The Digger’s quest for eternal youth in cyberspace

And here’s my take on what Rupert Murdoch is up to. (Also from today’s Observer.)

In less than a month News Corporation stunned everyone by paying $580m (£313m) for MySpace.com, a social networking site with annual revenues of about $20m. The following month it bought Scout.com, a college sports site. And in September it bought IGN Entertainment, an entertainment and videogaming site, for $650m. One analyst predicts that Murdoch will spend between $500m and $1bn a year on online ventures in the next three to five years.

Given his totemic status in the industry, other media firms are wondering what he’s up to. The answer is simple: Murdoch is chasing kids. That’s the only possible explanation for his decision to pay ridiculous prices for MySpace and IGN. (Scout.com looks more like a traditional old-media play.)

Here’s the reasoning: Murdoch has all the newspapers, TV stations and movie studios any mogul could want. But he’s noticed the media ecosystem changing…

Bill Gates’s departure

This morning’s Observer column

It had to happen sometime. Even so, it comes as a shock to realise that Bill Gates will be stepping down from the company he co-founded with Paul Allen in 1975 and has dominated ever since. But we will notice the difference less than we would have done if he’d quit 10 years ago, because Microsoft has changed. So has the world around it – with the result that the company is now less important in the computing universe than it once was…