Category Archives: Digital Entertainment

Flat Panel TV Makers Emphasize Smaller TV's for the US

Due to the economic slow down and credit crunch in the US, Japanese flat panel makers are de-emphasizing large TV’s in favor of smaller sets for the US market.  What’s more interesting to me is that they saw the coming slow down last July, while none of us in the US were even cognizant that problems were coming.  What extra information did they have? Or perhaps their advisors have an unbiased perspective on the US economy.

I myself have been looking for a 32 or 37-in flat panel TV for my bedroom.  We also have have a large flat panel and I don’t feel that we need as big of TV in our bedroom.  I wonder if other buyers are like me — the US market is saturated with large TVs and people are opting to buy smaller, less expensive TVs as secondaries.  Hmm …  Either way, it sounds like the Japanese companies know their customer well and are on top of the situation.



The End of the Shared Media Experience?

Here is an interesting editorial on how digital media consumption could change the advertising and “watercooler” experience.  I like how this author is embracing digital technology and taking an enlightened and open view on how the changes will be positive for media companies, advertisers, and customers alike.  Now if only the media companies would get with the vision.  Perhaps if the advertisers push on them using this perspective, then we’ll see an end to the media companies’ paranoia and fear faster.  It seems sad that the media companies will have to be forced into new business models.  But once they realize that they can penetrate world-wide they will get with the rest of us.


The End of the Shared Media Experience?

Will an On-demand World Take Away Our Water-Cooler Moments?

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Published: March 17, 2008 

Universal Music's Offer to Apple

Something about this sounds fishy.  I wonder what kind of CRAZY DRM scheme could be bundled in this proposed music deal.

First of all, I don’t want Universal Music’s entire portfolio on my music player.  I may already own a bunch of my own music, I still like the CD experience, and I think that I would be overloaded with too many choices of what to listen to.  I’m picky with my music, so I don’t want everything on Earth on my player, especially when I’m listening to songs at random.  I’ve also heard a different version of the deal in which Universal does open up it’s entire portfolio to Apple to pre-load iPods and iPhones with 50-songs in exchange for some of the music device revenue.  After that they want to charge some fixed amount per year to buy additional blocks of music.  I’m not sure I get this.  I’m not sure what Apple gets out of this as an advantage over iTunes and keeping all the money for its music devices.  It’s not clear yet, either whether there will be some fishy DRM to prevent the spread of digital music files and to force customers to subscribe if they want to listen the music that was bundled with their device.  It sorta feels like Universal is trying to either take over music devices or make it impossible for Apple to continue to be successful.  I have no love for iTunes and I have even less love for the traditional music industry.  Despite this, iTunes is the devil I know, so I’m a little scared of Universal’s proposal.

Speaking of DRM and downloading music, my Dad said something interesting to me a while back about my little brother and why he illegally downloads music.  He said that the iPod memory capacity is too big and that my little brother feels the need to use all of the capacity.  Therefore, he does willy-nilly downloads of music that he may not like. Perhaps many young people behave this way.  Perhaps Universal received a similar assessment of young people’s online activity — who knows — and they are trying to combat illegal downloading by prefilling iPods with crap.  Gosh, that would seriously crack me up if that is what Universal is thinking.  The flip side of this is that if my brother had to pay for this music, he wouldn’t have purchased it in the first place — it’s like samples at the Costco to him.  To me it seems reasonable as the content provider to act like Costco and let people sample so bands can build a fan base and then sell stuff to that fan base (I guess that’s the purpose of radio, but listening to radio, we know they only play about 40-different songs a day — there is no diversity, and the selection is controlled by the music companies.)


March 20, 2008 5:09 PM PDT

Why is Universal Music cozying up to Apple?

Acer Introduces 6-Speaker Home Theatre Laptop

The current Acer sounds like it’s a wise reconstitution of E-Machines, Gateway, and Acer.  At CES I saw a lot of work on design and making their laptops look like they fit into a lifestyle from Acer.  Acer is also known for having low prices.  I would hate to be blind-sided by these guys while we focus on struggling Dell … Hmm

As for the laptop itself … well, without more details on the specs, I can’t say much.  I know that it takes quite a bit of horsepower to smoothly generate true 1080-line video.  I’m also skeptical of the sound quality out of something as small as a laptop.  Is six speakers over two or three ( 2 + mini “subwoofer”) going to make a difference that customers can hear or this this merely to have the 5.1 speaker box spec.  There’s also the matter of battery life and heat generation.  There is a teaser of an image of some sort of specialized contol on the side of the machine in the picture below.  I’m curious about that.  I wonder if they have some Acer movie specific software to enhance the movie watching experience.  Hmmmmmm … let’s noodle on that a bit.


Here’s a link to the article.