India’s Consumer Internet Space – Too Crowded?

Posted on February 18th, 2007 in General by daya

Did you hear that Google is becoming a limited partner and will be investing Gollars in two Indian venture funds – Erasmic Venture Partners and the SeedFund?

Is this the sign of an India VC bubble getting a bit bigger?

The answer to that question is yes, as long as the consumer Internet start-ups are concerned.

For last few days, in between familial commitments, I have spent some time studying the consumer Internet start-up landscape here in India, talking to a few savvy market observers, venture capitalists and entrepreneurs.

The Consensus: Too many companies chasing too few opportunities, despite the fact that PC sales are rising, albeit slowly, and despite the easy availability of an always-on (if not a real broadband) Internet connection for a few dollars a month.

There are some who believe that Internet start-ups here that are banking on advertising-as-a-business model will find the going tough for a couple of years, since the PC and broadband penetration need to increase substantially for there to be enough eyeballs for a decent ROI.

The PC usage patterns are such that people don’t spend too much time surfing, but instead focus on specific tasks and actions, like sending email, trading stocks, checking job listings or matrimonial listings. Think transaction-based, task-oriented Internet usage!

That would explain why we have seen U.S.-based venture funds pumping tens of millions into the India start-ups. Take the online travel sector. Four travel portals have raised over $45 million in VC dollars from the likes of Norwest Ventures, Kleiner Perkins and other Silicon Valley heavy weights. Overcrowded?

Sure, if you take into account the fact that unfunded start-ups in the space would bring the total to about eight. And that doesn’t include the usual suspects like the portals and U.S.-based online travel services. As one local investment professional joked, the total revenues of the industry are twice the amount of VC dollars pumped into these travel sites.

The situation is pretty similar in the DVD rental arena where there are nine Netflix clones including 70MM that had raised $7 million from Matrix Partners. Others in this space include CineSprite and CatchFlix, for example. Another one, Madhouse, recently raised $228,000 from The Band of Angels.

As one senior VC points out, the overcrowding in these two sectors indicates that “concept arbitrage” (aka copying U.S. Internet ideas and adapting them for the Indian market) is a high risk, low reward strategy in a market segment that is likely to remain fragmented.

Nevertheless, the investments continue to pour into the Indian consumer Internet companies. Some entrepreneurs fear a dot-com like backlash, especially if one or more of these companies fail. That’s something nobody wants to import.

Part two and three of this series will include a round up of Indian Web 2.0 companies and the future of Indian economy, likely to be published tomorrow.


Originally
from GigaOM

by Om Malik


reBlogged

by Admin

on Feb 17, 2007, 2:37AM

Originally by Om Malik from GigaOM on February 17, 2007, 8:07am

Popularity: 2% [?]

Newest Flash Tools on Display at Photobucket

Posted on February 18th, 2007 in General by daya

The latest Flash photo/video/sound editing tools that we mentioned last week are now enabled at Photobucket for premium users, and will go live for all users in March. Geoff Baum at Adobe confirmed that these tools are not yet available anywhere on the web except for Photobucket.

The new tool allows PhotoBucket users to mash up photos, video and stock music files into a single slide show/video and then display those mashups on any website. The screen shots below help describe some of what they are doing, but the key changes that make the tools better than what Motionbox, JumpCut (acquired by Yahoo), and Cuts are offering on the video side and Slide and RockYou on the photo side are just how fast and easy it is to make one of these. I stopped by the Photobucket offices earlier this week for a run through, and we created a photo and video mashup and added music in a matter of moments. An example:

Users are restricted from uploading their own audio files (copyright concerns drove this), but Photobucket says they may add a record button to allow a narrative of the photo/video stream in the future. For now, a selection of licensed stock music is available. Users can also add transition effects, text bubbles, frames and other effects to the mashup.

Since these tools were created by Adobe they’ll be available to Photobucket’s competitors as well, and I expect similar products to be launched by those competitors in the near future. By being first, though, Photobucket gets a head start over these other companies. How significant that advantage is, is yet to be seen.

Photobucket is based in Colorado and Silicon Valley, and has 60 employees. They’ve raised $15 million over two rounds of financing.

Screenshots below:

(more…)

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


Originally
from TechCrunch
by Michael ArringtonreBlogged by Adminon Feb 17, 2007, 2:28AM

Originally by Michael Arrington from TechCrunch on February 17, 2007, 7:58am

Popularity: 2% [?]

MySpace Launches Comic Book Community - Death To ComicSpace?

Posted on February 18th, 2007 in General by daya

One of Mashable’s many MySpace fanboys spotted the launch today of the MySpace Comic Book community, “a Place for Comic Books”. We always thought that true geeks were repulsed by MySpace: will they be tempted to join if MySpace Comics becomes one of the biggest comic communities on the web?

My first question about the community was whether MySpace had built it at all: the use of a profile page seems like something an amateur could have set up. After much prodding around, we were able to confirm that this is indeed an official MySpace community, although the inclusion of a forum and the fact that the images are hosted with MySpace pretty much assured us of that from the start.

As part of the launch, the comic book community is hosting the “Buffy Changed My Life” contest, which runs until March 14th - participants are asked to say how Buffy the Vampire Slayer changed their lives in less than 250 words (if Buffy changed your life in a significant way, maybe you need to get out more?). The contest is being judged by Buffy creator Joss Whedon, and the winner will appear in a Buffy Comic strip. MySpace Comic Books is also sponsoring the New York Comic Con this month.

As we mentioned previously, ComicSpace was attracting a massive amount of interest for its “MySpace of Comics” idea - will MySpace’s entry into the market kill off that project?

See also MyToons, the YouTube of cartoons into which Mashable got an exclusive peek.


Originally
from Mashable!

by Pete Cashmore


reBlogged

by Admin

on Feb 17, 2007, 4:54AM

Originally by Pete Cashmore from Mashable! on February 17, 2007, 10:24am

Popularity: 2% [?]

Google Starts Advertising GMail on YouTube

Posted on February 18th, 2007 in General by daya

A Mashable reader spotted today that Google has posted a series of 4 Gmail ads to YouTube this week, presumably to coincide with the release of Gmail to everyone. The ads, called Gmail Theater, are home-made but surprisingly good. The channel exists to post Google Company news, they say.

When geeks turn to video, the results are usually poor: it’s ironic that the YouTube staff are too camera-shy to use video to get their message across, and the YouTube channel is still extremely weak. The founders, who have a little on-screen charisma, haven’t made regular appearances. Likewise, Technorati’s video blog felt a little awkward - another sign that techies won’t necessarily experience a smooth transition to video blogging. Our suggestion: grab some of these Google staffers and put them on the YouTube channel, thus improving the content by a factor of 100. That’s what you call synergy, folks!

Of course, Google will likely be treated like any other company flogging its wares on YouTube: putting the ads on the front page would likely result in accusations of being “evil”.

Lonelygirl15 To Appear in Lindsay Lohan Film

To avoid turning this into “YouTube Friday” on Mashable, I’ll just cram in some bonus news: Lonelygirl15, aka Jessica Rose, has landed a small part in a Lindsay Lohan film called “I Know Who Killed Me”. It’s another sign that YouTube stars can hit the big time. Lisa Nova, meanwhile, settled for a TV role (amateur!).


Originally from Mashable!
by Pete CashmorereBlogged by Admin on Feb 16, 2007, 11:58PM

Originally by Pete Cashmore from Mashable! on February 17, 2007, 5:28am

Popularity: 1% [?]