October 06, 2006, 5:45 PM PDTWeblo is an interesting online game that mirrors a few financial aspects of the real world. You can buy virtual real estate (such as cities) and collect taxes on developments on your land. You can buy virtual properties on these virtual properties. You can set yourself up as the agent of the virtual version of a real-world celebrity. And you can buy dot-com domain names inside Weblo's universe.
You buy, of course, so that you can sell later, hopefully at a nice multiple of what you paid. Why would somebody want to buy your properties to begin with? So that he or she can sell them to the next person, of course. Weblo is a trading game, with a currency of real U.S. dollars. Fortunately prices for Weblo analogues of real-world items are not comparable. For example, I created a record for the CNET building and bought it for about $1.50 (the price included a few pennies of tax, paid to the owner of San Francisco).
I said at the top of this post that Weblo is a game, because that's what it feels like to me. But others would consider it a market, and indeed you can make real money here. Some people, apparently, have bought properties at Weblo's start-up prices and flipped them for thousands of dollars. You can cash out of Weblo whenever you want and transfer your earnings into your PayPal accont.
Because there is nearly a world full of untapped resources on Weblo right now, there's the potential for a real land grab to start on the system. Unpurchased addresses (like CNET) are less than two bucks. I bought both Adak, Alaska, and Peterborough, New Hampshire, for $5 each. I also tried to buy Alsace, in France, but Weblo figures the prices of states and cities by using an algorithm that incorporates real-world population. Alsace is priced at $1,568, well over the $100 that the Weblo PR team fronted me.
If you own a Weblo property, such as a building, a state, a site, or the rights to represent a celebrity, you can also develop it--you can build a Weblo Web page to support it, drive traffic to it from your other Weblo pages or even the "real" Internet. Weblo runs advertising on every page, and you'll get a cut of the ad revenues from your properties, as well as a percentage of all properties developed on your real estate (if you're the mayor of a city, you get a taste of all the revenues generated in it). How big a cut you get depends on which of the five Weblo membership levels you're signed up for. Free accounts get 10 percent of revenues. Top-tier "VIP" accounts ($30 a month) get 50 percent; paid accounts also pay less for unpurchased Weblo resources.
CEO Rocky Mirza has plans to introduce new resource types. He thinks fantasy sports teams and leagues would be a great fit for his world.
Unfortunately, right now the Weblo site itself is slow, which is not what you want in an online market. When there are fluctuating prices and real money on the line, you really need instant response.
I poked around in Weblo and found it strangely rewarding to buy virtual real estate. I'm not holding my breath that I'm going to make any money on these purchases, though. Basically, I think the whole Weblo concept is insane. Mirza has invented an economy from whole cloth. Apparently that's not stopping commerce from occurring, although before investing real money in this economy, I'd want proof of that. And if people are indeed buying into Weblo, that makes Mirza brilliant, not crazy. But I don't know about the rest of us.
See also: Red Herring's take on Weblo.
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October 06, 2006, 3:20 PM PDTSources: Engadget Mobile, BlackBerry Cool
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October 06, 2006, 1:48 PM PDT
October 06, 2006, 1:24 PM PDT
October 06, 2006, 12:02 PM PDTAccording to the article, VC veterans Howard Schulz (founder of Starbucks) and Jonathan Fram want to develop an in-car communications system incorporating a steering wheel-mounted keyboard, a projected heads-up display, and voice-to-text capabilities that would allow drivers to check e-mail without taking their hands from the wheel.
Fram apparently thinks that carmakers have been "too slow and risk averse" to develop this technology themselves. There's $5 million on the table for any budding entreprenuers who can develop a commercial prototype within three years. Any takers?
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October 06, 2006, 11:38 AM PDT
October 06, 2006, 10:13 AM PDT
October 06, 2006, 10:11 AM PDTAndre Lewis, who writes the geek blog Earthcode, told the crowd at the recent New Tech Meetup at our offices about his little mashup, wifi.earthcode.com, that tracks free Wi-Fi hot spots.
More than a few Wi-Fi finders are on the Web (including JiWire, started by a former CNET exec), but Earthcode's system wins points for its simplicity and speed. You just select a city and zoom in on your location (using the embedded Google maps), and it will show you Wi-Fi locations that other users have added. If you want to add one yourself, it's very easy, and you can also rate the food and the likelihood of finding a convenient AC outlet for your laptop. I put the CNET lobby (free Wi-Fi, nice tables, no food) in the database before Andre had finished his 60-second pitch.
Andre might want to add a way to find your location on a map (this might be necessary if you're visiting a new city), and it would be helpful if the list view sorted by proximity. And, of course, more entries would be good. But this is a great start.
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