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iPad: A name without an identity

The tech world worked itself into a frenzy as it anticipated the unveiling of Apple’s new tablet device, and rarely has there been so much fuss over such an incremental change in technology.

At least that’s what it seemed like when I first started reading about the new iPad during and after Steve Jobs’ press event Wednesday. After all, the iPad looks an awful lot like an iPhone or iPod Touch – only bigger – but it doesn’t make phone calls or take pictures. It will surf the Web like a personal computer, but, well, it’s not a PC.

Oh sure, the iPad will be easy to use like an iPhone. And it will do a great job displaying photos, video and other Web or electronic content, but so does any computer with a decent monitor. So the hoopla over the arrival of the iPad has me puzzling about a couple of things. First, why am I going to need (want) one? Second, how the heck is this not-quite-phone-not-quite-computer going to save the news publishing industry?

If you’re a gadget freak, an Apple fanatic or a serial first-adopter, you already want (need) one. But as with its other revolutionary products, Apple isn’t after you. It’s after the rest of us. (For the record, I’m not an early adopter. I never had a personal cell phone until I bought my iPhone in December 2008. I bought a MacBook Pro in June 2009 because my 5-year-old PC just wasn’t fast enough. And just this week I finally replaced my 11-year-old tube TV with an LCD, high def TV).

Honestly, I can’t think of many reasons I’d want to buy an iPad. I love my iPhone and some of cool applications I’ve acquired for free from the Apple App Store. I’m fond of my MacBook, which handles all of my personal and professional needs very well. What would I do with a device that doesn’t quite work as well as my computer or my phone?

I used to wonder why I would need a mobile phone. After all, I’ve always had a landline in my home. Now, however, I wouldn’t go anywhere without my iPhone. And it doesn’t have much to do with calling people. It has more to do with access to maps, e-mail, Facebook, the electronic notepad, weather forecasts, and the camera. It turns out, it’s a handy gadget, and it’s made my life better and easier in ways that I didn’t expect when I bought it.

The iPad will win fans and customers in the same way, especially after software developers start building applications and utilties that some of us can’t yet imagine.

And that leads me to some of things folks are already imagining for the iPad, like, for example the salvation of the newspaper and magazine industries. The logic seems to be that newspapers can once again be paid for content if they push it onto iPads and then charge folks for downloading it, a la music from the iTunes store, or perhaps an app from the App Store.

As a journalist, I fell in love with the World Wide Web because it offers multiple ways to tell stories – words, sounds, pictures, animation and video. But after more than 10 years of exposure to the Internet as a story-telling tool, most newspaper companies are only now beginning to take advantage of the multimedia possibilities of the Web. What makes anybody think that newspapers will suddenly see the light and generate multimedia content that people will PAY for on a tablet device like the iPad?

Granted, there’s a glimmer of hope. If you’ve not seen this demo of an issue of Sports Illustrated issue made for a tablet, you need to check it out. It’s brilliant. But it’s just a demo, and it’s not the kind of thing newspapers are likely to produce day in and day out. There’s not much point in rehashing the arguments about why newspapers are failing in a multimedia world. It’s simply enough to note that they’ve failed.

Really, the future of the iPad doesn’t depend on what content producers – newspapers, magazines, television studios, movie makers and musicians – want to put on it. The future depends on what iPad buyers want to do with it. And that remains to be seen.

What might you want to do with an iPad? Write a comment!

 

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Why the iPod Nano is not a game changer after all

With the much rumored and insanely anticipated Apple iSlate, due to be announced later this month, being referred to as a potential “game changer,” as momentous as the original iPod and its big cousin the iPhone, I thought I’d take a look back at a post I wrote in September in which I called the new iPod Nano a game changer itself.

At the time, I hadn’t actually gotten my hands on one. That finally happened last week. And I’m sorry to report that my prediction now seems premature.

My enthusiasm for the Nano was that it was the absolute smallest, decent quality video camcorder on the market, and it had a built in iPod to boot (or maybe it’s the other way around). It would be a boon to bloggers and media publishers of all sizes, not to mention consumers shooting silly cat tricks, I wrote.

And indeed, that potential is readily apparent for media publishers along with classified advertising practioners who can use the device to more easily take quick on-the-spot videos of products, vehicles and properties. I’m working with a client that works with communities in far flung places such as India, China and Burma. Why not arm its constituents with Nanos to document lifecycle events and send them back to us to edit and post on YouTube or Facebook, I suggeted.

When I finally tried out the Nano itself – at a rock concert of all places – I was not disappointed. The Nano neatly delivered on its promise: the device is so tiny I was able to keep it stowed safely in my shirt pocket, and it warms up fast so I was ready at the beginning of each song to grab the shots I wanted. The video quality was entirely acceptable; the audio less so.

So what’s the problem? It doesn’t have a camera; it’s just video. That might seem a bit nit picky, but the market today is all about convergence – reducing the number of devices you need to carry. The iPhone does this perfectly: it packs a phone, camera, video recorder, MP3 player and web browser all-in-one shiny black package.

But the iPhone (like most smart phones) is relatively hefty. It doesn’t fit into a pocket, it’s too bulky to wear on an armband while exercising and, frankly, it does more – and costs more – than many people need.

The Nano has the price and form factor I want, but without a camera for stills, if I want to be ready at any time and any place to shoot a photo and a video, I have to carry both my Nano and my digital camera. My cell phone doesn’t take pictures at high enough quality to make it a worthy alternative.

Why didn’t Apple include a camera in the iPod Nano? Probably to prevent cannibalization of sales of its higher end i-products (although the official rumored reason is that they couldn’t get the optics small enough to work). Perhaps the camera will be a part of the package in the future – along with a tiny wireless receiver, now wouldn’t that be cool! – but before then, the business buzz will have already moved on to the iSlate as the next game changer.

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In case you were wondering how that video I shot at the rock concert came out, here’s a short clip I took with the iPod Nano. The audio is a bit muffled, but I think that’s more due to where we were sitting (in the front row, where the instrument amps were closer) than the iPod’s functionality.

Brian Blum heads Blum Interactive Media, a consulting firm that creates quality content for social media: blogs, podcasts, video, eBooks, research and more.

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Half of all Internet users to watch video online in five years

We all know that online video is hot. Viewership is expected to grow by more than two-thirds in the next five years, from 563 million in 2008 to 941 million in 2013, says EMarketer. The 2013 estimate represents just over one-half of the 1.8 billion consumers expected to use the Internet that year.

That number is skewed a bit, though, by Western adoption rates. In Australia, Germany, India, Japan, the U.K. and the U.S., more than three-quarters of consumers in surveyed in Q3 2008 by IBM Global Business Services said they watched video on their PCs. And that’s today. By 2013, the sky’s the limit.

The explosion of online video viewership has been truly dramatic. A study by the USC Annenberg School Center for the Digital Future and the World Internet Project found that as recently as 2007, a majority of Internet users in eight out of the 13 countries surveyed (including the U.S.) said they never downloaded or watched online video at all!

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IPoste.org launches minimalist video classifieds

IPoste.org wants to be a cross between a Craiglist-style minimalistic classified advertising site and a video hosting service. It does neither particularly well.

The company announced yesterday with PR fanfare that it has a revolutionary video-enabled free classifieds site. Well, there’s plenty of video on the web and the iPoste.org site is so underwhelming in its design, free doesn’t always mean worthwhile. Plus there just aren’t that many videos on the site.

Founders David Collins and John Nees seem to believe that combining classifieds with topic-specific RSS news feeds will be valuable to shoppers. But users have lots of other places to look for news. The chances that IPoste will be a destination site are pretty nill.

You have our permission to give this site a pass.

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MySpace vids go mobile

Mobile users can now watch videos from MySpace via a partnership with RipCode. The content will be available at MySpace’s mobile site, m.myspace.com. MySpace says the video will work on the iPhone, T-Mobile G1, BlackBerry Bold and BlackBerry Storm devices, among others. All user uploaded videos and most premium content will be available.

RipCode’s is providing an on demand video transcoding service where videos are transcoded only when requested, into whatever combination of codecs, bit rates and resolutions an individual handset requires.

YouTube has offered similar functionality at m.YouTube.com since early this year.

Related: MySpace has published a nifty guide on how to view videos on your mobile: http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=47525015

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80 percent of Web users watch online video at least once a month

Still wondering how important video will be to your site? Take a look at the results of a Nielsen study conducted over the summer. Nearly 80 percent of the US online population now watches online video at least once a month. That ranges from news clips to sports highlights to full-length TV episodes. But it also means video on your site.

Who’s coming? Surprisingly, an older demographic than you’d think. While a combined 39 percent of US viewers were under age 35, the single largest cluster of users was in the 45-to-54-year-old group at 20 percent. Older users were also well represented, with a combined 22 percent ages 55 and older.

Nielsen also reports that on the Web, online video viewers in the U.S. skew toward women by 55 percent to 45 percent, according to a May 2008 Nielsen study. For mobile video, it was the opposite, with men watching more on the road than women by a 6 to 4 margin.

EMarketer has more.

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Latin America report …

Digital classifieds are growing in Latin America -- a mixed landscape of traditional media companies and intercontinental giants that are finding new opportunities.

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