Data Science

Couple of articles last week showed how companies are trying to use Data Science to make sense of data they have captured over the years resulting in some great analytics and value being added back into the system. The first one is an WSJ Article which utilizes Google’s Books Ngram Viewer to analyze the use of phrases “Merry Christmas” and “Happy Holidays” over the years. Second one came from Facebook Data team which discovered patterns in how people use status updates differently, and how their friends interact with these status updates. These are great examples of what Tim O’Reilly outlined as “Data is the next Intel Inside” in his famous Web 2.0 article. Mike Loukides wrote a great report back in June’10 trying to make sense of Data Science. He summed up his report as below:

The future belongs to the companies who figure out how to collect and use data successfully. Google, Amazon, Facebook, and LinkedIn have all tapped into their datastreams and made that the core of their success. They were the vanguard, but newer companies like bit.ly are following their path. Whether it's mining your personal biology, building maps from the shared experience of millions of travellers, or studying the URLs that people pass to others, the next generation of successful businesses will be built around data. The part of Hal Varian's quote that nobody remembers says it all:

The ability to take data -- to be able to understand it, to process it, to extract value from it, to visualize it, to communicate it -- that's going to be a hugely important skill in the next decades.

Data is indeed the new Intel Inside.

Instagram hits 1 Million Users

One of my favorite Apps on iPhone, Instagram hits One Million users.

The Instagram Community - One Million and Counting

Now, only a couple months later, we're happy to announce that our community consists of more than a million registered users. But why is this important?

We believe it's the beginning of something bigger. When we started working on Instagram, we tried to imagine what the world would be like if everyone could contribute media to an open, transparent, and international community. For a startup with 80 users at the time, this was a big hairy audacious goal. Little did we know that within a few short weeks we'd see more images from all over the world than we could have ever imagined. It was both rewarding and humbling to see people embrace Instagram as both a new home on their iPhone - and a new way of communicating visually with people around the world. We believe this is only the beginning. With 6.7 billion people in the world, we're a tiny fraction of the way there, but we're extremely happy with the progress.

Microsoft has now 1300 customers for Cloud in India

Microsoft has now 1300 customers for Cloud in India.

Microsoft revealed for the first time that it had won 1,300 customers for its cloud based offerings in India. It has been about a year since the company announced these services for the country.
Sanjay Manchanda, director for the business division of Microsoft India, said 80% of those customers were SMBs, but said that proportion would be lower if the number of users were considered. Manchanda declined to provide user numbers, but large enterprises typically have much larger numbers of users. We expected to attract primarily SMBs, but found that many large enterprises were keen to move to the cloud for their new capacity needs, he said.

Link bait

Laughable when people use Microsoft name in their article headlines as a link bait. Why couldn’t this headline read, “Why Your Startup Shouldn’t Hire a Marketer from Apple”?

Show some love to RIM (maybe 1-2 quarters more)

RIM is getting some love from the Market today, reason, better than expected sales numbers. Profit rises to 45%. RIM is selling 14.2 M Blackberrys, shade more than iPhones.

NYT - Research In Motion Profit Rises 45%

R.I.M. said it shipped 14.2 million BlackBerrys in the quarter, narrowly beating Apple’s iPhone sales in its latest quarter, which ended in September. Most of R.I.M.’s growth is now coming from markets outside the United States, Canada and Britain, where the BlackBerry is the business phone of choice.

The company, based in Waterloo, Ontario, said its net income was $911 million, or $1.74 a share, up from $628 million, or $1.10 a share, a year earlier.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected earnings of $1.65 a share, on average.

Revenue in the period, which ended Nov. 27 and was the third quarter of R.I.M.’s fiscal year, rose 40 percent to $5.49 billion, better than the $5.4 billion expected by analysts.

“International markets continue to adopt BlackBerry in record numbers,” R.I.M.’s co-chief executive, Jim Balsillie, said on a conference call with analysts.

Horace Dediu breaks up the numbers.

Windows Phone & Apps gaining momentum

Microsoft is making great headway into forming new partnerships to bring great Apps to Windows Phone Marketplace. Yesterday Paramount Digital Entertainment announced that it will be releasing ten enhanced movie apps of Paramount Pictures' films exclusively for Windows Phone 7.  It also launched School of Rock movie Apps yesterday.

Paramount to Rock the Mobile Apps Market on Windows Phone 7

Paramount Digital Entertainment, a division of Paramount Pictures, announced today the availability of a brand new “School of Rock” app in the Windows Phone Marketplace that lets smartphone owners watch the full movie plus menus, bonus features and experiences not available on other mobile platforms.

“School of Rock” is the first of 10 Windows Phone 7 movie apps to be made available – other titles such as the Ben Stiller vehicle “Zoolander,” the action-packed feature film “GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra” and the documentary “Waiting for Superman” will soon be available, with more titles to come.

Microsoft also share the number of apps in the marketplace which now have crossed 4000.

Windows Phone Marketplace currently offers 4,000 quality apps and games for Windows Phone 7, with more than 18,000 developers already registered and working to keep the app pipeline full.

Google launches Nexus phone again??

Wait, what?? Google launches Nexus phone again?? I remember somebody saying that we won’t have a second Nexus Phone. I almost forgot but Web does not. Got it, it was Mr Schimdt who said this.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/google/7864223/Googles-Eric-Schmidt-You-can-trust-us-with-your-data.html

Initially, Google felt that they needed to build a device to help Android along so they worked with HTC to create the Nexus One handset. Schmidt says: “The idea a year and a half ago was to do the Nexus One to try to move the phone platform hardware business forward. It clearly did. It was so successful, we didn't have to do a second one. We would view that as positive but people criticised us heavily for that. I called up the board and said: 'Ok, it worked. Congratulations - we're stopping'. We like that flexibility, we think that flexibility is characteristic of nimbleness at our scale."

 

http://gizmotiff.wordpress.com/2010/10/27/google-nexus-two-alert-carphone-warehouse/ 

Now, with the Nexus Two rumors, I am sort of confused about what he meant. Does releasing a Nexus One successor indicate that Android is not a success as Google thought it was? Ouch. So much for all that hype about Android activation numbers. Or was Schmidt taking a nap when they decided to make a Nexus Two?

Either way should I also remind you that Google accepted defeat and discontinued selling the Nexus One from its website earlier this year. If the Nexus Two is real, looks like Google has learnt from its blunder and decided to unload the phone on a third party phone retailer in UK (No news of when it’s coming to US!)

Why XBOX 360 TV will be a Success

Reuters is reporting that Microsoft is in talks with TV networks to create a new subscription-based TV service on its Xbox gaming console that would rival efforts by Google Inc, Apple Inc and Netflix Inc.

Microsoft eyes leap back into TV: sources

One scenario under consideration by Microsoft is to create a new TV service on its Xbox gaming console that would establish a "virtual cable operator." The service would charge a monthly fee for access through the Xbox to networks such as ABC, NBC, Fox, CBS, ESPN or CNN, according to two sources familiar with the plans.

Other options include allowing cable subscribers to use the Xbox to watch shows with more interactive functions. Viewers could, for instance, message with friends over the console while viewing their favorite shows.

Microsoft is also exploring the possibility of creating programing packages for customers, setting up a bundle of sports or children shows, for example, these people said.

 

I see three reasons why Microsoft will pull this off into being a success:

 

One: Number of XBOX Live Subscribers

Microsoft has over 25 Million XBOX Live Subscribers (source) and with Kinect selling like Hot Cakes (source), more and more people are bound to get attracted towards XBOX leading to even more sales and more XBOX Live Subscribers. I won’t be surprised if I see 28 Million XBOX Live Subscribers mark getting breached by January. That’s more subscribers than Comcast which has 23 Million Subscribers (source). That means Microsoft is well poised to get better (read that ‘fresh’) content from Networks. Moreover XBOX Live subscribers have shown avid interest in watching TV/Movies over XBOX using services like Netflix or XBOX Live/Zune. Within the first three months of Netflix launch on XBOX 360, 1 million Xbox LIVE Gold members had downloaded and activated the Netflix LIVE application (source).

 

Two: Technology like Kinect and 3D TVs gaining Momentum

Motion sensing and voice controlled Kinect devices takes the gaming experience to a whole new level. It will make even more sense when Microsoft forwards this innovation and applies it somehow to the Video and Online Content. At its minimum I would be cool to play/stop/pause my Movie on XBOX by calling out without a remote. With 3D TVs gaining momentum, we can’t just imagine what all Kinect can do in this space.

 

Three: App Store

There are rumors of Microsoft looking to expand its Silverlight web platform to Xbox 360 (source). Silverlight is the platform on which most Windows Phone 7 Apps are developed. Wonder what will happen if Microsoft is able to bring the App Store to XBOX. Suddenly the developers of these Apps will have a new market (millions of XBOX subscribers) buying their Apps and this will only provide more incentive for them to develop cool new Apps for XBOX. Combine it with 3D TVs and you have a whole new dimension of looking at things.

 

Next year will be great for Microsoft consumer products and I am sure XBOX will be leading the way.

Windows Phone 7 nearing to 3,000 apps and games

From the Windows Phone Developer Blog

We’re heading into one of the biggest shopping weeks of the year and we’re on pace to offer roughly 3,000 apps and games by the end of this week. We’ve also seen a near 80% increase in the number of registered developers since September, with more than 15,000 developers already signaling their intent to bring exciting content to Windows Phone. Clearly we’re just getting warmed up.

Galaxy Tab eating into iPad Pie

Definitely there is a demand for alternate form factor Slates/tablets, a sweet spot between Mobile and Laptops. Samsung with Galaxy Tab is eating directly into Apple iPad sales pie. Microsoft needs to position a strong alternative and it needs to happen soon (as in next 3-6 months).

Galaxy Tab global sales top 600,000 units

Samsung Electronics Co. said Sunday it has sold more than 600,000 units of its tablet PC globally just a month after its launch. The 7-inch Galaxy Tab was first released in Italy in mid-October, challenging the global dominance of Apple Inc’s 9.7-inch iPad.  The Galaxy Tab is now available in more than 30 countries in North America, Europe and Asia. In Korea, about 30,000 units have been sold since its Nov. 14 launch through SK Telecom. 

Apple has sold about 7.5 million iPad units globally since its April launch, brushing off skepticism that tablet PCs would not fill the gap between smartphones and computers.

"The Daily" coming to iPads near you

This looks promising if Steve Jobs and Rupert Murdoch are able to pull it off with a staff of mere 100.

A News Corp. Newspaper, but Not in Print

Rupert Murdoch, an old-timey newspaper romantic, has nonetheless deputized himself as the digital savior of paid content. Mr. Murdoch is currently leading the charge to build The Daily, an iPad-centered newspaper under construction in the News Corporation’s Manhattan offices that is scheduled to appear at the beginning of next year.

With an investment of $30 million and a staff of around 100, The Daily will be the first of a kind — a “newspaper” with rich media and photography built especially for the iPad.

Beyond editorial challenges, the path to a real business with real profits seems a lot less clear than the display on an iPad. If, as Mr. Murdoch is said to hope, half a million people eventually subscribe over the first five years, that would be almost 5 percent of all current tablet users, which seems wildly optimistic. (Then again, by some estimates, the number of tablet users will grow to more than 100 million in the same period.)

In the meantime, reaching about 100,000 people seems far more likely, which would yield less than $20 million annually, even before Apple gets a cut. And the discrete market for advertising within applications seems promising, but it is largely untested.

In the short run at least, The Daily will be like a number of Mr. Murdoch’s other newspapers in this respect: It will be depending on money earned by other parts of the News Corporation.

The New Monopoly - AT&T, Comcast, Apple.......& Google

Meet the New Monopoly, Same as the Old One

Thank goodness the confining days of the 20th century are behind us and freedom of expression and choice will forever reign, right? Don't be so sure, says Tim Wu, a law professor at Columbia University. In his new book, The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Wu argues that our Internet-driven, increasingly wireless information bounty could be on the verge of falling into the stifling control of a handful of powerful companies—just as TV, film, radio, and telephones did in their time. In Wu's view, such companies as AT&T, Comcast, and Apple will try to increase their power as gatekeepers of information, subverting the promise of the Internet as a revolutionarily open distribution medium. Google was founded on an alternative premise, one rooted in the ideals of the Internet, but Wu fears that Google might also be drawn to the dark side.

David Pogue reviews Google TV

David Pogue reviews Google TV

This much is clear: Google TV may be interesting to technophiles, but it’s not for average people. On the great timeline of television history, Google TV takes an enormous step in the wrong direction: toward complexity.

Product Development is difficult than Web App development.

Are we there yet, I mean "In the Bubble"

Morgan Stanley's Net “Queen” Meeker is Back In Demand

Mary Meeker predicted a $50 billion online advertising boom in an address at the annual Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco today. The Morgan Stanley analyst said as well that mobile commerce may gain market share faster than traditional online retailing.

Meeker, 51, is back in demand. She was called “Queen of the Net” by Barron’s in 1998, only to see her star dim as technology stocks plunged and regulators said securities firms used biased research to lure banking business. These days, investors are scouring her work anew for would-be Web winners.

“We are trying to invest in the kinds of companies she’ll mention in her reports,” investor Marc Andreessen said in an interview.

BTW, Mary Meeker, presented her Internet Trends report today, Ten Questions Internet Execs Should Ask & Answer - Presentation from Web 2.0 Summit. Good Read.

Ask.com learns it's tough to counter Network Effects

It’s tough to counter Network Effects unless you have a distinctive positioning (most of the times new innovation around gaps in incumbents products) and innovative marketing strategies.

IAC's Barry Diller Surrenders to Google, Ends Ask.com's Search Effort

Ask.com, the Internet search engine that media mogul Barry Diller acquired for $1.85 billion to compete with Google Inc., is cutting 130 engineering jobs and conceding much of its search business to competitors.

Leeds said that Google has become too powerful a competitor to justify Ask.com’s continued pursuit of those search users.

“It’s become this huge juggernaut of a company that we really thought we could compete against by innovating,” Leeds said in an interview. “We did a great job of holding our market share but it wasn’t enough to grow the way IAC had hoped we would grow when it bought us.”