Archive for the 'business' Category

11
Aug

Wanted: 3G iPhone in Thailand

Yes!! It’s finally in town! But god damn *!&£ing hell … it costs 1 months rent for a small Notting Hill Gate apartment!

My sister-in-law scoped it out in Central Bangna the other day going for THB 45,000. That would pay 6 Thai police basic salaries! (I say “basic” due to the the erm, extra curricular methods of obtaining viable income of theirs - ahem.)

I mean come on! Apple just opened an iTunes store for Thailand for the very first time. An iTunes store!! Ok, it’s only for Apps - but that’s my point!

iTunes store - Yes Official iPhone - No

Hmm, something is missing here - but saying that, it’s a positive sign from Apple. And this corroborates rumors that the 3G iPhone will be coming to Thailand officially, especially since the 3G license spat seems to be resolved. According to CNET asia the equipment rollout has begun but my resource says rollout time will take probably 6 months for one of the networks which means a lot of waiting and lots of time for the grey imports to rinse our wallets clean for those that aren’t willing to wait.

Is it really worth it people? I think I’ll wait or just go for the 2G iPhone. By the time 3G really hits Thailand, other nations will be laughing at our legacy technology. How embarrassing.

More info at CNET Asia and Absolutely Bangkok

10
Aug

Pitching your startup

If you have your own startup and it’s time to pitch the business/product to an investor - Jason Calacanis has got great advice. At least it’s the best shortcut for me rather than reading the “Perfect Pitch” by Jon Steel that’s been sitting on my book shelf for the last 10 months.

Actually, perhaps I should sit down and read it now that I have more time…

Anyway, Techcrunch was lovely enough to print the fulltext of the post from Jason’s mailing list here.

31
Jul

What a cuil parody!

You just gotta love Sam Pullara for using Yahoo!’s BOSS API to parody cuil. Unfortunately I can only sit back and read the comments as I wasn’t quick enough to see the actual hack working.

You can only admire the pace at which the web 2.0 community is running, and at the speed that you can put a mashup together with Yahoo!’s API. We’ve got some interesting times ahead of us - but I can help feeling there way too many web startups with random applications that don’t neccessarily offer anything of value except “entertainment”. How on earth do they make money? Or is just a quick publicity stunt to generate financial interest and then sell up and let them deal with the other problems? hmm…