Six ways to save the internet
-
0:01 - 0:06Have you ever been in the position
of watching Silicon Valley take off -
0:06 - 0:10and wish that you had known
what was about to happen? -
0:10 - 0:12(Laughter)
-
0:14 - 0:17So, I'm here to talk about
what I think is going to be -
0:17 - 0:22the most intense disruption
of the technology world -
0:22 - 0:24that's occurred in the last 15 years.
-
0:25 - 0:30And I believe the end product of it
will be entirely about engagement. -
0:30 - 0:35In fact, I think it is possibly
a transformational change -
0:35 - 0:37in the way we're going
to think about engagement. -
0:37 - 0:43So what would you do if you knew today
-
0:44 - 0:46that there was going to be
a major technology cycle -
0:46 - 0:48beginning in the next couple years,
-
0:48 - 0:50and that you could participate in it?
-
0:50 - 0:52What would you do?
-
0:53 - 0:54(Audience) Jump in!
-
0:54 - 0:57So, this is the situation
in which I find myself: -
0:58 - 1:01I'm a professional investor
about half the day, -
1:02 - 1:04the daylight half.
-
1:04 - 1:05I was paying close attention earlier,
-
1:05 - 1:08and I now know I need to have
10 hours sleep at night, -
1:08 - 1:11which is tricky, because last
night the show ended -
1:11 - 1:14about 12:30, and so I was, I got --
-
1:14 - 1:17and that was in Santa Rosa,
so I got home a little late. -
1:17 - 1:20I want you to understand,
I've been studying the technology world, -
1:20 - 1:23and things have already begun to change.
-
1:23 - 1:24But they're changing in ways
-
1:24 - 1:27that I see literally no
commentator referring to today. -
1:28 - 1:31There are six things going on
that I'm going to focus on. -
1:31 - 1:34I want you to understand,
each one of these is a hypothesis; -
1:34 - 1:36it is subject to revision.
-
1:36 - 1:38It may even be subject to elimination.
-
1:38 - 1:39But I want you to understand
-
1:39 - 1:43I've been working with this group
of hypotheses now for about 10 months, -
1:43 - 1:46and what's really interesting
is that I've been exposing them -
1:46 - 1:48to a lot of people in the industry,
-
1:48 - 1:51and people have been finding it
very hard to debunk them. -
1:51 - 1:53So I'm going to share them with you today,
-
1:53 - 1:56because I think collectively, we have
a chance of figuring this out. -
1:56 - 1:59The first thing -- and I think
this is fairly obvious -- -
1:59 - 2:01is: Windows is dying.
-
2:01 - 2:02And --
-
2:02 - 2:04(Applause)
-
2:04 - 2:06I mean no disrespect to Microsoft,
-
2:06 - 2:10because I think, in fact, Microsoft
as a company has many things it can do -
2:10 - 2:11to maintain growth,
-
2:11 - 2:14but desktops would not be one of them.
-
2:14 - 2:17And the key indicator here,
and the only one you need to know -
2:17 - 2:19to understand what's going on here,
-
2:21 - 2:25is that smartphones have
basically taken Windows -
2:25 - 2:29from 96% of internet-connected
devices 3 or 4 years ago, -
2:30 - 2:32to under 50% now.
-
2:32 - 2:34And it is falling precipitously;
-
2:34 - 2:37they'll be under 30 percent,
probably about a year and a half from now. -
2:38 - 2:40Microsoft has lots of things it can do.
-
2:40 - 2:43It can retreat to Exchange
and crank the price there. -
2:43 - 2:46But the reason this is so significant
-
2:46 - 2:50is that Windows and Enterprise
software, which is related to it -- -
2:50 - 2:52think SAP and people like that --
-
2:52 - 2:56those businesses account for hundreds
of billions of dollars in revenue. -
2:56 - 3:00And I'm suggesting we're going to have
a jump ball for that revenue. -
3:00 - 3:03And in a world where the US economy
is not growing that rapidly, -
3:05 - 3:10having somebody go away is the simplest
way to create room for new industries. -
3:10 - 3:13And this is where the revenues
are going to come from. -
3:13 - 3:16But guess what? Like a Ginsu
knife commercial, there's more! -
3:16 - 3:18(Laughter)
-
3:18 - 3:21It turns out Microsoft
is not the only company -
3:21 - 3:24whose body is lying
across the railroad tracks today. -
3:26 - 3:27Another one is Google.
-
3:29 - 3:31Now, you may not have focused on this,
-
3:31 - 3:35but index search accounted for
90% of all search volume -
3:35 - 3:37about 4 years ago.
-
3:38 - 3:40But an interesting thing happened.
-
3:40 - 3:46Google got to be so successful
that the index became full of garbage. -
3:46 - 3:50In fact, the entire Web
has become full of garbage. -
3:50 - 3:54If you think about it, the Web has become
almost a digital Detroit. -
3:54 - 3:55(Laughter)
-
3:55 - 3:56If you look hard enough,
-
3:56 - 3:59you can find really
compelling things there. -
4:00 - 4:04But if you aren't really careful,
you can get mugged. -
4:04 - 4:05(Laughter)
-
4:05 - 4:07And it is no shock
-
4:07 - 4:09that each one of us
and everyone else out there -
4:09 - 4:13have looked for other ways to find
the things we want to find. -
4:13 - 4:15We started with Wikipedia,
-
4:15 - 4:18but then Facebook came along
for matters of taste and money; -
4:18 - 4:20Twitter came along for real-time news;
-
4:20 - 4:22LinkedIn, for professional things;
-
4:22 - 4:25Match.com, for less professional things;
-
4:25 - 4:28TripAdvisor for travel,
Yelp for restaurants, -
4:28 - 4:32Realtor.com for finding a home,
Dictionary.com for words, -
4:32 - 4:34Wordnik for the whole language.
-
4:34 - 4:36So the thing has really changed.
-
4:36 - 4:38And here's what's interesting:
-
4:38 - 4:41like Microsoft, Google has
plenty of ways to respond -
4:41 - 4:43in terms of growing its business.
-
4:43 - 4:46But what it cannot do
is recover its position -
4:46 - 4:48as the dominant player on the internet.
-
4:49 - 4:53It is my belief that when
Google came along in 1998, -
4:53 - 4:56the internet was an open-source,
-
4:56 - 4:58long-tail world with no leader.
-
4:59 - 5:01And Google stepped into this void,
provided leadership -
5:02 - 5:03and implemented a strategy
-
5:03 - 5:07that systematically commoditized
all forms of content. -
5:08 - 5:11And the simplest way to look at it
is to look at a Google results page: -
5:11 - 5:14the only logo on that page is Google's;
-
5:14 - 5:16everything else is in the same font.
-
5:17 - 5:20That form of commoditization
has been tremendous for Google -
5:21 - 5:23and horrible for almost everyone else.
-
5:23 - 5:26And I believe, to a first
order, it is over -- -
5:26 - 5:31not because index search is going away,
but because, like word processing, -
5:31 - 5:33it's gone from the most important
application we all had, -
5:33 - 5:35to just another thing we do.
-
5:36 - 5:38And you see this in mobile in particular.
-
5:38 - 5:43Because in mobile, people have found
other ways to find what they want. -
5:43 - 5:46Index search is too disruptive
on a cell phone, -
5:46 - 5:50so the rate of index search
is a small fraction on cell phones -
5:50 - 5:52to what it is on desktops.
-
5:52 - 5:56And that is the leading indicator
that Google's recovery, if you will, -
5:56 - 5:59will be in something other than search.
-
5:59 - 6:04The third hypothesis I have
is no longer controversial, -
6:04 - 6:07but it's important
to understand what happened. -
6:07 - 6:10If the left-hand side of this equation
is the open-source World Wide Web, -
6:10 - 6:12with its belief in the long tail,
-
6:12 - 6:14its belief in an absence of regulation,
-
6:15 - 6:17of an absence of security and control,
-
6:17 - 6:19it's really a frontier.
-
6:19 - 6:21Apple came along with a different vision.
-
6:21 - 6:23They said, "We think the Web is dead.
-
6:23 - 6:25We're going to go on the internet,
-
6:25 - 6:27because that's the big data store,
-
6:27 - 6:32and we're going to provide you
with branded, thoughtful, value-added, -
6:32 - 6:35copyright-protected content."
-
6:36 - 6:39And people have overwhelmingly chosen that
-
6:39 - 6:40over Google's vision.
-
6:40 - 6:42Over the last three years,
-
6:42 - 6:46Apple's gone from being
an also-ran in computers -
6:46 - 6:52to this year they will ship approximately
100 million internet-enabled devices. -
6:53 - 6:54One hundred million.
-
6:54 - 6:56They'll probably be just short of that.
-
6:57 - 7:00The point here is, it's Apple's world.
-
7:02 - 7:03We're lucky to be part of it,
-
7:03 - 7:06because Steve is quite intolerant
about who he lets in. -
7:06 - 7:07(Laughter)
-
7:07 - 7:11But think about this:
imagine Georgia in the Civil War. OK? -
7:11 - 7:13Apple is Sherman,
-
7:13 - 7:14World Wide Web is Joe Johnston.
-
7:15 - 7:16And the point is, they've lost.
-
7:17 - 7:19So the Web is looking at this and going,
-
7:19 - 7:20"My God, we've got to come back."
-
7:20 - 7:25And the cost in order to do this is
they have to sacrifice Google. -
7:25 - 7:28So Google has pushed
the pendulum of technology -
7:28 - 7:31to the absolute limit of commoditization,
-
7:31 - 7:34to the point where people
who spent their whole lives -
7:34 - 7:38developing really valuable,
compelling entertainment -
7:38 - 7:40and really valuable, compelling journalism
-
7:40 - 7:42and really valuable, compelling novels,
-
7:42 - 7:44can't make money doing it anymore.
-
7:44 - 7:48So the Web said, "OK,
if Google's over here, and Apple's here, -
7:48 - 7:52HTML 5, the next generation, is going
to be on the other side of Apple." -
7:52 - 7:56So the new battle, instead of being
commoditization versus the App Store, -
7:56 - 8:00is going to be between the App Store
and highly differentiated content. -
8:00 - 8:04If you don't know what HTML 5 is,
let me help you understand. -
8:04 - 8:05It is a programming language.
-
8:06 - 8:08But it's a profound one.
-
8:08 - 8:10Because for the first time,
-
8:10 - 8:13you're going to be able
to construct a web page -
8:13 - 8:17where the entire thing can have
embedded interactivity, -
8:17 - 8:20can have video, audio,
whatever it is that you want. -
8:20 - 8:22But no more Flash boxes.
-
8:22 - 8:24And it's a huge, huge change,
-
8:24 - 8:27because it essentially
opens up a new canvas. -
8:27 - 8:30And it doesn't just open it
up for The New York Times, -
8:30 - 8:32it opens it up for everybody on WordPress,
-
8:32 - 8:34it opens it up for every band ...
-
8:35 - 8:40Because suddenly, the ability to produce
a differentiated, highly compelling, -
8:40 - 8:43value-added -- maybe
even monetizable -- product -
8:43 - 8:44will be there.
-
8:44 - 8:48And what's really interesting
is, thanks to Apple, -
8:48 - 8:51there's nothing that commoditizers
can do about you. -
8:52 - 8:55Apple may try to stop us,
but I don't think they will. -
8:55 - 8:57I think they're smarter than that.
-
8:57 - 9:00So the key point is, I don't know
where we're going to stop -
9:00 - 9:02as the pendulum swings back.
-
9:02 - 9:05But I think the days
of hypercommoditization are behind us. -
9:06 - 9:07And we can all play in this.
-
9:07 - 9:10In a moment I'm going to tell you
how I'm doing it personally. -
9:10 - 9:12Tablets.
-
9:12 - 9:15This is the other side
of why Windows is dead. -
9:16 - 9:18If any of you does not own an iPad --
-
9:18 - 9:21Look, I don't own any Apple stock,
so I have no axe in this, -
9:21 - 9:26but seriously, if you don't own an iPad,
you cannot possibly understand -
9:26 - 9:28the most important things going on now.
-
9:28 - 9:29(Laughter)
-
9:29 - 9:31No, I'm really serious about this.
-
9:31 - 9:35And I think the most important point
is that the other players on this thing, -
9:35 - 9:36at the moment,
-
9:36 - 9:38have made no impact.
-
9:38 - 9:40And keep in mind,
-
9:40 - 9:44it was our investment that built
Palm's webOS that HP's shipping -
9:44 - 9:46soon, eventually, someday.
-
9:46 - 9:48(Laughter)
-
9:48 - 9:51I think it's highly probable
Apple wins this thing -
9:51 - 9:54with market share closer
to what they have on the iPod -
9:54 - 9:56than to what they have on the iPhone.
-
9:57 - 9:59That would be 70 or 80%.
-
9:59 - 10:02If that's right, Apple's going to be
50 to 100 billion dollars bigger -
10:03 - 10:04in a few years
-
10:04 - 10:05than they are today.
-
10:05 - 10:08And I literally don't see anybody
else even challenging them. -
10:09 - 10:11It's really important to understand
-
10:11 - 10:14that Apple's cost structure is so
favorable relative to everybody else, -
10:14 - 10:17it's almost impossible to imagine
any of the cell phone guys, -
10:17 - 10:19particularly Android guys, catching up.
-
10:19 - 10:23Because Apple's gross margins
exceed the retail price -
10:23 - 10:25of almost every Android phone.
-
10:27 - 10:29Here is the one that I want
to leave you with -
10:29 - 10:31as an investment idea, first and foremost.
-
10:31 - 10:33The mania on Wall Street is about social.
-
10:34 - 10:37Social is a sideshow.
-
10:37 - 10:41And I say this as somebody whose fund
has most of its money in Facebook. -
10:42 - 10:43It is a one-off.
-
10:43 - 10:45This is not ...
-
10:46 - 10:48To borrow a phrase from Star Wars:
-
10:48 - 10:51this is not the mania
you are looking for. -
10:52 - 10:55The one we're talking about will be
so much bigger than this. -
10:55 - 10:57Facebook has won.
-
10:57 - 10:59It is the new Windows. OK?
-
10:59 - 11:04A few other guys -- Twitter,
Yelp, Skype, LinkedIn -- -
11:04 - 11:07are building successful platforms
-
11:07 - 11:11that are much smaller
than what Facebook has. -
11:12 - 11:13And they'll be successful.
-
11:13 - 11:16But everybody else coming along is going
to have to follow the Zynga model. -
11:16 - 11:20They're going to have to make themselves
subordinate to the platform of Facebook. -
11:20 - 11:24And Zynga's inability to build
anything successful off of Facebook, -
11:24 - 11:29I think, is the key indicator
of why this platform is so powerful. -
11:29 - 11:31So if you do a start-up today
in the social world, -
11:31 - 11:33build it on top of Facebook.
-
11:33 - 11:35It's the only piece of advice
I can give you. -
11:35 - 11:37But the most important piece
of advice is: forget social. -
11:37 - 11:40Social is now a feature,
it's not a platform. -
11:40 - 11:41So embed social,
-
11:41 - 11:44the same way that Catherine said,
"Embed gamification into everything." -
11:45 - 11:47It's all about engagement.
-
11:48 - 11:52The future is going to be different.
-
11:53 - 11:54And the core question is:
-
11:54 - 11:56What are we all going to do about it?
-
11:56 - 12:00What I do is very simple:
I believe in full-contact investing. -
12:01 - 12:04So I looked at HTML 5
about a year ago, and I said, -
12:04 - 12:07"This thing could be really important.
How do I find out?" -
12:07 - 12:09So my band, Moonalice,
-
12:09 - 12:12which, a couple years ago,
did an album with T Bone Burnett, -
12:12 - 12:15that we thought was going to be
a huge hit and blah, blah, blah ... -
12:15 - 12:20Well, we learned that nobody cared about
hippie music done by old folks, so -- -
12:20 - 12:21(Laughter)
-
12:21 - 12:24So we put it all onto the net,
went on Facebook and Twitter. -
12:24 - 12:26We started doing things
called "Twittercasts," -
12:26 - 12:28the first live concerts
and then prerecorded concerts, -
12:28 - 12:30distributed over Twitter.
-
12:30 - 12:33Then we started using live stream,
the same thing we're using here today, -
12:33 - 12:35to do internet-based
live video of our shows. -
12:35 - 12:38And then recently, we bought
a satellite network. -
12:38 - 12:42Why? 'Cause it cost less than three months
of what our manager used to cost. -
12:42 - 12:43(Laughter)
-
12:43 - 12:47And right now, we broadcast
every one of our shows -- -
12:47 - 12:48other than the U2 show --
-
12:48 - 12:51live, in HTML 5,
-
12:51 - 12:52via satellite,
-
12:52 - 12:54in a system we totally control.
-
12:56 - 13:00We have an app that's about to ship
within the next month. -
13:00 - 13:04It's -- "app" is the wrong term;
our website is being upgraded to HTML 5. -
13:04 - 13:08And in it, you will be able,
from any phone, anywhere, -
13:08 - 13:10to play any song we've ever played live
-
13:10 - 13:12and view any live video that we have,
-
13:12 - 13:14which is 150, 200 shows.
-
13:15 - 13:18Now, it cost practically
nothing to do this. -
13:19 - 13:21And we're this teeny-weeny little band.
-
13:22 - 13:25Now, I know more about technology
than most people, -
13:25 - 13:29but that's just because I know
more than most people who are 55. -
13:29 - 13:32But people who are 18 to 20,
who live in this world, -
13:32 - 13:34are going to be able
to use these platforms -
13:34 - 13:35in music and everywhere else
-
13:35 - 13:37in a fundamentally different way.
-
13:38 - 13:40I think creativity is coming back.
-
13:40 - 13:42Moonalice is something
that's built around that. -
13:42 - 13:45We have poster artists
for every single show. -
13:45 - 13:48We have photographers who work
every show, we have painters. -
13:48 - 13:53And the notion is, I believe
that creativity has been stifled, -
13:53 - 13:55not so much by technology,
-
13:55 - 14:00but by the general deterioration
of American culture -- -
14:00 - 14:02you know, people's unwillingness
to be educated, -
14:02 - 14:08this notion that we have to fall back
on ritual and beliefs, instead of facts. -
14:08 - 14:11But I think technology is finally
going to do us a favor. -
14:12 - 14:17I think it's finally going to give us
the tools to make us independent. -
14:17 - 14:19And there's little glimmers, right?
-
14:19 - 14:20We see the Arab Spring
-
14:20 - 14:23and the impact that Twitter
and Facebook had. -
14:24 - 14:26Pretty exciting.
-
14:26 - 14:28But imagine a world
-
14:29 - 14:33in which everything is an app.
-
14:33 - 14:37In HTML 5, digital Detroit
gets replaced by this thing -
14:37 - 14:39where every tweet is an app,
-
14:39 - 14:42every advertisement
is an instance of a store. -
14:43 - 14:44Think about what that means.
-
14:45 - 14:47So instead of seeing an Amazon display ad,
-
14:47 - 14:50you see the store, say,
on the New York Times Book Review. -
14:51 - 14:55You can both create demand
and satisfy it in the same place. -
14:55 - 14:57Why?
-
14:57 - 14:58Because that's better for everybody.
-
14:58 - 15:01Saves time, increases engagement,
-
15:01 - 15:03because it keeps you on the page.
-
15:03 - 15:07We're going from a web of elevators,
-
15:07 - 15:11where you go to different places,
and you go off sites and you lose people, -
15:11 - 15:13to a control panel model.
-
15:13 - 15:15And guess who's going to make it?
-
15:16 - 15:17You are.
-
15:17 - 15:18Thank you very much.
-
15:18 - 15:21(Applause)
- Title:
- Six ways to save the internet
- Speaker:
- Roger McNamee
- Description:
-
The next big shift is now, and it's not what you think: Facebook is the new Windows; Google must be sacrificed. Tech investor Roger McNamee presents six bold ways to prepare for the next internet.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 15:33
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Brian Greene accepted English subtitles for 6 ways to save the internet | |
![]() |
Brian Greene edited English subtitles for 6 ways to save the internet | |
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Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for 6 ways to save the internet | |
![]() |
Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for 6 ways to save the internet |