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    July 11, 2008

    iPhone 2.0 'Remote' : a Small App For A Giant Leap Forward

    Apple_iphone20remote Shall you have an iPhone or iPod Touch, you can now remote control your iTunes libraries (Mac and PC, Folks) with the little yet jaw-dropping awesomely fantastic Remote application.

    Now, once again Apple is showing the way to the Future : how we'll be able to control any *connected* device from our smartphone - er, iPhone.

    Possibilities are endless, including for professional applications. ***

    More details on Remote here.

    *** Call for developers : you 're young, you're open-minded, you're french (yes, some of us combine those three criteria ;-) you're an iPhone/Mac developer : please drop me a line (Twitterers welcome).

    July 09, 2008

    Portugal Commits to FTTH (in the meantime, France awaits the next Google...)

    That is one of the headlines on the FTTH Council Europe homepage :

    " Public and private interests in Portugal have this week made a series of ambitious and immediate commitments to FTTH investment that could propel the nation into the top tier of European fibre nations. 

    On Friday 4th July, the Portuguese government set the target of 1 million FTTH connections by 2010, and there is every indication that this will be achieved as carriers Sonaecom and Portugal Telecom announced investment plans to potentially exceed this number before the end of the decade. 

    Incumbent telco Portugal Telecom forecast connecting 100,000 homes by the end of this year and a total of 1 million by the end of 2009.

    In February, alternative operator Sonaecom announced a €240m FTTH roll-out to reach around a quarter of Portugal’s 10.6 million population.  Its project completion is anticipated three years from now."

    So, Portugal enters the Ultra-Broadband race with a quite aggressive plan.

    In the meantime, FTTH deployments are still on hold (sort of) in France, with the three major telcos : FT-Orange, SFR-NeufCegetel, and Free waiting (sort of) or the final decision by the Authority of Regulation ARCEP on the mutualisation.

    OK-derle, Portugal is a small country compared to France - say 6 times smaller population-wise. However, 1 million connected homes by 2012 as target goal defined by the Portuguese government is more aggressive than the one set by the French government - 4 million homes (link in french) - when compared to the respective population numbers : for Portugal, the ratio is 1:10, whilst for France it is 1:16. Ever heard of the Digital Divide ?...

    Say Goodbye Farewell To Second Life

    Lively_byGoogle Second Life is dead. Google just launched its own "virtual world" platform : Lively. The difference with SL ? Lively is entirely Web-based. You don't need to install and run a standalone piece of software, as opposed to Second Life (how many of us have been rapidly fed up launching SL ?...). To play with Lively, you just stay with your favorite browser, aka Firefox 3 (it runs with IE too).

    Lively is truly the signal most of us were waiting for to go investigate the potential of Virtual Worlds for business. And it's made by Google.

    For a complete review on Lively here by Techcrunch.

    Download Lively here. That's the only thing that sucks, by the way : there's no Mac version for the time being, although Mac users are among the most efficient beta testers because we easily become early adopters...

    June 27, 2008

    Fete du Tres Haut Debit, Photos


    Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.

    "Fete du Tres Haut Debit" Running Notes

    Yesterday in Mortain, a beautiful small town a few miles away from the Mont St Michel,was the 3d Ultra-Broadband Conference, held by the french optical cable manufacturer ACOME.

    Here are my running notes, as is - means no re-writing * ( my personal comments under brackets ) :


    Regis Paumier, CEO, ACOME. keynote speech :

    - CETHD Center of Expertise for Ultra Broadband : 1,000+ visitors to date (note : opened mid 2007)

    - there are many issues with Quality and Maintenance (on optical networks, FTTx)

    - key issue in France (on FTTH) : rural environment.


    Ms. Agnes Huet, President, Comptoir des Signaux. market survey by the FTTH Council Europe :

    - FTTx networks Business Model :

    a) OpenAccess is mandatory

    b) Operator vs. End-User : capacity becomes commodity; extends potential services; puts the End-User at the center of the market.

    - User-oriented solutions : puts the End-User at the epicenter of the system : dynamic bandwidth allocation, dynamic services allocation.

    - Open Access / Open Networks not widely adopted in France : very few existing networks allow such services.

    - xPON infrastructures limit Open Access systems.

    - Collectivities want to : investigate all potential solutions; model contribution and ROI.

    - Collectivities claim they don't have visibility on those solutions (hence the need for permanent live show-rooms).


    Yves Le Mouel, President, French Federation of Telecoms (i.e. : Operators) :

    - FTTH in France : need 100k new subscribers per month to be considered "mainstream";

    - Investments : estimation = 10 Billions euros over 10 years (see recent announcement by SFR - link in french);

    - New Business models must be invented, because based on abundance of bandwidth and services;

    - the key question is : how to deploy a complex infrastructure to deliver services the simplest way (note : hence the need for a complete paradigm shift. Think Different);

    - how FTTH will win by 2012 : the Killer App.

    - the Killer App : images, video, online gaming, music, unlimited storage (read : Cloud Computing);

    - services : teleworking, telemedicine, teleassistance, telemonitoring, online shopping;

    - QoS : PnP, Easy2Go, AlwaysOn.

    - avoid the Digital Divide : think Geography, Social, residential customers vs. enterprises...

    - issues to be fixed : evangelisation, training & education of networks' deployment professionals (comment : good to hear that from the operators themselves);

    - this represents more than 100,000 jobs (comment : good to hear that one too. I personally claim FTTH is a unique opportunity for new jobs and businesses creation, since months);

    - target FTTH France 2012 : 3-Mo new subscribers per year. Same as ADSL. (comment : on this one, I slightly disagree : ADSL is easy to deploy, because it uses an existing infrastructure. FTTH : you need to install at least the last mile).


    Thierry Houdart, Deployment Director, Axione (ETDE groupe Bouygues). an innovative solution for optical cable deployment :

    IMG_0512

    - install the optical cable along the low-voltage power distribution network;

    - speed : up to 1-km per day, by 2 technicians;

    - no traffic disruption (road, power, telecom, etc.);

    - capillarity : the fiber cable can go right to the end-user;

    - infrastructure' cost : divided by a factor of 2 to 3 compared to existing traditional solutions, e.g. buried cables;

    - green deployment : lower the CO2 emissions by 50%.

    My personal take (this time w/o brackets, because it's a pretty crucial point ;-) : I assume the cost of deployment with this new solution is less than 30€ per meter, all together - site survey, components, installation, etc. Let say we can achieve 15€/m : a fantastic quantum leap for FTTH. 


    This solution is a true paradigm shifting one anyway : the split of the cost of deployment is no longer 80% civil work and 20% components + instal; it is now 20% civil work and 80% components + installation. On top, it's an eco-friendly solution. Fiber finally goes Green. Brilliant.

    * I wish I could capture notes this way ;-)

    June 16, 2008

    Broadband Washroom

    IMG_0121_2The lovely city of Pau is truly The Broadband Country. See this hand dryer in the restrooms at the Pau airport. The Dyson Airblade™. It wipes your hands dry in a matter of seconds, the time for you to realize that it's done. When hygiene and fun meet. That's innovation, Folks !

    For more details on the Airblade™, go here.

    You may read the whole "Why Airblade" section : it's a pretty nice lesson of product marketing.

    Also, the Customer Service part is a model. I never thought hands drying could be so interesting.

    Optical Network Test : The Sun Rise Again ?

    Rumor is spreading around the Test & Measurement small world : some interesting news coming soon from Sunrise Telecom, San Jose, California, and its swiss subsidiary.

    It seems that SRT' management finally realized that the R.O.I. of the former startup could have been way better.
    Stay tuned for more, as I wait for one last confirmation before publishing the whole story.

    June 11, 2008

    Marketing 101 : The Street Rules

    IMG_0323 You know your product is reaching Mainstream when you see it on 4x3 ads in the streets.

    May 30, 2008

    May The Force Be With Cisco

    Yoda As I'm involved in the creation of a "FTTx School" here in France, Cisco' s Telepresence system is one of the tools we're investigating for us to deliver training courses and seminars over fiber. An amazing piece of technology, Telepresence makes StarWars' R2D2' s holographic videos real. 
    My lucky buddy Jean-Hughes Lauret is to get one system soon, for his academic purposes.
    See what how you will soon be able to beam Princess Leia here.

    More on Cisco Telepresence system ? You may want to start there.
    Also, you may get info about Cisco' s initiatives to reduce carbon emissions here.

    post-scriptum : thanks to Guy Kawasaki for the reminder.

    May 28, 2008

    "Second Life: Virtual Worlds and the Enterprise"

    A must read essay that I've discovered today whilst surfing on Bruno Giussani' s LunchOverIP blog : "Second Life: Virtual Worlds and the Enterprise", by Susan Kish. It was published last year, but it's still pretty valid and useful for those of us who want to better understand what are the possibilities offered by the Virtual Worlds in the Enterprise.
    Download PDF here.

    May 12, 2008

    [The Changing The World Edition] Muslima.com

    Muslima_logo

    Looking for some info to get the most out of FriendFeed, I found this post by Digital Inspiration.
    Although a pretty interesting article with lots of useful tips, an ad banner catch my eyes : " Muslima.com, the International Muslim Matrimonial Site." That was kind of a surprise to me, since I always thought Islam religion would forbid such of dating services.
    Says the About page :

    " Muslima.com is a specialist Muslim dating and matchmaking website that assists Muslim ladies to find their perfect match anywhere in the world. We offer friendly service combined with sophisticated search and messaging facilities that will make your search for true love fun and enjoyable. "

    The website is available in 4 languages : English, Dutch, French, and German. No Arabic, at least on the .com domain. Does that mean that the target audience is not the one claimed above ?...
    Anyway, dear Muslim readers, shall you be looking for a friend or a husband/wife, you can go here.

    April 14, 2008

    Design For The World

    The Blackberry Tale Of The Day

    In the aircraft bringing me back home last friday, I was sitting next to a Finance guy. You know, the kind of big-head/stripped-suit/heavy-smoker/VIP trader.

    To give you an idea, the guy was still on the phone whilst we were ready for take off, discussing about a client of his willing to leverage on the fiscal package that Sarkozy offered to the richest French citizens on Day One of his Presidency.

    Why post on that poor little anecdote ? This : during the flight, I've watched Al Gore' speech at the recent TED conference, on my iPhone. When the guy saw me, he took his Blackberry out of a pocket, and started to... play some kid's brick game.

    Definitely, we are not on the same planet ;-)

    April 10, 2008

    Fake Steve Jobs To Bob Metcalfe : "Go Get New Glasses"

    Dan Lyons aka Fake Steve Jobs has the point with Bob Metcalfe' s EnerNet idea. His "one pair of glasses" theory is worth reading. Trust me. Because I'm a proponent of this idea that the Internet, Broadband, and Fiber can help solving the Climate Changes issues.

    April 02, 2008

    Wake Up Call By Google

    Google did it again. A true breakthrough online app, which is set to be the next revolution in the Internet mattress - ooops, sorry, matters. See here for more details.

    April Fool's Day For A Goofy Man

    To my friend Handy.

    Direct link to AlternativeEnergy' Comedy here.

    March 21, 2008

    On The Road To Fiber-To-The-Home...

    Yesterday morning on my way to the FTTH Forum organized by the French Fiber-Lobbying association CREDO at the Telecom & Management Institute of Evry, 30-km south of Paris, I've lost almost 60 minutes.

    Img_0717

    The reason ? Watch the photo, and you'll understand : the A104 "La Francilienne" highway is one of the most crowded in the country, thanks to those awful convoys of trucks.
    Why that ? Because : a) in this part of the Greater Paris area, the A104 makes the connection between the A4 highway which goes eastbound, and the A6 which goes southbound; b) this very piece of land is occupied by a handful of super-malls and... giant logistics/warehouse/whatsoever-big-chunk-not-producing-any-good hubs; c) just a few miles away, there is a huge road construction on the bridge over the Seine river, which forces drivers to slow down their already slow speed.

    That's France, Ladies & Gents. An economy based on Consumerism. No more industries, as per the German terminology. We are a country made of shopping malls and logistics hubs. Commuters do waste hours in traffic jams each day because of some truck on a road somewhere has got a problem. Road constructions takes ages because of nobody cares of the end-user - read : the driver. We all together do send tons of CO2 in the air because of those stupidities. A vicious circle, like this road on the photo.

    The irony : I've lost my time on the road to a conference aimed at Fiber-To-The-Home, which, among endless other things, allows teleworking.





    February 29, 2008

    Generation Fiber

    Read here. I'm glad this blog is named after the Fiber Generation...

    February 27, 2008

    Texas university to give Apple iPhone or iPod Touch to all incoming freshmen

    Read on MacDailyNews :

    "An Apple iPhone or iPod Touch will become a central part of Abilene Christian University's innovative learning experience this fall when all freshmen are provided one of these converged media devices, said Phil Schubert, ACU executive vice president.

    At ACU - the first university in the nation to provide these cutting-edge media devices to its incoming class - freshmen will use the iPhones or iPod Touches to receive homework alerts, answer in-class surveys and quizzes, get directions to their professors' offices, and check their meal and account balances - among more than 15 other useful web applications already developed, said ACU Chief Information Officer Kevin Roberts."


    More on this initiative here
    Full description of the project by the ACU here.

    February 26, 2008

    Live from San Diego : Bob Metcalfe speech @ OFCNFOEC'08

    Metcalfe


    This are my running notes of Bob Metcalfe' s keynote speech at the opening plenary session here at OFCNFOEC'08, San Diego, California. Posted after the speech, for misspelling corrections and irrelevant stuff deletion.
    I'll comment some of them later on, in a further post. Just this personal note : Mr Metcalfe himself confirms that good times are ahead for the the Fiber industry. Should she wants to reinvent herself.

    Running notes :
    - BM has no ppt slides.
    - uses instead 3 cards stacks, today will use 5 packs - reads the cards either on the table or hand held.
    - the agenda of the day is to get the answer to two questions : "why should we be Terabit Ethernet ?", and then "how ?".
    - 20 years between the first optical Ethernet in 1978 and the real commercial one.
    - BM has a new project : create the Ether-Net, to solve energy crisis.
    - SONET vs Ethernet : Ethernet won because of prices slash on cost per bit.
    - BM prefers the terminology "telephon television and data" vs "voice video and data".
    - the Internet is now carrying video, mobile, and embedded apps.
    - Internet was not designed for none of them.
    - Bubblephobia : people still afraid of traffic growth after the 2000 burst.
    - expects growing traffic on embedded apps : first were mainframes then mini-computers then PCs then laptops then palmtops, so what's next ? : embedded.
    - "alien wavelengths" : fiber people don't allow computer people to send their own wavelengths on the fiber.
    - Ethernet technology will continue to ramp-up on a 10x slope, not 4x : 10G, then 100G, then 1T.
    - Terabit Ethernet needs break out the existing infrastructure, otherwise it will be chaos.
    - chaotic infrastructure because of too many levels, pieces, components - too much complexity.
    - BM to the audience : "it's good news for you : it's gonna be fun". invent new stuff. means new business.
    - BM lists some directions : new fibers : maybe carbon fibers ? how about no fibers at all ? how about free space mesh ? OOO (no more OEO conversion) ? etc ?
    - we will never hear the word "OC3072" because of Ethernet 100G.
    - Intel Sales & Marketing VP says TbE will not happen on terminal devices - it will be WiMax instead.
    - when Tim Berners Lee invented the WWW, he never thought there will be a Google.
    - today we have 4 layers, no more the 7 of the OSI model : at the bottom : Ethernet, then Internet, then WWW, then on top : Google.
    - we need to re architect Ethernet because online video : download needs bandwidth, streaming needs QoS, interactive needs low-latency : Ethernet never been good at that.
    - re-architect Ethernet : routing, switching, etc.
    - meet people needs for lower energy consumption.
    - Ethernet will help reducing transportation needs etc.
    - BM asks the audience : "you fiber communications people are you ready to help solve the energy crisis ?"


    Short biography of Dr. Robert M. Metcalfe: MIT engineer, Harvard mathematician, Internet developer, Xerox scientist, Ethernet inventor, Stanford professor, 3Com founder, Cambridge fellow, InfoWorld pundit, and now Polaris partner.

    Read the OFCNFOEC plenary session program here.
    See Bob Metcalfe' s recent interview by Light Reading here, and read more here.
    Get the clear picture on why online video naturally changes the World here.
    Last but not least, the legend of Bob Metcalfe is here, by Wired.

    February 14, 2008

    JDSU vs. EXFO : Something Really Going On ?

    Some Spanish folk has been googling for "exfo jdsu". Maybe for some competitive analysis purpose ? *

    * in this case, dear FiberGeneration reader from Madrid : go to otdr.com, and buy Agilent gear. Still the best out there.

    February 13, 2008

    Europe Is On Its Way

    Look at the blue flag at the bottom of this FiberGeneration' stats snapshot. The missing detailed location says it all.

    Statsfgeurope

    January 29, 2008

    The No-Time For Blogging Edition [01-29-08]

    Buddy Blogger Benoit Felten has published two must-read briefs on two must-read reports : "CES'08", by Olivier Ezratti, and "Free's FTTH services testing", by the french newsletter Journal du Freenaute. Great readings for learnings.

    January 28, 2008

    By The Way...

    ... the iPhone makes really crisp & clear photos, don't you think ?

    Just This (05-08) and a few more bits

    Img_0093

    Approaching the lovely city of Pau, Pyrénées, France, is a true WYSIWIG experience : what you see (thru the airliner's window) is what you get (once on the ground). An outstanding place to live in, offering an all-in-one package for Nature' s lovers : the countryside at your doorstep, the mountains just a few miles away, and the ocean less than one hour drive.
    Add the first and largest FTTH Fiber-To-The-Home network in France to date, and you get a unique place to build the Life of the 21st Century.

    January 25, 2008

    Just This (04-08)

    111205_1010

    Ed. note : I'm a regular/loyal iTunes user ;-)

    January 24, 2008

    It's About Finding A Job In Downturn Times

    Robert Scoble has posted a very long article on how to find a job during recession. Worth reading, provided the current situation in the Global Economy.

    Here are a couple of my favorites, based on my own experience back in 2003 when I had to leave Agilent Technologies - should TypePad and YouTube have exist at this time (I think TypePad was in its early stage online by then), I would have jumped on them to do exactly what Scoble suggests. Hey, I've got the job with the city of Pau thanks to the Blogosphere, and I've discovered the wonderful world of WebTV last year thanks to Usenet. Lesson : listen to what Scoble says.

    Here we go, with my own comments/feedback.

    6. Do a video everyday on YouTube that demonstrates something you know. Loic does a video everyday. If you’re laid off you have absolutely no excuses. Get a cheap Web cam and get over to YouTube or Seesmic.
    Do it. It'll pay back quickly. That's the true aim of the so-called Web 2.0 : help people make connections faster.
    10. Go to any job networking session you learn about. All of them were valuable to me, even though they didn’t necessarily bring me a job. Part of it is just feeling like you’re doing everything you can to get back on your feet. It’s an attitude thing. If you have an attitude that you’re going to work at this that will come across and will bring opportunities to you.
    I'll never forget the workshop sessions at the outplacement consulting firm I've been to thanks to my severance package at Agilent. Outstanding outcomes. For instance : at the very first workshop I've attended, I was with C-level people, from many different areas; industry, computing, bank, consulting, even politics (the chief of staff of a very popular yet powerful mayor of a city nearby Paris). It helped me realize two things : a) I was definitely not the only forced to look for a new job, b) I am a C-level guy (well, of the free-electron type ;-)
    16. Go to every business event you can attend. Can’t afford to get in? Me neither and I have a job! Hang out in the hallways. You never know who you might meet. At minimum you’ll get interesting interviews for your blog. Have your resumes ready.
    My worst regret, when I look back at the 2003-2005 period. I didn't take enough time to attend those business events. I learned the hard way how proactive networking is mandatory (just because, before being laid off by Agilent, I never ever had to look for a new job : I always had the chance to meet the right persons at the right time).

    Full post here.

    January 22, 2008

    France 2.0 ?

    Buddy Blogger Benoit Felten has posted a very interesting article on the recent report from the French business owners/managers' Union MEDEF : "How to make of France a leader in the Digital Economy." (link and pdf document in french).

    Just This (03-08)

    Img_0076 Photo sent from my iPhone this morning.

    January 19, 2008

    Scoble And I.

    So, World' s famous blogger Robert Scoble is born on January 18 too. Until today, my references were Montesquieu, Cary Grant, or Kevin Costner. Now I have to add Mr. Scoblezeir. That's the Web 2.0 Age, Folks ;-)

    January 18, 2008

    Radionomy : The WebRadio Is Born

    Radionomy_2

    Belgian startup Radionomy has been officialy launched yesterday night in Paris, from the Eiffel Tower (where the very first TV signal has been broadcasted some decades ago).
    According to the Radionomy folks, the concept is pretty simple :

    With Radionomy, everyone is finally going to be able to create their own radio station on the Internet!

    It’s easy.
    By tapping into the contents of vast music libraries.

    By integrating their own musical creations.
    By adding their own audio content, sequences, reports and podcasts.

    It’s free.
    Radionomy will broadcast these radio stations around the world and take care of all costs, including royalties. Radionomy even shares its revenue with radio station creators, based on the size of their audience.

    Pretty cool, huh ?

    So, we're going to see - er., hear - tons of "Pirate" radio channels, just like in the good old days of Radio Caroline.
    Will be interesting to watch the outcomes. How this concept will find users, and how those ones will use it.
    What's quite funny to me is the fact that the WebRadio concept emerges AFTER the WebTV stuff, whilst the original technologies were on reverse order : Radio first, then Television.
    Also funny to me, the fact that Radionomy launches whilst traditional radios start doing live TV webcasting of their shows and programs.

    Conclusion : Convergence is coming fast. Within the next couple of years, we're going to have a brand new "Web" space, where everyone will be able to create, share, and use any kind of content that will be available one way or another on the Net. Exciting.

    To subscribe to the Radionomy Beta Testers Waiting List, follow the link here.

    Ed. note : thanks Jean-Michel for the heads up.

    Just This (02-08)

    Today is my birthday. This is where I would like to enjoy it now : Benchen Karma Kamtzang Lamastery in the Kham region, Tibet.
    Kamtzang_lamastery_2

    See this post's geographical context.
    Ed. note : Tibet being a Chinese province, it seems that GoogleMaps can't deliver accurate images for the Kham region. Hence this link to the capitale Lhasa.

    Photo Credit : Hubert Wysznski

    January 16, 2008

    The Man Did It Again

    I'm not talking of Master Steve nor his clone, but of Mr Greenspan.
    In his recent interview by the Wall Street Journal, Master Of Disasters and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said that the United States are probably about to enter recession : "The symptoms are clearly there. Recessions don't happen smoothly. They are usually signaled by a discontinuity in the market place, and the data of recent weeks could very well be characterized in that manner."
    Shall I be american today, I'd better get everything ready to relocate somewhere in Europe quickly. Because what Mr Greenspan says always come true half a year later (I'll never forget that I've lost my job at Agilent Technologies because of him ;-)

    Zattoo : Say Hello To The TV Of The 21st Century

    Logo_bgwhite
    I'm currently testing the new Zattoo Beta application. Just blazingly simple.
    Says the US startup' website homepage : "Zattoo is live TV on your PC - it's the football game as you chat, the news as you email, and your favorite soap as you pay your bills. Zattoo is also TV when you don't have a TV - it's the channels you want, when you want, where you want.".

    Thanks to Zattoo, I'm relieved now : I'll be able to watch Roland Garros and The Tour de France whilst "working" at the office next summer. Pretty cool, huh ?

    Seriously speaking, Zattoo is the application lots of us were waiting for since a while : an easy way to watch free TV live channels on our computers.
    Now, the question is : how will Zattoo make money, provided that the software is supposed to be free of charge ? The answer may be in the Partners page :

    Partners

    Zattoo's customers are end users: people who appreciate high-quality, quick-start, long-play video from multiple channels available on one browser. Broadcasters and advertisers are our business partners.
    Broadcasters

    The ability of broadcasters to reach large audiences via the Internet has until now been limited by the unfavorable economics of Unicast, whereby for each additional audience member a broadcaster has had to incur additional cost. Zattoo solves this problem with our peer-to-peer distribution architecture, which allows broadcasters to reach ten times the audience with no additional infrastructure investment. For the cost of serving 10,000 users with Unicast, broadcasters can now serve 100,000 users with Zattoo.
    Zattoo provides broadcasters with compelling competitive advantages beyond reducing operating cost. Zattoo gives broadcasters the technology to deliver streaming with vastly increased quality, reliability and unmatched video smoothness. Furthermore, Zattoo enriches the user experience by integrating compelling multimedia elements, thus making the Zattoo experience stickier than traditional TV.

    Contact: Niklas Brambring, Content Acquisition Manager (nick@zattoo.com)
    Advertisers

    Zattoo enables advertisers to leverage the most successful web-based advertising methods in combination with the best attributes of broadcast television "spots" by supporting banner ads, targeted text ads and video clips. Advertisers understand the inherent strengths and value propositions of each method and can make an educated investment to reach specific audiences. Furthermore, advertisements can be sourced from ad specialists and integrated without modification, leveraging de facto industry standards.

    So, correct me if I'm wrong : Zattoo gets (or will get) revenues from both the channels broadcasters and the advertisers. I understand the earlier, but don't get the later one yet : does that mean we will experience complementary ads during the live program ? Such as embedded contextual advertising, for instance.
    Think about the combination of a live transcription system (used in live captionning) together with customized/localized advertising content : you're watching the latest '24' episode (well, once the writers' s strike will be over ;-), Jack Bauer is driving the brand new Ford SUV, and boom, you see a beautiful ad banner urging you to call your local Ford dealer... That is the power of TV thru Internet : UCC "User Customized Content", as opposed to the UGC User Generated Content.

    The question is : could Zattoo be the Next Big Thing ? When it's about watching live TV on a PC, probably yes. Is that what the people want (watching live TV on a PC), I don't know. On the one hand, some want a PC on their TV, on the other hand some want TV on their PC. The right answer is called something like "convergence", isn't ?
    So, what do I Average Joe want ? I want Zattoo on the iPhone. I have VOD already (iTunes, YouTube), now I'd like to get live streaming too. Because I'd like to be able to watch Roland Garros live whilst Im' sitting in a High-Speed Train.

    Last thing on Zattoo before a more deeper review some time later : the folks there seem to care about their users. As an example, I've received the invitation to download the beta in french, although the company is based in the US (as far as I understood on the 'About' page). The set-up is quite fast and simple too. Pretty neat stuff, Folks ! Keep going ;-)

    To visit Zattoo : here.

    January 15, 2008

    The Magic Is Back, or : Marketing That Serves The End-User

    Back in 2000, I titled the brief report of the OFC Optical Fiber Communications exhibition to my management at Agilent Technologies : "The Magic is gone." The whole Telecoms industry was ruled by marketeers, and Fiber was no different. The Lucents, the Cornings, the Pirellis : they were all selling wonderful shiny proprietary solutions to hungry customers (the new telcos which were popping up like hell everywhere on the Planet), totally forgetting that what made the Optical Communications industry in the past was Innovation.
    Fact is, until 1998 the fibers were sporting strange names, such as "ITU-T G652". Everything changed in '98, when Corning came out with its Leaf, Lucent with its TrueWave, or Nec with its Lucyna. Since then, marketeers took over the business, leaving inventors and researchers in their labs. The best example : the Pirelli Telecoms booth at OFC'99, with an... italian motorcycle as the only product on stage.
    For people like myself, whith a technical background, a marketing position and a customer-focused mindset, the outcome was obvious : a total lack of real customers' s needs, leading to what happened to be a violent downturn.

    Today, almost 8 years later, my feeling is that the Magic is back. Reaserchers and innovators can talk to end-users again. See this product presentation video by... Corning : for the very first time since a decade, a new product is a true solution to a real customer problem.

    January 14, 2008

    " Looking for IPTV? Then move to France. "

    This article, by Ray Le Maistre, International News Editor at the mandatory Light Reading, demonstrates once again that my country (France. You know, the little old piece of european land ruled by a superb showman) is truly leading the Telecoms World. But nobody here knows it, including our Emperor, ooops sorry, er. President, unfortunately.

    January 09, 2008

    Welcome To The New French President Era

    Want to know why my home-country is going mad those days ? Read this true story on our "new" President, who just made it on TechCrunch, by the way. Jaw-dropping. When the journalists at your top-5 medias are unable to double-check an information, you're in big trouble.

    post-scriptum : Congrats anyway, Mister President ! ;-)

    January 06, 2008

    This Is What WebTV Is All About

    The CES big circus has just started. If you can't make it to Las Vegas, you can still attend the show and get the whole flavor of it... on the Web.
    See here, here, and here. Lesson : WebTV is the future. And the present, too, should you have a broadband access.

    Ed. note : for a full coverage of CES'08, Robert Scoble has the list.

    Post-Scriptum : I wonder if the folks at the Optical Society Of America are going to offer the live coverage of the forthcoming OFC-NFOEC exhibition in San Diego next month.

    December 27, 2007

    2007 : The Digital Divide

    Thanks to The Broadband Hub, this highly interesting presentation by Dr. Robert Atkinson of The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF). Although it's 100% USA-focused, I'm sure most of the ratios apply to the rest of the Western World too (incl. France of course and unfortunately).

    Among many key figures which help understanding the real situation in regards of Broadband access & use, the one about the perception of the Internet by Disabled persons (page 39) is quite questioning : the Internet, which normally should be considered as one of the most powerful tool to get Disabled people on board, is not. There is a good news behind the bad one : there is plenty of stuff still to be done for real innovation and entrepreneurship in this domain. "Change the World", right ?...

    ps: also found in this presentation, the Virginia Tech’s eCorridors Broadband Access Map, that enables real-time, bottomup broadband mapping. Got to find the same for Europe. Or create it if it doesn't exist yet !...

    December 24, 2007

    Season' s Greetings, Take One

    Dear FiberGeneration Readers :
    To all of you who do celebrate Christmas, I wish you and your loved ones a happy holiday.
    To everyone else *, enjoy the day and the night.
    To all : enjoy the time with your loved ones.
    Peace Out, and Carpe Diem.

    * especially to You, Dear (Un)known Reader from Ankara, Turkey.

    December 21, 2007

    Global Flying

    Theskyisnomoreblue


    I took this photo today, somewhere nearby Disneyland Paris. Look at the sky : the only clouds you see are those generated by the airliners's prop' engines. Scarring.

    See this post's geographical context.



    December 17, 2007

    Happy Birthday, Dakota !