Tropical Storm Zeta
Saturday, December 31st, 2005
Happy New Year

Happy New Year
While this is, obviously, outrageous…
Federal police may monitor the locations of Americans by constantly tracking their cell phone signals without providing evidence of criminal activity, a magistrate judge has ruled.
… just to add to the irony my cell phone company refuses to share my location information with me.
Joel Garreau wrote Edge City quite a few years ago. In the literature about the growth of the suburbs it’s somewhat unique. He love’s them, and he really loves their developers. Which is fun because he can cheerfully explain all their jargon without the least bit of eye rolling. That, in turn, allows the reader to remain a cherry bemused detached observer.
It’s a book well worth reading but I wanted to mention it because there is are a few terms in there that ought to be more widely adopted.
One is ground cover, which I’ve discussed at much greater length before. Ground cover is a developer’s term for the crap you build on a property while your waiting for the right time to build your office park or 500 town houses. The important thing about ground cover is that it should a) pay your taxes, b) make a small profit, and c) be sufficiently ugly that when you want to tear it down the community will thank you rather than put up a fuss. U-storage facilities, use car dealer ships, and many low end malls are actually ground cover.
A lot of Googles recent offerings strike me as a bit like ground cover, i.e. their blog search engine.
Another term is plop-art. I.e. the art that developers place about their creations, art that must must never ever offend anybody. You see this a lot in packaging, graphic design for web sites, page back grounds, carpet and wall paper design.
If your buy into importance of plop-art then what Google does with the banner on their home page is actually very daring. Plop-art is the art that can not be tagged.
Today’s term is the “Ooh Ah.” High end real estate will always feature a few Ooh Ahs. The high end home will have a bidet, for example. The high end office building will have hair dryers in the men’s rooms. The point of a “Ooh Ah” is to cause the buyer to pause and say “Ooh” and then a moment later ‘ah’. So bathroom fixtures are good. But huge atriums, fountains in unexpected places, surprise views, clever parking gadgets, will all fill the need.
In part the “Ooh Ah” role is to give the buyer something to talk about after the viewing. A conversational hook later when he’s discussing the property with other decision makers. It should be one or more of light, amusing, striking, etc.
Microsoft recently revealed a very good “Ooh Ah” as part of their rebanding of virtual earth under the Live.com brand. These really striking photographs taken from various angles at low altitudes. They bought those from a company that sells them to people who are interested in keeping their eye’s on the real estate. Local government highway departments for example. In my state all the local towns have access to these. (see PictoMetry).
You really always ought to have some “Ooh Ahs” in your offerings. I’m thinking of getting an atrium installed in my personality.
David Hornik speaks the truth about the long tail.
… It is certainly the case that in the aggregate, Long Tail content is extraordinarily valuable. The question for VCs and entrepreneurs is “for whom?” … The value will all inure to the benefit of the aggregators and filterers ….
All. Not some. All.
There are three players in these transactions. The buyer and seller are obvious, with the distribution channel the third. The aggregators and filterers is just another name for middleman, distribution channel, market, or hub.
The three players all benefit when the transaction happens. Some money to the channel, some to the maker, some “consumer surplus” left for the buyer. Pretty much, only one of these three has pricing power.
The emerging hubs; they are the new Telecom, Media, and Platform companies. In the long run it, certainly looks to me like, they will be bigger and fewer.
It is possible to spend less than $5.99/gallon for your wine. You just inherit it. Yes, my wife brought me some fine wines from the cellars of her parents house. Recently some vintners have begun to adopt the screw top for their wines and my in-laws managed to catch one of the first. Pictured is the label from a 1.5 liter bottle of “soft semi-dry red table wine” the label assures us that it is naturally pure, naturally fermented, and should be served chilled. It’s “Grandi Vini” and was imported by the Renfield Corp. of Union NJ from Nonantola Italy. I suspect this bottle entered the collection in 1978. While I did not swallow any of this bilge it took two strong India Pale Ales to remove the taste.