Feb 08

I continue to watch with intrigue as AOL gobbles up media and technology companies. AOL’s announcement that it will purchase the Huffington Post (via Wall Street Journal) is by far the most intriguing and could be exactly what AOL needs to be relevant again to many who feel it’s time had long ago come and gone. There’s no debating that the Huffington Post has been at the forefront of combining commentary and aggregation to provide a smartly edited Web report — one that has been as disruptive as new technologies. It’ll be interesting to see if adding the HuffPo and Arianna Huffington’s leadership will be the game-changer that AOL needs.

Arianna Huffington Discusses the Acquisition via Huffington Post

Tim Armstrong’s Internal Memo About Huffington Post Deal via Techcrunch

SEO Speedwagon: The rapid rise and sale of Arianna Huffington’s Post via Slate

Why AOL wants the Huffington Post via The Economist

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Jan 11

grouponIn its very irreverent way, Groupon announced today that it had raise “like a billion dollars” and would use the funds to drive its global expansion, invest in technology, and provide liquidity for employees and early investors.

I have to admit that I’m a Groupon fan. Who doesn’t love a bargain? And they do a good job of finding deals that are, for the most part, relevant (to me, at least). I also get daily deal e-mails from Living Social, BloomSpot and a number of others. Ok, I’m not a shopaholic, but I am fascinated by the explosion of social commerce and I do love comparing the offers and finding a good deal in the process.

For context, I’m the person who would see something in the store and go home to retrieve the coupon waiting in my e-mail before purchasing (and e-mail it to friends as well), so these offers take the work out of bargain-hunting and bargain-sharing for me.

On the other hand, now the work is in sorting through a multitude of offers. So although it’s great for Groupon that it has been deemed “the fastest growing company ever” by Forbes Magazine and now can easily toss around a number of other accolades, I’m waiting for the deal aggregator-aggregator. That’s right, I want a company (or an app) that will sort through all these competitors’ bargains and deliver the most relevant, “most likely to result in a transaction” offers to my e-mail, phone, iPad… You get the point.

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Jan 09

mac app storeBeing an app, iPad, Mac junky, I was looking forward to the new mac app store. However, after browsing through its offering, I find little there worth adding. I don’t see the need to replicate what’s on the iPad, especially if I have to pay for it yet again. (I already went through that during my Touch to iPad upgrade.)

The functionality of the few games I downloaded doesn’t compare to the fluidity of the ones built to work with iPad’s touch-screen controls. Dragging a cursor these days seems so, umm, 2009.

The price points are also a bit ridiculous. $19.99 for Bejeweled when I can grab it from any store for about $10? Needless to say, I’ll pass. Even though I’m not impressed, I haven’t lost hope. Apps have revolutionized personal computing, and as soon as we get more touch-screen laptops and desktops in the hands of consumers, we’ll all be converts.

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