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Category: Digital media

September 25th, 2007

Zimbra plays matchmaker for Comcast and Yahoo!

Posted by Maurene Caplan Grey @ 7:18 am

Categories: Digital media, E-communications, Messaging, Web 2.0

Tags: Comcast Corp., Yahoo! Inc., Zimbra, TiVo Inc., Tv & Home Theater, TVs, Internet, Personal Technology, Home Entertainment, Maurene Caplan Grey

Earlier this year, Comcast announced their planned launch of SmartZone Communications Center — targeted for late 2007. Jay Fortner in Read/Write Web offers an excellent description of Smart Zone, components of which will result from Comcast’s technology partnerships with Zimbra (messaging) and Plaxo (contact management).

SmartZone Home Page

Comcast SmartZone Communications Center - Home page

Last week, Yahoo! announced that they are acquiring Zimbra. Zimbra is a start-up that “has made a name for itself” through aggressive product development. From Between the Lines:

Zimbra has a browser-based client and supports Windows, Apple, and Linux desktops, as well as Microsoft Outlook a variety of mobile devices. On the server side, Zimbra supports Red Hat, Mac, Ubuntu, SUSE and Fedora. Version 5.0 is due later this year, and adds numerous features, such as multiple mail identities, personal distribution lists, advanced search in the administration console, instant messaging, external directory support and delegated mailbox and mail folders.

Yahoo!’s acquisition of Zimbra offsets Google’s evolving application arsenal. However, I believe that the Zimbra acquisition will be a significant part of a framework leading to a powerful alliance between Yahoo! and Comcast. Read the rest of this entry »

June 27th, 2007

Web 2.0: Where "low-fi is the next high-fi"

Posted by Maurene Caplan Grey @ 7:57 am

Categories: Blogs, Digital media, E-communications, Social media, Web 2.0, Wiki

Tags: Web, Web 2.0, IP, Maurene Caplan Grey

My audience [will] live a happier, easier life here on the web!

Well, you’re gonna be a rock star with this!

Simple, entertaining, funny, and informative!

… and my personal favorite

You made it so simple, even my parents could understand it.

These are a sampling of comments received by the folk at CommonCraft.

CommonCraft has mastered the art of simplifying the complicated. They call it paperworks, and “believe lo-fi is the new hi-fi.”

Let’s say that tomorrow you need to give a presentation to your non-technical boss on the value of wikis. You could start with the Wikipedia definition of “wiki” — or you could start your presentation with this video.

Human communication fails when people speak different languages and do not have a translator or a common goal — for example, when the IT system engineer talks about IP (Internet Protocol) with the marketing design team responsible for IP (intellectual property).

I rarely gush over vendor products or services… but gosh darn it, this type of “2.0″ tutorial was just so easy to understand.

June 25th, 2007

Reality television leads to "unreality" communications

Posted by Maurene Caplan Grey @ 10:54 am

Categories: Digital media, E-communications, Social media

Tags: Internet, TV, Reality Television, Maurene Caplan Grey

I’m not a fan of today’s reality television.  I don’t really want to know that Sharon Osbourne likes to flash her son’s friends. However, there is a certain amount of voyeurism in all of us, which today’s reality television exploits and numbs us to the reality of unreality.

We now have the e-communicative tools to expose much of our private lives to anyone with access to the Internet, including Grandma Frieda. In fact, it’s common practice for future employers and college admission officers to check YouTube and MySpace for your possible transgressions - à la Paris Hilton.  

Discussing privacy and Twitter, eWeek.com writer, Jim Rapoza, says, “Obviously there are different levels of privacy, and the point at which it becomes an issue is different for everyone,” to which a reader commented:

But it still comes down to a matter of choice and control, and privacy advocates would be well to emphasize these aspects and insist that laws, regulations, and systems be constructed to allow the power to decide to stay in the hands of the individual.

Let’s say that I choose to post a photo of myself as a Las Vegas showgirl on the Internet. That’s my constitutional right. A month from now, I say to myself “What was I thinking!” Has the boldness of today’s reality television numbed our sensibilities in how we communicate on the Internet? Has the virtual reality of Internet communications (video, audio, Twitter, blogs and so on) dumbed down our thinking to the potential ”unreality” exposed on the Internet for perpetuity?

Maurene Caplan Grey is the founder and principal analyst of Grey Consulting -- an independent research, advisory and consulting firm in the messaging, collaboration and new media markets. For disclosures on Maurene's industry affiliations, click here.

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