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Wired 12.10: The Long Tail







Wired 12.10: The Long Tail

Wired 12.10: The Long Tail 10/07/2004 04:15 PM




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Wired 12.10: The Long Tail

Grok Headline matches for Wired 12.10: The Long Tail

The long tail is fractal. Why I buy the
long tail, having been a skeptic


The long tail is fractal. Why I buy the
long tail, having been a skeptic
03/29/2005 03:01 PM
The long tail is jagged, fractal – perhaps as any market achieves maximum efficiency it starts to look like everything...

Long Tale of Long Tail


Long Tale of Long Tail 03/17/2005 03:58 AM

This recent post by Joe Krause about the i mportance of catching long tails in business is the best post I've read in recent weeks.


The Long Tail


The Long Tail 12/31/2004 07:10 PM

The Long Tail: Here's something entertaining in an odd way. This page will pull a blog entry out of the...void.

Click "Next Item" to get another one. They come from blogs all around the world, and are presented with no context or other information (there is a link if you want to actually visit the site the entry came from).

Only about half of the entries I looked at were in English. All of them were posted in the last two minutes.

I can't figure out why this was so addictive. It's like little snippets of communication from anywhere and everywhere.


Extending the Long Tail


Extending the Long Tail 12/22/2004 01:52 AM
Meanwhile, Chris Anderson, Editor in Chief of Wired, (no relation) has just launched The Long Tail, the blog that follows his seminal article on the subject. Even better, he's got a book coming out on the topic. Now we just need a "most popular unpopular items" chart....

Incentives along the Long Tail


Incentives along the Long Tail 06/05/2005 11:21 PM
Chris Anderson has just published a great piece on his Long Tail blog called The dangers of "Headism". Go read it if you're into all that. If you're not into all that, I still think this picture is worth a thousand words: It explains a lot of what I've had to explain and re-explain to people in recent months. Heck, go to his post anyway just to look at the other pictures. They're simple but explain things nicely....

The Long Tail of PayPal


The Long Tail of PayPal 03/14/2005 04:23 PM

While setting up the contribution mechanism at PayPal, I got to thinking about how PayPal is (or certainly has the potential to be) a Long Tail business. With lots of features, extensive documentation, tons of implementation examples, and no up-front fees, they make it so easy to sell anything to anyone worldwide that the cost of doing business for individuals and small businesses is almost nothing. My friends Tamara and Julie make soap in their apartment and sell it online for a few bucks a bar, with PayPal handling the checkout process and some of the order fulfillment stuff as well. And there are millions of little cottage industries like this scattered across the web, businesses enabled by PayPal each selling maybe a few items a week or month.

However, there are a couple of issues with PayPal's attempt to harness the Long Tail of online retail. Shipping costs are proportionally more expensive for less expensive items...it's roughly the same price to ship a $350 iPod as it is to ship a $20 book or tshirt. PayPal's fees are a bigger percentage of the total sale for cheaper items as well; they take $0.30 right off the top. That doesn't sound like a lot but for a merchant selling $3.00 items, that's 10% less profit, which could be a bit of a deterrent in wanting to sell cheap items through PayPal. It'll be interesting to see if PayPal sees a Long Tail effect benefiting their bottom line and tinkers with the fees to encourage more cheap offerings.


Organizing the Long Tail


Organizing the Long Tail 02/05/2005 10:04 PM
The Long Tail is one the few things about the blogosphere that seems new. Here’s an obvious question: is there any structure lurking in that Long Tail, or is it just an undifferentiated skinny pointy blob? The answer starts here...

Long Tail of Latent Demand


Long Tail of Latent Demand 12/27/2004 11:16 PM
I'm a huge fan of The Long Tail, but the demand it represents is nothing new.  What's new is how we discover it. Latent Demand (also known as Induced Demand) is the potential earnings if a market is served efficiently. ...

The Long Tail the book and the bl0g


The Long Tail the book and the bl0g 12/24/2004 12:47 PM

Chris Anderson is writing a book about The Long Tail which started as one of my favorite articles that he wrote for Wired. He has also started a blog about the Long Tail. The original article is online at Wired.

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Business opportunities of the Long Tail


Business opportunities of the Long Tail 03/19/2005 02:46 AM

cAnderson.jpgI'm sitting here listening to Chris Anderson discuss the various aspects and insights he has into the 'long tail' phenomena.

I find this stuff fascinating - not from a macro-economic POV - but from the gut level validation of all my ideas and feelings - over the past 25 years. It just makes sense to associate yourself with the niche players and small entities - than bother with the big boys.

I've always felt that way.....

It's amazing to see it evolve into an entire school of thought.


So now Chris is talking ot Joe Kraus - who started Excite (and admits why the failed at Excite) and comparing it to JotSpot - which he calls a 'long tail' business.

I wonder how Chris considers JotSpot 'long tail'?

I think I'll ask him that question.

- self service - lowering the cost of customer acquisition?
- end-user created apps and a marketplace for those apps (JotSpot as a platform?)
- something about Wikis and collaboration?


FOLLOW-UP: Joe concurs that all Long Tail plays should be platforms - and markeplaces. I totally agree! That's the model for success in the Long Tail.


Amazon Stretches The Long Tail Even
Longer


Amazon Stretches The Long Tail Even
Longer
04/04/2005 01:54 PM
There have been many efforts to create "print on demand" solutions -- though, often these have been done by brick and mortar book stores looking to come up with ways to compete with Amazon and other online sellers. However, most of these in-store print-on-demand offerings have never gotten very far. So, wouldn't it be amusing if the company that actually made print-on-demand make sense was Amazon itself? The company has now bought a print on demand company that will make it easier for Amazon to sell books with less demand -- since they won't have to stock any inventory. It's yet another sign that Amazon recognizes the importance of the long tail, in that this should let them sell books even further out on the tail, with little inventory expense to itself.

"The Long Tail: Mainstream Media
Meltdown"


"The Long Tail: Mainstream Media
Meltdown"
04/13/2005 08:20 AM

The Long Tail: Mainstream Media Meltdown


The Long Tail: Mainstream Media Meltdown 04/13/2005 04:29 AM
The Mainstream Media Meltdown .. kind of a win-win .. very useful post

longtail.typepad.com/the_long_tail/2005/04/media_meltdown.html< br />track this site | 3 links


"Long Tail" from Chris Anderson to
become book, bl0g


"Long Tail" from Chris Anderson to
become book, bl0g
12/22/2004 01:30 AM
Xeni Jardin: Wired Magazine's editor-in-chief Chris Anderson says:
I've signed a deal to do The Long Tail book with Hyperion (in the US--Random House will be publishing it in the UK and others TBA elsewhere). I should be turning in the manuscript next fall for a spring 2006 release. Following John Battelle's great example, I'm starting The Long Tail blog to help me preview my book thinking and research in public and to tap the wisdom of crowds on this rich subject.
Link to thelongtail.com, also available in tasty, lean RSS. Link to online copy of original Long Tail essay which appeared in Wired Magazine.

Fiona Apple Teaching Sony A Lesson About
The Long Tail


Fiona Apple Teaching Sony A Lesson About
The Long Tail
03/17/2005 03:26 AM
Fiona Apple was a musical sensation half a decade ago, but has dropped out of the spotlight since then. Apparently, that was supposed to have changed two years ago when she delivered a new album to Sony -- who immediately shelved it, claiming they "didn't hear a single," which probably means the computers over at Hit Song Science didn't appreciate the songs. However, in the last few weeks, a DJ got his hands on the album and has been playing the tracks, which fans seem to really like quite a bit. It's a lesson in the long tail for Sony. Rather than focusing on just "the hits," they should at least be willing to put out other albums that have niche supporters. Of course, considering Sony's recen t statements, it's really no surprise that they really don't understand how to handle this new market. Of course, it's probably only a matter of time before they try to shut down those who are offering up this music that they refuse to release.

Startup Persuadio visualizes opportunity
in the Internet's long tail


Startup Persuadio visualizes opportunity
in the Internet's long tail
03/25/2005 04:56 PM
ZDNet Mar 25 2005 9:37PM GMT

"Bnoopy: The long tail of software.
Millions of Markets of Dozens."


"Bnoopy: The long tail of software.
Millions of Markets of Dozens."
03/14/2005 05:53 PM

State of the Blogosphere March 2005,
Part 3: The A-List and the Long Tail


State of the Blogosphere March 2005,
Part 3: The A-List and the Long Tail
03/19/2005 03:15 AM
Today I'll discuss the impact of weblogs on traditional media, the impact of the A-List, and the power of the long tail. First off, some terminology and an understanding of what we're measuring. This graph is a measure of...

The loneliness of the long tail:
subscription growth in techbl0gs,
February 2005


The loneliness of the long tail:
subscription growth in techbl0gs,
February 2005
03/14/2005 05:45 PM
Last month's analysi s of subscription growth in techblogs focused only on a small sample of the blogs I read. This time around I'm looking at all of the 270-odd blogs I read, and I'm seeing something quite peculiar. Here's the big picture for the whole set: ...

AETHER: Wired’s Worst Stories:
Zippies, The Long Boom, and Push!


AETHER: Wired’s Worst Stories:
Zippies, The Long Boom, and Push!
11/03/2003 03:16 AM
Gary Wolf pondering the worst Wired story ever .. his judgment .. book-blog

aether.com/archives//000009.html
track this site | 4 links


"Dazzling, full-color shots of people
long since dead, landscapes long since
paved, and an empire long since
overthrown."


"Dazzling, full-color shots of people
long since dead, landscapes long since
paved, and an empire long since
overthrown."
01/17/2004 11:07 PM

Finally .. after long long long time ..
Sonique 2 beta released


Finally .. after long long long time ..
Sonique 2 beta released
12/21/2003 03:42 PM

So Long, Long Distance (The Motley Fool)


So Long, Long Distance (The Motley Fool) 09/07/2004 02:07 PM
The Motley Fool - The Olympic Games are now history, but not AT&T's (NYSE: T - News) $25 million ad campaign to redefine its image. After years of getting clobbered by the regional Bell companies such as BellSouth (NYSE: BLS - News), Verizon (NYSE: VZ - News), Sprint (NYSE: FON - News), and MCI (Nasdaq: MCIP - News), the company has turned its business focus from traditional phone service to networking.

Long Live the Elephants, Long Dead


Long Live the Elephants, Long Dead 06/04/2004 01:01 AM
Elephants at the American Museum of Natural History are undergoing cutting-edge, high-definition digital radiography.

Wag the Tail


Wag the Tail 05/14/2004 10:51 AM
Wag the Tail version 0.1 released

Wagging Your Tail


Wagging Your Tail 03/14/2005 06:02 PM
Executive recruiter Dave Hardie on the benefits of leaving gracefully, consumer-products experience, and balancing We versus I.

Erasing the tail


Erasing the tail 09/26/2004 09:23 AM
The NY Times Magazine article on blogs makes the same old error. Viewing blogs through the media lens, only the left-hand of the side of the power curve is visible. As Matthew Klam, the article's author says: In a recent national survey, the Pew Internet and American Life Project found that more than two million Americans have their own blog. Most of them, nobody reads Thus, the tail of the power curve — which is probably at least 5 million blogs long — gets erased. In fact, the tail is where blog are having their most important effects. That's where...

FC Now: Opportunities in the Tail


FC Now: Opportunities in the Tail 06/22/2005 02:39 AM
If you haven't yet heard - or used - the phrase 'the long tail,' you're not buzzword compliant for 2005. Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired Magazine, coined the phrase in an article that appeared last fall in that magazine....

Mac Tail, iPod Dog?


Mac Tail, iPod Dog? 05/21/2004 01:01 AM
Is this a sign that Apple views the current Mac platform entering a period of relative stability after six years of flux? By Matthew Rothenberg (via MyAppleMenu)

root-tail 1.1


root-tail 1.1 04/12/2004 07:21 AM
Allows printing of text directly to the X11 rootwindow

Tail gunning


Tail gunning 01/04/2005 02:08 AM
Wired editor Chris Anderson has started a good blog to follow up on his Long Tail essay and seed the ground for a book on the subject. Cory Doctorow takes Anderson to task for his "middle-of-the-road" stance on efforts to lock down intellectual property via increasingly desperate and continuingly futile technical schemes for digital rights management (DRM) -- schemes that tip the balance between propertyholders and the public way too far.

Anderson is dead right in elucidating the way the Net economy restores market value to works that are not big hits. The story of the next few years will be one about whether that market in "long tail" intellectual goods (I wrote about its promise in October) thrives in the same open environment that allowed the Net itself to evolve and prosper -- or shrivels under the furious weight of technical and legal efforts to squeeze every last dollar from every last little hair on the long tail. My money is on the former, happier outcome. But it won't turn out that way without persistent and stubborn resistance -- which we can thank Doctorow and the EFF for ringleading -- to the "we control the horizontal, we control the vertical" paternalism and anti-consumerism of the DRM mafia.

(For a little example of what happens when rights holders hold too many cards, check out the sad saga of "Eyes on the Prize," the documentary that is the "principal film account of the most important American social justice movement of the 20th century," in a Stanford professor's words from Wired News' account. "Eyes on the Prize" can't be publicly shown or distributed because "the filmmakers no longer have clearance rights to much of the archival footage used in the documentary." You want your audiovisual history? Pay up first!)

Assuming the Long Tail isn't clipped by DRMania, we face an ever-expanding banquet of media goods. The BBC sounds an alarm. We are coming face to face with the scourge of "digital obesity":

  Gadget lovers are so hungry for digital data many are carrying the equivalent of 10 trucks full of paper in "weight". Music, images, e-mails, and texts are being hoarded on mobiles, cameras laptops and PDAs (Personal Digital Assistants), a Toshiba study found. It found that more than 60% kept 1,000 to 2,000 music files on their devices, making the UK "digitally fat".

Or maybe not. The term is a ludicrous oversimplification and distortion; we keep all this stuff around precisely because we can now -- because it doesn't fill trucks, it fills infinitesimal chips and drives, and it's easier to keep everything around than to worry about cleaning house. Carrying the stuff around? No problem. Finding it? Harder. Finding time to absorb it all? There's our rub.

Obesity is simply the wrong metaphor. Thi s post by Rajat Paharia hits closer to the mark:

 

I'm finding that the "digital photo effect" is starting to make its way into my music and video experiences as well. What's the DPE? My ability to produce and acquire has far outstripped my ability to consume. Produce from my own digital camera. Acquire from friends, family, Flickr, etc. This has a couple of ramifications:

1. I feel behind all the time.
2. Because there is so much to consume, I don't enjoy each individual photo as much as I did when they were physical prints. I click through fast.
3. Because of 1 and 2, sometimes I don't even bother.

I first noticed this phenomenon back in the late '80s, when I switched from buying music on vinyl to CDs, and noticed how quickly I stopped listening to an entire 50-60 minute CD if the first track or two didn't grab me. Of course, this kind of impatience coincided with the speeding up of my professional life and my crossing the threshold into my 30s. Something tells me that the problems Paharia and I and perhaps you are facing in this realm of overload may not feel so dire to today's teenagers and twenty-somethings, for whom this thick soup is a native muck.

Still, the "I feel behind all the time" phenomenon is real enough, as today's RSS addicts know -- and as indicated by the rising popularity among the geeknoscenti of David Allen's "Getting Things Done" methodology, with its promise of liberation from uncomfortable behind feelings.

I'm not liberated yet. Behindness surrounds me on all sides. But finding stuff is getting easier. I'm slowly trying to teach myself the methodology that Doctorow has modeled for several years now: If you want to be able to find something in the future, don't bury it in your files -- blog about it, put it out on the Net, where Google will never lose it, and if for some reason you can't find it, someone else will probably have picked it up and saved it for you.

So to hell with bookmarks, and long live the blogmark. Here's a handful:

Lexis Nexis Alacarte: No longer the preserve of big-media newsrooms -- now in handy personal-journalism size.

For years, I tuned my guitar with one of those little electronic tuners in a plastic box; but when they were two, my kids decided that it made a great toy and disembowelled it. Well, all that is solid melts into Net: Today you don't need a physical object, all you need is a Net connection and a browser. Just Google "guitar tuner" for a bunch of options; I liked this one for its retro look.

Feel-good link of the day: First it was the beer and wine, now it's spicy food! Curry may help block Alzheimer's disease. (It's the turmeric.)

Test-Tail-Multi-0.01


Test-Tail-Multi-0.01 04/08/2005 05:59 PM

Test-Tail-Multi-0.02


Test-Tail-Multi-0.02 04/08/2005 08:39 PM

Amazon's tail was a bit shorter


Amazon's tail was a bit shorter 12/24/2004 12:47 PM

Chris updates some figures from his original article where he had written that "57% of Amazon's book sales are of books not available in stores". He writes in an update, "I've now spoken to Jeff Bezos (and others) about this. He doesn't have a hard figure for the percentage of sales of products not available offline, but reckons that it's closer to 25-30%. That would put it in line with Netflix's and Rhapsody's figures." There is an interesting discussion going on in the comments as well.

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File::Tail is damned useful


File::Tail is damned useful 01/18/2004 11:28 PM
In the last week or so, I've developed a renewed appreciation for the File::Tail Perl module. If you haven't guessed from the name, this module provides a native Perl implementation of something akin to tail -f somefile and--better yet--it can do this on multiple files at the same time. In case you're wondering, the reason I find it so helpful is that I've been building various tools that need to perform real-time scanning of log files. Specifically, I'm dealing with...

E-tail soars in 2004


E-tail soars in 2004 01/05/2004 01:31 PM
ZDNet Jan 5 2004 12:19PM ET

J2SE 1.5: A Tiger By the Tail


J2SE 1.5: A Tiger By the Tail 06/28/2004 06:08 PM
JavaOne -- The Standard Edition is slated for a fall release via the Java Development Kit (JDK).

Catch A Tiger By Its Tail


Catch A Tiger By Its Tail 06/29/2004 10:55 AM
Following up on my previous entry on Tiger's Search Technology I'll hit on the other announced features and additions with my personal feelings summing up...

The long tail's long lead


The long tail's long lead 12/22/2004 01:45 AM
Chris Anderson has signed with Random House to do a book about The Long Tail, and has started a blog devoted to it. (The long tail is the social effect of the Web apart from the hit-heavy, glamorous side of it.)...
Grok Description matches for Wired 12.10: The Long Tail
GrokA matches for Wired 12.10: The Long Tail

Free Wired Magazine Subscription


Free Wired Magazine Subscription 06/29/2004 08:49 AM

cover12_07.jpg imageI used to think these free magazine things were a scam, until we started getting, like, six copies of Seventeen a month. DiscountMags has a free year's subscription to Wired, if you're not already signed up. Sure, it'll have all the stories we've already covered, but you'll get them on shiny paper.
Read [DiscountMags via Slickdeals]


"free complimentary 1-year subscription
to Wired magazine"


"free complimentary 1-year subscription
to Wired magazine"
06/30/2004 02:42 PM

ToneGuys and STARE Magazine Sign
Agreement - STARE photo shoots now
available on USA cell phones


ToneGuys and STARE Magazine Sign
Agreement - STARE photo shoots now
available on USA cell phones
09/12/2004 03:03 AM
ToneGuys and STARE Magazine announce the launch of STARE Magazine photos on www.toneguys.com. Fans of STARE Magazine’s online monthly (www.staremagazine.com) can now send their favorite photos directly to their cell phones at www.toneguys.com . The STARE portfolio includes beautiful models in exotic photo shoots from around the world. [PRWEB Sep 12, 2004]

Is Subscription the Next Thing?


Is Subscription the Next Thing? 07/15/2004 07:10 PM
Source: John Battelle's Searchblog - Can I imagine giving Google $40 a month to get the WSJ, Times archives, BBC archives, all my favorite blog archives, and whatever other universe of paid content I might want to add elegantly served...

Really Simple Subscription, PII


Really Simple Subscription, PII 02/01/2005 08:43 PM

There has been a lot of debate following my initial post about Reall y Simple Subscription. Shortly after I suggested using the f eed URI scheme, NetNewsWire developer Brent Simmons came out in favor it, and in the comments to my post we heard that Safari RSS (part of Apple's upcoming Safari 2.0) will use feed:// quite heavily.

But other solutions have been proposed, such as the Universal Subscription Mechanism (USM) authored by Randy Morin. I've spoken with Randy about USM, and he knows that I have a number of issues with the "reflexive auto-discovery" mechanism. However, part of his proposal includes convincing feed producers to provide the correct Content-Type header for their feeds, and I'm 100% in favor of this. Although having the correct Content-Type doesn't entirely solve the problem, it would take us a big step in the right direction.

If you're interested in this topic, be sure to read all the comments beneath Brent Simmons' post, including Danny Ayres' comment that he "can't actually see [much] conflict between these approaches, implementing one doesn't rule out implementing the other." I agree. We'd all be better served if we realized this isn't either/or situation and stopped endlessly debating which solution is better. I'm in favor of feed:// because it's simple for everyone to implement, but I'm also in favor of evangelizing feed producers to use the correct Content-Type. And once it's fleshed out some more and answers my concerns about privacy, I may like Dave Winer's solution as well.


One-Click Subscription


One-Click Subscription 02/01/2005 09:44 PM
Recently, Dave Winer pointed out that there’s a problem in how people go about subscribing to to RSS feeds, and made a proposal to address it. Dave’s idea—essentially One Great Big subscription dispatcher—should work, near as I can tell, so any problems would be around business and politics, not technology. John Robb does some more thinking, as does P hil Windley. If we can’t find the business creativity, Atom has another solution that RSS could maybe borrow...

Validate on subscription?


Validate on subscription? 01/18/2004 09:15 AM
I've thought about Brent's proposed compromise, and to borrow a phrase that is a favorite of Tim Bray, I think that there is a way that 80% of the value can be obtained with 20% of the effort.  Is there really a market requirement to be selectively pedantic on a feed by feed basis? ...

A $1,700 subscription for free


A $1,700 subscription for free 07/24/2004 03:02 AM
The National Journal opens up its doors to the public for two weeks every four years. Best known for its ann ual vote ratings (which declared John Kerry most liberal senator of 2003), there's also ads galore, snarky coverage of the media, and more polls than you can shake your fist at.

Subscription Services


Subscription Services 01/11/2004 07:55 AM
Have you signed up for a subscription service from a web site such as MacUpdate or VersionTracker? Are you planning to? Or does the idea simply disgust you? Let us know. Follow the "Read More" link to the poll.

Please Note: The free subscription to VersionTracker Plus, provided by .Mac, does not count as currently holding a paid subscription.

Like Pixels? Check out MacDesign

Will Subscription Software Take Over?


Will Subscription Software Take Over? 03/19/2003 10:25 PM

Software by subscription: What about
support?


Software by subscription: What about
support?
01/05/2005 01:38 PM
ZDNet Jan 5 2005 5:07PM GMT

MSN Looks to Subscription Gaming for New
Revenues


MSN Looks to Subscription Gaming for New
Revenues
04/22/2004 06:44 PM
MSN rolls out a minor upgrade to MSN Messenger and introduces four new online games as part of the launch.

Blogosphere subscription trends


Blogosphere subscription trends 02/01/2005 08:52 PM
We've all seen the hockey-stick curve that shows the blogosphere growing like gangbusters. But I haven't seen much on subscription trends, so I took a look at the public information available in Bloglines. For a given feed you can ask Bloglines to show not just the count of subscribers, but also -- for the "public" subscribers who allow this information to be shown -- their usernames and the dates when they began subscribing. ...

Sun to offer more subscription pricing


Sun to offer more subscription pricing 02/13/2004 04:04 PM
Sun Microsystems Inc. plans to offer subscription pricing for more of its products as part of an effort to ensure a steadier flow of revenue into the company, Sun executives said this week.

Impact Online (subscription)


Impact Online (subscription) 04/03/2005 10:39 AM
Theimpactonline.com - Sun Apr 3, 06:51 am GMT

AOL offers $300 PC with one-year
subscription


AOL offers $300 PC with one-year
subscription
12/04/2003 03:36 PM

Subscription Small Print


Subscription Small Print 03/14/2005 05:06 PM

What happens when you cancel your Napster To Go subscription?


Could Google Make it Under a
Subscription Model?


Could Google Make it Under a
Subscription Model?
01/06/2003 09:37 PM
Could Google require subscription fees for searching?

Microsoft to aid music subscription
services


Microsoft to aid music subscription
services
05/03/2004 12:58 AM
Taking aim at Apple's iTunes Music Store and iPod, Microsoft said Monday that AOL, Disney, Napster and others have agreed to use a new version of Microsoft's media software that will allow consumers who rent, rather than buy, digital music and movies to put those files on portable devices...

MMOG Subscription Analysis Provides New
Insights


MMOG Subscription Analysis Provides New
Insights
08/19/2004 03:15 PM

Macromedia pushes subscription plan


Macromedia pushes subscription plan 02/10/2003 12:58 AM
CNET Feb 10 2003 0:15AM ET

IBM Boosts Software Toolbox Subscription


IBM Boosts Software Toolbox Subscription 02/26/2003 02:37 PM
Big Blue continues to try to fuel standards-driven Web services adoption by padding its subscription offering for software developers.

An Analysis of MMOG Subscription Growth


An Analysis of MMOG Subscription Growth 07/19/2004 02:44 PM
An Analysis of MMOG Subscription Growth .. MMORPG subscriber growth stats

pw1.netcom.com/~sirbruce2/Subscriptions.html
track this site | 5 links


What RSS users want: consistent
one-click subscription


What RSS users want: consistent
one-click subscription
01/19/2004 10:42 AM
Saturday's Scripting News asked an important question: What do users want from RSS? The context of the question is the upcoming RS S Winterfest. Dave Winer adds:
I thought we should try to put the focus on people who use the technology, to let them set the agenda for the developers.
Amen. Over the weekend I received a draft of the RSS Winterfest agenda along with a request for feedback. Here's mine: focus on users. In an October posting from BloggerCon I present video testimony from several of them who make it painfully clear that the most basic publishing and subscribing tasks aren't yet nearly simple enough. ...

Overture to Charge Compulsory
Subscription Fee


Overture to Charge Compulsory
Subscription Fee
08/10/2004 02:07 PM
Rumors that Overture/Yahoo was about to make major changes to their PFI model have been floating for about a month. Looks like some confirmations are starting to come in.

IDC: Software subscription gaining
popularity


IDC: Software subscription gaining
popularity
05/25/2004 11:50 AM

DoCoMo retakes subscription crown


DoCoMo retakes subscription crown 07/07/2004 09:04 PM
Japan Times Jul 8 2004 0:52AM GMT

Napster gives away music players with
subscription


Napster gives away music players with
subscription
06/17/2004 02:58 PM

Yahoo! to Search Subscription Sites


Yahoo! to Search Subscription Sites 06/17/2005 07:22 PM

NNW Subscription to iPod Contacts script


NNW Subscription to iPod Contacts script 02/14/2004 04:05 PM
Doug’s AppleScripts for iTunes: “This script will copy the news items of the selected Subscription in NetNewsWire in vCard format to the Contacts folder of iPod for portable reading.”

Wired 12.10: The Long Tail

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry: hack staremagazine.com staremagazine subscription "sonia zjawinski" "stare magazine" subscription login

















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Q&A: New Corporate
VP Aims to Help Make
MSN More than the
Sum of its Services

Cisco switch
products target
small business

"Forgotten" tops box
office

Carter: No pure
democracy in Florida

Stepping it up
Pearl slaying
suspect killed in
Pakistan

Laura Bush, stealth
weapon

A Short Goodby
When Drain Pipes
Stampede

keep it real keep it
real keep it real
keep it real

Your own personal
wiki

RIAA+litigation=bank
ruptcy

'Know Your Enemy':
Everything you need
to know about
honeypots

TableTag 0.1
Paymaster 0.0.1
Glare Bug Tracking
Software 2.1

SRG 1.1
Frickin PPTP Proxy
0.9b

slimlinux 0.8.0
Flat Assembler 1.56
FUDforum 2.6.7RC1
(Development)

ZoneMinder 1.19.5
Technology presents
new challenges for
police

Osama Probably
Alive, in Pakistan,
Top Officials Say
(Reuters)

U.S. Soldier Faces
Court-Martial in
Prison Scandal
(Reuters)

Bishop Indicted on
Child Rape Charges
(AP)

U.S. Soldiers
Charged in Death of
Iraqi (AP)

Update: Photoshop CS
Raw 2.3

Lexar JumpDrive
Secure Password
Disclosure

what is grok?