New Koyono.com Site

Filed under: KOYONO sitings — Jay Yoo April 21, 2007 @ 11:33 pm

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Well, the new Koyono.com site is finally here. We hope you enjoy the new layout and ease of use. Stay tuned for new and interesting stuff. Thanks!

Save Internet Radio

Filed under: Music — Jay Yoo April 16, 2007 @ 3:20 pm

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Here is e-mail I just got from the Founder of Pandora Internet Radio about a recent decision by the Copyright Royalty Board in Washington DC to nearly triple the licensing fees for Internet radio sites.

“The new royalty rates are irrationally high, more than four times what satellite radio pays and broadcast radio doesn’t pay these at all. Left unchanged, these new royalties will kill every Internet radio site, including Pandora.”

You can go here to sign a petition that will go to your local Congressional representative to “save Internet Radio.” If you believe in the cause and love the variety and freedom of Internet Radio, here’s a way you can make a difference. It takes less than a minute and your petition is directed instantly to your respective congress person.

I just got a response back from my congress person, so it is the real deal.

Here is what your message will look like:

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Thank you for using Save Internet Radio Mail System

Message sent to the following recipients:
Representative Jones
Senator Brown
Senator Voinovich
Message text follows:

[your name address get embedded here]

April 16, 2007

[recipient address was inserted here]

Dear [recipient name was inserted here],

As a fan of Internet radio, I was alarmed to learn that the Copyright
Royalty Board has decided to raise music royalty rates by 300 to 1200
percent.  For most webcasters the new royalties exceed their revenue and
they simply will go bankrupt and stop webcasting.

[your special message goes here - optional of course]

I respectfully request that Congress look into this matter and take action
to prevent it.  Please understand that time is of the essence since the
new royalty rates are retroactive to January 1, 2006 so they will cause
immediate bankruptcies if they become effective for even one day.  Please
don’t let the music die.

Sincerely,

Jay

Siberia (The Next Silicon Valley)

Filed under: Innovation, The Future — Jay Yoo April 14, 2007 @ 8:27 am

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This is great. Siberia as the next Slilicon Valley is interesting to think about. There are many elements of what it might actually take (according to Guy Kawasaki, anyway), as well as other paradoxical dynamics at work (low rent, under population, etc.). Russia is already the third largest software outsourcing destination on the planet and they have a reputation for doing great work:

Inside Intel we have an expression,” says Steve Chase, president of Intel Russia. “If you have something tough, give it to the Americans. If you have something difficult, give it to the Indians. If you have something impossible, give it to the Russians.”

With a concentration of really smart people (Akademgorodok as they call it), isolation, and public and private investment anything is possible. After reading Jim Roger’s The Investment Biker (copyright 1994), where he and his companion road motorcycles across every continent (excluding Middle Eastern countries) to survey first hand the next growth opportunities of the world, it sounds like Siberia even has beautiful summers and good looking people (well, women). With a population density of 3 people per square kilometer, they certainly have enough land for an Aerotropolis. Hmm, who knows?

via TrendHunter and CNN Money.com

On Religion

Filed under: The Future — Jay Yoo April 13, 2007 @ 9:11 pm

to err is devine (human), to forgive is human (devine)

a (the) dyslexic biblical (re) interpretation :: it is devine nature to make mistakes oneself while finding it easy to forgive others. (LOL)

Paradoxically interesting! All opportunities to stop and ask, “if I did it (thought it) the opposite might it be great?” is pretty much simple and cheap to do, no? Hmm - It’s kinda how all the best ideas came to be…