February 19, 2009
lebren:

Automakers Seek $14 Billion More in Aid - NYTimes.com
Graham and I once had a conversation in which we imagined a vacant Renaissance Center (the irony of such a name now!) being transformed into high-rise, low-income housing. But really if GM goes under, what will become of the Renaissance Center? Multi-tenant office space? With many former car factories being transformed into cheap movie production sites, could the Renaissance center become the respective corporate office location for the expanding Michigan film industry? The thing pretty much is the Detroit skyline.

lebren:

Automakers Seek $14 Billion More in Aid - NYTimes.com

Graham and I once had a conversation in which we imagined a vacant Renaissance Center (the irony of such a name now!) being transformed into high-rise, low-income housing. But really if GM goes under, what will become of the Renaissance Center? Multi-tenant office space? With many former car factories being transformed into cheap movie production sites, could the Renaissance center become the respective corporate office location for the expanding Michigan film industry? The thing pretty much is the Detroit skyline.

lebren:

abbyjean:
“The constant paranoia that women are made to feel for having a period is ridiculous.  Is the world really going to come to an end if there is a little bit of blood on our clothing, or our sheets?  Will it cause people to go running down the street screaming bleeding woman. bleeding woman, lock up your first born there is a bleeding woman? It seems the only time I hear about menstruation is when someone is pointing out the best way to hide all evidence of its existence as though it is not a perfectly natural occurrence. What is it about my monthly bleeding that is so vile, that the only thing I can read, see, or hear about it, involves  stuffing something in my vagina . It makes me just want to tell the world, I’m on my period deal with it.” (womanist musings)

lebren:

abbyjean:

“The constant paranoia that women are made to feel for having a period is ridiculous.  Is the world really going to come to an end if there is a little bit of blood on our clothing, or our sheets?  Will it cause people to go running down the street screaming bleeding woman. bleeding woman, lock up your first born there is a bleeding woman? It seems the only time I hear about menstruation is when someone is pointing out the best way to hide all evidence of its existence as though it is not a perfectly natural occurrence. What is it about my monthly bleeding that is so vile, that the only thing I can read, see, or hear about it, involves  stuffing something in my vagina . It makes me just want to tell the world, I’m on my period deal with it.” (womanist musings)
The Brand Collective. It’s the new secret sauce.

Adam Hanft, Millions Downloaded vs. Billions Sold: Apple’s New Brand Collective Changes the McDonald’s Game — Huff Po, 2/18/09

Great piece from my friend Adam Hanft on the importance of open platforms, from a marketer’s perspective.  I’m left dreaming of the possibilities of an open oatmeal platform…

(via mokoyfman)

Want Content? "Pick One"

rickyv:

A meeting with the super smart Avner Ronen of Boxee yesterday, combined with reading coverage of the Pirate Bay trial and the 30 Rock “McFlurrygate” has got me thinking on overdrive about the future of video content.

In a conversation last night with my buddy Aaron, we came up with a simple rule called “Pick One.” While certainly not groundbreaking, it’s an easy way to think about the future of entertainment.

I’ve seen a lot of folks living inside the insular tech world develop the attitude that they deserve their content free of:

- cost
- time/focus consuming advertising
- product placement

This led to the “pick one” theory. For a sustainable content production model, the consumer has to pick one of those. I hate to play the old media asshole here, but an episode of Lost isn’t going to get made with none of the above.

In essence, the nation’s biggest employers of unskilled labor often leave workers having to feed from the public trough. In 2004, a year in which Wal-Mart reported $9.1 billion in profits, the retailer’s California employees collected $86 million in public assistance, according to researchers at the University of California-Berkeley. Other studies have revealed widespread use of publicly funded health care by Wal-Mart employees in numerous states. In 2004, Democratic staffers of the House education and workforce committee calculated that each 200-employee Wal-Mart store costs taxpayers an average of more than $400,000 a year, based on entitlements ranging from energy-assistance grants to Medicaid to food stamps to WIC—the federal program that provides food to low-income women with children.

3 Boston Startups I Like

fredseibert:

robgo:

Over the past several months, I’ve met a number of people who are new to Boston or completing graduate school and are looking to join an exciting startup in the technology or media space.  I’ve found that a couple companies keep coming up, and I thought I’d share 3 that I particularly like.

Because I know VC’s are horrible self-promoters (myself included), I am excluding any company that I have been involved with either as an investor at Spark or as an employee or in any other formal capacity.  I’m also biasing this towards startups that are a little further along than your typical series A company.

These are companies that I am whole heartedly rooting for, because we need more local success stories.  So, in no particular order:

1. Visible Measures: We are big believers in the online video space, and Visible Measures is quickly becoming the standard tool to help publishers and advertisers understand audience behavior.  Very cool company, and I am a big fan of their CEO Brian Shin who is a smart, down to earth, and all-around great guy.

2. Sermo: I must say I was pretty skeptical about this company when I first heard about it.  Is there really a need for a social network for doctors? But I admit I completely missed the value in this one.  Harnessing the insight of physicians about difficult cases, clinical studies, medical technology, and healthcare policy is a big deal.  And from what I hear, adoption has been impressive and is growing.

3. Kiva Systems: This is a non-obvious one.  The summer before business school, I decided to try something completely off-beat. So I joined an organic pet food company that was recently purchased by a PE firm I had done some work for in the past.  What I got was a very quick education to supply chain logistics and a realization of how much could be lost and gained in this area.  Kiva systems uses the best of robotics to optimize the productivity and accuracy of fulfillment in distribution centers.  It’s not sexy, but those robots are pretty darn cool.

I know I’m missing others, but these are the three that come to mind, and also don’t get as much press as some of the other “hot” companies in Boston.  Know any others that should be on this list?

OK, so can I hype one of your investments?

February 13, 2009

ben franklin and pennies

a penny saved is a penny earned…  when was the penny created?