Monday, October 15, 2007

Blog Action Day -- October 15, 2007

Today is Blog Action Day. This first, but hopefully annual, blogebration has lofty goals. Let's get everyone to post about the environment in their field of choice. I'll let the founders explain more:
On October 15th, bloggers around the web will unite to put a single important issue on everyone’s mind - the environment. Every blogger will post about the environment in their own way and relating to their own topic. Our aim is to get everyone talking towards a better future.
Some notable blogs that commented today:
  • Lifehacker did a post on top 10 user-submitted ways to live easier, greener.
  • The Official Google Blog writes about how ideas of "small changes, aggregated on a large scale, can bring to people everywhere" work on both topics of environmental change and searching the web.
  • Google Finance Blog discusses "The Green Stock Boom" for investors interested in environmentally conscious companies/industries that will benefit from rising oil prices.
  • One of my favorite posts of the day, Copyblogger writes on "The Butterfly Effect" and how one action reverberates worldwide, forever.
  • Kansas City blogger Mike Swenson writes "...unless we do begin to take all actions large and small to impact the future of our planet in a positive way, nothing else will matter someday. Most especially the economy."
These and 15,000+ other bloggers who have registered to make today a chance for a slight murmur across the blogosphere which, I hope, someday is a fervent yell for the cause of environmental concern. Folks, we got one planet -- it would suck to lose it.

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What I want in this space is a focus on the future of the newspaper industry.

Last Thursday, my friend Ben came in to OP to have a dinner with my folks and I. Among our varied discussions, I postulated "The newspaper industry will be radically different and almost extinct in 15-25 years."

My dad and Ben were not persuaded. They spoke of the tactile sensation of holding a double page spread, photos arrayed in designer layouts, graphics, and the walk down the driveway to to pick up the paper. This makes me sad and nostalgic too, one of my favorite things in the world is a dinosaur.

Unfortunately, these times are a changing. There are several reasons for that, but the simplest, easiest one is this: the cost of a digital medium will continue to go down to almost nil while the cost of newsprint, distribution, and printing will rise. Market forces will simplify this equation for newspaper publishers.

As more people get their news online -- there are fewer and fewer people wanting to deal with the hassle of getting news that, (believe this!) isn't updated on the minute like the CNN and NYT web sites.

Combining that, with as I'm sure most would guess, the fact that print newspapers aren't the most environmentally friendly:
Tyson Miller, director of the Green Press Initiative, said ... “Newsprint consumption is 9.2 million tons per year, and the average amount of that which is recycled material is 32%, so about 6 million tons of virgin fiber is used to make U.S. newsprint per year,” he said. “That’s more virgin fiber than the books, magazine and catalog business combined. So even though they use a lot more recycled content, and print circulation is dropping, the industry as a whole uses a lot of paper. The good news is that the industry has a fairly high recycled fiber use rate.”
Circulation is down, advertising revenue for the print product is down, and the discourse on environment first thinking is going up.

Hasta la vista traditional newspapers.

What will replace newspapers and how will we get our information? Check back Wednesday for my take on the future of media in this country.

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My very little thing I did this weekend was finally organizing my recycling at my apartment. Previously, my system involved me throwing all my plastics/aluminum goods in a trash sack haphazardly taking it to local recycling places when they got too smelly to keep in the kitchen. (At best, and more times than I'm proud of, a nearby dumpster) I think you'll approve of the upgrade.



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Thank you for taking one minute to think about the environment collectively across the blogosphere. If you are so inspired, write something on your blog/facebook note of choice and register with the Blog Action Day folk. Let's just hope we keep the dialog going to October 16 and beyond. Besides, don't you really know what October 15 is?

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

What "in rainbows" will do to the music industry

So, ok. I think just about everyone I know that I've seen in the past few days has to know how excited I was for today. Why, might you ask? Because today is the day that the music industry is changed forever (and for the better).

It would have been enough
had one of my favorite bands, Radiohead, to release a hell of a seventh studio album, but they had to break every economic standard that the music industry has been counting on for the past five decades. In Rainbows stands to do that and more.

"How come I end up where I started?" the band asks in the opening cut "15 Steps." A legitimate question, and it is one record executives will be asking in the upcoming days, months, and years. Techcrunch guru and noted blogger Michael Arrington said:

2007 is turning out to be a terrible year for the music industry. Or rather, a terrible year for the the music labels.

The DRM walls are crumbling. Music CD sales continue to plummet rather alarmingly. Artists like Prince and Nine Inch Nails are flouting their labels and either giving music away or telling their fans to steal it. Another blow earlier this week: Radiohead, which is no longer controlled by their label, Capitol Records, put their new digital album on sale on the Internet for whatever price people want to pay for it.

The economics of recorded music are fairly simple. Marginal production costs are zero: Like software, it doesn’t cost anything to produce another digital copy that is just as good as the original as soon as the first copy exists, and anyone can create those copies (meaning there is perfect competition and zero barriers to entry).
Dorothy and Todo, we're not in Kansas anymore. Gone are the days of record companies holding rule over bands on how, when, and for how much will you make when we generously publish your music and make bank. Radiohead bucks this trend by announcing on their blog 10 days till the albums online only, digital, DRM free release.

Hello everyone.

Well, the new album is finished, and it's coming out in 10 days;

We've called it In Rainbows.

Love from us all.
Jonny
This is directly from the source, completely handled by the band, straight to the consumer. Record industry. It's time to wake up. N.I.N. plans to do the same, and more band will jump on this after they see how successful it is for the band and their fans.

So how is the album? Reviews, as expected, have been glowing.

The Guardian Unlimited gives it five stars:

Witty, romantic, life-affirming: you don't need to be an expert in the minutae of their back catalogue to know that these are not adjectives readily associated with Radiohead. But then, in the years since OK Computer propelled them to superstardom, you could say the same about the phrase "consistent album", yet that's precisely what In Rainbows seems to be. Whatever you paid, it's hard to imagine feeling short-changed.
My friend, and self proclaimed Radiohead addict, Nolan T. Jones said:

It’s a good album. Hell, it’s a fantastic **** album. It does exactly what a Radiohead album has always done—it makes you feel the whole way through. It’s an emotional journey, and it charts new territory for the band. Obviously an initial review of an album means very little—classics grow on us. New things appear in tracks we’ve heard a hundred times and amaze us. Also, in terms of my own words, the mysticism of music is interpretation.

For me? If you like Radiohead, you'll love In Rainbows. It picks up perfectly from where Kid A, Hail to the Chief left off. I'll let the band really say how I feel with the concluding verse from the final cut "Videotape":

No matter what happens now
I won't be afraid
Because I know today has been the most perfect day I've ever seen.


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Today's M-W quote of the day strikes me as eerily similar to a certain group I've been with for the past few years.
"You get fifteen democrats in a room, and you get twenty opinions.
Senator Patrick Leahy, May 1990"
Hah.