Video games are a medium unto themselves. They are the main reason TV networks say males 18-35 don’t watch as much TV. From San Francisco Business Times: Electronic Arts is now selling product plugs in its games.
Those pesky details
From CNET News: Washington Post misses the $19 annual registration for its domain name, which caused the email system to crash for part of the day.
Open Secrets
Wall Street Journal began today the series “Open Secrets”, practices that raise eyebrows but persist on Wall Street. It began with corporate minutes and how they are rewritten later, arbitration awards against brokers and brokerages that are never paid, municipal bond pricing and annuities. The series is for those not in on the secrets.
Washingtonpost.com wants more info
Washington Post will seek more information about its online readers than date of birth and Zip Code. Now it asks for job, size of company, email address and password. Washingtonpost.com story. That may mean more business for registration dodger sites like bugmenot.com.
A Porsche and a commission
From Dallas Business Journal — Sell a warehouse, get free use of a Porsche for three years.
So that’s why they read newspapers
Editor and Publisher: Survey by Consumers Union and the Consumer Federation of America finds newspapers were the primary source of local news. Does falling newspaper readership mean people feel less connected to their local community?
I would have posted this sooner, but I didn’t have time
Wall Street Journal article Jan. 26 reports we’re running out of spare time.
Chart shows how people spend their spare time since 1996. The amount of time people spend on cable and satellite TV increased 7 hours a week to 18, while broadcast TV has dropped 4 hours to 15. Radio had a slight growth from 19 to 20 hours and recorded music fell almost in half to 3 hours and Internet has risen to from nowhere to 3.5 hours.
Newspapers (4 to 3 hours), magazines (flat at 2.5 hours) and books (slight decline to 2 hours).
One thing we’re doing less is sleep (down to 6.8 hours).
Best quote of the article: “In 1965, 80% of 18- to 49-year-olds in the U.S. could be reached with three 60-second TV spots. In 2002, it required 117 prime-time commercials to produce the same results” — Jim Stengel, Procter & Gamble’s global marketing officer.
Under the trees
In spring, students beg their teachers to hold class outdoors. British Telecom recently asked people where they would be most productive. Results: 37% said the beach, followed by park benches, mountain tops or their own back garden. Four percent said they would be happy working from their bed. From the BBC
English teachers rejoice
If you misspell (mispell?) words on Ebay, you lose business. Nobody can find your items. Some have picked up bargains, because misspellings meant fewer bids. From Seattle Post-Intelligencier.
Dumbest moments in business
Business 2.0: The 101 Dumbest Moments in Business — 2004 edition