The iPad may be flipping the usage pattern

ipadchart

Now this is really interesting.

For the first time that I can remember, the typical traffic burst pattern established for more than a decade on the Internet has flipped with the iPad: The spikes are coming on the weekend.

This bears further study, but this is an intriguing clue as to how those two million early iPad adopters are using their devices.

Fake Steve Jobs

I just wandered over to allthingsd.com to see what time the Steve Jobs shindig kicks off and saw this:

Apparently the WSJ artist couldn’t get ahold of Jobs for a sitting and instead drew the barista down the street who “really looks a lot like Steve.”

Thoughts about the finale of Lost

How do you spell chutzpah?

If nothing else, the folks driving the pay-wallification of The Times of London and The Sunday Times have the courage of their convictions, recently making it clear, PaidContent,org reports, that not only are they putting up the wall, but they’re also planning to turn search engines away.

That means the sites – which are fine, focused products - could be passing up their greatest customer acquisition opportunity: their content itself. Non-members who reach a story page are greeted by a Times+ sign-up and login overlay, obscuring the article; there’s no taster, no excerpt and no way that anyone will find those articles via search sites.

In poker, they call that “all in.”

Mutter to local TV: You’re next

houseofcards

Alan Mutter has a message for local TV stations: What happened to newspapers is probably about to happen to you next.

Once it becomes as easy and satisfying to view a YouTube video on your 50-inch television as it is to watch “Two and a Half Men,” audiences will fragment to the point that local broadcasters will not be able to attract large quantities of viewers for a particular program at a finite point in time.

This will shatter the mass-advertising model that has served local broadcasters so well since the advent of the medium that some stations in the best of times were able to pocket pre-tax profits as high as 50 cents for every dollar of advertising they sold. While profits nowadays are running at a more modest 20% to 30%, they are well ahead of the pre-tax earnings of such corporate behemoths as Wal-Mart and Exxon.

The challenge to the lucrative local broadcasting model will have a direct impact on the quality, such as it is, of local television news – the medium that approximately 70% of the population counts as its primary source for news. This is a matter of great concern, for which no clear solution is evident.

The quote comes from the first of two posts adapted from testimony Mutter is scheduled to present at a Media Ownership Workshop being conducted Friday by the Federal Communications Commission at Stanford University. Definitely worth reading.

Photo: Creative Commons licensed from flickr user Tjflex2.

“Don’t tell anyone,” but it’s easy to search everyone’s Facebook status

openbook

In theory, I’m okay with Facebook being more open to the world. But that assumes that the people using it realize they’re likely talking in public, not just among their friends.

Thanks to openbook, you can now see how that’s working out, by searching Facebook statuses of lots of people – not just the people in your circle of friends.

The site defaults to a random-rotation of potentially embarrassing phrases (“don’t tell anyone,” “playing hooky,” “rectal exam”), but I’m sure you can come up with better on your own.

In the time it takes to read this headline, another hour of video will be uploaded to YouTube

youtube

It’s hard to say what’s more mind-blowing: That they stream two billion videos a day, or that we got here in just five years.

Happy 5th Birthday to YouTube.