Posts filed under Online Media

Major Publisher Selects .tv for video channel

Nothing dramatic here, but part of what will become a steady stream of corporate .tv initiatives over the next 2 years. Disclosure: we own one of the largest portfolios of .tv domains in the world via national.tv so I am obviously cheerleading for the extension right now. Thanks Mark for the tip.

Full Article here

Publishing giant Meredith Corp. has launched its first broadband network, Better.tv.

The online video network takes its content from Meredith's stable of magazines including Better Homes and Gardens, Ladies' Home Journal, More, Family Circle, Parents and Fitness, as well as its TV stations, books, Web sites and live events.

The broadband site, which launched this week, hosts more than 20 "channels" arranged by topic, from food, family and relationships to remodeling, entertainment and fitness. Meredith is selling ad space on Better.tv in tandem with its other interactive properties, especially BHG.com, the Web site for Better Homes & Gardens.

Meredith also has bundled Better.tv into its corporate package that lets advertisers buy space and time across all its properties. So far, its sales push within that corporate package has been “minimal,” since the sales team hasn’t had anything to show advertisers about Better.tv until now, said Jack Bamberger, Meredith’s senior vice president of corporate sales and marketing.

Posted on April 11, 2007 and filed under Online Media.

Great Moments in Strategic Thinking: Google MyMaps

Om Malik at GigaOm notes that now that Google Maps has created MyMaps, a feature letting users easily map data on Google Maps, it means tough slogging for a series of startups built around the Google Maps API.

Google is announcing a new service, My Maps, that allows anyone to create their own Google Maps-based mashups, reports The Wall Street Journal. Essentially, anyone can go in and plot all the great Thai restaurants in San Francisco, and save it as SF Thai Food Maps. You can also attach YouTube videos to these maps. Think map mashups for dummies! Microsoft already offers a similar feature with its stellar and constantly improving Live Search Maps service.

The consequences of Google's announcement could be quite dire for a gaggle of map mashup start-ups including Platial, Frappr, Flagr and Plazes, to name a few that have raised millions of dollars in venture capital.

Some use the Google Maps API as an underpinning for their offering. They now face the prospect of competing with Google, which also controls the API. However, a quick review of Google's new service gives upstarts an edge on user friendliness, even though on their blog, Google claims even caveman can do it.

I don't mean to be mean, but was there any doubt that Google would ultimately make a MyMaps-like feature? And more generally, if there is something quick and easy programmatic that you are building on someone else's API, I think you should expect this to happen.

Here is a general rule of thumb to keep in mind when competing with Google that is twice as applicable for mashups.

If it is relatively easy for them to do programmatically or in an automated manner, you are ultimately dead. Real value will come if you can access offline data or capabilities that are just too niche or painful for them to do. So if you go post underwater pictures of every reef in Belize on your site and integrated with Google Maps in a mashup, you are probably safe. If you just build an additional programmatic feature to Google Maps in your application, then, sorry, if it is any good, you will have it copied.

This is not Google-specific, it is a general rule that without a proprietary edge, long-term you are usually in trouble....See what is happening with Alexa/Alexaholic for more of the same.

Posted on April 8, 2007 and filed under Online Media.

Major Article About .tv

As late as six months ago, the general domain community was neutral to negative about the prospects of .tv. This morning, there was a long and positive cover story in the Domain Name Journal, the major publication covering domains about Richard Rosenblatt and his plans for the .tv extension.

The full article is here, but I have excerpted the background about Richard Rosenblatt and their plans for .tv.

Despite being founded less than a year ago (in May 2006), Demand Media has already become one of true giants in the domain industry. The mastermind behind the company’s meteoric rise is a 37-year-old serial entrepreneur from Southern California named Richard Rosenblatt. Rosenblatt is best-known as the guy who transformed Intermix Media and their marquee website, MySpace.com, from a money-losing albatross into a half-billion dollar racehorse. Less than 18 months after he became CEO at Intermix, Rosenblatt had sopped up the sea of red ink and engineered a $580 million sale of the company to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

While that was Rosenblatt’s biggest success, it was far from his only triumph – in fact it wasn’t even his first half billion dollar sale! In 1999, Rosenblatt sold a company he had founded himself, iMall, to ExciteAtHome for $565 million! That same year he became the founding investor and Vice Chairman of GreatDomains, a domain aftermarket sales company that he then quickly ramped up and helped sell to Verisign for $100 million in 2000.

[break]...

At the moment, Rosenblatt’s eyes are squarely focused on transforming .TV into a major extension that surfers will recognize as the place to find video content. Technically, .TV is the country code for the small pacific island nation of Tuvalu, but in 2000 that country licensed operation of the extension to Verisign.

Verisign had some modest success with the TLD but decided a few months ago to turn management of .TV over to Demand Media. “Verisign is an important partner and we are thrilled to be working with them on .TV. It has been a collaborative process and we are working together to really build out the best possible offering that will drive .TV adoption,” Rosenblatt said. "We plan to make .TV ubiquitous. We are going to spend a lot of money to make .TV the domain you must have!"

Demand Media will officially relaunch the extension May 1 at the prestigious AlwaysOn Hollywood show for digital media and entertainment executives in Hollywood, California. Rosenblatt and NBC-TV personality Carson Daly, who signed on as .TV’s spokesman, are both scheduled to sit on the keynote panel for the event at the Roosevelt Hotel.

The show should give .TV a tremendous amount of exposure as organizers says it will attract 700 technology, entertainment and media CEOs, studio heads, business development officers, media buyers, venture capital and private-equity investors. Leading members of the press and blogging community will also attend and over 20,000 webcast viewers from over 100 countries are expected to tune in and interact with the program.

Rosenblatt will take the opportunity to introduce a much anticipated suite of proprietary free tools that the company says will allow anyone to build a video channel with social networking features on their .TV names registered through eNom.TV or any eNom reseller site.

.TV fans are also anxiously awaiting the reinstatement of premium .TV domain registrations (high quality generic or geo names offered at variable prices to be determined by the registry). Demand Media put the premium names on hold when they took over management of the extension. Since then if you have tried to register a domain on their premium list you have had to fill out a form that promises you will be contacted when the domain is made available (you can still register any domains not on the reserved list).

Though premium registration has ostensibly been closed, sharp observers from the .TV Forum at NamePros.com say they have seen some top tier names turned over to new owners in recent weeks. Demand Media spokesperson Quinn Daly could only tell us “We are continuing to respond to inbound requests and evaluate sales on a limited basis, but are finalizing our strategy to make premium names available in a more automated fashion through our platform.”

Though the distribution mechanism for premium names remains unsettled, Rosenblatt is convinced the path to .TV success is on solid ground. “There are a couple of fundamental shifts in the market place that we see coming. First, media has become more personal and community focused, so users want to build their own space and control their own social network. Second, video has exploded online with millions of users creating, viewing and sharing video content. " "Here in L.A., there was a fire recently that was burning very close to the Hollywood sign. Within an hour from when the fire broke out, there were thousands of videos uploaded to YouTube. Thousands!,” Rosenblatt marveled.

“This is the time for .TV. We believe that the market is ready, that users will immediately understand the benefit and meaning of a .TV site. Market adoption will be driven by great examples of .TV sites and by providing very simple and easy tools to empower the user to build their own channel. See the pervasive theme here?,” Rosenblatt asked. “Again, it comes down to giving users the ability to build their own store, or profile, or channel that they want. The great thing is that the users and technology keep evolving so we can give them much more than an iMALL store.”

Demand Media started beating the promotional drums as soon as they took over management of .TV. There is an informational site at ChannelMe.tv and Carson Daly, who has a popular late night national TV talk show in the U.S., has been providing a celebrity push at Carson Daly.tv.

While .TV is front and center at Demand at the moment, they have their eyes on other pillars of a domain empire. “Our overall company strategy is to build and grow enthusiastic vertical sites by empowering the user. We are doing this in multiple ways, but they all involve combining professional content relevant to that vertical. We then snap in our social networking tools, our user publishing and multiple forms of monetization,” Rosenblatt said. He also told us the company intends to continue making new acquisitions that fit their strategy.

Posted on April 8, 2007 and filed under Online Media.

100 Oldest Currently Registered Domains

Computer

Here are the first twenty:

1. 15-Mar-1985 SYMBOLICS.COM 2. 24-Apr-1985 BBN.COM 3. 24-May-1985 THINK.COM 4. 11-Jul-1985 MCC.COM 5. 30-Sep-1985 DEC.COM 6. 07-Nov-1985 NORTHROP.COM 7. 09-Jan-1986 XEROX.COM 8. 17-Jan-1986 SRI.COM 9. 03-Mar-1986 HP.COM 10. 05-Mar-1986 BELLCORE.COM 11. 19-Mar-1986 IBM.COM 11. 19-Mar-1986 SUN.COM 13. 25-Mar-1986 INTEL.COM 13. 25-Mar-1986 TI.COM 15. 25-Apr-1986 ATT.COM 16. 08-May-1986 GMR.COM 16. 08-May-1986 TEK.COM 18. 10-Jul-1986 FMC.COM 18. 10-Jul-1986 UB.COM 20. 05-Aug-1986 BELL-ATL.COM

Funny to see a lot familiar names... Full 100 are here

Posted on April 7, 2007 and filed under Online Media.