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The real king

BearOnBusiness [1]and Telecosm [2] are discussing whether content is king of the network, so let me put my two cents in. Most content is like most people and like most things in this world, it follows rather than leads.  It flows downhill via the path of least resistance – in fact it is a watery analogy I will rely on here.  Is water king?  Or are the pipes king?  Neither, it is the valves that rule them both.

Valves?  What the heck am I talking about?  Valves, or groups of them, regulate the direction, speed, and destination of water within the pipes, in the internet one would perhaps call them vectors: how the content gets from the creator to the viewer.

Ask yourself what has driven internet growth during each internet era.  What has disrupted the content supply chain?  Was it content? Was it the pipes?

It is innovation that is king of the internet, content will always follow innovation.  Why?  Because the internet is not about producing new stuff nor is it about bigger and bigger pipes, it is about enabling new vectors between content and eyeballs – the rest are just consequences.  Invent a new vector, and you too might be king.  For a year or two anyway.  Valves get replaced frequently, and *that* is the threat the cable companies face, because they are a valve.  They used to be a disruptive one that played havoc with broadcast TV, but that was then.

6 Comments (Open | Close)

6 Comments To "The real king"

#1 Comment By tech101 On June 4, 2008 @ 11:40 am

The idea reads intuitive and enlightning.

Thanks.

#2 Comment By Transit Broker On June 5, 2008 @ 8:01 am

“Search – Google really is king right now, yet owns no content and no pipes. Search has proven to be the ultimate vector because it is so easy to monetize relative to others, and Google remains king because of it.”

Google has a ton of dark fiber across the US and is investing in a major undersea cable.

See:

#3 Comment By Transit Broker On June 5, 2008 @ 8:02 am

[3]

#4 Comment By Rob Powell On June 5, 2008 @ 10:58 am

Yes, I’ve heard that Google is doing these things thanks for the clarification, but I would say that it is more for future plans. Any fiber they now have is not really part of why they came to be the ‘king’. 🙂

#5 Comment By FAC On June 5, 2008 @ 3:22 pm

An interesting analogy, Rob. Your use of water flowing downhill, I mean, a classic form of imagery used in describing the Taoist principle of wu wei. However, in my opinion neither water nor pipe nor valve can be crowned king in the context you are ascribing here. The throne in this case is reserved for gravity.

Consider, New York City’s drinking water supply comes from upstate watersheds and travels more than a hundred miles through tunnels and pipes. It’s all gravity fed without the aid of a single pumping station, although there are some very large valves used for emergency shut-offs and for keeping brackish water from entering the supply from the Hudson River.

And yet, if you’re living below the fourt floor in a building in NY City, water is being delivered to you courtesy of Sir Isaac Newton.

Extending your analogy one step further, gravity can be likened to the very essence of the need we all have to communicate. We, the end user population, are king, as it were. So let’s all of us take a bow, everybody. Let’s all congratulate ourselves.

#6 Pingback By Content taken down a peg On July 8, 2008 @ 8:40 am

[…] counterbalanced by a an accelerated decline in traditional media.  Now, some readers might recall a post of mine a few weeks ago where I argued that neither content nor pipes are king of the internet.  I feel […]