Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell

Class of '03 Takes Lead Role for U.S. Squad

Is it me, or are there a few people talking about video lately?

And if that's not an enough of an understatement, New York City has a small vermin problem.

Its fascinating to what how many people are trying to play this every which way.

Here's the video technology list of lists... a random collection of small bits loosely joined that I'm putting out there as fodder for discussion:

The goal in figuring out where video is going next is (depending on who you are):

  1. To make a lot of money by investing.
  2. To not lose a lot of money you've yet to invest.
  3. To make more money than you're already making.
  4. To not shoot your current business in the face.
  5. To figure out what consumers want and make them happy.

The players are/want to be (jeez, this is a big list):

  1. Consumers
  2. Cable operators
  3. Television stations
  4. TV producers/publishers
  5. Movie producers/publishers
  6. Content archive owners
  7. Advertisers
  8. GYMAAA (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL, Amazon, Apple)
  9. Flickr for video startups
  10. These guys?
  11. Box and chip companies (Phillips, Intel, etc.)
  12. Tivo
  13. Netflix, Blockbusters
  14. Bittorrent
  15. MySpace, Facebook (My friends are watching...)
  16. Big Telecom
  17. Handset manufacturers
  18. Homebuilders
  19. Akimbo, Brightcove, etc.

Top ten conflicts/bottlenecks that will cause the consumer to get the short end of the stick:

  1. DRM
  2. Video on demand cannibalizes recent release DVD sales
  3. Royalty streams for actors not setup for content ubiquity (Someone told me this, not sure if its true)
  4. Home media server setup expensive and complicated for video
  5. The $1.99 price point
  6. No way in hell all three four (iPod) screens are going to cooperate enough so that, if I buy episodes of the A-Team once, I'm going to be able to watch them on my laptop, Video IPod, TV, and my cellphone. 
  7. No universal video format (can we just lock everyone in a room and fix this)
  8. Watching DVDs in your pimped up SUV likely to cause accidents
  9. Add your addition here.
  10. Ok, so I only came up with 7... so shoot me.

What consumers want:

  1. Everything
  2. Anywhere
  3. Cheaper than we pay for it now, and growing cheaper  everyday, because that's supposedly the reason why we invented technology in the first place.
  4. Search, Discovery, Recommendation (because, the new adage is, "You can't have everything... how would you find it.")

So, if anyone wants to piece these things together coherently in an essay or maybe in a little chart or something, feel free.  I haven't come up with a unified theory yet.

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Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell

BlackHat, DefCon Pranks Underlie Larger Security Message

Link: TRENDWATCHING.COM Newsletter | Global Consumer and Marketing Trends | April 2005.

Thanks to Liesbeth den Toom for pointing me in the direction of the permalink for Trendwatching.  They've got an interesting site up and this month's newsletter highlighted "Tryvertising".  The idea:  "Give me free stuff and if I like it, I'll keep using it."  Sure, we've gotten little packets of shampoo in the mail, but did you know that there are some hotels that will let you drive around in a Maybach for free?  I hope this catches on, because I'm all about free stuff.  That's how I got hooked on Fresh Direct.  They had this free $50 of groceries offer and I'm all about food, so it was a can't miss.  Now, I don't think I've bought groceries in a regular supermarket more than twice.  The other day, I ordered mangos.  No mangos in Gristides... at least nothing that looked like a mango anyway.  We used to do the same thing at GM when people tried to sell us data services or research.  The message:  Get us hooked!  Not enough companies are doing that.

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Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell

New Kings Coach Attempts to Strike Balance

I first heard Mitch Hedberg on the XM Radio comedy station.  I think the first think I heard him say was that he wanted to be a race car passenger that bugs the driver. 

"Say man, can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why do we gotta keep going in circles? Man, you really like Tide ..."

I thought the Tide thing was hilarious and from then on, I was hooked.  I saw him on Comedy Central once... hair in front of his face, just barely audible, deadpan delivery.  Think of what Steven Wright would be if he looked like Kurt Cobain, and he was more random.  That was Mitch Hedberg.  I missed it, but apparently they found him in a hotel room in Minnesota two weeks ago.   I'm really sorry to see this guy go.  I was actually online looking for tickets to shows and they had an announcement on his site.  Here are some other Mitch quotes:

I hope the next time I move I get a real easy phone number. Something like, 222-2222. I would say sweet. People would say, "Mitch, how do I get a hold of you?" I would say, "Press 2 for a while, and when I answer, you will know that you have pressed 2 enough."

I think Pringles' initial intention was to make tennis balls. But on the day that the rubber was supposed to show up, a big truckload of potatoes arrived. But Pringles was a laid-back company. They said "Fuck it. Cut 'em up."

I get the Reese's candy bar. If you read that name Reese's thats an apostrophe S. Reese's apostrophe S at the end of that name. That means the candy bar is his. I didn't know that. Next time you're eating a Reese's candy bar and a guy name Reese comes by and says "let me have that", you better hand it over. "I'm sorry, Reese. I didn't think I'd ever run into you."

I was in a bar, minding my own business, and this guy came up to me and said, "You're gonna have to move, you're blocking a fire exit." As though if there was a fire, I wasn't gonna run. If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.

When you go to a restaurant on the weekends and it's busy they start a waiting list. They start calling out names, they say "Dufrane, party of two. Dufrane, party of two." And if no one answers they'll say their name again. "Dufrane, party of two, Dufrane, party of two." But then if no one answers they'll just go right on to the next name. "Bush, party of three." Yeah, but what happened to the Dufranes? No one seems to give a shit. Who can eat at a time like this - people are missing. You fuckers are selfish... the Dufranes are in someone's trunk right now, with duct tape over their mouths. And they're hungry! That's a double whammy. We need help. Bush,
search party of three! You can eat when you find the Dufranes.

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The Blogosphere Charlie O'Donnell The Blogosphere Charlie O'Donnell

Toyota, Honda Report Sales Jump in July

Link: apophenia: impression management: blogs as terrible representations

Last week, we got to meet some of my readers, which was very cool.  Now, I'm thinking about, after reading danah's article, what the impression is that I give off.  I don't think I've ever really met anyone through my blog after building up any kind of substantial online relationship anyway.  I wonder what kind of impression I give off here and how that compares to my offline persona.  I think part of the issue is that a lot of people only blog on one topic.  Fred and I are probably very much like we are in person as we are on our blogs.  In fact, Fred is pretty much his walking blog.  As for danah, I'm sure she's probably much more chill in person as she is on her blog, because she tends to get into some heady academic thinking on there.  In fact, as I get into some of the more well known bloggers I met through their blogs first and then in person, like Mena, Jarvis, and Steve Rubel, I think they're pretty much what I expected.  If you keep up with a blog, I think a lot of someone's personality comes out.  Its difficult to write everyday and hide major aspects of your persona... at least for me it is anyway.  So, I think I'm probably much like my blog.

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Mentoring Charlie O'Donnell Mentoring Charlie O'Donnell

Report: Pacers' Jones to Join Raptors

I run this great program for NYC-area students interested in finance called SEMI.  We even started a blog this year.  It gives students the opportunity to get matched up with a professional from the New York Society of Security Analysts, learn about different areas of finance, and also potentially win a sizable scholarship.

One of the goals for improvement in the program next year is to improve the mentor's experience.  Our mentors are very dedicated, but sometimes they feel out of touch with the broader program, or they're not exactly sure what they're suppossed to be telling the students.

I'm looking for feedback on mentoring experiences.  What has worked, what hasn't?  Are the programs you're involved with very structured or do the mentoring pairs work independently?

Also, is anyone who is reading this a member of NYSSA, or knows a NYSSA member who would make a great mentor for students interested in finance? 

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Baseball and Other Sports, Fordham Charlie O'Donnell Baseball and Other Sports, Fordham Charlie O'Donnell

Romney sorry for 'tar baby' remark

This post was written by David Murphy.  He was our shortstop and won our last two games on walkoff hits.  He was also a part of several championship Fordham intramural teams.  They even made a Geocities page about it.

Here's Dave:

The Rams Alumni softball team brought a successful finish to a dismal season last Monday night.  For the second time in as many games, the sons and daughters of Mother Fordham battled back in the final frames to finish the year on a victorious note with a 8-7 win over the vaunted Mizuno machine. 

“Regardless of the final win-loss record, I’m proud of this team,” manager Charlie O’Donnell said after the game.  “I don’t think we’ll ever be accused of having the most talent in the league, but there’s no question that, as a team, we have the heart of a champion.”

Fordham struggled throughout the season with spotty defense and a lack of timely hitting.  It wasn’t until the final stages of the season that Fordham seemed to find their groove.  All told Fordham went 5-8 missing a playoff birth by a significant margin.  Even still, O’Donnell saw seedlings of hope develop in the expansion franchise.

“When we came into the season we didn’t know what to expect,” O’Donnell said.  “There was a big learning curve with this club but I think we definitely came into our own.  You could see that, on both sides of the ball, we definitely began to gel as a unit throughout the last few games.”

Both of the final two contests in 2005 proved dramatic for the Rams.  After a thrilling walk-off home run victory in the previous game, Fordham showed no sign of a let down in the last game of the season.  Fordham went up by three going into the last inning when the same shoddy defense that had haunted them all season began to rear its ugly head.  Pitcher Patty Dickerson, the indisputable team co-MVP after logging countless innings on the mound, saw misplay after misplay result in four unearned runs for Mizhuno. 

That led to one final chance for a comeback by the Jesuit educated bunch. In the bottom of the fifth, the always selective Ron Zapata led off with a single.  He moved into scoring position on a hit by Jason Gianitti.  Two batters later, Pawtucket’s own Ryan St. Germain singled in the tying run and moved the winning run into scoring position for shortstop Dave Murphy.  Murphy, also a Pawtucket native, doubled home the game winner with a line drive to right ending Fordham’s inaugural season on a high note.

“I just got the pitch I was looking for,” Murphy said after the game.  “We’ve battled back before, and the guys just did a great job of getting on base and I was fortunate enough to get a pitch I could handle.”  Murphy’s six hits in his final six at bats for Fordham this season were a big change from his hitherto lack luster performance.  Many Rams’ observers lay the blame of Fordham’s largely unsuccessful campaign squarely on his shoulders.  The captain of two Fordham University intramural softball championships with Team Shame, struggled mightily throughout 2005.  Many believed he simply could not adjust to playing without the teammates that surrounded him from 2000-2004 at Fordham, capturing those two titles. 

For Fordham, it was the best of times and it was the worst of times in 2005.  Although the team chemistry seemed to mix well, particularly by the end of the season, a series of people moving to go along with inconsistent play on both offense and defense resulted in a sub-par performance. 

Second baseman Trevor Freeman seemed to sum up the season best when packing up his locker in the Fordham clubhouse saying, “Maybe it’s because I’m an Oakland fan, but my mentality is, hey – wait till next year!”

And that is just what Fordham plans to do. 

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Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell

Equipment sales: Aixtron and Riber

I was looking for a place to keep my photos online and Valarie from CM suggested Snapfish.  I'm trying it now and I'm thoroughly impressed with their upload feature.  I just dumped 57 hi res shots from my San Fran trip in their uploading tool and let it be.  It will take about an hour on the DTUT wifi, but its just sitting in the backround working on its own while I do other stuff.  No browsing for individual photos.  Big fan so far.  I like being able to download the high res version of the pics, too... b/c I was concerned about some of these photo albums scaling my pics down.  I'll probably never need them that detailed, but who knows.  I may go poster crazy one day and decide to wallpaper my apartment with huge reproductions of my prized butterfly pic.

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Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell Random Stuff Charlie O'Donnell

Not Too Cool for School

So, I'm taking a 4 day vacation on the West Coast...  Originally, this trip was loosely based around a Stanford visit, but then I just realized that I needed a bit of a break and I had good enough friends out here to welcome me with open arms and open apartments.  :)   So, for now I'm in Walnut Creek.... just chillin', maxin' and relaxin'.   I won't lie... I did do a little bit of work this afternoon for a client presentation, but for the most part, its the first non-family related vacation I've had in a while (visited the bro in Tampa twice this summer.)   Its funny, because as I was telling Charles (my boss) that I was going to be gone the rest week, he's like, "shit."  I'm like, "Dude... look at the calendar...  look at the last time I took time off."   So, here I am.  I'm here, and I'm resting comfortably.  Its a nice way to clear ones mind especially as big decisions may be looming. 

Pics will be coming, too, of course.  Tomorrow, I plan to head over to a Ford dealership I saw that had a Mustang on the lot.  :)

Oh, and by the way, did anyone catch Jack Cafferty ripping on Yassar Arafat this morning on CNN headline news??   I won't repeat what he said, but he basically flipped out on how terrible a guy this once and finished with, "Good riddence."  Solidad O'Brien was speechless.  Interesting stuff...   Apparently billions of dollars in donations to his cause are unaccounted for?  I didn't know this... I need to go check that out.

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Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell Venture Capital & Technology Charlie O'Donnell

SuperCoups Launches New Web Site

Lately, I've been conjuring up all sorts of ideas for what you can with del.icio.us.  A lightweight tool distributed across an active internet userbase can be a very powerful and very interesting thing.  Fred and I have been using it a lot to search.  For example, you can go to del.icio.us/tag/restaurants+nyc if you're looking for someplace good to eat.  The good thing about del.icio.us, rather than a citysearch or something like that is that unless someone finds it worthwhile enough to remember, it probably won't be on there--so the crap is already screened out to some extent.

Anyway, while I was at the Boathouse today, I was talking about dating with someone and I came up with an idea.  What about distributed dating via del.icio.us?  The problem with dating sites is that its hard to tell which ones you should use, and they're all so closed off.  Not everyone is on Match or Friendster or MySpace or whatever.  A metasearch that crawls all the dating sites might be ok, but at the end of the day, you'll still need to pay to talk to people, regardless of whether or not those people wind up being worth talking to.

So let's take back our personal lives with a little good ole fashioned self-tagging.   Basically, it will work like this.  Pick any page, preferably a page that someone can access (as opposed to one behind a pay dating site) and tag it dateme with del.icio.us.  If you don't know how to use del.icio.us yet, kick on the Pimp My Web box on my menubar.  I have some screencasts on how to get started. 

Now, we'll need some way to search people, so I suggest you go by 10 year age groups and gender.  How about location, too?  Now, certain cities have really obvious abbreviations, like NYC is obviously NYC.   Same with San Francisco.  If you're not sure, just put your two letter state abbreviation.  So, for me, I would tag my post as follows:

dateme 20s male nyc ny

If you were a woman in her 30's from San Fransisco, you'd tag yourself:

dateme 30s female sf ca

And the same thing goes for searches.  So for me, I'll be watching the del.icio.us/tag/dateme+20s+female+nyc page and its corresponding RSS feed at http://del.icio.us/rss/tag/dateme+20s+female+nyc

Inherent problems with this?  Well, first of all, the del.icio.us user population, similar to the blogger population, is probably male dominated.  So, we need guys out there getting their female friends up with del.icio.us and a blog page.  What needs to happen there I think is that some newspaper or maybe Gothamist or something needs to pick up this story and encourage people to do it. 

The cool thing is that you can setup your page, tag it, even tag it anonymously, and no one would even know that you were doing it.  So, you could just be writing  a blog, and tagging yourself for this distributed dating system, and you wouldn't have to go through the embarrassment of someone at work finding you on match or anything like that...  unless they were literally on del.icio.us looking for exactly your type of profile. 

So, I'll be tagging this post and seeing what comes of it.  Anyone who reads this, forward this to your single friends and get them up on del.icio.us if they aren't already.  If nothing else, this is going to be an interesting experiment:  The del.icio.us distributed dating experiment... starting with one silly blogger--a blogger that appreciates openminded, ambitious women who like the outdoors, movies, cooking and being cooked for, and baseball.  (Just in case this actually works.)

So... who's with me??  Tag yourselves "dateme"!!

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Kayaking Charlie O'Donnell Kayaking Charlie O'Donnell

Harrison Street Regatta

This Saturday, the Downtown Boathouse will be holding its annual Harrison Street Regatta:

From DTBH:

This is our annual fun-race and BBQ that is held every year at the Boathouse. It is the highlight of the paddling season. We hold a race from Pier 96 to our 72nd St. dock. The winner is the 2nd boat to cross the finish line. The race is open to all human-powered craft. All participants are entered in a drawing for boating-related prizes. Our fleet of public kayaks is available for use, or bring your own boat. Come at 1:00PM to register, the Race Starts at 2:00PM. A BBQ is held after the race. Everything including the food and soft drinks is 100% free.

Last year, I came in 3rd... but 1st my self termed "Crappy Boat Class".  The two guys who beat me were in fiberglass boats and I had a slow plastic one.  So, I'm going to secunder one of our newer boats by taping my name to it in the wee hours of the morn before the race starts...   I don't care about the whole 2nd boat in, thing...   I'm very ok with finishing first.  :)

So, if you'd like to come and check out kayaking, Saturday afternoon would be the day to do it....  so you could watch me leave Tim in the dust.  Remember, though, that the race ends at our location at 72nd Street!   Its a one way race, so that's where the BBQ will be as well.

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