The Gowers Report

This morning’s Observer column

So far, IP lawmaking has been an evidence-free area. In virtually every other area of public policy, lawmakers seek evidence from interested parties before legislating and try to assess where the public interest lies. But IP law has traditionally been made simply by conceding the demands of content owners for ever-greater extensions of their rights, leading to the absurd duration of copyright protection. Every time Mickey Mouse is about to run out of copyright, Disney & Co go to Congress and get an extension – ‘infinity on the instalment plan’, as one wag dubs it. Europe follows suit, and the world marches to the beat of the Disney drum.

Given this background, Tuesday’s publication of the Gowers Report on Intellectual Property is a truly memorable event. Andrew Gowers – the former FT editor I quoted earlier – was asked by Gordon Brown to conduct ‘an independent review into the UK Intellectual Property Framework’, and he has done better than most of us expected. It’s available online and should be a set text for legislators…

Bear Stearns and the Long Tail

I know — it sounds like the title of a kids’ fairy tale, but Bear Stearns is an investment bank and they’s just published an interesting report on how the long tail phenomenon will affect the media business. In a nutshell, they conclude that “Aggregation and Context and (Not Necessarily) Content Are King”.

Actually, the report is a lot better than you might think from that headline. Among other things, it looks at the evolution of the TV cable industry as an example of a long tail development.

So much for Moore’s Law

From Chris Anderson

Pixar Quiz

I recently had coffee with a friend at Pixar and he mentioned a surprising stat, which I’ll phrase here in the form of a quiz:

Q: On 1995 computer hardware, the average frame of Toy Story took two hours to render. A decade later on 2005 hardware, how long did it take the average frame of Cars to render?

A: 30 minutes
B: 1 hour
C: 2 hours
D: 15 hours

(Hint: designer ambitions always expand to fill the computational space available.)

Google’s Big Five

Nick Carr’s been brooding about Google’s long-term product strategy. Here’s what he predicts:

  • Google Search (“Google” goes back to meaning just search: for all information types, on all devices, personalized)
  • AdMarket (a unified market place for buyers and sellers, spanning web text, web video, web banners, print, radio, TV)
  • YouTube (YouTube expands from video to become the common interface for all media sharing)
  • YouTools (what Apps for Your Domain morphs into, with different tool sets for businesses, families, universities, and hospitals)
  • YouFile (a personal information management service, covering health data, finances, etc.)
  • Left hand down a bit

    From today’s New York Times

    “I’m used to being in companies where I am in a rowboat and I stick an oar in the water to change direction,” said Mr. Berkowitz, who ran the Ask Jeeves search engine until Microsoft hired him away in April to run its online services unit. “Now I’m in a cruise ship and I have to call down, ‘Hello, engine room!’ ” he adds with an echo in his voice. “Sometimes the connections to the engine room aren’t there.”

    BlackBerry Orphans

    Silly non-article in WSJ.com. Sample:

    As hand-held email devices proliferate, they are having an unexpected impact on family dynamics: Parents and their children are swapping roles. Like a bunch of teenagers, some parents are routinely lying to their kids, sneaking around the house to covertly check their emails and disobeying house rules established to minimize compulsive typing. The refusal of parents to follow a few simple rules is pushing some children to the brink. They are fearful that parents will be distracted by emails while driving, concerned about Mom and Dad’s shortening attention spans and exasperated by their parents’ obsession with their gadgets. Bob Ledbetter III, a third-grader in Rome, Ga., says he tries to tell his father to put the BlackBerry down, but can’t even get his attention. “Sometimes I think he’s deaf,” says the 9-year-old…

    Lots more in the same vein. Yawn.

    A humping good Christmas

    From Thursday’s Independent

    DUBLIN: Staff at an Irish riding school had to postpone a Christmas party after Gus the camel chomped his way through 200 mince pies and several cans of Guinness meant for their festivities. Gus, starring in the riding school’s Santa’s Magical Animal Christmas Show, filled up while staff were changing for their party.

    Hmm… I’d always wondered what camels stored in their humps. P.G Wodehouse would have known what to do with this material.

    New Acrobatics

    Although I use pdf files a lot, I dislike Adobe Acrobat intensely. For me, one of the great things about Mac OS X is that it enables me to create a pdf from any document without ever resorting to the Adobe program.

    Wade Roush has much the same attitude to Acrobat, which is why his review of the latest release is interesting. Sample:

    I’ve spent the past few days testing Acrobat 8 and an associated Web service, Acrobat Connect. I’m pleasantly surprised by the number of new features Adobe has provided to help people work together on documents over the Internet–even if those documents aren’t PDFs. When combined, Acrobat 8 and Acrobat Connect form a powerful (and potentially cheaper) alternative to established collaboration and presentation systems such as WebEx and Microsoft’s Live Meeting and Office Groove 2007. They also show how Adobe is beginning to benefit from its 2005 acquisition of Macromedia, the company that founded the interactive-multimedia industry.

    Veteran Acrobat users needn’t worry that they’ll lose anything. Acrobat 8 includes all of the core functions of Acrobat 7, including the ability to create, review, search, encrypt, and export PDF documents, and to convert other kinds of documents, such as e-mails, Web pages, and Word files, into PDFs. (I tested Acrobat 8 Professional, which retails at $449. Acrobat 8 Standard, at $299, leaves out a few specialized features, such as the ability to work with CAD documents and create fillable PDF forms. Adobe Reader 8.0, the latest version of the company’s stripped-down PDF viewer, is still a free download.)

    It’s the new collaboration features, however, that have me rethinking my negative attitude toward Acrobat and PDF. The features change PDF files–which I’d always seen as the electronic equivalent of museum cases, preserving sacred, untouchable text–into living documents that any number of people can alter, either separately or in concert.

    For instance, Acrobat 8 allows users to create blank PDFs and add text by typing, just the way one would with a new Word file. That’s a major shift in itself; it means PDF can be a document’s “native” format, not just a way to package material created using other applications.

    The program also offers better tools for providing feedback about PDF documents–a key feature for professionals like lawyers, publishers, or journalists. Conveniently, all of Acrobat’s commenting tools now appear in a single floating toolbar. If you don’t like the way your boss rewrote your section of the company’s annual report, the toolbar provides a whole playground of tools for expressing yourself: beyond the traditional colored-highlighter tool, there are tools for creating deletions and insertions, sticky notes, boxes, circles, freehand drawings, pretty little thought bubbles or “clouds,” draggable “callouts” with arrows that point to a specific passage, and “rubber stamps” saying things like “Draft,” “Confidential,” and “Sign Here.” You can even attach an audio file downloaded from your dictation machine.

    Even cooler, though, is a new collaboration feature called Shared Reviews. When it’s activated, comments and markups added to a PDF file by reviewers are no longer saved within the document itself, but are uploaded to a central location on an organization’s computer network, such as a network server or Web server. Every time a team member opens the document, Acrobat retrieves the latest changes from the server. Whenever a reviewer adds a new comment, the program notifies all of the other reviewers. In other words, team members no longer have to wait their turn for access to a document, or create separate edited versions that someone must eventually merge back into the “master copy.” With Shared Reviews, many people can work on the same document in parallel.

    My guess is that this might worry Microsoft quite a lot. Those of us who work in the Open Source world know that one of the factors which makes companies wary of moving to Open Office is that they have built their corporate working procedures around the commenting tools in Microsoft Word. (Virtually every legal firm in the western world, for example, uses the program in that way.) But companies also use Acrobat to “freeze” the final Word document in pdf form. If Adobe is offering a way of doing all this in Acrobat without having to go through the Word phase first, then they might find it an attractive proposition.

    The Green Electronics Guide

    Greenpeace has just released the second edition of its Green Electronics Guide

    This Green Electronics Guide ranks leading mobile and PC manufacturers on their global policies and practice on eliminating harmful chemicals and on taking responsibility for their products once they are discarded by consumers. Companies are ranked on information that is publicly available and communications/clarifications with the companies.

    Nokia comes top; Apple bottom.

    Cheney to be a grandad — again

    NO REPUBLICAN in Washington is more beloved by social conservatives than the Vice-President Dick Cheney, who with his wife Lynne, has backed and breathed every issue dear to them for six tumultuous years.

    News that Mr Cheney’s gay daughter, Mary, is pregnant has therefore touched a raw nerve as advocates for conservative family values struggle to reconcile their loyalty to the Cheneys with their visceral opposition to same-sex relationships – and particularly to raising a child without a father.
    “Not only is she doing a disservice to her child, she’s voiding all the effort her father put into the Bush Administration,” said Janice Shaw Crouse, a senior fellow at the Beverly LaHaye Institute, run by Concerned Women for America.

    Asked why the Administration played down the news, she said: “This is Cheney’s daughter; anything they say will make the situation worse.”

    [Source]