Re: Economic Crisis Avoidance Deus ex Machina - Part I: Active Asset Price Inflation - Eric Janszen
Microsoft announced they were dumping their own proprietary web rendering engine to use Chromium, the open source project that drives Google Chrome development.
Between that, Google's dominance on mobile via Android & the cash they shower on Apple to be the default search provider on Safari (along with deals for other browsers like Mozilla Firefox, Vivaldi, Opera, etc.) it is hard to see them losing share in search or with their web browser (at least outside of Russia where they lost share in both due to antitrust action).
Mozilla's CEO complained about Microsoft folding their rendering engine in Edge in favor of a rebuild based on Chromium, but Mozilla also terminated their search agreement with Yahoo in favor of a deal with Google. Yahoo also has a search agreement with Google in addition to their agreement with Bing. Sometimes when looking at the MSN new tab page I see ads which upon scroll over are delivered by Google AdSense.
I know with the rise of voice search many believe there will be fewer areas for ads, but perhaps the commercial recommendations become affiliate ads of some sort. Or advertisers can sponsor answers (this answer is brought to you by ___, check out their blah blah blah).
In some cases people also really want to be able to see what they are buying & compare in a visual format, and voice is not anywhere near as good as viewing through a web browser or perhaps some sort of AR headset in the future.
Social habits may be fickle, but Facebook has been resilient far longer than Friendster or MySpace or such were. And the new waves of regulation actually gut many upstarts with the combination of expensive compliance costs on one hand & lower ad rates on the other hand from the lack of data that both Google & Facebook have on end users.
If the easy things are all done, this will eventually lead to outsized profits for companies which are tech-enabled & not debt-levered thus having the ability to fund deeper integration on more expensive models requiring owning more of the supply chain, while private equity digs mass graves for their traditional legacy counterparts.
In some ways SaaS can better align incentives, but whenever there is lock-in (real or perceived) there is often incentives to sunset support for older versions, offer newer versions at higher prices, or increase prices via salespeople when one of the alleged subscription benefits was locking in price.
Absolutely agree with that last bit. Fashion is a market with no cap & 4 seasons of buying every year. There are even fashion rental services optimized for Instagram vanity.
One thing that has improved a lot on cell phones over the years is the cameras in them. That's decimated the point & shoot camera market.
I think the bifrucation from pre-2008 to post-2008 is because some of the tech companies felt the market impacts firsthand & perhaps gave talk about supporting the open web, but in reality moved to more of an AOL 1.0 model.
Thus there are now more propriety formats & standards to publish in - Facebook Instant Articles, Google AMP, Apple News, etc. Those ultimately increase the chunk size of competition while shutting out many smaller players who cannot afford all the additional tech cruft.
It is hard to find a big consumer-facing tech company that isn't investing aggressively (billions/yr) in video content. Amazon fast followed Netflix. Apple, Facebook & Google/YouTube are also investing heavily.
And some of the older legacy media companies have went through rapid consolidation. Newspapers, magazines, TV channels, film studios, etc. Disney bought Fox, AT&T bought WarnerMedia.
I was thinking of the healthcare system while reading that whole passage...then you ended with it.
Originally posted by dcarrigg
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Between that, Google's dominance on mobile via Android & the cash they shower on Apple to be the default search provider on Safari (along with deals for other browsers like Mozilla Firefox, Vivaldi, Opera, etc.) it is hard to see them losing share in search or with their web browser (at least outside of Russia where they lost share in both due to antitrust action).
Mozilla's CEO complained about Microsoft folding their rendering engine in Edge in favor of a rebuild based on Chromium, but Mozilla also terminated their search agreement with Yahoo in favor of a deal with Google. Yahoo also has a search agreement with Google in addition to their agreement with Bing. Sometimes when looking at the MSN new tab page I see ads which upon scroll over are delivered by Google AdSense.
I know with the rise of voice search many believe there will be fewer areas for ads, but perhaps the commercial recommendations become affiliate ads of some sort. Or advertisers can sponsor answers (this answer is brought to you by ___, check out their blah blah blah).
In some cases people also really want to be able to see what they are buying & compare in a visual format, and voice is not anywhere near as good as viewing through a web browser or perhaps some sort of AR headset in the future.
Social habits may be fickle, but Facebook has been resilient far longer than Friendster or MySpace or such were. And the new waves of regulation actually gut many upstarts with the combination of expensive compliance costs on one hand & lower ad rates on the other hand from the lack of data that both Google & Facebook have on end users.
Originally posted by dcarrigg
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Originally posted by dcarrigg
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Originally posted by dcarrigg
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One thing that has improved a lot on cell phones over the years is the cameras in them. That's decimated the point & shoot camera market.
I think the bifrucation from pre-2008 to post-2008 is because some of the tech companies felt the market impacts firsthand & perhaps gave talk about supporting the open web, but in reality moved to more of an AOL 1.0 model.
Thus there are now more propriety formats & standards to publish in - Facebook Instant Articles, Google AMP, Apple News, etc. Those ultimately increase the chunk size of competition while shutting out many smaller players who cannot afford all the additional tech cruft.
It is hard to find a big consumer-facing tech company that isn't investing aggressively (billions/yr) in video content. Amazon fast followed Netflix. Apple, Facebook & Google/YouTube are also investing heavily.
And some of the older legacy media companies have went through rapid consolidation. Newspapers, magazines, TV channels, film studios, etc. Disney bought Fox, AT&T bought WarnerMedia.
Originally posted by dcarrigg
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