Tag Archive for Engadget

How Does Your Equipment Stack Up?

How Does Your Equipment Stack Up?Engadget points us to phone-size.com that lets you compare the relative proportions of different smartphones. At the top of the webpage, you’ll also find a toolbar to enter the size and aspect ratio of your display. Once you jump through this minor hoop, according to Engadget, the utility produces accurate, life-size depictions of smartphones like Apple’s (AAPL) iPhonesGoogle’s (GOOG) Androids, and Research In Motion’s (RIMM) Blackberrys.

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Really wanted to use the title.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

AOL Notes

AOL NotesAOL was once the leader in online service providers in the U.S.and around the world. In 1988 America Online (AOL) came alive and legendary CEO Steve Case took charge in 1991. In 1996, AOL reached 6 million subscribers and started offering a flat-rate monthly service fee of $19.95. In January of 2000, AOL decided to buy up Time Warner Inc. which was spun out again in 2009.

AOL Wasn’t Building Great Products

AOL Wasn't Building Great ProductsA report from BusinessInsider says that AOL (AOL) wants to refurbish its brand and boost its energy out west. They cite a Bloomberg BusinessWeek story, that AOL is attempting to rebuild its brand by:

* Re-painting its West Coast HQ.
* Opening a gym downstairs.
* Inviting startups to work at the office rent-free.
* Hiring 80 new engineers.
* Throwing ex-AOLers under the bus.

AOL wasn’t building great products, and the brand was reflecting that,” says AOL West Coast boss Brad Garlinghouse. “We have to expunge the ghosts of AOL and start fresh.

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are Back

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are BackThe BusinessInsider speculates now that the top two editors for AOL’s (AOL) powerhouse gadget site Engadget are headed out the door, lots of people think the next thing AOL will do is buy GDGT, the gadget-oriented social network started by Engadget alumni Peter Rojas and Ryan Block.

Through AOL Ventures, AOL already owns a piece of the startup. The buy would probably be one of those “acqui-hires” where GDGT investors are made whole and the founders get what amounts to a signing bonus. comScore tells BusinessInsider that GDGT has been fluctuating between 60,000 and 140,000 unique visitors over the past year.

An AOL/Engadget insider tells BI “that gdgt rumor comes and goes.

Update: GDGT co-founder Peter Rojas says, “I can’t comment, either way, you know the drill.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

America Online (AOL) laid off around 900 people on 03 march 2011 and undoubtedly, it was brutal for those people, and for their friends at the online provider. Unfortunately, layoffs are a long-standing tradition at AOL. Chart of the Day plots the job butcher’s toll of 11 years of AOL layoffs. Sometimes the layoffs are big, sometimes they’re small, but they’re pretty much endless.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDs

AOL Spent More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDsAmerica Online (AOL) used to be king of the dial-up hill. At its peak, over 26.7 million households accessed the Internet via AOL, a figure that no American ISP has ever surpassed according to a report from AOL’s own DownloadSquad. That success came at a cost, though: those CDs (and floppy disks!) that arrived in your letterbox, often on a weekly basis, cost AOL over $300 million.

The data comes from Quora, a service that is fast becoming the go-to place for juicy, ‘insider’ information. Someone asked about AOL’s distribution costs, and in mere moments, both the CEO-at-the-time, Steve Case, and the former Chief Marketing Officer, Jan Brandt, had chimed in with authoritative responses. Mr. Case recalls, that in the heyday of the mid-1990s, AOL was quite content to spend $35 on obtaining a new subscriber. Brandt, responding a bit later, provided a total cost of “over $300 million,” for the distribution of the CDs. She went on to offer a shocking statistic: “At one point, 50% of the CDs produced worldwide had an AOL logo on it.” Shocking, but… sadly rather believable.

Desperate to Hook Up With HuffPost

AOL Was So Desperate to Hook Up With Huffington PostWhen America Online’s (AOL) CEO Tim Armstrong announced the $315-million acquisition of The Huffington Post he made the deal sound like a strategic add-on for the former web portal’s content business however, GigaOm says that AOL had to buy Huffington Post. GigaOm says that AOL traffic has been plummeting and losses increasing at most of its major media properties. GigaOm’s Mathew Ingram cites an Advertising Age report that unique visitors in February 2011 were down by more than 40 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

AOL has tried to reinvent itself as a content company, using the cash its Internet access business continues to produce (which I wrote about here) to buy assets like TechCrunch and video service 5Min Media, and The Huffington Post. GigaOm reports AOL has also spent $100 million on building out its Patch.com hyperlocal news operation with another $120 million this year. GigaOm’s Ingram says AOL is feverishly trying to build new businesses that can replace the ones that are disintegrating, before the cash from its legacy businesses runs out and the company collapses.

Assets like DailyFinance and PoliticsDaily were supposed to be part of the recipe for boosting traffic and advertising but that doesn’t seem to be happening. Mr. Armstrong is quoted in Paid Content that the news and finance sites were losing $20 million a year for the company and advertising revenue reportedly dropped by almost 30 percent in the latest quarter.

At The Huffington Post, meanwhile, both traffic and revenues have climbed. Mr. Ingram concludes that the HuffPost acquisition brings two things to AOL that it desperately needs: an understanding of how much social networks and social features matter to new media, and a sense of personality and brand awareness that AOL sites have failed to generate. Now all Arianna Huffington has to do is somehow graft all of that into AOL.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Mattel Upgrades Hot Wheels

Mattel Upgrades Hot WheelsI know it sounds like I am being a cranky, jealous old geezer, but how else should I react to Mattel‘s (MAT) 21st-century upgrade to the venerable Hot Wheels lineup? At CES 2011, Mattel demo-d the Hot Wheels Video Racer. The Hot Wheels Video Racer upgrades everyone’s favorite die-cast cars by adding a VGA video camera built-in to capture the action.

Mattel Hot Wheels logo According to Engadet the small car houses 512MB of storage, which can hold 12 minutes of video, at up to 60 frames per second. The New York Times says the onboard memory can either be played back without sound at low quality from postage-stamp-sized LCD screen (there are no speakers) or, at higher quality and sound, on your Mac or Windows computer by way of the USB cable. The USB cable is also used to charge the car’s internal batter

The camera is easy to use, reports the NYT, first you start the camera, then let the car rip down the track just as you would any other Hot Wheels car. You can then replay the ride as if you were behind the wheel. You see the tunnels, loops, and the crash at the end when your car flies off the table. Because there are no moving parts, there’s little to break ensuring a twisted first-hand view of the run down the track.

Hot Wheels Video Racer

Mattel also provides a protective case so the cam can be Velcroed to a skateboard, helmet, or Fluffy the cat to record off-track action. They also have included a basic kid-friendly editing package for the PC so the Video Racer’s run down the orange track, under the couch, and past the dog can be made into the movie masterpieces it should be. The software can edit in scene transitions, add special effects and music to spice up the video reports Ubergizmo.

Engadet says the rig will retail for $60 in the fall of 2011, just in time for Christmas 2011 for all the good little boys and not so little boys. The package includes the rubberized mini USB to USB cord for connecting the cam to a Microsoft (MSFT) Windows or an Apple (AAPL) Macintosh computer and PC editing software.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.