Froth Alert?

Amusing list yesterday from the a:c…  The talk of a new bubble has now been around for 18 months, since the term Web2.0, with about a thousand possible meanings, got people and the media in a spin.

Although I lack the on-the-ground prespective from the valley, I think it’s difficult to call the current state of internet business a bubble.  First, you don’t have many public companies, so the valuation inflation is mainly happenning on the VC books.  That’s a much smaller problem, especially given the liquidity levels globally.  Second, if you looked, you could see similar exuberance in almost any market (e.g. residential real estate yields in Istanbul seem to hover around 2-3%), so the asset price levels are not isolated to the internet sector. Third, some of the bubblish valuations we’ve seen (YouTube, DoubleClick, implied Facebook), are truly paradigm shifting companies and not exactly pets.com’s.

Not a bubble… Yet..

Facebook keeps disrupting

F8
I am following the coverage of f8, and I find myself thinking that what Facebook is setting out to create is the most significant development on the internet since Google.  An open platform, supported by its own markup language (modified HTML) and open-source programming toolset (thrift), overlayed on the most loyal user base, is immensely valuable.

Good coverage by Mashable, TechCrunch and GigaOm.

PS. Photo by Chris Kelly.

DRM-Free Music from Amazon

Amazon’s announced a disruptive move today: They launched a music store selling MP3s, through a partnership with EMI and apparently 12K other labels.

This is exactly what I have been waiting for.  I have been sick of iTunes restricting which MP3 player I can use, or how many computers I can transfer my music to.  I presume they will try to restrict me geographically, but I can usually get around that using a US credit card.

I hope the other majors, if they have not already, follow EMI to Amazon fast.

eBay in Turkey

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eBay has acquired a minority stake in Turkey’s leading auction site, GittiGidiyor.com.  It’s really the first second global internet company acquisition in the Turkish market (after Ticketmaster’s acquisition of Biletix.  Thanks, Tahir).  More should follow, as Turkey’s significance as an internet market is getting more visible.

Congratulations to Serkan, Burak and Tolga, the founding team at GittiGidiyor.com, who have created a great company.

Case on Revolution Health

I continue to believe that one of the next great companies created will help solve consumer healthcare problems.  The current contender for that prize is Revolution HealthFabrice has a few words, first hand from Steve Case, on the company.

He also described what he’s doing with Revolution Health. As we all
know and as Steve experienced with his brother’s Dan brain cancer and
his various encounters with the health care system, health care is
broken in this country. Consumers are not the decision makers, there is
no consumer brand in health care and getting information and services
is extremely inconvenient. He intends to change that.

I Want My MTV

I_want_my_mtv
OK, I could not resist the headline…  Actually, what I mean is that broadcast TV is bankrupt and as a consumer, I am demanding access to video content of my choice, on any screen I prefer, at any time I prefer, and I am willing to pay a lot of money for it.  The technology has been here for a long time, but old media, who still (at least legally) controls content has so far not succeeded in delivering the solution.

I am in NYC this week and being here reminds me both about the available content that I would demand (if only it was offered to me) and that the technology has enabled the U.S. customer to get a similar experience to the above.

What I have in mind can be attained today, fairly easily, although it would involve breaching some laws.  I’d have to set up a server in the US, get a cable tuner next to it, and hook it up to a DVR and a SlingBox.  Wİth the server I can purchase the content offered online in the U.S. (typically blocked to Turkish IPs) like the shows on NBC or iTunes.  With the PVR and SlingBox, I can stream live or saved content to Turkey.  I would pay for the services (cable) and the pay-content.

I can not understand why this valuable an experience is not offered to me by the media/telecoms industry when the technology is so readily available?  When I don’t have this option what do I do?  I watch less video content, and when I do, some of it is pirated.

Don’t even get me started on the zones for DVDs! That’s for another post…