Posts from January 2004

Bush In 30 Seconds

Say what you will about the negativity of these ads, I think the idea of hosting a web-based contest to come up with great political ads is a perfect use of the interactivity and two-way nature of the Internet. These ads were written and filmed by citizens like you and me who are expressing their feelings about our political leadership. This is democracy in the age of digital video and the Internet. And I love it.

So, that said, these are the ones I like best.

In My Country

Polygraph

Teaching Our Children

Desktop

Leave No Billionaire Behind

Most of the rest are too over the top, too heavy handed, and too negative for my taste.

#Politics

Dean vs. Clark (Continued)

I’ve been saying on this blog for the past four months that the Democratic race is between Dean and Clark (and more recently that i’m a fan of Clark).

I just read about an interesting USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup poll that suggests the two things i believe:

1 – Bush is going to be very hard to beat as the economy is getting better just in time, and

2 – Clark is the only Democratic candidate who has a chance to beat Bush

Here’s a link to USA Today’s story on the poll

#Politics

BeyondVC

Ed Sim’s BeyondVC blog has two recent posts on it that I really like.

In the first post he says something I’ve been saying for years – that venture backed companies are bought, not sold. I completely agree Ed. The only thing I would object to is the comment that every company that Ed invests in must have IPO potential. I don’t think that is necessary or even desirable in many cases. As long as the company can build a meaningful business with good margins and cash flow, I think it will get bought by someone eventually and the IPO exit doesn’t have to be there.

The second post is about the changing face of the software business. This is a longer discourse about the commodization of hardware and the resulting effiency with which software companies can quickly develop solutions and go to market. He postulates, and I agree, that these changes make software an even more compelling opportunity for venture investment than it has been in the past.

Ed also asserts that classic enterprise software is becoming less attractive as new ASP and appliance models are developing. My gut tells me that there is a lot of truth to this as well. I am not sure it will play out exactly as Ed outlines, but I believe he is directionally correct.

#VC & Technology

Dean vs. Clark (Continued)

Wes Clark wants to change the tax code.

He wants families of four or more making less than $50k/year to pay no taxes.

He wants all taxpaying families making under $100K/year to get a tax cut.

He wants the tax form to be simplified for most families to three lines; income, number of children, and marital status.

He wants to fund this by closing corporate tax loopholes and increasing the tax rate on income over $1mm/year by 5%.

He calls this plan Families First.

I like it.

#Politics

The One-Two Punch

Suing downloaders and smammers isn’t going to get the job done all by itself. But when combined with practical solutions to the underlying problems, legal efforts can and will help.

I’ve been catching up on my online reading since I got back from vacation and I read with interest Jim Cramer’s take on Eliot Spitzer and Microsoft’s efforts to sue the leading spammers. Since too few of you probably subscribe to Jim (but you really should), I’ll quote from his piece:

What Microsoft and Spitzer have figured out is that there are only a couple of really huge spam artists behind the all the spam. They make lots of money. But if you add a line-up, legal expenses, to the mix, they lose money. If they lose money and have a chance to go to jail to boot, they rapidly will pick other professions and their places will not be filled because the word will be out that it is too expensive a business to go into.

Capitalism is the only thing that stops spam. Not technology, capitalism. And the cost of spam just may have gotten too high for the bad guys.

I disagree with Jim about lawsuits being the ultimate solution. They won’t do the trick all by themselves. But when combined with the technology of spam filters and their economic implications, spam will mostly be a thing of the past within 18-24 months.

Look at digital music. Despite all the naysayers, it is the future of the music business. iTunes and all the other leading services are selling a lot of music these days. iTunes has sold over 20 million songs as of early December. I figure that all of the other services have probably sold another 20 million, so the industry has probably sold 40 million songs online this year. At $1/song, that isn’t a huge number for an industry that measures its revenues in the billions, but that is $40 million more than the industry got from online last year.

This summer I was at a friend’s house right after we picked up our kids from the bus bringing them back from summer camp. My friend’s son, who is 15 or 16, asked me if he’d get sued if he used Kazaa to download a bunch of songs he listened to at camp. I told him I didn’t think so, but why wouldn’t he just go get them from iTunes? I don’t know if he did, but I bet that a lot of kids his age were asking that question this summer and that many of them, and their parents, ended up at iTunes and its competition as a result.

When asked this November about the logic behind paying $2.6 billion for Warner Music, Scott Sperling, a partner with TH Lee, was quoted in the NY Times as saying that the music business was in the process of solving the issues surrounding digital music piracy. That sounds to me like a bet that digital distribution is going to take hold and that legal downloading will be the norm in the future.

In closing, I’ll point to John Schwartz’ column from New Year’s Day’s New York Times because I think 2004 is going to be the year that the Internet goes legit.

#VC & Technology

Pay Phones in Brazil

The phone system in Brazil doesn’t use coins. If you don’t have a phone card, you can’t make a call on a pay phone. But everyone in Brazil has a phone card. They are like credit cards here in the US.

josh_phone_booth.jpg

#Blogging On The Road