organization of web content professionals

Will YouTube's Revenue-Sharing Plans Do Away With Cable?

YouTube's announcement that it has plans to create a revenue-sharing agreement with the contributors to the popular website is eerily not being discussed by the 'traditional media' even as YouTube has become an Internet sensation and a household name.

Is YouTube's latest move yet another a nail in the prepped coffin of mainstream television and cable programming?

As more information, videos, photographs, music and so on premiere on the Internet first nowadays - including announcements from presidential candidates - even regularly scooping mass media organizations on important news, there seems to be no way to stop the decline of traditional media. Can you stop a slip and slide that is in full motion? I doubt it.

In a few years, just about anyone will be able to report over the Internet on breaking news - they only need be in the right place at the right time and have a modern cell phone, which increasingly offer quality, real-time video.



The media cannot be everywhere, but the millions of people who post to the Internet can be. That's going to be the fundamental difference, as it is already playing out.

I remember telling friends and family back in 1995 that the Internet will revolutionize the way we collect and consume news, information, entertainment, and eventually, consumer products.

Few people had any confidence in that prediction even though the writing was on the wall in huge black letters against a white background - "The Internet will change and define news, popular culture and communications in the next century".


I don't know why so many were so skeptical, and a decade later, the revolution continues to change almost everything we do now. It was simply the natural progression of a relatively easy and accessible technology with broad exposure to get your message out for very little money (in comparison to, say, newspaper and magazine publishing).

Creators and users of the Internet are setting the trends for news reporting, communications, commerce, fashion, business, social networking, banking and finance, music, movies and the list goes on.

How will television as we know it fit into the enormous Internet culture of bloggers, web sites, online media and so on? That is still to be seen, but every will ultimately decide what is the best programming and will have 24/7 access to anything they want to read, watch, listen to or download.

How many people will abandon their cable companies because they will be be able to eventually easy and quickly get whatever they want commercial-free from the Internet (connected to a TV or Widescreen) when they want and how they want.

A decade ago, Microsoft introduced what was touted as a revolution in the history of online media.


Remember WebTV?

The service allowed subscribers to surf the Internet on their televisions. However, the service was clumsy and unreliable, and therefore never gained the popularity anticipated by Bill Gates and others at Microsoft.


Most damaging to the WebTV model was probably the approach MS initially used, luring people into accepting it's model (or vision) for the future of Internet and computer use. It was, at its best, a novelty.

But in the last decade or more, especially in the past five years, the Internet has become a mass communication channel, the most extensive, widely-used and globally significant communications device in the history of media and communications.


So it shouldn't be a surprise that the natural progression of technology on demand will be the future, and the industries involved will need to adapt or be replaced.


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by Phillip E. Daoust  on  Monday, February 19, 2007



Before You Upgrade To Vista, See This

Some people have already encountered problems with upgrading from Windows XP to Vista.

Don't be one of those who have to spend hours, sometimes days, to fix errors that could have been prevented by checking out Vista a little more.

Here are some essential resources to take a good look at before upgrading from XP to Vista:

- Vista help geared more towards consumer with Windows experience

- Vista help for company and business IT folks

- Tech Republic white paper on Vista

- Vista Not For Everyone (USA Today)

- 10 Reasons to Upgrade to Vista or Not (webworkerdaily.com)

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by Phillip E. Daoust  on  Friday, February 09, 2007



Google IS Watching You

Beginning today, Google will turn on by default 'personalization options' for all new Google accounts and some personalization options have already been auto-enabled for existing Google account users.

In some cases, Google users may be surprised to find out that the company has been aggregating your personal information for, in some cases, up to 18 months in what they call an attempt to provide more personalized search engine results when you do a search.

Therefore, if you have a Google account, whether it be with Gmail, Blogger, and so on, your personalized preferences tracked in both your emails, searches and blogging have been logged and filed away with your name attached to it.

Google says it has made this information well-known and that the information will not be used for any nefarious reasons. They know that no one reads the agreement policies when they sign up for an account.

Hey folks, I don't know about you, but I don't want all of my searches, emails and blog entries to be stored away forever by Google or anyone else so they can provide me a "better search experience".

I mean, WTF!!? Has Google really become Big Brother in disguise?

Now for all of you who are now as shocked as I am, there is only one recourse you have. Sign out of your Google account when you do searches. This is recommended as an
alternative on the Google blog.



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by Phillip E. Daoust  on  Monday, February 05, 2007