Week in Review, 3/29/2009

The word for the week was competition. There were battles raging on several new media fronts, with everyone trying to be at the forefront of "the next big thing" – in at least one case, before the technology was even launched.

I speak, of course, of OnLive, the video gaming system that started creating a hubub as soon as it was announced. OnLine claims to have developed a video compression system that will allow gamers to play across a network without downloading the games. Almost instantly, there was at least one industry expert crying that the sky was falling and OnLive would spell the end of traditional boxed-game retailing.
Of course, it remains to be seen if the system is actually going to work – but that hasn't stopped at least one potential competitior springing up, from Acclaim.

The other big battleground was E-books, where Google's Kindle, at the risk of making an incredibly bad pun, has really started a fire. Samsung threw its hat in the ring with the Papyrus, a system it says will be less expensive than the Kindle and Sony's reader, while Barnes and Noble announced its Fictionwise unit will be handling an E-book reader for Blackberry. This has the potential to be a get-rich-quick arena full of bandwagon-jumpers, a fractured market with different publishers having exclusive deals with different readers, so tread carefully if you plan to enter this field.

Gaming continued to be a hugely profitable area – we found out that the PC games market was worth $11 billion this past year. The MMO market will be worth $2 billion by 2013, and the virtual goods sold within them are extremely profitable on their own. Nintendo's Wii passed the 50 million sold milestone.

As for streaming video, a couple of companies that have been rather down on their luck lately looked to this new technology to turn their fortunes around – Blockbuster struck a deal with TiVo to put streaming content on the DVR's boxes and Sony's Playstation 3 may be joining hands with Netflix.
Hulu, meanwhile, entered into a partnership with Disney and gained an astonishing 10 million viewers in one month, putting them at the forefront of the "throw your cable box out and watch TV on your computer" movement.

At least one traditional TV network seems to be adapting to this new media world, too – CBS's coverage of March Madness basketball turned out to be a big hit on computers (no statistics were available for the iPhone stream of the games).

The rush to do everything online was keenly felt in the anime publishing industry, with Anime Insider closing its doors. Given how much of anime fandom – both the content itself and fan discussion – is now in cyberspace, it was no surprise at all.

Perhaps the best news of the week for job-hunting geeks this week may have been that their services may be extremely in demand – creativity is increasingly valued in U.S. marketplaces. Furthermore, 85% of employers who value creativity say they have difficulty finding cretive people to work for them. So if you've been honing your talents on your fan projects, they may be about to pay off greater than you imagined.

Week in Review, 3/1/2009

These days, it seems, it's all about streaming video. Those of you who make AMVs and encode them for YouTube are in luck, as the value of your skills is only going to go up in the job market.

Netflix announced it was going to offer streaming-only service plans. The Hulu vs. YouTube battle kept rolling on, and China decided it was time to come up with its own YouTube competitor.
Crunchyroll made news again, participating in Global Shinaki Day by streaming three videos. The company – which, by the way, also has a Japan branch – even attracted the attention of Editor and Publisher, trade journal of the publishing industry.

Elsewhere in anime/manga, though, things weren't so bright, as Viz announced a restructuring, including layoffs – an unfortunate effect of the bad economy, though not completely catastrophic

American comics, meanwhile, were busy having an impact in mainstream Hollywood, which seems to be going geek in a big way. The success of the Iron Man movie resulted in increased profits for Marvel, while Heath Ledger scored a posthumous Oscar for playing the Joker in The Dark Knight and the upcoming release of Watchmen continued to grab mainstream attention, including a cover story in Entertainment Weekly.
Video games attracted moviemaking attention, with 50 Cent proclaiming that he wants to do a film based on Saints Row (apparently forgetting the fact that video games rarely make good films). And even board gaming got into the act, with an annoucement of a remake of Clue, which just had people asking, "WHY?"

Elsewhere in gaming, Electronic Arts was all over the place again, saying it was going to rethink its release schedule – a smart move considering that game sales may have been hurt in the past by numerous titles coming out at once. Details also emerged about the company's much-anticipated Dante's Inferno game, which sounds kind of like EA is trying to create its own God of War. They also mulled plans to develop their own music game (the company distributes Rock Band).

Sony announced a major management restructuring that seemed to include tighter integration of its game and media departments. It also announced big plans for the PSP, including the first-ever portable version of Rock Band and a Hanna Montana bundle that suggests Sony is reaching for a piece of Nintendo's non-tranditional-gamer audience. Rumors also surfaced of a new God of War game for the device.

But the biggest news in gaming was casual games – which may be a $1 billion industry by 2013 – and online MMOs. It was noted that the average player in Perfect World's free MMO spends $10 a month anyway, and gift card maker InCom reported strong growth in game currency cards.

Funcom was the exception to the online game boom, though, losing a lot of money due to the underperformance of Age of Conan, which may have forced the company's CEO to resign. Undaunted, however, they are introducing their game in Russia and Poland.

Things continued to be tough all over in publishing, with the Rocky Mountain News of Denver closing its doors and Computer Shopper going all-digital. Digital content was hot elsewhere in the industry, with talk of a Kindle 3 starting already shortly after the release of Kindle 2 (Hearst is already bringing out its own competitor to the device).

And finally, we leave you with a word to remember for the future: Netbooks. Small and cheap means big bucks on the computer market nowadays. So keep those Linux skills polished and downsize your thinking with computer screens, because these small wonders aren't going anywhere anytime soon.

Links of the Day, 2/23/2009

First of all, we'd like to point out that geekdom invaded the Academy Awards last night in a way it hasn't since the heyday of Lord of the Rings – La Maison des Petit Cubes became the first anime to win an Oscar since Spirited Away when it took the animated short prize, Steve Jobs' company Pixar took the animated feature Oscar with WALL-E, and the late Heath Ledger was named Best Supporting Actor  for playing The Joker in The Dark Knight. Couple that with the media blitz over Watchmen, and it seems that the geek audience is being taken very, very seriously by the mainstream film industry.

Video Games

Atlus Online will make its American debut with steampunk free-to-play MMO Neo Steam: The Shattered Continent, from a Korean developer. If more international online games come over here, that will definitely open up new job markets for localization teams, so this is a Good Thing.

Sony is closing its European PSP instant messaging service. More bad news for a platform that has struggled outside its native Japan.

More problems for Age of Conan: Hyborian Adventures developer Funcom, which lost a ton of money due  to the games's underperformance – but the company says it still plans to invest heavily in the game, launching Age of Conan in Russia and Poland. This looks like a case of "what not to do when your game is failing" in the making, and as such, is worth keeping an eye on.

Technology

In the Steve Jobs health watch, the Apple CEO is skipping the company's annual meeting for the first time during his tenure. We still think the company will continue to thrive with or without Jobs – based on the momentum of the iPhone and iTunes alone – so don't cross them off your resume list.    

In the insult to injury department, Microsoft announced it gave some of its laid off workers too-generous severance packages and is asking for its money back. And this is a lesson in "how not to gracefully let people go."

Netflix will offer streaming-only service plans, most definitely a smart move in the age of broadband video and a way to keep the company from becoming a dinosaur.

Women's publishing and advertising company is looking to make money off Twitter through micro-blogging widgets, such as one launched last night for the Oscars. This allows users to provide a steady stream of commentary on a sponsored site. We have a feeling this is just the first micro-blogging cash-in of its type we're going to see: Yammer, a Twitter-like service for businesses, is looking to broaden itself with a suite of new features. 

Publishing

Simon and Shuster reports sales decline: Definitely not a surprise given the catastrophic effect of the economy on book sales in general.

More newspaper bad news, this time from Pennsylvania: The parent company of the Philadelphia Inquirer and Phildelphia Daily News has filed for bankruptcy protection, as has Yardley, PA-based publisher The Journal-Register Co.  

Job Market

When the Search for a Job Becomes a Full-Time Quest: The Kansas City Star shadows one unemployed job-seeker. A portrait of what far too many people are going through right now.