All the pre-publicity in the world can't beat a good first-person shooter
It's hard to imagine what more could have been done to drum up interest in Walter Isaacson's Steve Jobs. The only biography of Apple's (AAPL) CEO written with Jobs' cooperation hit the bookstores 19 days after his death in a tsunami of publicity, from 60 Minutes to Charlie Rose to Jon Stewart and everything in between.
And the book did well. It sold 379,000 copies and earned $13.2 million in one week, according to Nielsen BookScan, leaping to No. 1 on the New York Times bestseller list and putting itself in position to become the bestselling book of 2011.
But an item in Friday's GamesBeat -- the videogaming arm of the VentureBeat blog -- puts those sales in perspective. In the same week that Simon & Schuster published Steve Jobs, Electronic Arts (ERTS) issued Battlefield 3, a first-person shooter set on the Iraq-Iran border that I venture to guess neither Charlie Rose nor Jon Stewart has ever heard of.
Yet the videogame sold 5,000,000 copies its first week and generated $300 million in sales. And it's hardly the biggest game of 2011. Modern Warfare 3, due out next week, is expected to outsell it 2 to 1.
This is not to say that people don't read anymore. Books are a $40 billion business in the U.S., twice the size of the videogame business, according to DFC Intelligence. But among the players who lined up at midnight to buy the new game, the latest title in the Battlefield franchise is a very big deal indeed.
And as game analyst Billy Pidgeon told GamesBeat's Dean Takahashi: "When it comes down to it, it's more fun to play games than it is to read a biography."
The downside of server-based voice activated computing
Apple's (AAPL) Siri, to paraphrase Alan Kay's comment about the original Macintosh, is the first voice-activated artificial intelligent assistant good enough to criticize.
Good enough, in fact, that Asymco's Horace Dediu has suggested that voice-activation might be the next revolutionary user interface, as disruptive for future computing devices as the mouse, the scroll wheel and the touchscreen were before it. In his Critical Path podcast Wednesday (Back to MORE
Philip Elmer-DeWitt - Nov 4, 2011 8:08 AM ET
What would the startup scene be like without the blog that currently animates it? A whole lot better, actually.
FORTUNE -- At TechCrunch's Disrupt conference earlier this year, Michael Arrington brought Arianna Huffington on stage and the two played "The Odd Couple" for 10 minutes. "How the hell did we both end up at AOL?" Arrington asked, musing on AOL's purchase of TechCrunch for a reported $25 million and The Huffington MORE
Chadwick Matlin - Sep 7, 2011 2:17 PM ET
A report from IDC sets off some pretty silly headlines in the tech press
The top item on the closely-watched Techmeme news aggregator Saturday morning was a piece by ZDNet's Larry Dignan about how the shipments of tablet computers have failed to meet the industry's "lofty expectations."
It was a theme picked up by at least eight other news outlets, including VentureBeat ("Tablet sales slow"), The Loop ("'media tablet' market isn't as MORE
Philip Elmer-DeWitt - Jul 9, 2011 5:51 AM ET
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"If you invent frequently and are willing to fail, then you never get to that point where you really need to bet the whole company." - Jeff Bezos, Amazon CEO (GeekWire)
* Bloomberg reports that Skype fired several high-ranking executives -- including vice presidents David Gurle, Christopher Dean, Russ Shaw, MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Jun 20, 2011 6:30 AM ET
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"His continued presence is the biggest overhang on Microsoft's stock." -- hedge fund manager David Einhorn on CEO Steve Ballmer (Reuters)
* Tech blog "This is my next" confirms Google will introduce the a near field communications (NFC) payment system later today along with participating retail partners that will MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - May 26, 2011 10:33 AM ET
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It's official: The Flip digital cam is dead. (Long live, Flip.) Cisco, which bought the startup behind the product line for $590 million back in 2009, will close down the business and lay off all 550 staffers as part of a restructuring of its consumer electronics division. The MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Apr 13, 2011 5:00 AM ET
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New Google CEO Larry Page just upped the ante as far as workflow goes. Last Friday, he sent out a company memo explaining to all employees that 25% of their annual bonuses will be tied to the success of Google's social strategy this year, regardless of whether they're MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Apr 8, 2011 5:00 AM ET
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Lady Gaga donated $1.5 million to Zynga's fundraising initiative with Save the Children to support relief efforts in Japan. (The donation comes not long after Zynga raised more than $2.5 million, as well.) "I'm inspired that my little monsters banded together to help those affected by the terrible MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Mar 29, 2011 5:00 AM ET
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Cisco named 10-year company vet Gary Moore its first COO. Moore, who's been running the $8 billion-a-year Services business division as executive vice president, will help CEO John Chambers transition the company into new markets, including data center products like servers and consumer products such MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Feb 23, 2011 7:32 AM ET