Saturday, November 03, 2007

I was recorded on Day 1 of Digital Hollywood to say our pitch about Vishwak by Vator.TV and it was published now (click the above video). Vator.tv is a professional network and marketplace for ideas and businesses. Anyone, across all industries, at any stage, can share ideas, products, services and businesses with the rest of the world, mainly through video.

When they recorded with a small handycam I doubted on how well it will come. Not only it has come out well but they have published our About us and also enrolled us in SDForum Competition.

 
Thursday, November 01, 2007

Today is the last day of DH and I have my panel discussion in another hour or so. I am sitting currently in The Next Generation in Mobile & Broadband Platform Personalization: Widgets, Search, Information & Commerce.

Joyce Schwarz, JCOM Emerging Entertainment Marketing, talked about her blog at Hollywood2020. You should give some content free, so that consumer will upsell, upgrade, etc. It is sickening everytime you have register when you want to see some content. She says she is an active believer that move toys will connect to Internet - Nicholas Negropante has said you will have more Barbies connected to Internet than PCs.

Martin Russ, Chief Architect, Real Time Content talked about documentary where you can give consumer a small teaser and then that keeps expanding as you go into it. There should be able to have an open API for exchanging profile from one social site to another. It is not possible to automatically move the profile content from facebook to linkedin. Future always has the habit of being what is least expected. 3

Jonathon Wolfe, CEO, Maxiem talked about his company having a framework around MPEG21. And content producers in future are going to let go of the content to be distributed over all places, but have embedded transaction points and revenue shares.

Collin Bruce, Director of Marketing, Embedded Business Group, Hitachi America Ltd. talked about their investments on embedded database for search. We will accept adverts when we want to do something/buy something. If we force advertisement with content, people will move to free options.

Scott Fedewa, Executive VP & Executive Producer, LiveNation.com talked about how they are building technology that shows text and picture sent from SMS go through moderator and appear on the screen in the front during a concert. A spam is a spam only if you are not interested. If you target correctly then you will want it, even rich people will want it, done correctly advertisement becomes programming.

Jim Benz, BDM, CSG Interactive talked that they are 1.2 Billion USD company there customers are most of the cable companies. DRM seems to be come and go depending on which seminar you are in.

Dan Nguyen, Director of Product Management, OpenWave provides the client and server software for mobile browsing and location based services. On Google OpenSocial API - if you can't buy them, neutralize it and this is a best way to do it.
 
Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Digital Music & Its Transformation

Artistnation has been recently launched which brings under one umbrella the pandora of revenue sources for artists including Music Rights, Mobile Rights, Merchandising, Product branding, touring, etc. It has recently signed up with Madonna for 150 Million over 10 years. Artists are now being realized as the center of universe and they never had distribution going better for them than now. Another speaker says he wants to dispel this vision of artist quitting their day job, over the weekend distribute music and make millions. Traditionally there has been an adversary relationship between label and artists - now they will move into more collaborative relationship just like artist and managers. Labels were controlling 90% of video distribution, now you have MSN, Google & Yahoo! doing it. There was mention about Ruckus which is legal music free for college students.

Alby Galuten from Sony says it is a myth that labels makes artists. Music sales in their heydays had users immersed in music when they buy a CD put up their headphone and hear it, do nothing. Now they do many things. It is going to be very difficult to get subscribers to keep paying $15 per month.

Jessica Stoner of Pandora (Radio) talked about how users will get more ways to get music easily - as easy as get getting terrestrial music, now they are getting broadband music in PC, later it is going to broadband in their cars. People want to discover/get introduced to music in their radio and then hear it till they drop from their iPod. 

John Jones talked about how music will be mixed / consolidated in everything that MSN, Yahoo! does.

Charlie Moore of Ruckus feels that students feel comfortable paying money per semester terms, they are comfortable for charging through mobile/landline numbers than through credit cards. They will feel better to pay $50 per year one time, rather than $5 per month.

There was a question of where Microsoft is with Zune with all their monies and where is there $50 million campaign equivalent of iPods. Microsoft historically leads in 3rd round, they have patience and perseverance to lead. They did with software, now they are likely to get it in entertainment with XBOX leading. 

Reinventing Advertising: Broadcast vs the New Platforms

Dean Scheu from Charter Media says That the 30 seconds spot is not really dead, it is evolving into interactive spots. The thought process that went into creating it is changing. Charter is in 300,000 houses in LA. Lot of people want to know more if the product advertisement is targeted and appropriate for them.

Mitch Oscar from CaratDigital says The ads are now made to work wherever they are, whether it is time shifting, place shifting and all that. When technology people come to the advertising agencies like his, they say they have done a new technology before but they don't add value like what worked what is the ideal time how users are behaving to this, etc. Agencies need this information to understand this and are not getting help, also the manpower shortage in agencies is also not helping.

Charles "Chip" Meehan from Comcast spotlight talked about their Telescopic spots that helps to cross promote their 110 other channels to people who normally watch only 16 of them and are not aware of the others.

Kenneth Papagan from Rentrak Corporation talked about how their company measures user behaviors in theatre and DVD just like in Internet. When advertisers have tried to make their 30 seconds into 21, 11, 5 seconds consumers are moving out of it lesser.

Jeff Schultz from CONCERT who were the first on demand TV channel in US. There is no inherent thing fixed about 30 seconds spot.

 
Tuesday, October 30, 2007

vishwak-stall60-in-digitalh Most of the talks were about Mobile content, everyone seems to be obsessed with that single idea, the next idea is social networking in online space. Some of what I heard in the day:

The biggest challenge is the variety and difference of off-deck sites and the way you work with careers, the consumer experience is so different that you have to teach them to get each site working. The other challenge is I watch two videos, do a call my battery dies. You have now plenty of content now available, the real need is how to discover the. The reason why YouTube is successful it makes the finding of content like what people are watching made very easy.  2% (or 6 Million or so) of the 240 Million subscribers in USA have downloaded ever a video in their mobile. The offdeck world is important because you can do sharing of content between subscribers of different careers. The careers have no big interest in scaling video downloads in their network.

Bernard Gershon Sr.VP of ABC News says it is 2 years away where people are going to be very comfortable watching videos on Mobile. Tammy Franklin VP of Turner broadcasting said Phone is still a Hardware business, the phone needs to have the capability to play videos and people are stuck in 2.5G and their present plans before you can move them. There was a mention on how OEM and Device manufacturer would like to get into the service revenue, they feel left out and now with iPhone they are tempted again.

In another track there was a demo of Titan TV that helps local Television stations to go broadband, titan does the encoding, geographic based advertisements, etc.

I was interviewed today about Vishwak twice in Digital Hollywood at Vator.tv and Nowlive.com

 
Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Piano Hanging from Air near Kodak Theatre, LAPiano Hanging from Air near Kodak Theatre, LA

I am here in LA with my team for the Digital Hollywood 2007 Fall event happening at Hollywood & Highlands (which is where the Oscar Awards famous Kodak theatre is). As we went up and down the floors between the conference floor and the exhibit floor I noticed this big piano complete with sitting stool hanging in air above 5 floors. What a creative use for a old piano!. Click on the photos above for a larger view.

 
Tuesday, October 30, 2007

DSC_0072 DH Fall 2007 just started. The first session "Media, Entertainment and Social Change" talked about how Digital Film Making Tools helped the campaigners behind the "Darfur Now" movie to produce it. "Ted Braun" said how they are using the Community tools to spread the message through viral marketing (embed the original videos produced during the movie). Participant.net company's "Adrian Sexton" says their goal is to be make entertainment meets social action meets social media. For them using the community/social networking technology tools means not only making profit but action social awareness. Most of the Social causes sites and places are not engaging and compelling, they are largely inert communities and no entertainment proposition. People want to be in active communities and have entertainment as well. Good Philanthropy should also give good entertainment and they call "Social Action Network". There tenets are to "Connect, Collaborate, Engage, Activate" basically take part!.

I was pleased to know that the technology we feel is only for the urban elites are helping greatly in effecting a social change.

Few other points - YouTube has a new initiative "Broadcast your cause" where they give free cameras to community journalism, Al Gore has launched Current.com (2.0) Digg Like System for social causes sites, Kiva.com is about loans that change lives (based on Micro finance) and Clinton plugged it in Oprah on Sep 4, 2007 and they got more money they can give, MSN Messenger works with the IM donations model, Development of original multimedia content based upon community engagement in a subject area.

"We Make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give" - Winston Churchill

Mobile TV & Video: Content & Commerce: A movie clip was demoed by Motorola using Mobiclip player from Actimagine corp. Transpera demoed their solutions to connect multiple devices, multiple gateways, etc and also social community sharing features. MediaFlo (Nalco) shows their TV Experience in Mobile and channel surfing as fast as in tv and not battery draining, uses Qualcomm's nationwide 700Mhz spectrum. Actimagine says they expect the Nokia, Motorola & Windows Mobile Smartphone will be 400Million+ by next year. Choicestream talked about their personalized recommendation software. Verisign talked about their DNS Services, SSL, Mobile Messages (60% of world wide messages are routed through them) and they have more TELCO integration than anyone else. Fun Little movies demoed their family/kids/international friendly comedy in Sprint Mobile channel.

  • How do you make people watch the content they have already paid for, say by $100 per month for their cable connection
  • Internet has taught us that Media houses will have significant share, but the hockey stick long tail approach/inflexion point is user generated content
  • Discussions on whether content programming (like what they cable networks do) is important or not. Or is only the content producers (professional or user) important
  • In the question hour I talked about how in India people wait for 5-10 minutes to download a paid content; it is about empowering people who don't have access to content (connecting the unconnected)
  • There was another question - In TV advertisements happen because it was free; why will we watch advertisements while we pay for Mobile. It was answered as the same scenario that happened 10 years back - why see advertisements while we pay for ISP for internet, why we watch advertisements in TV while we pay for cable.
 
Monday, October 29, 2007

wtc I am  writing this post on a flight from London to Los Angeles. Since I had a good night sleep on my previous leg from Mumbai to London, I didn't want to sleep now, instead spending the time got on clearing my backlogs of emails and tasks. I own a Zune Player that I rarely carry outside, I think I already have enough electronics with me all the time - Laptop, its cables, cell phone and USB drives. I use my Zune most of the time while I am at home connected to Lansec speakers. Recently I found a good use for Zune, it is to take it on long trips for watching movies that I don't get time to watch while at time. The best thing about Zune is that it has a quite big size screen which makes it comfortable for watching movies, battery that lasts for nearly 2 full movies and I can charge it back by connecting it to my laptop.

I bought the DVD of the movie "World Trade Center" few months back but never had the time to watch it at home. Before leaving I converted the DVD into Zune format using PCDVD software. The software does a good conversion, but freezes once in a while running in Vista.

Coming back to the movie, I was expecting (should I say ignorantly) the movie to be the story behind the plot & how it was executed. Instead the movie was about how two cops from Port Authority (PAPD) who risked their lives to safe people after the first tower coming down, got themselves trapped in concourse of building 5. The whole movie revolves around these two officers and their anxious family. The director has nicely handled the story on the lines of human spirit, moments before death and courage of people in uniform. After watching the movie completely, it struck me if the movie had covered any other story line or talked about the plot it would have been disrespectful to the thousands of families who lost their loved one's on that tragic day.

 
Saturday, October 27, 2007

I have said it in the past, I will say it again. The best airport to go abroad from India is Chennai International Airport. It is small compared to Mumbai and Delhi, which means less flights depart, fewer people so you will have comfortable space. I am doing this post from Mumbai International Airport, even after privatization this airport has improved little. It is one big corridor in two floors, packed with people every where - easily few thousands and no place to sit, windowless gates and Cigarette smoke everywhere near gates. It is a complete chaos. Compared to the International Airport, the Mumbai Domestic Airport is far better.

Last week I went to Colombo and returned. I found the Arrival terminal in Colombo to be world class and the departure to be the same old airport. On return to India, I was surprised to find a new arrival hall in Chennai International Airport, this one is more spacious, more conveyor belts. One more reason for me to like the Chennai Airport :-)

 
Friday, October 26, 2007

Deliver an Experience - Vishwak Solutions

At Vishwak we have over 10 years of experience with Media and Mobile Portal solutions. Recently we launched www.deliveranexperience.com as a branding site for our offerings with Silverlight, Sharepoint, VPF (Vishwak Portal Framework) and MCDS (Mobile Content Delivery System).

We are showcasing this for the first time in upcoming Digital Hollywood (Fall) event being held at Hollywood from 29th Oct to 1st Nov 2007. DH is a premium event that connects Hollywood and IT industries. I will be there and if you happen to be in LA area, please visit us at Stall #60 at the Grand Ballroom at Hollywood and Highlands.

I have been invited as well as a speaker in a panel discussion on Day 3 (Nov 1):

Track III: 12:50 PM - 2:00 PM - Personalized and Innovative Mobile & Broadband Services: Advertising and Content

  • Steve Bava, Group Account Director, WHITTMANHART Interactive
  • Mike Fitzsimmons, CEO, Delivery Agent
  • Jonathan Cobb, Founder and CEO, Kiptronic
  • Venkatarangan Thirumalai, Chairman, Vishwak Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
  • Jordan Greene, VP of Mobile Marketing, MindMatics
  • Dina Pradel, Vice President of Marketing, StyleFeeder
  • Michael J. Pinto, Managing Principal, mCapital, LLC, Moderator

For Session Description & Speaker Bios Click Here

Update 1/Nov/07: My panel went well, Michael did a good job. Though the discussions were more on the advertisement/agency topics I presented an Indian perspective on some of the innovative products that are being launched in India.

Venkatarangan on Panel on Personalized and Innovative Mobile & Broadband Services

 
Tuesday, October 23, 2007

As I have said in the past, many times I find interesting articles handpicked and featured in MSN.COM homepage. Today I read one such article on World's Cheapest destinations. It covered about places where you can spend a day for $20 - Laos, Bali, Vietnam, India, Zambia, Tunisia, Honduras, Guatemala, Peru and Argentina. Sadly it has left out Sri Lanka - may be it was because of the ongoing unrest there.

Bali -World's Cheapest Destinations. MSN Travel Zambia Victoria falls - World's Cheapest Destinations. MSN Travel

Though India is featured there, don't get fooled. Anything in Travel that falls under luxury is expensive in India compared to other Asian countries. Five Star (though not everyone will be looking) accommodations are the most expensive in India, even Las Vegas is cheaper than Indian Metros. One of our abroad client is visiting us in Chennai this week and Chola Sheraton's per day rate for them is Rs.8800 (USD 225).