Oct 13

I just checked the news again and aparrently there’s a financial crisis on.  Still.  The ‘credit crunch’ as it’s being called is the biggest gift the world could ever have given to the 24-hour rolling news readers, economists and other financial pundits, it’s pretty much all I hear: morning, noon and night.  Whilst watching BBC News 24 the other day I heard a news reader ask a guest economist, “so what do you think about what we think is going to happen”?  They’re paying people good money to speculate about things then paying other people to come in and speculate about the consequences of the original speculation – clearly with a US election and a financial crisis the 24hr newsmonkeys are like pigs in slop.  The most annoying part of the whole process is that the news programmes these days seem to follow the same basic formula:

  • Financial Crisis x 15 minutes.
  • Political stories (usually related to the financial crisis) x 5 minutes.
  • Skateboarding horse (or some other “and finally” story) x 2 minutes.
  • Sport x 5 minutes.
  • Weather x 2 minutes.
  • REPEAT

There’s probably a stack of interesting stuff going on elsewhere in the world or even in our own countries but we never get to hear about it because of the dreaded Financial Crisis.  It’s a close call but I think that the Credit Crunch is on course to absolutely destroy the previous orgies of pointless repetition: the deaths of Princess Diana, Pope John Paul II and the Queen Mother.  There should be a Guinness World Record for the number of times the same fact has been repeated on a 24-hour rolling news programme, if anyone actually had those numbers it’d be scary.  Another piece of sloppy journalism I heard the other day was a reporter stating that “because the banks are unwilling to lend money there will be businesses who can’t get loans to pay their staff”, surely one point that stands out there is that if a business has to borrow money to meet it’s own payroll then it was pretty screwed in the first place!

That’s not my sole beef with the media either, I’m still reasonably certain that the media have played a very strong hand in exacerbating (if not actually causing) the current financial brouhaha.  Initially there was a problem with the banks and only the banks, a whole industry of people had sprung up taking crappy mortgages, bundling them up into crappy (but shiny new and exciting) financial securities that were then sold to a bunch of greedy fools.  This kinda went wrong and a few banks became a bit wobbly (notably Northern Rock in the UK).   From this point onward the media was absolutely full of doom and gloom at every turn and has set out on a crusade to destroy whatever consumer confidence the world’s developing countries had left.  Well, it’s worked and they’re still raking in the air-time and the (consistently diminishing) advertising spends from major marketing companies.

In a way I can forgive the media a little bit because despite all the blustering and headlines not much has actually happened.  Sure, a few bankers have lost their jobs but I personally don’t know one single person that’s lost their job or suffered any negative impact from the current financial climate, in fact I have a colleague who just last week walked into the bank and within half an hour came out having doubled their entire credit line (and I’m not talking small change).  Sure, house prices are lousy at the moment but that’s been hapenning for ages – despite all the crap in the news it wasn’t caused by the current state of the economy – if anything it’s an actual cause.

I’m off to see if I can make shoe-leather soup out of Vegetarian Shoes, gotta save those pennies somehow!

written by thirtyfootscrew

Dec 31

I know it’s cheesy but I thought I’d do a little roundup of 2006 and then later on a series of predictions for 2007. The lists are all Top Fives and are based on techie stuff unless otherwise stated.

1. Podcasting
I had a look in 2005 and there really wasn’t any great content out there, I came back in 2006 and it was like the whole ‘industry’ had exploded with some well established shows as well as some new favourites, this was really the year the podcasting became established.

2. Video Gaming
With the Xbox 360 released in December 2005 (but generally available March 2006) and the December launch of the Wii and the PS3 (US only) this really has been the year for gaming. More than that Nintendo have performed an amazing feat by pulling games out of Geekdom and into popular culture, not only with the Wii but with this year’s release of the DS Lite and the wonderful Brain Training.

3. Beta Releases
I’m not sure what’s happened but in 2006 nobody wants to release a product without having a public Beta, this has been true for games (Phantasy Star Universe + Final Fantasy XI on the Xbox 360), PC software (Office 2007, Windows Vista) and everything regarded as Web 2.0.

4. Video & Broadcasting
This year has seen a fundamental change in the way people watch and interact with video, of course nobody missed the popularity of YouTube and its acquisition by Google for $1.65bn but the I find the complementary changes in the broadcast industry to be even more interesting. Many major players have been trying to get into the User Generated Content (UGC) market ranging from pointless attempts by people who just don’t get it (MTV Flux) to well-done but still distinctly old-media (BBC’s Your News).

5. High Definition
In 2006 we saw the launch of both HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, heralding a new era of home cinema – let’s just hope that one of the two competing formats wins sooner rather than later so consumers can buy with confidence. 2006 also saw the introduction of Sky’s High Definition Satellite service, sadly it was over-priced, delivered late and has limited quantities of genuine HD content. This year also seems to be the year that people started to buy HD TVs in great quantities, at the end of 2005 I didn’t know anybody with an HD TV, now over half of my friends either own or are seriously considering an HD TV and the prices still keep on tumbling.

Well, I’m convinced I’ve missed something but that’ll have to do, I think I’ll go to bed now and hopefully dream of 2007, if I do then you’ll have my predictions tomorrow!

written by thirtyfootscrew \\ tags: , , , , , , ,