YouTube and the dilemma of its business model

Internet ventures have long been a phenomena that is very difficult to understand. On one hand, the internet or the web has been wildly successful that there is a wealth of information (and disinformation) at the click of a mouse button.

Yet, on the other hand there have only been very few successful businesses. The successful ones are the likes of Google, Yahoo etc, but very few others.

So what drives venture capital funds to the web?

The dotcom bust in the early 2000s brought things back to reality. Yet, now we see the second wave of the web… called web 2.0.

Web 2.0 is primarily used to describe the second wave of web ventures which draw primarily from the internet community itself. Sites like mySpace and YouTube are the recent prime examples of community based sites achieving wild success (at least in terms of eyeballs).

The question now for the likes of YouTube – is this sustainable? What do you think? Is the free-for-user-and-hope-to-get-advertising-revenue model workable?

Time to move to space?

I didn’t realise that there was such a thing as a space conference. Found this on a Wired article in my RSS feed.

The recently held Space 2006 Conference in San Jose, California was a bit about selling a life (living?) in space. But the problem with living in space is gravity.. if not for anything, it is going to be a big problem keeping your food down.

It is likely that the Moon (one sixth earth’s gravity) and Mars (three eighths) are unlikely space real estate destinations.

For Al Globus, senior research associate for human factors research and technology at NASA Ames Research Center, the most salient issue is one that most people take for granted on Earth: gravity. In low gravity, muscles atrophy and bones loose calcium and become brittle. If people start having children in an off-Earth settlement, those children — being adapted to the moon’s one-sixth gravity or Mars’ three-eighths gravity — may not be able to function on Earth, Globus argues.

“If you are a genius, you can never go to Harvard or Princeton,” Globus says. “If you are a great violinist, you will never be able to play the concert halls of Earth.”

Bad news huh? A bunch of brittle people. Yet in science fiction many portray martians as fearsome creatures. Chopsticks I say!

That’s a deal breaker, in Globus’ opinion. The space researcher instead argues that rotating space stations that can produce near-Earth gravity would be the best bet for long-term human inhabitants. These stations could produce more energy because certain orbits could bring them more sunshine than is possible if they were land-based. And the stations would be hours away, rather than three days for the moon or, at best, six months for Mars. The proximity to Earth makes tourism a possibility and makes resupplying the stations a snap.

So what about a space station? Sounds like a cool idea. But I will not be booking my space trip anytime soon.

But why would people want to stay in space in the first place?

The ultimate secure home

The ultimate secure homes

We all are pretty concerned about home safety in all aspects: security, disasters etc. But would you buy a house in the woods, which looks like a hobbit den? Well, one is indeed for sale for only USD475,000 inclusive a 4.3 acre land.

It looks nice, but hey…

If you are keen, you can check out the website.

Help me, I’m swamped

It has been a long while since I updated my blog. Things have been extreme for me for some time now. Changes at work, new initiatives with my-kart, business planning etc.

This Merdeka Day break is good. Just need to free myself from all the work and priorities and reflect for a short while. No doubt i shall be soon doing a bit of work… but let me for a short while sip some virtual tea with you.

I am going through and responsible for putting through some changes at work. This is a huge challenge for me, as change is one thing that many people fear the most. It is often so easy to do the same things we do for the longest time we can remember. But every once in a while things start to change and sometimes we tend not to be ready for it.

People often say that the only thing that stays constant is change. Hmph… easier said than done.

Yet, I am responsible to drive this change. I believe that change is good, but how do I deal with the resistance? How do I deal with the years of stability and predictability? I can see many obvious areas needing change, but this is not a matter for just turning the dial or switch and voila! No. There are no switches and remote controls.

The undercurrent that is resisting change are feelings of fear, uncertainty, resentment, comfort… I will have to deal with each of this. But do I provoke it with more fear? Do I sooth and comfort these feelings and say that everything is ok?

I have been watching House MD season 2 recently, and like Dr House, there are times that I feel I have to tell the patient that “you are going to die, so we need to do some radical procedures”. Yeah. You could probably excuse Dr House’s poor bedside manner because (a) he is fictional, (b) he is genius.

Where do I go from here?