product PeopleAggregator. He’s just posted the four Appendices that conclude the book in his blog. It’s a great overview of the major web platforms: Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft Mesh, and Facebook/MySpace.

Here are Marc’s comments, via his post, and you can click the images to see the diagrams.Disclosure: I used to do some consulting work for Marc’s company, during 2005-06.

Google

“What does Google’s Open Mesh look like?”

Most of the infrastructure, services and applications that Google offers work all by themselves and are not dependent upon anything else. Google has launched OpenSocial and built Google Friend Connect.

Yahoo!

“How is Yahoo building the open mesh?

Yahoo probably has the most comprehensive, well architected approach towards building their own open mesh. They’ve left lots of room for us without getting in our way. Now they just have to execute those plans!

 

Microsoft

“Will Microsoft connect their Live Mesh to our Open Mesh? …[and what about the rest of Microsoft?]

Live Mesh totally rocks and it’ll probably become a key element of our open mesh. It’ll gateway us to mobile, car, living room, game machines.

Facebook & MySpace

“Aren’t Facebook and MySpace really Closed Meshes?” … [ and how can we connect to them?]

Sending out tentacles or satellites isn’t the same as being open.

 

 

August 1, 2008

IBM aims $400 million at cloud computing

Filed under: platform, software — Dash @ 4:51 pm

Posted by Jim Kerstetter

IBM announced Friday that it’s spending nearly $400 million on new cloud computing data centers in North Carolina and Tokyo. Big Blue will spend nearly $360 million to renovate an existing building at its Research Triangle Park campus in North Carolina. The goal is to reuse 95 percent of the existing building’s “shell,” recycle 90 percent of the old building’s material, and make sure 20 percent of the new material is recycled. The new center is expected to be completed by late 2009.

IBM image

Big Blue also boasts that the new data center’s mechanical equipment will be “50 percent more efficient than the industry average, equaling a reduction of approximately 31,799 tons of carbon dioxide emissions a year.” If IBM can follow through on that promise, that would be the equivalent of taking 5,800 cars off the road, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

The Tokyo facility will be linked to the new North Carolina facility and seven other IBM cloud computing centers in cities including Dublin, Ireland, and Beijing.

Clean air benefits aside, few should be surprised that IBM, which runs the largest computer consulting business in the world and derives the bulk of its revenue through services such as software hosting, should jump head-first into cloud computing services.

While Google caters to consumers with its Web-based applications, Amazon provides hosting services to start-ups, and companies like Salesforce.com provide an array of on-demand software, it can be easy to forget that IBM is the real heavyweight in business computing.

In November 2007, IBM unveiled its “Blue Cloud” bundle of services. And at a conference in Los Angeles in April, IBM executives made it clear that providing hosting services is nothing new to them. The rest of computer industry? According to IBM, they’re new to this game.

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