Comparing Print, Television vs the Internet

Published on January 5, 2009 at 1:13 pm by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development

the internet, tv, and print comparison Looking at growing websites like digg or new start-ups like Friendfeed, it struck me how active those communities can be, with their users apparently plugged in 24 hours a day, and submitting a never-ending flow of information, and users challenging each other to bring new witty comments or content. Trend-setters have dubbed these websites as the future of the Internet, so I have taken the opportunity to analyze why these services are growing and generating interest from their users.

We can see at the same time legacy media empires like the Tribune or the New York Times having trouble converting their business models to the Internet. They are converting their content to a web format, but they have trouble getting enough revenues comparable to their print business.

Here’s a comparison of different media, their format, and their uniqueness:

  Print Television The Internet
Engagement High engagement. Readers spend hours & possibly days to read a piece written by an author Very low Medium, users are welcomed to create an account and personalize their experience
Practicality Very High Practicality. Paper is the most practical medium, built to last for centuries. It doesn’t need batteries, has no compatibility problems, and can be brought by anyone anywhere Very low Medium. the Internet can be accessed on a variety of devices, with a variety of formats (audio, video, text, multimedia etc.). However, it doesn’t have the practical advantages of the paper
Ease of Consumption Difficult. Newspapers and books need significant investments from their readers Very easy use of consumption. Viewing is passive and requires no efforts Easy.
Interactivity none very low Very high interactivity, with complete personalization of content
Speed Print does not compete on speed, with magazines or books referring to a month-old or year-old stories fast Real-time delivery of information
Size of Information Sizeable amount of information Medium amount of information. Very Small. Tidbits of informations such as blog posts, tweets, activity stream are highly visible on the Internet
Collaboration None None. Very High Collaboration. Users can communicate, collaborate and work with each other. Think about emails, forums, or “social media” 
Business models Sales of a physical object. Business models are known.  Advertising, or pay-per-view Advertising, hosting, SaaS, and other models yet to be discovered
Barriers of Entry medium to high very high Low Barriers of entry

As you can see, each kind of medium has its pros and cons. The strength of print (newspapers and books), and television are known, it’s just now that we are completely aware of the advantages of the Internet. Summed up from the table, the Internet has very high interactivity, real-time delivery of information, small tidbits of information, very high collaboration potential, and low barriers of entry. One aspect of the Internet that is still being dealt with is the design of sustainable business models.

In practice, Wordpress, friendfeed, youtube, facebook, RSS feeds are direct implementations of the characteristics described in the previous paragraph. This is what the internet is for, and ultimately, we will see more of these services in the future. If you are running a website, you should have a close look at those, and try to get advantage of the Internet’s uniqueness.

In the same way that web site designers must spend time to design sites which take advantage of the Internet’s uniqueness and its strengths, web entrepreneurs should also take the time to design new business models, native to the web, which take advantage of the the Internet’s strenths.

Here’s to a great 2009 year!

Published on January 1, 2009 at 12:18 pm by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development, Web Hosting, iWeb

Fireworks NYE Melbourne This is 2009’s first day, and as such, I wish a great successful 2009 year for all readers and all customers of iWeb, on behalf of the iWeb team. As written previously, the previous year has been exceptional for the web, with its share of crisis, but most importantly with key innovations, revolutions & growth. For iWeb, this year is simple: provide you with the best web hosting services in the industry, with trusted, solid and better products and services.

This is also an ideal day to sit back and think what you and your company would like to achieve this year, a due exercise to start afresh with new objectives and new motivation.

Here are a few ideas to tinker with, if you are a web developer or programmer:

If you are a business owner or a consultant, here are other ideas:

  • see how using web applications like the Zoho suit can save you money, instead of using desktop applications.  You can also use new online services for recruting, accounting, sales, marketing to capitalize on untapped resources
  • see how web services like ning.com, Facebook group, pages and applications, twitter, or by having a company blog can provide you with guerilla marketing and promotion
  • get metrics about your web presence. use web analytics (such as percute) to nail your most valuable customers, and focus on them to drive sales and revenue. You can also think about PPC advertising to reach more of those valuable customers.
  • be up-to-date with latest web marketing news by subscribing to the iWeb blog

If you are into web entrepreneurship, if you are launching new web destinations and new web startups, here are a few ideas for 2009:

  • Get real now and find paying customers. Focus on providing services to customers that will save them money, make them more productive, or get them immediate returns. Do not hesitate to differentiate and nail a niche where you will excel, instead of wasting resources into trying to capture entire markets.
  • Track metrics, such as monthly revenues per member, cost of acquisition, viral loop coefficient, etc
  • be lean, capitalize on rapid development and user-centric development
  • keep an eye on growing markets: mobile (iPhone & Android), social platforms (facebook , twitter & associates), Asia (china and south-east asia), etc.
  • Be up-to-date with latest tech news by subscribing to the iWeb blog (of course)

If you have any other ideas or resolutions for 2009, don’t hesitate to share with other readers in the comments area.

(Image Credits: Melbourne New Year’s Eve Fireworks)

Its an honour to be named Best Host in December!

Published on December 30, 2008 at 11:30 pm by iWeb-Bernard in: Web Hosting, iWeb

We were pleased and happy to learn that we were rated among the top hosting companies in December!  

best colocation web hosting companyFindmyhost confirmed that iWeb came out on top for its Co-Location Editor’s Choice Award, this is the seventh time in 2008 that we have had the pleasure of being ranked first.

Two days earlier, Dedicated Server Directory announced that iWeb had been selected as a UNIX Server award winning provider, coming in second.

We would like to think that this might have something to do with the recent network expansions. In fact, in 2008 we have quadrupled the total network capacity to 43 Gbps and added 4 additional telecom  carriers (for a total of 9), which earned us a spot in the November Netcraft ranking.

All the credit goes to our System administrators, Network administrators and our customer service team -congratulations guys!

MD5 Breach of Security; SSL certificates compromised

Published on at 10:40 pm by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development

A team of “security researchers” has announced they managed to issue false SSL certificates by using a md5 vulnerability. This was announced publicly at a hackers’ conference today in Berlin, with full details disclosed here

They were able to do so with a known vulnerability for md5 hash functions, and used an array of 200 PS3s to create a false SSL certificate. The PlayStation 3 was used because of its Cell micro-processor and vector calculations abilities, making it ideal for brute force attacks like this.

This means the SSL protection advertised by banks or ecommerce websites are now rendered compromised.

If you purchased an SSL certificate from RapidSSL or FreeSSL (one of the “cracked” SSL providers), you must take steps to verify the integrity of your servers, even if it’s highly unlikely that a hacker will find the resources to gather 200 PS3s overnight to get advantage of this vulnerability. Look for instance for a provider which uses SHA-1 message authentication, instead of md5

Web Marketing, Tip #3: Advanced Segmentation and Custom Reports

Published on December 29, 2008 at 11:09 am by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development

The marketing department of iWeb attended the Google Analytics Seminars for Success by Justin Cutroni, the 8th and 9th of December. One of the seminar’s advantage was to cover the beta features of Google Analytics, such as advanced segmentation of visitors.

According to Justin Cutroni, “if you don’t segment your visitors, you’re doomed”. Segmentation is one of the most important key tool in understanding web traffic. The new beta features of Google Analytics, Advanced Segmentation and Custom Reports, allows you to create subsets of traffic, and generate custom reports according to 6-7 (and more) dimensions and metrics, knowing that dimensions apply to qualitative data (type of browser, page kind, title of page, action taken by user, connection speed…) and metrics apply to quantitative data (pageviews, length of visit, bounces, unique visits, new vs old visit etc.)

For instance, the new beta features will allow you to get reports such as:

  • What is the percentage of visitors from Montreal, Canada, who come to the website, through Google, and stays more than 2 min
  • Comparison of key performance indicators (visits, objectives, sales) by hours of the day

See Previous Tips:

Revolutions, Crisis, and Innovation: Why the Internet is still the most exciting technology in 2008

Published on December 27, 2008 at 2:09 am by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development

Technologies come and go, in electronics, in engineering, in heavy industries. If you follow the news, clean technology such as tesla electric cars, the hadron collider, or new aeroplanes like the SpaceShipOne were hot this year. But if we sum up what has been going on in 2008, the Internet is by far the most exciting technology. It’s the only field that went through several revolutions, brought brand new and real usages in mainstream society, and even experienced downturns, all within the same year. 

Here are 12 top trends in the Internet which prove why the Internet is the most exciting technology this year:

1. Revolutionary use of the Internet in the 2008 US presidential election

Barack Obama and his team created the first ever political campaign in history which entirely leveraged the internet as a policital medium. By using a social network to rally partisans and connect local communities on his website, by using viral videos, twitter, facebook and myspace, Barack Obama demonstrated to americans and to the whole world how a 21st century political campaign should be run, by using the most modern tools. Expect other politicians, non-profit organisations, and lobbyists to follow Barack Obama’s path and leverage the Internet in the same way. 

2. Real-time Video Goes Mainstream

2007 was the year of youtube and youtube clones. 2008 was the year of real-time video streaming websites: Justin.tv, ustream.tv, Qik, etc. We have on our minds the unfortunate live suicide on justin.tv, but these new tools also bring new uses such as real-time coverage of conferences, new usages by podcasters and video-bloggers. On ustream for instance, viewers can ask questions to the show’s host in real-time, opening new dynamics and models for shows. 

3. The year “web2.0″ dies

Prior to the summer of 2008, we had “celebrities” like Michael Arrington, Jason Calacanis, Robert Scoble idolizing TechCrunch, web2.0, mashups, Facebook applications, and fashionable startups like cuil or seesmic. Now, all we hear now is layoffs, crashing valuations, and the very same Michael Arrington telling startups that the party is over, a correction which is probably earned.

4. Web Applications brings Web Engineering

Here are 3 different developments in 2008, which are closely tied:

  • New web browsers, such as Firefox 3.0 and Google Chrome, were released this year, with Google Chrome seen as Google’s operating system, where their products could be run and trusted by users. 
  • Frameworks have also matured in 2008, with cakephp, django, ruby on rails, zend, merb which rose as the ideal tool for quick web development, with higher productivity, and bring tools such as suite tests, ORMs, open source methodologies, profilers, agile development, integration with javascript libraries such as prototype or jquery.
  • Web applications matured in 2008, offering solid alternatives to companies wanting to switch from desktop applications. Zimbra, 37Signals, Google Apps, Salesforce, SugarCRM, and many other web startups are now offering productivity applications, CRMs, project management, finance, or collaboration software.

Those 3 different movements have a created a whole new category for software engineering, web engineering, and I won’t be surprised to see complete web engineering courses offered in 2009 in colleges and universities. 

5. The Mobile Revolution: the iPhone and Android

The Apple Application Store is without question a major innovation in 2008. It was the first time a company managed to offer a compelling platform for developers, with easy distribution, no hassle on testing on multiple devices, and clear delivery. The iPhone is a game-changer and all other cell phones, such as BlackBerry, Nokia, Sony-Ericssons are now compared to the iPhone. While new, Android is also very promising, because of its openess and will make Apple and Google compete for better platforms, for the benefit of customers.

6. Virtualized hardware for web developers

In the same sense that we’ve got now applications somewhere in the Internet, virtualization has grown tremendously this year, giving web developers the option of having hardware not on a real server, but somewhere in some data center. Virtualization brings on-demand, cheap, and flexible resources, with an entire industry of providers, products, consultants and services created in less than a year.

7. The Omnipresence of social platforms

While “web2.0″ has died in itself (see point 3), there’s one technology which is here to stay: social platforms. Facebook was again for 2008 the fastest growing website. For instance, it’s used by more than 75% of Canadians, and words like “Facebook friend” or sharing pics on Facebook are now common, even for the most un-connected of your friends. 

8. Information overload; Bloggers’ Voices are now unheard

This is a direct consequence to #7. In 2007, if you had a personal blog, it was still possible to get the word out, and have an impact for a few weeks or days. Now, platforms and messages have exploded. Early adopters are joining twitter, identi.ca, friendfeed, facebook or any other social service. In Twitter’s example,  it has remplaced blogging. It also remplaced bookmarking. Attention span has reduced to 0, with blog readers commenting a tidbit on twitter, or on friendfeed, and then going the next minute to another url pointed by another tweet. Of course, there are still popular blogs, but all the popular ones are now backed by corporations, with full-time staff working on content creation.

9. Netbooks are In, and they are made for the Internet

I have written the first few lines of this article in a coffee shop, on an Acer Aspire One. It doesn’t have an optical drive, runs a less than satisfactory OS (Windows XP), with a maximum resolution of 1024pixels by 800 on a 9″ screen. But it doesn’t cost much, doesn’t weigh anything, and is perfect to browse the web on Firefox or Google Chrome. You toss it somewhere in a backpack and you’re ready to work anywhere. Products like the Acer Aspire One, Asus’s eee PC, the HP Mini 1000, or the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 are the fastest growing hardware segments for laptops, and brings new usages for mobile workers, telecommuters and students.

10. Application Platforms and APIs for Every Website

This year, we’ve seen Facebook Apps (again), Salesforce App Exchange, myspace, the new LinkedIn business  applications, and new initiatives like Facebook Connect, Friend Connect for Google, Myspace Data Availability. Those platforms and APIs show the future of the web, where every website will have an API for third-party web services which can re-use the data in a novel way. If you run a website, think on how you can offer a platform. Twitter’s success can be explained alone on its very liberal API.  

11. Near-Death of the PC as a Gaming Platform, except for MMORPGs

World of Warcraft, Sins of Solar Empire, Warhammer Online, Age of Conan are massive successes on the PC, and one of the only reason why consumers bought desktops in 2008. Multiplayer Strategy games or FPS video games such as Team Fortress 2 are also still relatively popular. As with the other trends listed in this article, PC video games have each created their own ecosystem, with fans-created forums, artwork and communities. 

12. The Exponential Rise of the Internet Access in Asia

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The Exponential Rise of Internet Access in Asia

Published on December 22, 2008 at 4:15 pm by iWeb-Heri in: Web Hosting

December is an ideal moment to sum up what has been going for the past year, and see if there has been major changes on the web.

For iWeb customers and partners, apart from new web sites such as Facebook, or new technologies like Ruby On Rails, 2008 can also be remembered as an year of massive growth of Internet usage in Asian Countries. Here is an outline of the growth of major Internet service providers:

The graph comes from the Renesys blog where you can find more detailed figures, published just today. There are many things to get from the graphs, but one recurring pattern is that growth is mainly due to Asian Internet Providers, or international ISPs which received extra traffic from Asia: this is the case of Level 3, Global Crossing, NTT, Tata Communications, China Telecom, Asia Telecom, Korea Telecom, Japan’s SoftBank Telecom, Asia NetCom etc.

Meanwhile, american Internet service providers such as Sprint, Verizon or AT&T are losing ranks compared to last year.

Even more interesting is to see the current “Internet population” for each country:



The figures used for the graph were for June 2008; out of the top 20 countries, 8 of them are now from Asia. In the case of China, the country became first in terms of total Internet users at the beginning of this year, going past the United States.

If Internet usage is a clue for the economic activity of a given country, we can conclude that we have a preview here of the dominance of the Asian continent. Countries like China or Indonesia are experience both high economic and population growth, and will get past other countries in future years. Still, we won’t see in the near future North American users using Baidu (the chineese search engine) or visiting korean-language websites for work or for leisure.

What does that mean for webmasters? Here are possible outcomes that you should consider in your long-term plans:

  • It might mean the end of the dominance of English in the next years on the Internet
  • Internets within the Internet: we will see more web services targeting a specific cultural and geographic zone, which would be unknown by other “zones”. This is already the case of the Internet in Japan, South Korea or China
  • Massive potential growth for webmasters who can provide localized versions of their website, in specific Asian regions.

Of course, translating Facebook or any other popular web service isn’t enough, and if you wish to develop websites for Asia, you’d also need to take into account local customs and local culture.

Season’s Greetings from iWeb!

Published on at 11:22 am by iWeb-Bernard in: iWeb

After what has been a very exciting year, the entire team and family at iWeb wishes you a very merry holiday season;

More specifically, we wish you success, health, wealth, happiness and a bit of luck (if you need it) :-)

Thank you for being an important part of the successes of our 12th and busiest year, we look forward to continue working with you in 2009! Hopefully, together we can make the web a little bit better for everyone, one project at a time.

Until then;

Cheers, Happy Holidays and all the best!!!

iWeb ranks among the most reliable hosts in November 2008

Published on December 17, 2008 at 11:08 am by iWeb-Bernard in: Web Hosting, iWeb

 

Netcraft: iWeb is ranked among the most reliable hosting companies

Reputed firm Netcraft has officially published its ranking of the most reliable hosting companies for November 2008.

 

The iWeb network is in the top 8, specifically ranking third among the top hosting companies. 

So far in 2008, several upgrades, updates and new carriers have been added to increase network performance and reliability - Congratulations to the network administration team for maintaining such a high quality of service for the IP network!!

Web Marketing, Tip 2: Transactions tracking

Published on December 16, 2008 at 3:20 pm by iWeb-Heri in: Web Development

If you sell products or services on your website, one immediate integration is transactions tracking, to track ecommerce orders and sales on your website. By tracking transactions, you can then compute total sales, return on investment (ROI), and then correlate them with other key performance metrics, such as sources, keywords, banners, and geographical information. 

In Google Analytics, the integration is done with javascript, and is straightforward to implement, and will allow you to show reports for the store, as well as individual reports for each product. 

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The iWeb Blog covers web hosting, web development, web design, Internet marketing, and also exhaustive announcements from iWeb.

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