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    Showing posts with label change. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label change. Show all posts

    Lifetime wins the Super Bowl.

    On this day of horrible violence towards women across the US, one station chose to counter it with some powerful films. Lifetime quietly made the choice to show Bastard out of Carolina and Black and Blue, two films about domestic violence opposite the Super Bowl. They are also showing The Good Girl, but I'm not certain that it is part of the series.

    Someone at Lifetime made a really great choice and will possibly save someone from a lot of pain. I'm watching it to see which advertisers support Lifetime for these films and make them part of my choices. Maybe I'll even write a letter or two...

    Google-bound

    A few years later I find myself firmly embedded into the Google work system. Calendar, Mail, Analytics, Reader... all of it.

    Let me back up a bit. Two years ago I got an invite to beta test Gmail. It was one of those invitations people were BUYING and had the buzz power of a Wii. I was elite. I was the shit. Updated contacts, sent out notices, burned bridges to other providers. Easy. I was in.

    There was nothing insidious or cloying about how Google worked itself in further. Gmail & co. works. It does all of the necessary tasks and lets you integrate mostly seamlessly. Privacy and fear experts (Not the same thing, btw. I don't want to argue about it.) will tell you that I am setting myself up to be electronically violated or left in the dirt when Google changes its profit machine or gets bought. I don't care and I don't care. Any system which allows me to FEED NEWS THROUGH MY EMAIL AND TRACK MY SEARCHES(AWESOME!) is my new best friend. So someone finds out I was searching for Brazillian Wax videos or information on pot farms in Manhattan. It proves nothing exept that I am curious. Curious AND satisfied.

    More things I can do:

    - From Google Analytics I learned that someone from Bulgaria has repeatedly visited my blog. Whoever you are, I love you. Same to the person from New Dehli and Wisconson. We are an inclusive, internationally-minded blog. Welcome. Also, No Agenda is driving 13.33% of my traffic. That is 2 people. Thanks. Every bit counts toward inflating my ego.

    -Google sucks potential calendar items out of my e-mail and puts them to the right of the e-mail itself. I can click to add them to the calendar. Jesus.

    -If I look something up in Google Maps I can text it to my phone, then hit the road. Seriously. When did we not need that? I've saved a freaking tree by not printing directions over the last six months.

    That is enough fawning over Google, the provider of this blog. There is much more, but I think we have had our fill for now. Please feel free to comment.

    So I went and changed the title.

    Yes, I did. It wasn't sitting right. This one may not either, but I will keep the blog at the same address until I find one as good as "Jimmy Q's Egg Hut". Until that day, I am merely a name away from glory.

    Carry on my wayward son. There'll be peace when you are done.

    I'd better find something to do while this downloads...








    I will not wait this long for anyone. Anyone at all. According to my calculations, I will be waiting 230,982 years. Sexy.

    Reserch Item #1: Predictive Markets

    Recently I've been looking into the state of prediction markets. A prediction market is any stock market-like game or system where you can bet (usually not in real money) on the outcome of an event or competition, like American Idol, movie releases and anything buzz-worthy. I have a feeling that we'll see a lot more of these in the near future, given their tremendous potential value in taking the pulse of society.

    A couple of words of warning: The markets can become very addictive. Try to schedule time to pay attention to them, rather than doing it haphazardly. Don't expect yourself to be a pro overnight. It takes time to get the hang.

    Having been a member of HSX's movie prediction market for 6+ years, I wanted to see how the competition had evolved. Or if there was any. It turns out that it really hasn't moved far at all, which surprises me. The main examples are weak, underpopulated and poorly designed right now, but evolving quickly.

    The Markets:

    HSX: My first trade was Deep Impact in 1998 and I've (slowly) built to 550 million HSX dollars. Reliably stable and thorough, HSX offers an easy to understand model of prediction markets and is based upon the actual box office reciepts. The competition is stiff and already way ahead of you here. Competent newbies (of which there many) can really take off in the rankings. As good as it is, they seem to be slowing the impovements considerably. Having said this, when they upgrade the site next week and it's great, I won't be surprised.

    Inkling: Looks to be a popularity market, allowing bets on everything from American Idol winners to Apple Rumors to the price of oil. Smart looking site and easy betting tools are appreciated, but there needs to be more to bet on. Perhaps with time and more members there will be something really solid here. The staff is very responsive to requests and seems excited about the concept in the various blogs and news items detailing the process of starting the market. Trading is really easy and plainly evident. It actually asks you a question to help you get to a buying decision faster, which helps. The amount to trade leaves wide gaps for the future. I want so badly to create a market of two, and I believe this is on the horizon for them.

    Yahoo Buzz: This market has the most content potential of the new crop, but I doubt it will ever be organized into something better. It is SCREAMING for an AJAX interface and an information designer to grab it by the neck and shake it. It is plainly designed, but the content is terrific and easy to bet on, much like HSX. The focus is (kinda) on tech and tech products.

    CrowdIQ: I really tried to like this one. In the end, however, it was a bit intricate for my idea of fun. It is built as a series of smaller, user-created markets, all functioning on their own. In the looks department it gets a 9, however, and it has little moments of brilliance like giving confidence percentages as newsworthy items.
    These markets can all be a lot of fun and really bring current events into a new place for you. It makes reading the news much, much more interesting because there is a sort of investment in it. No matter how evil that may sound, it keeps me reading.


    I'll possibly add more as I encounter them and update this list every so often.