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Friday, September 30, 2011

Can Kindle Fire add more burn to cord cutting?

"Cord cutting" is what the cable TV industry says when people stop their cable TV service and go exclusively to the internet to watch television shows. Watching on a laptop is a solitary experience, and it's not much more social watching on a desktop, and many of us have been caught dragging laptops over to our televisions and connecting them up to watch internet streamed shows on a larger screen.

There are several problems with this approach. First, you need a laptop that has a video output connection. Second, you need enough internet speed to stream the show (see trailer for Bandwidth Blindness to learn more about that problem).

So, with the iPad, and now, more importantly, Amazon's Kindle Fire, can you just park a tablet next to you TV, leave it connected to the TV, and power it up whenever you want to watch a show? With tablets, you need to make sure the hardware and software can support what you want to do. Does the tablet have a Netflix App? If it doesn't, can you use the tablet's browser to stream the show?

Secondly, does the table have a video output connection? Apparently, the Kindle Fire's USB port doesn't allow direct connection to a TV, whereas the BrilianTab has a HDMI connection that allows direct connection.

In the case of Amazon, they seem to be actively promoting Netflix for now, which is a good thing. Does their proprietary browser allow streaming of Hulu, Comedy Central, and other sites? Either way, if you can't connect it to a larger screen, your viewing will mostly be by yourself as opposed to with your family or a loved one.

So, it's unclear if the Kindle Fire will contribute at all to replacing "over the top boxes" used to stream cable TV (and hence contribute to the cord cutting phenomenon). One concern is speculation that Amazon's Kindle Soft web browser remotely tracks every single page you visit. Ah, so maybe the $199 price tag isn't so cheap anymore!

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Urban Winemaking Part 1: Revolution Wines Now Online

In Part 1, we visit Revolution Wines in midtown Sacramento and see one of their Syrah crushes. Interviews with owners Gina Genshlea and Craig Haarmeyer. Find out what makes this midtown, Sacramento-based winery unique, and explore their new bistro, located on the corner of 28th and S Streets.

Blade Work Full Version Now Online!

Check out the full Blade Work episode on toast.


Blade Work goes through the basics of the rowing stroke, what muscle groups are used, and what qualities make an ideal rower. Interviews include Tricia Blocher, who coaches for River City Rowing and for the US Junior Development National Team, Joel Griffith, winner of 3 gold medals at the 2010 World Rowing Masters Regatta at St. Catherine's, Canada, and Greg Darrah, winner of the gold medal in the men's C double at the same regatta.



Sunday, September 25, 2011

Blade Work trailer named Video of the Day on Row2K

We were pleasantly surprised to find the trailer for Blade Work listed on Row2K's site as the video of the day.

Great news is that the full episode is finished and had its world premier at the River City Rowing Fall BBQ yesterday and will be appearing online within the week.

Thanks to the tremendous footage taken by Lew Abramson, Matt Pye, Rose Giordano, Dan Tharp, and Janelle Bogue, the full episode has a lot more than you'd guess from the trailer.

Stay tuned!!


Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Toast is back

Sactoast.com is up and running again. Apparently, things are back to normal.

Toast site temporarily down

Sorry to say that our web hosting service, Fused.com, reports that it is "mitigating an attack." Sounds serious, and at the moment, Toast is unavailable.

Monday, September 19, 2011

new series on Urban Winemaking

On Friday, just shot some footage of a Syrah crush at Revolution Wines. What makes Syrah so wonderful it it produces a dark, inky, red wine full of depth and wonder. Check out the short trailer featuring Revolution's wine maker, Craig, his staff, and that amazing destemming and crushing machine.

Friday, September 16, 2011

behold, a VRAD

A "VRAD" (Video Ready Access Device) is what AT&T uses to provide U-Verse high speed internet and high definition television service to homes. In the past, there have been attempts to map out, unofficially, the locations of VRAD in order to figure out where AT&T is offering U-Verse (AT&T won't disclose this information for competitive reasons).

We did a lot of driving around downtown and midtown Sacramento over the past few days and managed to find 3 of them. I'm sure there are more, but they don't jump out at you. Below is a short video clip of what they look like. Telltale signs are a dedicated power meter and an actual address on the box (do they take pizza deliveries?). You'll notice too that they make a slight humming noise.

The VRAD is where AT&T brings in fiber optic lines. The digital signal from these lines is converted from optical to electrical and then sent to homes through a neighboring box called a "cross connect."

An article earlier this year suggested that AT&T is winding down its U-Verse expansion, which is bad news for Sacramento, but we did find one location where they were actually installing a new VRAD, so perhaps it's not over yet.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Why Idaho has the slowest internet speeds

Should internet service be profitable? If so, how profitable? That's a question nobody seems to want to talk about. Instead, we just plod along, letting large telecom companies decide where they are going to offer service based on profitability rather than equity. That could change somewhat under FCC Chairman Genachowski's proposed Universal Service Fund (USF) reform. But all of the discussion these days is about rural areas. Urban areas area also lacking capacity and coverage, as you can see from a previous post about AT&T service dragging down the average throughput rate in Sacramento.

An article in yesterday's New York Times focused on the abysmally slow internet speeds in Idaho, where the average population density is 19 people per square mile.

It's no surprise that providers have no incentive to extend their networks in very rural areas to just a few homes. This is why the upcoming "Broadband Blindness" is exploring why, given the economic realities of investing in costly networks, we refuse to change how we pay for network infrastructure and leave investment decisions in the hands of public companies who run the risk of plummeting stock prices if their eyes stray from the bottom line.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Wall Street Journal, NY Times now TV stations

You were wondering what "Toast" was all about, right? Well, wake up and smell the roses. Everything is going video, even though it may not be readily apparent here in our neck of the woods in Sacramento. A recent report by Knowledge Networks shows that online viewing continues to eat into the time spent watching cable or network television. See http://tinyurl.com/6gt88sc.

And it's not just Gen Y. Boomers are also watching more shows online that were traditionally viewed on cable or network television.

Yesterday, the New York Times reported that the Wall Street Journal has expanded its daily video offering to 3.5 hours of live programming and has plans to add to it. This is in direct competition with the New York Times' own TimesCast, which offers short video summaries of certain news events.

Monday, September 12, 2011

President's Broadband Plan is A Pipe Dream

In his recent speech on the American Jobs Act, President Obama included "a deficit reducing plan to deploy high-speed wireless services to at least 98 percent of Americans." This would be done by auctioning off spectrum to wireless carriers with the condition that they use that spectrum to cover parts of the United States that do not currently have internet access.

This may seem like a marriage made in heaven - using wireless carriers to pay down the deficit AND expand internet access - but it's not. Here are two reasons why:

1) Where's the money to pay for the network, and
2) Wireless isn't a long-term solution


Expanding wireless to 98 percent of Americans could cost many billions more than the US Government receives in revenue from the spectrum auction. So, what's in it for AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile? Clearly, if there were enough revenue potential in the uncovered, primarily rural, parts of the United States, they would already have wireless coverage by now. They're not covered right now because there's not enough revenue to justify offering service there.

So let's assume that the wireless carriers get the spectrum and start building out their networks to meet the 98 percent goal: at what point do they go back to Uncle Sam and demand major subsidies?


Secondly, wireless is not a long-term solution. In wireless technology, capacity and coverage work in opposite directions. You add more capacity, you get less coverage. Covering 98 percent of America with a low capacity wireless network doesn't get you very far. In five years' time or less, the radio equipment will need to be completely replaced as new radio technology comes out.

Rather than combining deficit reduction with broadband expansion, President Obama needs to consider other ways to finance a more future-proof, robust national broadband infrastructure that can meet the needs of the coming decades, and that should focus primarily on landline networks with fiber-optics, which can be used for decades and handle ever-increasing capacity demands without needing an upgrade. We did this for rural electrification, and we can do it for broadband.

Friday, September 9, 2011

AT&T dragging Sacramento down

Given the choice, most people would choose the express train over the slow train. In Sacramento, and, unsurprisingly, across the nation as a whole, it seems that AT&T Internet Services is the slow train for internet access.

Judging from data collected by M-Lab that is publicly available, one wonders how aggressively AT&T has been expanding their U-Verse network and converting DSL users to their "faster" service.

The visualization below shows average download throughput by provider for Sacramento. The red Sacramento line is the average of the two.


Sample sizes are not radically different between the two providers, and it's clear that average throughput for AT&T hasn't changed much. One takeaway is, if you want fast internet, your only bet is Comcast. There really is no competition here in Sacramento unless you live in one of the few areas where AT&T has recently invested in more capacity.

Earlier this year, AT&T's CEO, Randall Stephenson, made an offhand remark saying that AT&T deployed DSL in the 1990s to fight off Comcast and that the technology was obsolete. This seems to be true here in Sacramento.

Mobile is the cash cow in the telecom business. Fixed line is not. Is AT&T plowing its money primarily into its mobile business, including the T-Mobile buyout?

It would seem that way, given UBS Research's take on AT&T slowing down expansion of their faster U-Verse service.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Saturday, September 3, 2011

market research at Chalk It Up Sacramento

It was an amazing day at Chalk It Up out at Fremont Park between 15th & 16th / P & Q streets in midtown. So many great people, so many great ideas, and the sidewalks were covered with beautiful art. The event is going on through tomorrow, so stop by and check it out. Live music too from local bands, and good grub to boot!