Entries Tagged 'Business' ↓

Chrome just Changed the Game

Whether you’re up on ‘em or think they are sign of the Coming Apocalypse, you may have heard…

Flying Spaghetti Google

Google just changed the game for the delivery of software applications.

They released Chrome: less browser, more application delivery platform.  JITted Javascript — for fast DOM wizardry and Ajax yumminess.  It’s own application space and full-stack OS hooks through Gears.  Your app can effectively leap into the cloud. More ⊕

New York: Media, not Finance!

We <3 NYCPaul Graham doesn’t understand the appeal of New York City to web nerds. He says “Cambridge… feels like a town whose main industry is ideas, while New York’s is finance and Silicon Valley’s is startups.” Not so! New York, for me, is media. And I’m not alone.

I’ll take this point to introduce myself to this blog, Oddly Zen, as this is my first post, and my story informs my defense of New York against Cambridge and Silicon Valley. I do live in New York, and I work in media. I work for Observer Media Group as the technical team leader (head nerd), where I run Observer.com and Politicker.com.

I’m certainly not in New York for the money, and I’m not that envious of those who have more than me. I’m in New York because of the pace and excitement of my niche in software development. The problems in computing for news media are enormous for many reasons; managing web content in a clean and useful way is so much harder than most developers know (if you scoff at that claim, I’ll trade jobs with you for a day).

Anyhow, the bulk of the CMS-needing media companies of the world are in New York, and many of them employ nerds like me to whip their CMS into shape. And as media becomes more interactive and more (gasp) social, startups bubble up around the fringe. There are many such startups in New York City; in fact this is probably true for other industries, like advertising, textiles, and public relations. I just don’t know anything about these domains. The result is that there are a ton of software developers here. And most of us aren’t working in finance. More ⊕

Print is dead. Long Live Print.

the New York Times, panting to the finish line?

On Wednesday, New York Times Co. (NYT) reported disappointing second-quarter earnings, and on Thursday the stock continued in its steep descent.

At the end of trading it stood at 12.48, or virtually half the price it commanded one year ago.

Web 2-uh-oh.

This part of the story is unsurprising, given how the Street is slamming any newspaper stock.

What’s startling is something else: If you back out much of the rest of the company’s portfolio, you arrive at a surprisingly teeny valuation for the vaunted New York Times itself, despite all the respect the brand commands.

How Can The New York Times Be Worth So Little?