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Some Powerful Numbers…

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The information below is from a cogent PowerPoint presentation that Mary Meeker from Morgan Stanley recently presented at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. It underscores the tremendous changes and rate of change that is happening with new media, technology and related fields of study. The complete presentation is here.

Some of the interesting facts in her presentation:

- In 1995 North America made up 66 percent of Internet users. By 2005, that number had dropped to 23 percent.

- Asia/Pacific now makes up the largest share of the Internet market at 36 percent. China has more Internet users under the age of 30 than anywhere else.

- There were 7.6 billion global searches on Google last year…up 74 percent over the previous year.

- There are 40 million users who have a personalized My Yahoo! page.

- The market cap of Google+Yahoo!+eBay+Yahoo! Japan was $2 billion prior to their 2000 IPOs. As of 11/11/05 their combined market cap was $262 billion.

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Gmail Gets Delete

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Okay, I understand the bit where Google wants you to keep all your mail because they are extremely generous with the space they give you (I still haven’t used anywhere near the first gig, let alone the second) but sometimes there is mail you want to go away. Yes, you could previously delete a letter by clicking its checkbox and using the drop-down to get rid of them...but c’mon, did it really need to be that hard to delete mail I don’t want?

Gmail from day one has been a near perfect online email experience, other than the obvious lack of a delete button. So when I noticed they had added one, I noticed it this morning, I couldn’t help but do a little dance in my chair. So I’d like to extend a great big thank you to Gmail for the delete button finally. Thanks Gmail!

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Is Advertising/Print/Radio/TV/PR Dead?

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I see variants of this type of headline too often. Insert the appropriate word. Is advertising dead? Is print dead? Is TV dead? Is PR dead? The answer to all these questions is no. Usually, these stories are about the older, traditional forms of the media in question: offline advertising, free terrestrial radio, broadcast TV, etc. Granted, all of the aforementioned are undergoing tremendous change, but anyone who thinks they are dead is mistaking mortality for what is really metamorphosis. In fact, usually when I see headlines like this, it is obvious someone is advertising for you to read the story, and simply using a dramatic headline as the hook.

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Another Stab at Electronic Books

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In light of Sony’s poorly managed rootkit fiasco, the introduction of the Reader for electronic books offers the company an opportunity to redeem itself, and put some exciting new technology in the hands of consumers. (The Reader is an updated version of the Librie, which was released last year in Japan. The product received bad press because of its high cost and its digital rights management software that automatically deleted purchased ebooks after 60 days.)

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Radio

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Why does this not surprise me: Google is now in the radio business. It made news all over the place yesterday. If, as so often is said, content is king, then Google is not only king...it is quickly rising to the rank of emperor. Google gives access to a world of content and now they are starting to control the content channels, too. Maybe they’ll call it Roogle or Radioo.

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