by AdamFernandez on 7/20/15, 6:13 PM with 28 comments
by Bartweiss on 7/20/15, 8:37 PM
Content is king, and sites with content richer than plaintext have done substantially better. Advertising has done well, and long-term subscription models continue to drive down user counts. The line about "attract attention, not convey information" was a prescient look at a world of shitty, flashing banner ads. He missed subscriptions for premium features, but it's a subtle difference.
On the other hand, ads still cripple the speed of page loads - smart advertising has added weight as fast as internet speeds have improved. Per-use transaction fees still haven't caught on (except in freemium games) because they encourage users to not consume content, and because no one trusts a central authority to set them up. Ultimately, ads are the only effective small-charge technique anyone has found.
He was spot-on with the problems the web faces, but wrong in thinking they'd be solved by now.
by smacktoward on 7/20/15, 10:55 PM
by oautholaf on 7/20/15, 9:04 PM
In many ways, it seems like Microsoft's late-90's obsession with content didn't really pan out. Sure, MSNBC is still around but sidewalk.com long since evaporated. It doesn't seem like MSFT really became a profitable media company.
But look at how many multi-billion dollar "unicorns" are messaging companies.
by edw519 on 7/20/15, 11:23 PM
Still is. And will always be.
The annoyance of ads will always expand to fill any improvements in throughput achieved by technology.
by scottfits on 7/20/15, 11:23 PM
Overall he's still right--content is king. But I predict that in the future the internet is going to be dominated by user generated content and websites that can effectively show us what we want to see--websites that can refine the ever-growing amounts of information we have at our fingertips.
by theseatoms on 7/20/15, 8:24 PM
Incredible how far we've come from "put up with turning on a computer."
"But within a year the mechanisms will be in place that allow content providers to charge just a cent or a few cents for information. If you decide to visit a page that costs a nickel, you won't be writing a check or getting a bill in the mail for a nickel. You'll just click on what you want, knowing you'll be charged a nickel on an aggregated basis."
I can't decide if this sort of micropayment-driven internet would be heaven or hell.
by voidfiles on 7/20/15, 10:26 PM
by SandersAK on 7/20/15, 9:40 PM
Content is king, but what Gates could have never guessed was what type of content.
by applecore on 7/20/15, 9:08 PM
Look how far we've come.
by serve_yay on 7/20/15, 9:34 PM
For music and writing, distribution is king.