How Print Newspapers Can Survive



If newspapers are going to beat the odds and continue to exist they must keep evolving. Some have learned their lesson as evidenced by even small town papers having decent websites. They cannot stand still though as the internet is not static. If they try to keep their online edition of the paper the same for years they will keep losing their backsides. They need to keep up with the online space by melding into it. The success of prominent bloggers is partially due to old media, without which bloggers don’t have much to talk about. That will change as well because old media & new media will take parts of each other’s qualities in order to profit. Some online sites have their own insiders to get news tips so they don’t need to read mainstream newspapers or watch the talking heads on TV to get their information.

Podcasts, blogs, & online video are essential to newspapers surviving. If smaller papers don’t have the people or ability to do video or podcasts they better hire the people who can provide help. If not they are still just something to read. If you haven’t noticed there are a ton of people who simply hate reading, which is terrible, but nonetheless, a fact. Many folks would rather just watch a video or listen to a podcast with the same info as what they would have to read. Our small town paper is moving in the right direction but still has no video or podcasts. They have added rss feeds & the ability to comment on some articles which should have been done a long time ago. All they needed to do was hire the right person to point them in the right direction. But when you get set in your ways it is hard to turn around the ship. Another local news website is using more media formats and even had video available from the local presidential rallies in town. I don’t think they even have a print edition as they tend to have a relationship with the local radio station and may even be owned by the same company. It will be interesting to see which one flourishes especially with the slowdown in the economy.


The Future of Buckypaper



I may have reported on this before several months back, I’m not sure, but there have been some new advances in the potential manufacturing process for buckypaper.

Silly name for a product, but it has great potential for the future of planes, automobiles, and possibly even home construction. Buckypaper is 10 times lighter, but as much as 500 times stronger than steel. It is a composite product, but unlike other composites, it can conduct electricity like copper or silicon and disperses heat like steel or brass. It’s potential is unlimited, but only if the manufacture of it can be developed so that it is cost-effective and less time-intensive.

Buckypaper looks like ordinary carbon paper, but is actually created from tube-shaped carbon molecules 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. Because of its construction and conductivity, it can be used to lighten automobiles and airplanes, replace some functional components of computers and televisions, and even be used in the development of lower-cost solar options.

Researchers at Florida’s Rice University are working on revolutionary manufacturing techniques that may make the production of buckypaper much more cost-effective, as well as being less time-intensive. This new research is a major breakthrough on a project that has been taking shape over the last 15 years.

And if the name sounds funny, those that are science geeks like me will know right away that Buckminster Fuller had something to do with this. The discovery of “buckyballs” [buckminsterfullerene], soccer-ball-shaped molecules produced during an experiment with carbon, led to the development of buckypaper. Ah, the visionary and futurist Buckminster Fuller. He lives on!


Knock, Knock. Hi. I’m AT&T. Wanna Switch to Us?



So yesterday I was working on a new PC for my ustreaming when the dog starts barking profusely. I went downstairs to find out what’s going on and noticed there was someone at the door. After getting Alex settled, I answered it.

The guy says “Hi. I’m with AT&T. We just put Fiber in your area and wanted to let you know.”

I decided to forgo the usual “Funny I don’t feel more regular” quips and let him explain what that meant to me. He continued on by saying that they could now offer cable TV and wireless to this house with speeds up to 10 Meg down and 1.5 meg up.

“That’s great” I said. “Do you have any documentation?”

“Uhhhh….” he responded. “No. But if you switch now we can give you a great discount.”

I was a little perplexed. So I decided to grill him a little. “You say 10 down, 1.5 up, is AT&T also going to be implementing a cap?”

“Uhh…. I don’t know. I am only a contractor…”

I continued. “Well what type of channels does the cable offer?”

“Uhhh….”

There were a couple other questions, but you get the idea. I told him straight up that he had no documentation for me and he couldn’t answer any real questions. If he wants to come back with that information and documentation, then I’ll entertain the idea.

First of all, let me state at this point in life I like Charter. They have some decent policies like they won’t give my information to just anybody asking for it. If there is a problem, I will be informed so I can take action. Of course they’re a big company and that could change tomorrow, but for now I realize I could be burdened with the bureaucratic B.S. some other companies are pulling.

Now while I understand AT&T is just trying to get into the niche, to send someone over that doesn’t have the ability to answer my questions is just asinine. How do I know it’s not a guy just trying to scam some information from me? As I’m writing this, I should have called local authorities.

If you are going to knock on my door and upset my dog, you better be able to explain yourself. This guy didn’t. Therefore, he got no more information from me than a email would saying I won $300 million from the Nigerian Lottery.

Now that I think about it, I will be notifying the local authorities on this. I saw “Home Alone.” If they are an intruder, all Alex will end up doing is try to lick their face and hope they take him for a walk.


2008 Podcast Awards Slate



2008pcaThe 2008 Podcast Awards slate of shows that will be voted on has been finalized and will be announced Sunday Oct 19th at 4pm Pacific.

I personally want to thank those in my audience that volunteered to do the review. It was a huge amount of work in fact for a few of our reviewers it was more than they bargained for and I had to solicit some alternates.

The slate looks pretty impressive and I look forward to making the announcement on Sunday. The announcement will take place via a live streamed event starting at 4pm Pacific @ PodcastAwards.com


Disco Could Save Your Life



This is not tech-related, but medical-related, and thought I’d share. Like many people, I am certified in CPR and First Aid and keep my certification up to date. Because I work in a college environment with lots of young people who don’t always have the common sense they should have, I have found this training to be invaluable.

And while I’ve never had to perform CPR on anyone, I know I can if need be. Today, a new study from the University of Illinois at Peoria suggests that disco can save lives. Specifically, applying chest compressions to the beat of the Bee Gees’ Stayin’ Alive can reach the target of over 100 beats per minute. The song has a measured beat of about 103 beats per minute, which when used as a template for compressions, is virtually perfectly matched to the standards published by the American Heart Association.

Performing CPR can triple the survival of victims, and the song is easily stuck in one’s head anyway because of its repetition and intense beat.

I wonder if I’ll get to hear the Bee Gees in my next CPR certification class?


GNC-2008-10-17 #417 Live from Dallas Texas



Live from Dallas will be having Dinner tonight with those that want to come hang out give me a call. 808-741-4923 if you want to have dinner with me in Dallas Tonight Oct 17th

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Show Notes:
Where to Put Your Money Now
Oil Prices Down
New Macbooks Discussion
Joe the Plumber Website
Mars Phoenix Lander nears End of Mission
Firefox 3.1 Beta 1
ISP Scanning your Outbound Traffic?
Free Font Sites
FCC Worried about Digital Switch
Android Kill Switch
Mimo – Mini Displays
Hubble Fires up a 486
Do you look at Site Ads?
The Live Web
Adbrite Downsizes
Build Display Ads
Free Broadband Fight is On!
Build your own 3d Movie
Soyuz to ISS
Patch Tuesday has 11 Updates
Voice Lie Detector

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What caused the financial crisis?



It annoys me when people try to blame the problem on a single thing, banks, the government, deregulation, etc. The situation is so much more complex than can be explained by any one reason and most people that are trying to blame a particular factor have an agenda they are trying to promote. Greed and cognitive dissonance should be high in the list of causes though.

The Mark Cuban article Todd talked about in #415 offers quite a good high level analysis of what has been going on and some reasonable solutions to the problem. I thought at least some of the GNC readers would like some deeper insight into some of the factors that tend to get glossed over in the media coverage. When Mark talks about Investment vs Financial Engineering, he is touching on a very profound difference between two sources of wealth creation in modern capital markets. One method is to create something that has value and sell it to someone. People with money can invest in these type of companies and share in the returns. The other method is to move money around and take a cut for doing so. While this second method can help money get to where it is needed, it can also be used for personal gain without any real benefit to the economy. This is what Mark means by financial engineering.

You have probably heard ‘derivatives’ mentioned occasionally, most likely in relation to the sub-prime mortgage market. These financial tools, and their misuse are at the heart of the financial crisis. The derivatives market is so complex that Nobel prize winning economists struggle to understand the complete details of them. The basics are quite simple though, and probably the simplest derivative to understand is an option. As a reward for good service, your company may give you an option to buy shares. The price of the share is the current buy price, but you will not pay for it until some point in the future. The option itself has no value unless the share price moves. If it goes up the option has a positive value, if it goes down it has a negative value. The value of the option depend on, or ‘derives’ from the value of something else, in this case a stock.

In the case of a company giving you stock options there is no downside to you, if the stock price goes down you just ignore them and they eventually expired. Lets say though, that the rules of the option you have allowed you to sell it (which some do). Another person to offer to buy them from you. If you are not confident the stock price will go up you might sell them to get some cash for something that is essentially worthless to you. The person gives you cash now and if the stock goes up in the future they get the benefit then, what they have actually bought off you is a potential reward and the risk that goes along with that. This illustrates the key reason for the existence of derivatives which is to transfer risk.

Currency hedge positions protect companies from movements in exchange rates, credit default swaps transfer the risk of bankruptcy, CDO’s spread the risk of mortgage defaults, short selling buffers against stock price falls. There are hundreds of different types of derivatives and none of them have any intrinsic value. What they do is transfer both the positive and negative aspects of risk. When used in the right way they lower the risk of an investors portfolio. The way they have increasingly been used in recent years (since about 2001) is essentially gambling.

The consequence of the over 5 fold increase in derivatives trading since 2001 was to release lots of extra money into the market. This money was essentially created out of thin air and represented the possible future value of a range of base assets. This money was essentially a loan that could only be repaid if those assets legitimately increased in value in the future. You can probably see what a house of cards this was. This is why so many commentators talk about trust when talking about the problem. As long as everyone believed that they would get paid in the future they were happy to go along with what was going on. As soon as that trust was gone the whole house of cards falls down. Like when the housing market, artificially inflated by the easy availability of credit, finally snaps back to reality.

As I said earlier, there are so many reasons why this got out of hand. Government removed regulations that limited the use of derivatives; aggressive fund managers pushed products that became more and more risky; lenders were more concerned with getting customers than evaluating their ability to pay; ratings agencies like Moody’s and S&P gave AAA ratings to investments that were by definition risky; analysts and the press didn’t bother to understand what the realities of the situation were; many people chose to believe that asset prices would continue to rise, despite a history of this being wrong. Many people let their greed get the better of them.

While this description only scratches the surface I hope it has helped you understand what is going on a bit better.