BlogTorrent

BlogTorrent is software designed to,

. . . make it much easier to share and download files using the bittorrent protocol. . . . Blog Torrent is easy for users: even if they don’t know what bittorrent is, they get an installer that downloads the file they want. But most of all, Blog Torrent makes publishing with bittorrent painless. Just click “upload”, pick a file, and you’re done. This is our preview release and it has a lot of bugs and rough edges… but we’re smoothing them out for the next version, so stay tuned.

The obvious use for this would be for distributing large video files without having to worry about bandwidth charges or having downloaders cripple your webserver.

The other cool thing about this is, if it is widely used, it is another nail in the coffin of efforts by the RIAA/MPAA to ban all P2P networks. This is the sort of non-infringing use that would once and for all illustrate the sort of potential that P2P networks have for things other than pirating movies and music.

Now if I could just figure out how to get BitTorrent to work behind my LinkSys router.

Wow, Those NBA Players Certainly Learn Fast

Hmmm…Minnesota Timberwolves player Michael Olowokandi had to be tasered by police after he refused to leave a club around 3 a.m. Thursday.

The Timberwolves are supposed to play the Indiana Pacers Thursday, and Olowokandi has been suspended from that game. Wouldn’t want to give the Pacers the idea that outrageous behavior is acceptable in the NBA!

Not enough attention has been paid, in my opinion, to the role of the press in instigating outrageous NBA behavior. The most amsuing storyline of the month had to be all of the sports journalists falling all over themselves to hype the return of the Orlando Magic’s Grant Hill.

The stories all focused on the fact that former superstar Hill is starting to play like a superstar again, and of course he’s one of the NBA’s upstanding citizens — no violent outbursts, no drug arrests, etc.

Of course, when Hill was with the Pistons for so many years, many of those same journalists knocked him as being “soft” and lacking the “killer instinct” that a true superstar needed to dominate in the NBA.

Go figure.

Memo to Warner Brothers: You Suck

One of the nicest treats this Christmas season has been watching Warner Brothers’ “Polar Express” fall on its face while Pixar’s “The Incredibles” has soared at the box office. Warner actually slotted “Polar Express” to come out the week after “The Incredibles” because they thought the Pixar film was not going to do well. And the reasoning behind that is a tale of sweet revenge.

Five years ago, Warner had an excellent animated film on its hands — “The Iron Giant.” If you haven’t seen it, you really should. No, it’s not the greatest animated movie ever made, but it’s a warm, funny, solid film. (It’s an anti-gun movie that even gun nuts like myself can love).

“The Iron Giant” received fabulous reviews, but tanked at the box office when Warner Brothers refused to promote it. The suits at Warner Brothers never believed in the film, and let it die a quick death in theaters. In typical Hollywood fashion, the blame was laid at the feed of director Brad Bird.

Fast forward to 2004, and Warner Brothers decides it absolutely must recreate a Christmas version of the $130+ million “Final Fantasy” disaster. So they take a 29 page children’s book, throw more than $150 million at it, and bring on big Hollywood star Tom Hanks.

When to release this disaster-in-the-making. Why not release it the week after “The Incredibles,” because Brad Bird is back directing that film for Pixar and the suits just know that he can’t deliver blockbuster performance.

And, of course, “The Incredibles” kicks sand in the face of the puny “Polar Express.”

It’s kind of funny because now there are the inevitable stories about Warner Brothers executives trying to figure out what went wrong. Reminds me about stories earlier this month that Creative Labs really wants to challenge the dominance of Apple’s iPod in the MP3 player market. How does Creative plan to do this? With a multi-million advertising campaign.

Well, of course, if you want to beat Apple you’d want to waste all of your money on an advertising campaign rather than trying to create a product that is as good as or better than the iPod. Focusing on turning out high quality products as Pixar and Apple do wouldn’t make much sense when you’ve got marketing and Hollywood stars in your camp!