Friday, September 29, 2006

User-Generated Content Video revenues to exceed $850 million by 2010

User-Generated Content (UGC), such as that found on YouTube and MySpace, will continue to grow significantly in popularity and generate increasing revenue over the next several years. By 2010, the volume of downloads/views on these sites will surpass 65 billion, and revenues tied to UGC video are expected to exceed $850 million by 2010, reports In-Stat. Revenues are those directly linked to videos in the form of banner/skyscrapers, embedded video, Google Adsense, and/or branded pages/channels.

Other Highlights:
  • The size of downloads/views are estimated to eclipse 1.1 exabytes of data by 2010, with uploads growing to more than 9.1 petabytes.
  • 23% of the dozens of UCG sites studied currently support mobile access, with others making announcements for this support in the near future.
    YouTube holds the highest market share for video, but MySpace has the most visitors.

In related research In-Stat found that although Online Content Aggregators are in the early experimentation stages of rolling out video services, they will have some dramatic revenue-generating opportunities in the next five years. The worldwide market for online content services is expected to expand by a factor of 10, growing from about 13 million households during 2005 to more than 131 million households by 2010.

Damaka Launches DialOut™ Service for PC-to-Phone Calling – Price of Phone Calls Continues to Drop

A 13-year-old in Texas can clearly hear and see her grandmother in India without the high phone bills

RICHARDSON, Texas- (PR: Business Wire) – Cheap phone calls is now available to users worldwide using damaka’s DialOut™ service. After downloading damaka for free, a user can make a call from a personal computer to anywhere in the world at a fraction of the price charged by operators and phone card companies. Sample damaka per minute rates: US (1.9 ¢), India (9.8 ¢), China (1.8 ¢), UK (1.5 ¢), Singapore (1.4 ¢), Spain (1.7¢).

A cheap phone call, however, is just one of damaka’s product offerings. The standards-based solution comes with free video calling, free voicemail, Smart IM™, and soon-to-be-released, desktop sharing. These features, combined with the PC-to-Phone launch, makes damaka the most comprehensive, peer-to-peer, standards-based communication and collaboration software in the world. damaka also plans to launch DialIn™ feature shortly.

According to Chelsey Antony of Plano, Texas, “It took us about 30 seconds to download damaka from the Internet. After that, I could call my Grandma’s mobile phone in India and she sounded as if she was right next door. I could hear her excitement when I told her I got an A in math.”

According to Chandan Chopra, Director of IT at damaka. “Adding PC-to-Phone capabilities to our SIP-based, Peer-to-Peer platform adds a significant dimension to our existing suite of product offerings and underscores our commitment to increase user experience and deliver the next generation collaboration & communication software. “

damaka also offers an upgraded version of its software to corporations needing a one-stop-shop for unified communication and collaboration. A company can save the hassle of using one vendor for phone calls, another for video conferencing, and an unsecured third-party for IM. In less than 30 days, damaka can build, customize, and launch a private peer-to-peer network for companies ranging from a small start-up to a global conglomerate.

Click here for a Screenshot

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Saturday, September 09, 2006

damaka Launches World's First Standards Based Desktop Multi-Party Peer-to-Peer Video Conferencing

Desktop Video Conferencing for up to Four People at Once Brings Jetson-Like Environment to Home and Office

RICHARDSON, Texas --(PR: Business Wire)-- Before you call your loved ones, check out damaka's peer-to-peer video conferencing. Whether you are a businessman traveling in Japan or a mother wanting to talk to her son in Mexico, a simple download of damaka, paired with a webcam, will allow you to see your family and friends from the comfort of your desktop. With its breakthrough Personal Softswitch(TM), damaka launches affordable, multi-party video conferencing in pure software format, bringing Jetson-like voice and video communication to the office and home.

According to Siva Ravikumar, CEO, "What makes damaka unique is that it uses SIP-based P2P technology with no server in the middle. This means that data packets are transmitted directly from one user to another. Today's video conferencing technology uses the client/server platform, which requires expensive servers or the use of a third party provider. damaka is the only direct P2P video conferencing solution available in the world today which allows for affordable, scalable, end-to-end-encrypted video conferencing for up to four people."

damaka's vision is to use best-in-class video (H.263/H.264), combined with P2P telephony, instant messaging, email, SMS, and gaming, to create a one-stop-shop for all communication and collaboration needs. The unified communication solution gives higher flexibility not only for a CEO to have a private conversation from his/her office to counterparts worldwide, but also for families in different parts of the world to have affordable face-to-face chats from the comfort of their homes.

damaka licenses its software to operators who are interested in new revenue streams with minimal infrastructure investment and to enterprises interested in a secure collaboration platform. damaka also plans to work with online communities and dating sites interested in a low-cost, scalable, feature-rich platform to empower its members to communicate directly and privately with one another.

Click here for a Screenshot


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Tuesday, August 29, 2006

damaka introduces Secure, Peer-to-Peer File Transfer

Latest release of damaka introduces Secure, Peer-to-Peer File Transfer: Instantly share files with your contacts through damaka. Peer-to-peer transfer is fast, reliable & secure. This release also allows users to setup their speakers, microphone and webcam to ensure high-quality voice and video experience.

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Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Damaka - Experience the Joy of Communicating

Latest release of damaka allows service providers and enterprises an exceptional opportunity to seamlessly unify Internet users everywhere into a global network for real-time communications in all media: voice, audio, video & messaging. Click here to download damaka

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Saturday, June 17, 2006

Internet advertising revenues at a record $3.9 billion

Internet advertising revenues at a record $3.9 billion for the first quarter of 2006



The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) today announced that Internet advertising revenues reached a new record of $3.9 billion for the first quarter of 2006. The 2006 first quarter revenues represent a 38 percent increase over Q1 2005 at $2.8 billion and a 6 percent increase over Q4 2005 total at $3.6 billion.



“The steady growth of online advertising is a clear indication that marketers continue to believe in the opportunities and effectiveness that this medium delivers in reaching and engaging their consumers,” said Greg Stuart, CEO, Interactive Advertising Bureau. “The Interactive Advertising industry remains committed to the creation of a world class medium with best-of-breed standards, measurement guidelines, research and ad products for marketers and agencies.”

“The Internet continues to shape the media landscape as more advertising dollars are going online,” said Peter Petrusky, Director, Advisory Services, PricewaterhouseCoopers. “It is abundantly clear that marketers are seeing a compelling opportunity to leverage the Internet as a powerful medium that drives both branding and sales results.”

“Consumer habits are continuing to change and mature,” adds David Silverman, partner, Assurance, PricewaterhouseCoopers. “Companies are effectively learning to devote more of their advertising budget to this fast-growing advertising platform in order to reach the right audience at the right time.”

Friday, June 16, 2006

damaka Launches Operator and Service Provider Version of Its Peer-to-Peer Personal Softswitch

RICHARDSON, Texas--(PR: BUSINESS WIRE)--June 12, 2006--damaka, a leading provider of real time peer-to-peer multimedia collaboration and communication software solutions, announced the release of "damaka powered" Partner Operator version of it's Personal Softswitch(TM) that enables Operators and Service providers to offer unique high value, easy to use voice, video and data services to their customers with the highest flexibility and lowest cost of ownership compared to any solution available today.

"damaka now empowers Operators, VoIP Providers and ISPs with branded solution to leapfrog their competition by providing next generation services with secure, high quality Video and Voice (PC-to-PSTN/Mobile and PC-to-PC) communication," said Siva Ravikumar, Founder and CEO of damaka. "damaka's cutting-edge peer-to-peer technology based on SIP standards allows our customers to take advantage of its service enabling and highly scalable solution to increase revenue and reduce cost significantly."

damaka has announced their Operator launch with Mortel Telecom (www.mortel.com), a next generation Turkey based VoIP Provider focusing on Turkey and International markets. Mortel has implemented the complete "damaka powered" solution to deliver creative peer-to-peer services. damaka is currently working with numerous other operators and VoIP providers to enable them to launch their own peer-to-peer networks and be in the forefront of offering tailored communication and collaboration solutions to their customers.

"We require our partners' solutions to seamlessly integrate into our infrastructure so that we can maximize our capabilities, quickly deliver superior quality, and offer advanced services that touch people's lives every day. damaka's technology is changing the way we deliver services," said Vahit Aykut, CEO of Mortel. "The secure peer-to-peer model helps Mortel to scale with the most cost effective infrastructure possible today and this is a key element to our overall growth plan."

damaka has also recently developed and released the best-in-class peer-to-peer video (H.263/H.264) as the cornerstone of its video offering.

For information on how to have your own peer-to-peer "damaka powered" network contact: bizdev@damaka.net

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

India's cellphone users to reach 278 million by 2010

Analysts expect India's user base to rise to 278 million by 2010 as the low call rates lure customers. At 93 million, now it exceeds the combined population of Germany and Belgium (via Reuters/Yahoo).

India's domestic market, forecast to grow to $5.8 billion by 2010, is expected to consume about 55 million handsets this year, up 71 percent from 2005. Between 4 million and 5 million new users are coming into the market each month, attracted to the world's cheapest local mobile call rates of as low as 2 U.S. cents a minute.

There is still room for growth as mobile ownership is just 9 percent in India where the population is more than a billion and networks, even though they are expanding rapidly, are still largely city centric.

Nokia, which controls nearly half the $2.5 billion Indian handset market, and its suppliers are investing about $150 million in its Chennai unit, which makes a few million handsets a month and has already exported phones to south east Asian nations like Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand.

More than 40 percent of the software that goes into Motorola RAZR handset is developed in its Indian R&D facility.

South Korean LG Electronics operates a plant in the western city of Pune that will churn out 20 million GSM and CDMA handsets by 2010, roughly half of which are earmarked for export.

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Latest release of damaka introduces Free Internet Radio

Latest release of damaka introduces Internet Radio: Listen to your favorite music online. Listen free 24/7 to over 100 internet radio stations, from Alternative to Country, Classical to Trance, and lots more.


Download damaka

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Sunday, April 30, 2006

damaka releases standards-based, best-in-class, Video offering

New release of damaka provides users with next generation, standards-based, secure, Peer-to-Peer Video calling feature. Video call allows you to see your contacts in real-time. damaka 2.0 Video is based on H.263, a popular ITU standard, that provides high-quality video. damaka also has the capability to provide Video services based on H.264.

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Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Meez Takes Avatars Mainstream

New Service from Meez delivers an Easy Way for Internet Users to Personalize Their Experience on IM, Blogs and Social Media Sites.

Meez provides custom avatars to use with IM, email and social networks including MySpace, Facebook, hi5, Xanga, Blogger, Tagworld, Xuqa, YFly, Windows Live Spaces, Yahoo Messenger, Skype and plenty more besides. You design your character using a neat little Flash app, adding facial features, clothes and accessories. The business model is to charge for special items using an internal currency called “Beenz” (very similar to Cyworld’s acorns). They’re also charging to add Meez wallpaper to your cellphone.

The company has raised $4.3 million in venture backing.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

JaJah gets love ($2M) from Sequoia

Sequoia Capital has invested $2M in JaJah, an Austrian-VoIP start-up that wants to be what else: a Skype-killer.

The company, Jajah Inc., which pledged to make cheap Internet calls as simple as using a search engine, is starting its service in the United States. It also has an office in Luxembourg and a development center in Israel.

The service works once a user visits jajah.com, fills in her phone number and the number she's trying to reach. With a click of the mouse, the user's phone rings and the call connects to the other telephone.

Its founders say that many people have been slow to try Internet telephony -- services offered by the likes of Skype, Yahoo or Vonage -- because, until now, they've had to download software, speak through a computer or get a phone adapter and a broadband Internet plan.

Jajah is selling its services to consumers in 60 countries. Calls from those 60 countries can be made to any destination in the world. Jajah's rates will average around 1.7 cents to 1.9 cents a minute for domestic calls. International calls vary. Calls from the U.S. to South Korea, for instance, range from 3.3 cents a minute to 6.6 cents a minute.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Skype, others sued for Racketeering

Morpheus maker Streamcast has sued Skype and its founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis under RICO laws, which are more commonly used against organized crime groups. It's not all that common for RICO violations to be charged between companies, but it does happen. Andy Abramson has all the details, which Om Malik summarizes as being all about the money -- basically saying that Streamcast is pissed off that Zennstrom didn't sell them the Kazaa technology, before spinning it off to Sharman Networks. Streamcast says that the their own deal included a "right of first refusal" should Zennstrom sell the technology to anyone else. Streamcast also claims that the basic Kazaa technology is part of Skype.

Read what others are saying:

Skype sued over peer-to-peer technology
CNNMoney.com
StreamCast Networks claims Skype is using its peer-to-peer technology. Plus: Satellite photos show an iPod-like structure in western Australia. ...

StreamCast Sues Skype
Forbes
StreamCast Networks, creator of the Morpheus peer-to-peer communications software, has hit eBay's Skype unit and its two ...

Skype Founders Sued For Racketeering
InformationWeek, NY
The suit claims that peer-to-peer client maker Kazaa, also founded by Skype founders, violated StreamCast's exclusive rights to the technology behind Kazaa by ...

Skype and Kazaa named in StreamCast lawsuit
ZDNet UK, UK
The suit, filed in US District Court in the Central District of California, claims that StreamCast owns the technology underlying Internet-calling provider ...

Skype hit with racketeering charges
Register, UK
Skype, the Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) provider bought last year by eBay, has been named in a RICO case brought by StreamCast. ...

StreamCast names Skype, Kazaa in lawsuit
ZDNet
SteamCast Networks, creator of the Morpheus file-swapping software, has filed a lawsuit naming Kazaa, Skype Technologies and its founders Niklas Zennstrom and ...

StreamCast Files RICO Charges Against Skype
CIO, MA
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) provider Skype, which is owned by eBay, is one of a handful of companies that had racketeering charges brought against it ...

Streamcast Files Racketeering Charges on Skype
VoIP Magazine (press release), CA
It would appear that Skype's p2p past is catching up with them. Andy, scooping just about everybody, has posted that Streamcast ...

RICO Suit Filed Against Skype Founders
Slashdot
Stitch_Surfs writes "Defendant Skype Technologies SA, Niklas Zennstrom, Janus Friis, Kazaa, Bluemoon Ou and a slew of others have been named in a Rico Suit ...

Skype, Kazaa Named in $4B RICO Lawsuit
InternetNews.com
StreamCast Networks, maker of the Morpheus file-swapping software, filed racketeering charges against the founders of Skype and developers of Kazaa. ...


Gates sizes up the Web's next generation

Bill Gates speaks with CNET News.com about the push into hosted services, competition with Google and mobile computing...

Click here to read the interview

Bill Gates, live from Mix '06 (Video)

Sunday, February 12, 2006

damaka store launched

damaka users can now purchase accessories (headsets, speakerphone and webcams) from the store to enrich their communication experience.

Click here to go to the accessories page

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Learn all about SIP...

SIP is a signaling protocol used for locating remote users and establishing interactive communications. It is analagous to setting up a call on the telephone network, with two critical improvements.
  1. It is internet-native, and therefore interoperates well with other protocols including, critically, future protocols (more at SIP RFCs and Specifications)
  2. It separates session establishment and session description, so specifying who (or what) you would like to connect to is independent of how you would like to communicate. (Compare calling someone's voice vs fax line, where the choice of how to communicate dictates how you connect.)

SIP is the glue for a new set of existing applications, beyond just the obvious 'IP telephone' to include multimedia, mobility, IM and presence, e-commerce, web services, and many others.

To learn more,:
http://www.toyz.org/cgi-bin/sipwiki.cgi
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/sip/ (Maintained by Prof. Henning Schulzrinne MUST VISIT)
http://www.tech-invite.com/Ti-sip-WGs.html

Saturday, December 24, 2005

damaka 2.0 with Video launched

News Update
Latest release of damaka adds free integrated video calling. damaka Video allows users to see the contacts they are calling using a webcam. The latest release also includes Weather Forecasting for US cities.

damaka's developers have done an awesome job. The quality is incredible and is better than Skype, Yahoo & MSN.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Codecs... what are they?

codec

Short for compressor/decompressor, a codec is any technology for compressing and decompressing data. Codecs can be implemented in software, hardware, or a combination of both.

In telecommunications, (short for coder/decoder) a device that encodes or decodes a signal. For example, telephone companies use codecs to convert binary signals transmitted on their digital networks to analog signals converted on their analog networks.

"Compressor-Decompressor" or "Coder-Decoder," which describes a device or program capable of performing transformations on a data stream or signal.

Learn more about codec on wikipedia

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Big eBay Users Shun Skype

Looks like eBay chief Meg Whitman has plenty of selling to do herself.


Russell Shaw points to a story in TheStreet.com that claims that “Big eBay users shun Skype”.

The original article quotes the executive director of a group of high-volume eBay sellers as saying that "Skype doesn't give me a capability that I already don't have." Apparently this based on informal conversation with members. Of course it is not clear why they should feel this way.

The story doesn’t give enough supporting evidence for their claim. Nonetheless, I feel that eBay sellers can use third party VoIP tools as well instead of Skype. So I feel Skype is not going to change much the landscape for eBay.

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Happy Thanksgiving Day!

Today is Thanksgiving Day. In US of A, this is a day when families gather (whether they want to or not), offer thanks (some heart-felt, some fake), share a festive holiday meal (I don't really like Turkey that much), and watch a football games (How about them Cowboys?)

Looking back at 2005, I have a lot to be thankful for - my parents, my wonderful girl-friend for taking such great care of me, my friends and my buddies @ damaka.

I think I have achieved a lot this year - both at personal & professional front - and this would not have been possible without the love, inspiration, help & support of my family & friends.

Happy Thanksgiving Day to everyone!