Posts Tagged ‘subscriber base’

Roku + Hulu = The Killer App?

November 23rd, 2009

The Roku Channel Store will roll out 10 new (and free, at least for now) channels to users within the next two weeks:  Pandora, MotionBox, MediaFly, blip.tv, TWiT.tv, Facebook Photos, Revision3, framechannel, flickr & MobileTribe.

More channels are promised “as they become available.”

Tip for Roku:  adding Hulu would be a lot more compelling.   How about a January 2010 release for that one? :)

Roku_Netflixplayer

A Netflix Stream in Hand…

… would be a killer app – and in more ways than one; streaming more than one movie would easily eat up most people’s iPhone minutes package on AT&T without making *any* calls… Today, from TechCrunch, via Hacking Netflix: Rumor: Netflix Streaming Coming To The iPhone by MG Siegler on August 3, 2009 One big story …

Hello, Roku HD…!

When I still had cable tv, I love my Tivo, even though I never upgraded my Tivo 2 box the Tivo HD. Why not?  Pricing.  I had a lifetime (of the Tivo 2 box) subscription, so upgrading would have been very expensive for me – first because of Tivo’s high pricing …

Netflix, its Algorithm, My Neighbors, and Me.

I still haven’t quite figured out how Netflix’s business model keeps it profitable - even with a paid subscriber base of 10,000,000, there are a lot of operational costs behind Netflix.com, from software engineering to shipping costs to and from that paid subscriber base; each queued title shipped as a DVD …

Hulu-baloo.

According to Silicon Alley Insider, with data partly from Comscore, 38 million people watched Hulu at least once in July - a viewership which easily topped Time Warner Cable’s July viewership of 34 million. That same month, only DirecTV (47 million viewers) and Comcast (62 million) pulled larger audiences: While impressive, Hulu.com has a long way to go before reaching the cable companies’ …

Hulu-baloo, Part 2.

I seem to be thinking mostly in images these days, when not thinking in terms of databases… Related content: Help Wanted: Zookeeper with a Good Attitude. Most job postings are dry.  Really dry.  And – they usually include “must haves” which require skills and/or experience with everything but being able to both plumb AND …

It’s Official: “BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos” Team Wins Netflix Prize

Today Netflix Corp. awarded its long-awaited $1M Grand Prize to team “BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos,” which consisted of Bob Bell, Martin Chabbert, Michael Jahrer, Yehuda Koren, Martin Piotte, Andreas Töscher and Chris Volinsky. The 3-year crowdsourcing contest motivated self-forming, unpaid volunteer teams to compete for one $1 million dollar prize by creating  an …

Tags: million viewers, flickr, subscriber base, comcast, viewership, instant watch, motionbox, siegler, time warner cable, killer app
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How the Netflix Prize Was Won…

October 14th, 2009

Not surprisingly <G>, Wired has an interesting follow up story on how the Netflix prize was won – and notes real progress was made in the contest’s goal to improve the Netflix movie recommendation algorithm by 10 percent only after the leaders joined forces with members of some of the also-ran teams.

The post is a very interesting read, and includes an equation from Yehuda Koren’s prize-winning documentation which shows the winning team adding a third set of movie-movie weights, and emphasis on adjacent ratings made by a user:

bellmath-300x130

Read the full store here.

Life is a series of experiences, each one of which makes us bigger, even though sometimes it is hard to realize this. For the world was built to develop character, and we must learn that the setbacks and grieves which we endure help us in our marching onward.

- Henry Ford

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It’s Official: “BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos” Team Wins Netflix Prize

Today Netflix Corp. awarded its long-awaited $1M Grand Prize to team “BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos,” which consisted of Bob Bell, Martin Chabbert, Michael Jahrer, Yehuda Koren, Martin Piotte, Andreas Töscher and Chris Volinsky. The 3-year crowdsourcing contest motivated self-forming, unpaid volunteer teams to compete for one $1 million dollar prize by creating an …

Netflix, its Algorithm, My Neighbors, and Me.

I still haven’t quite figured out how Netflix’s business model keeps it profitable - even with a paid subscriber base of 10,000,000, there are a lot of operational costs behind Netflix.com, from software engineering to shipping costs to and from that paid subscriber base; each queued title shipped as a DVD …

So Many DVDs, So Little Time.

A former postal service employee recently pleaded guilty to stealing during a one year time frame more than 30,000 DVDs shipped through a western Massachusetts post office. Federal prosecutors say Netflix alerted local postal officials up to 100 movies routed through that post office mysteriously disappeared each week.  Investigators then filmed the …

Tags: setbacks, federal prosecutors, dollar prize, western massachusetts, yehuda koren, algorithm, unpaid volunteer, pragmatic chaos, henry ford, operational costs
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Is the Paradigm for Search Engines Changing Again?

October 5th, 2009

Clive Thompson has an interesting article in Wired this month about today’s “real-time Web,” which is changing the playing field for traditional search engines such as Google, Bing, Ask.com, et al; and at least for now, creating a market-changing opportunity for real time search engines such as Tweetmeme, OneRiot, Topsy, Scoopler, and Collecta.

For example – Google’s PageRank algorithm in part measures which sites have the most links pointing to them, but also a really good job of identifying/filtering out website spam; whereas real time search engines track “trending topics,” which may or may not include web spam; but also offer searchers today’s news and topics as they are right now, not as they were crawled and cached one or more weeks ago.

Read the complete article here.

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How to Survive that Impending Zombie Attack.

It’s true. While our economy still flounders, AIDS remains epidemic around the world, and Earth’s axis unfortunately epine around Jon and Kate plus Eight, at least we now know what to do in case of a Zombie attack. Four Canadian mathemeticians actually did a study on mathematics of a hypothetical zombie …

Netflix, its Algorithm, My Neighbors, and Me.

I still haven’t quite figured out how Netflix’s business model keeps it profitable - even with a paid subscriber base of 10,000,000, there are a lot of operational costs behind Netflix.com, from software engineering to shipping costs to and from that paid subscriber base; each queued title shipped as a DVD …

Predicting the End of the World As We Know It.

I’m a big proponent of adaptive reuse; and am impressed computational biologists modified Google’s PageRank search algorithm to identify which species extinctions within a food web would lead to biggest chain-reaction of species death to predict with great accuracy when species will go extinct. Excerpted from Hadley Leggett’s September 4 Wired …

The Infinite monkey theorem

An amusing if not likely debate culture occaisionally reoccurs - where if an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the complete works of Shakespeare. I’m not sure they would eventually produce Shakespeare - but I do think they could come pretty close to …

Tags: subscriber base, traditional search engines, clive thompson, real time, time search, mathemeticians, food web, shakespeare
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Rescue Me

July 27th, 2009

Each economic downturn brings some cultural shift or change; during this one I realized I’d pretty much given up on network TV.

I’ve never watched even one “Survivor,” “Dancing with the Stars,” “American Idol” or “The Apprentice.”  I’m going to keep it that way.

Other than some of the original series on cable networks FX, TNT, USA, and HBO, I really don’t miss regular – or the extended digital cable package -Tv.  Chris Anderson is right – $0.00 really is the future of business.

After all – the FX, TNT and USA series I like – The Closer, Burn Notice, Monk, Pysch, and Rescue Me are available on Hulu and/or Boxee -and both are $0.00.  I’m also a big fan of several of HBO’s original programming – Big Love, True Blood, and No. 1 Ladie’s Detective Agency (which is actually the BBC’s original content); but I can rent those from Netflix under my existing eco-friendly monthly online and mailed dvd subscription.

At least the cable networks have realized it’s better for their original series to have short seasons with new episodes, then slot them so at least one series starts its season as soon as another of the network’s series airs its season fnale.  Besides adding some interest for the viewer, it no doubt keeps the paid subscriber base fairly stable.  I deliberately waited until after No.1 Ladies Detective Agency completed its six episode first season run before canceling my digital cable subscriber package.

Similar to the auto manufacturers, broadcast networks loudly struggle to identify new business models which both draw viewers and are profitable, too.

In fact,  Hulu is co-owned by NBC Universal, News Corp. and Providence Equity Partners, although operated independently by a dedicated management team with offices in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and Beijing; its full disclosure about its corporate culture is both noteworthy and commendable – although I’m relieved they don’t currently have an office in Seattle; we have plenty of existing corporate culture challenges to work | life balance.

Note to Hulu (and with special thanks to Gerry Mooney):

Diminishing returns.  It’s not just a good theory.  It’s a LAW.

I’ve given up TV before and spent more time with friends, family, and pets; working out; reading; and quilting.  And yet – once in a while a new TV series turns up which draws me back in…

“We are continually faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems.” - John W. Gardner

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Free is Not Always Free.

So – the featured speaker at the July 2009 Seattle Chamber of Commerce’s speaker at this month’s “Author Speaker Breakfast” is Chris Anderson, author of FREE: The Future of a Radical Price: FREE: The Future of a Radical Price by Chris Anderson the bestselling author of the The Long Tail In his revolutionary …

Free is Sometimes Free: The Future of a Radical Price

For those not able to make the Seattle Chamber of Commerce breakfast tomorrow, featuring Chris Anderson talking about his book Free: The Future of a Radical Price, his presentation at Wired’s “Disruptive Business Conference” is available online, for free: Related content: Free is Not Always Free. So – the featured speaker at …

Tags: universal news, ladies detective agency, seattle chamber, subscriber package, corporate culture, chris anderson, true blood, cable subscriber
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Netflix, its Algorithm, My Neighbors, and Me.

July 26th, 2009

I still haven’t quite figured out how Netflix’s business model keeps it profitable - even with a paid subscriber base of 10,000,000, there are a lot of operational costs behind Netflix.com, from software engineering to shipping costs to and from that paid subscriber base; each queued title shipped as a DVD or BluRay disk includes a postage paid return envelope.

Thankfully, Netflix’s business model does work.  My best guess is Netflix’s “typical” customer is not as avid a consumer of the over 90,000 titles in its library as are Mark and I.

We’re also big fans of Netflix’s “Watch Instantly” option, which no doubt cuts down on Netflix’s shipping costs and allows us to simultaneously watch movies together even when stuck on opposite coasts.  As an added bonus, “Watch Instantly” is very eco-friendly. Hopefully Netflix will soon solve whatever licensing or other challenges limit this viewing option to approximately 12,000 titles.

Netflix’s current prediction algorithm led us to movies which have become new favorites, including Outsourced.  It’s also interesting to compare “most popular titles” in our shared residences in the Pacific Northwest and in the Shenandoah Valley.  According to Netflix, the top four titles uniquely popular with our neighbors in suburban Seattle are “Ducktales, Vol.1,” “Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi,” “Om Shanti Om,” and “Mansfield Park;” while the top four picks of our neighbors in the the Shenandoah Valley are “Gilmore Girls: Season 1,” “Deadwood: Season 2,” ”The Last Sin Eater,” and “Nature’s Most Amazing Events.”

It’s been very interesting following Netflix’s crowdsource contest to develop a customer-centric prediction algorithm “which substantially improves  the accuracy of predictions about how much someone is going to love a movie based on their movie preferences.”

Wired covered this competition several times, in February 2008 and last month, in June 2009; TechCrunch much more frequently, as do other websites and bloggers.

Today on TechCrunch:

The Netflix Prize Comes To A Buzzer-Beater, Nailbiting Finish

by Jason Kincaid on July 26, 2009

Who knew statistical computing competitions could be so cut throat? Since we reported on the contest last night, two teams in the Netflix Prize have spent the last few hours jumping back and forth on the Netflix leaderboard as the three-year-long competition ticked into its final moments, with last minute sniping submissions coming from both sides. Finally, the results are in: The Ensemble has managed to come from behind to upset BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos with a top submission of 10.10% — an improvement of .01% — only 4 minutes before the contest closed.

It’s been a long road to get here. Over the last three years computer science teams around the world have been vying for the Netflix Prize — a competition that invited teams to try to improve on Netflix’s movie recommendation algorithm by 10%, with a reward of $1 million to the best submission. Since then teams have gotten progressively closer to the magical 10% mark, but it wasn’t until last month when a number of top teams joined forces to form BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos that the barrier was finally broken, with a score of 10.08%. However, their announcement kicked off a 30 day last call period where other teams were invited to make their final submissions.Read More

Then again – the better the algorithm, the bigger the conundrum of “so many options, so little time.”

So – time to move the Roku box I use for “Watching Instantly” into my too rarely used home gym.  While I’m at it, I should make sure the only way I can power the Roku box and TV is by pedaling the stationary bike, or by actually using the eliptical trainer… crowdsource solution, anyone?

Tags: sin eater, bellkor pragmatic, netflix prize, suburban seattle, netflix, quot quot, titles, teams, deadwood season 2, pacific northwest
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