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Written by Scott
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William of Orange, or William III, was King
of England between 1672 and 1702. He didn’t really do anything remarkable,
except think of ways to make money because he was a bit skint after knocking
seven bells out of the French. His most famous way of making money was the ‘Window
Tax’, the bigger and more windows you had the more you got taxed. The idea was
to tax the use of freely available things like air, water and in this case
sunlight.
As far as getting something for free go
sunlight is right up there with wind and rain. People got a bit fed up of
paying for actual windows, so they just left holes in the wall or had a brick
lattice instead. Now back in 1690 when the tax was introduced central heating didn’t
as such exist and the winters were probably colder etc etc, so people jus got
cold and wet instead of paying.
SO what on earth would possess my compadre
Ben to think that by making people pay for facebook that they would still use
it?
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Written by Ben
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Most things which seem
to be free are actually funded by advertising, along side the service
we want there will be adverts and the payment for those covers the
cost of us getting the product without ourselves paying. The
advertisers in turn believe that the sales they will get from the
adverts will be sufficient to make a profit on their payment for the
advert in the first place. Great in principle and something Google
have successfully built an empire on.
Facebook claim to have
a similar model, they provide the service entirely for free (the end
users don't have to pay anything) and then display adverts along side
the content. Similar to Google, but with one crucial difference; when
was the last time you clicked on an advert on Facebook? I thought
about this for a while and concluded never, I have Facebook open for
a fair part of the day, every day and yet not once have I clicked on
an advert.
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Written by Ben
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I was woken up this morning by a text from Nik. Firstly, a big thank you to Nik for doing it by text, last time it was by hitting a gong (nobody knows where he got it from) four inches from my ear. The text was about the new plan, announced on the 11th of May by the government, to fit "smart metres" in every home in britain by 2020 at a total cost of £7 billion (original article: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8042716.stm). On the surface this seems like good news, whilst Qonnectis main focus has been on their water metering product, they also provide smart metering systems for gas and electricity (http://www.qonnectis.com/Solutions/Energy-Utility/Default.aspx) and so could be a part of this. |
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Written by Portfolio Updates
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Security sold from the Money? What Money?'s investment portfolio:
Company Name: Autonomy Corporation PLC
Symbol: Au.
First Held: 14th February 2008
Holding Sold: 100%
Date Sold: 30th April 2009
Price: 1417 Pence
Profit: 38%
Summary:
Autonomy corporation has performed well in the 13 months since we first purchased them, developing a solid niche in the corporate information management market and consistently bringing out new products to compliment its existing systems.
MWM is of the view that after a period of steady growth, Autonomy will find it increasingly hard to expand further and will now enter a phase of consolidation. As their products become better known they will also experience steadily increasing competition from other – potentially much larger (read Google, Microsoft and Cisco) – companies. Their business being software based, patents will do little to prevent this.
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Written by Ben
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In
my last article, written in response to the pirate bay verdict, I
suggested that the traditional business models of the music and film
industries had passed their best and that if such firms wanted to
survive, they would have to come up with something new and better.
It's easy to look at their models from outside and point out that
they have failed, it's much harder to come up with suggestions for
what they should do to fix them.
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