Feb. 18th, 2003

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This is the obligatory "wow, look at all that darned snow" entry. You've been warned. My driveway is snowed in so I can't go anywhere so I have nothing better to do than to take pictures of the white stuff on the ground. I am comforted in the knowledge that various and sundry back in California will go "Wow, it must really suck to live out there." Ha! I have a fireplace and a roaring fire going. Shows what they know.

Stiff upper lip, and all that. Thumbnails follow, they link to bigger pictures, you know the drill.

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As you have no doubt noticed, I've done a bit of a redesign, mostly based on this skin. I added the sidebar. Realizing that if I painstakingly redid each template before relaunching, I'd be here till April, I took a deep breath and jumped in and kicked it off, so things are gonna be a bit rough for a while.

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Blogroll pruning doesn't mean I don't love you, it just means I can't keep up with too many blogs. (It's harder when you aren't using something that pings weblogs.com, too, since then I don't see the convenient "new!" flag. Sad but true.) It's really no comment on quality; I dropped SCOTUSBlog which is an excellent weblog but I just don't click through to it. Says more about me, I suspect.

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AltaVista, my home for several years, has been bought by Overture. I think congratulations are in order.

The price was $60 million in cash, plus $80 million in stock. How times have changed; AltaVista paid $163 million for Raging Bull, a few years back, and of course CMGI paid $2.9 billion for AltaVista back in the day. Still, I hope that the employees will get a small liquidity event (damn, that sounds coy these days).

I learned how to do what I do at AltaVista, and had some of the best mentors I could ever ask for. I've missed the place ever since I left, although I've never regretted the decision to leave. This, for me, is just the poignant coda to the story of a company that ought to have been one of the core companies of the modern Internet.

Most of the lessons one could learn from AltaVista's decline are painfully obvious, but here's one that perhaps isn't. Brands don't mean shit on the Internet. It's not like most brick and mortar businesses. It's very easy for a customer to get up and move somewhere else. Brand awareness is important, but it will not in and of itself retain customers. It will merely convince them to give your service a try.

AltaVista, at one point, thought that brand was a magic wand. Netcom, where I also worked, thought that brand was a magic wand. Both didn't make it.

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I'm not in the habit of posting every little upcoming RPG release, but I gotta take note when Dan Brereton announces a Nocturnals supplement for Mutants & Masterminds. Brereton is a pretty decent writer and a great artist. His full color painted style is way outside the comic mainstream, but man is it lovely. Nocturnals is his horror comic -- there've been a few minis and graphic novels over the years.

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