Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thankfulness

Will Rogers Park, BH, CA
It is Thanksgiving Day here in America, and there is so much that we all globally can be thankful for.
On this day, I ask that we all take a moment and list 3 things that we are thankful for. Gratitude goes a long way! Enjoy your Thanksgiving Day, America!
Smooches, Carla

Friday, November 18, 2011

Land Rover | Jaguar | LA Auto Show 2011

   
Land Rover Design Team
 
As far back as I can remember, I've always loved cars.
Now, to me, the Whips(Autos) that are captured in these photos are what driving up the Coast to
San Francisco,  via Pacific Coast Hwy(PCH),
and down the PCH to San Diego, is, well, how it should be done, Honey.

Go big, or stay home...

Rodeo Drive was all a glow with the Land Rovers neatly parked bumper to bumper, all around Via Rodeo, and Darling, Lena Cole Dennis and I had a blast! The evening was lovely! Land Rover | Jaguar had a Red Carpet Event, closing off the entire area, restaurants and all, for the opportunity of VIP Clients to view, sit and touch the latest Land Rover and Jaguar Concepts, a few days before the public gets a chance to do the same at the much anticipated
LA Auto Show, which opened today (Nov 18 - 27, 2011).

Jaguar XKR-S Convertible, Baby...So sleek and so smooth until it ought to have its own back up singers....



Richard, Design Team Member, Land Rover
Defender- DC 100 Sport
& Carla Thomas Nov 2011

When I saw this yellow Land Rover's DC 100, I thought, "Look at this beautiful Surf & Turf vehicle! (see yellow dream of driving to the beach vehicle)
I chatted it up a bit with Richard, of Land Rover UK, and he agreed. But for the record, Richard Woolley, Studio Director for Advance Designs at Land Rover said, "The Defender has been around for 63 years.
It doesn't belong to Land Rover, it belongs to the World."
Okay? Smooches, C


The Jaguar XKR- S, Defender DC 100 and Defender DC 100 Sports (Powder Blue) concepts are on display for all to experience - now.

Do yourself a favor and get on over and see with your own eyes, more than 50 Debuts of Whips(Autos)
 on display:  LA Auto Show | 1201 S. Figueroa Street, LA, CA 90015| Hours and Admissions: $8:00 - $12.00 | Sat 9am - 10pm, Sun 9am - 8pm, M-T-W 11am - 10pm, Turkey Day 9am-8pm, Fri-Sat 9am - 10pm, Sun 9am - 8pm

Sunday, November 13, 2011

2011 Governors Awards ~ Congratulations Oprah Winfrey, James Earl Jones and Dick Smith!

Congratulations are in order to the 2011 Governors Awards recipients, James Earl Jones, Dick Smith and Oprah Winfrey!

Honey, the Force was with James Earl Jones a.k.a. Darth Vader!
Mr Jones is currently starring live on stage at at the London Wyndhams Theater in the play "Driving Miss Daisy" with
Vanessa Redgrave - Oh, I love me some Vanessa Redgrave. Okay, let me stay focused!

Mr. Jones, who is 80 years old, teaches us all that one can continue loving the arts, being very disciplined, participating rigorously, proving the theory that one can do what they wish if they put their mind to it - no matter what age. Hats off to you, James Earl Jones - you are amazing!
Well, apparently Sir Ben Kingsley popped in for a visit at the London Wyndhams Theater, and presented James Earl Jones with his Honorary Oscar.  When asked his thoughts on his prestigious award, Mr. Jones sincerely said " I am deeply honored, mighty grateful and just plain gobsmacked." - how fabulous is that?

Dick Smith, Makeup Artist Extraordinaire, can truly beat a face into submission! Dick Smith puts the drama in every facial expression that Don Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) made in the film, "Godfather"
(1971, and "Godfather Part II"  in 1973). How about that wild child running wild, in that dark movie
 "The Exorcist" (1973)?
Dick Smith made Willy Clark (Walter Matthau) look old as Methuselah (Biblical character that lived to be 969 years old) in the film, "The Sunshine Boys"(1975). Who can forget how fine Sandman Williams (Gregory Hines) and Dixie Dwyer (Richard Gere), Vera Cicero (Diane Lane), Lila Rose Silver
(Lonette McKee ) to name a few characters in the film, "The Cotton Club (1984)! I could go on and on!

Oprah Winfrey - Congratulations on receiving the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award!
God's thoughts are not our thoughts - HE is way ahead of us! Oprah got an Oscar for loving people. How great is that?!
Do you know how long we've been rooting for you?
John Travolta said, " The Academy got it right" when it chose the media mogul to receive the
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, calling her "the most wonderful person in the world, the most magical person in the world and the most powerful person in the world."

What is so amazing about Oprah is that she kept in mind the fact that there is so much work to do in this world. We can make a difference starting from right where we are - today.

We are familiar with the Ancient Chinese Proverb - "Give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime." (6th-5th BCE Chinese philosopher, 老子 Lǎozǐ or Lao Tzu 道德經)
This is what Oprah Winfrey, via her actions - not words - but actions, have proven - knowing in her spirit that she is "her brother's keeper." If a child in America, Africa, Asia - anywhere in this world,  is going to bed each night Mother-less, Father-less, disease ridden, and hungry, then that should concern us all.

There are several ways that we can help make this place a better place, and Oprah has provided food, clothing and shelter, along with better opportunities for our youth via education. By providing scholarships for so many children - 65,000, to be exact, Oprah has and will continue to be an "Architect of Change" - Thus proving that one can be a blessing to so many people, making a difference in this world - Now.

Smooches, Carla
All photos are the sole property of The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences and  or Oprah.com.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Lessons From the Failure of Flash: Greed Kills

Adobe's decision to stop development of mobile Flash has deservedly gotten a lot of attention online.  It's a sad story for Adobe and Flash developers: a dominating standard on the PC web failed to get traction in mobile, and will now be abandoned gradually in favor of HTML 5.  But the story's not limited to mobile -- without a mobile growth path, I think Flash itself is destined to become a dwindling legacy standard everywhere (link).  I think the whole Flash business edifice is coming down.

How did Flash go from leader to loser?  There are a lot of explanations being floated online. Erica Ogg at GigaOm has a good list (link):

--Mobile flash didn't work very well
--It was opposed by powerful people like Steve Jobs
--It was out-competed by HTML 5

(And by the way, how in the world do you get out-competed by something as slow-moving as HTML 5?)

I agree with Erica, but it's more a list of symptoms than root causes.  It's like saying an airplane crashed because the wings fell off.  Yes, that's true, but why did the wings fall off?  If you look for root causes of the Flash failure, I think they go back many years to a fundamental misreading of the mobile market, and to short-term revenue goals that were more important than long-term strategy at both Macromedia and Adobe.

In other words, Flash didn't just die.  It was managed into oblivion.

The story of Flash is a great cautionary tale for companies that want to create and control software platforms, so it's worth looking at more closely.


A quick, oversimplified history of Flash

In the software world, there is an inherent conflict between setting a broad standard and making money.  If you have good software technology and you're willing to give it away, you can get people to adopt it very broadly, but you will go broke in the process.  On the other hand, if you charge money for your technology, you can stay in business, but it's very hard to get it broadly adopted as a standard because people don't want to lock themselves into paying you.

Clever software companies have long realized that you can work around this conflict by giving away one technology to make it a standard, and then charging for something else related to it.  For example, many open source software companies give away their core product, but charge for hosting and support and other services.  Android is another example -- it's a free operating system for mobile phone manufacturers, but if you use it in your phone Google also tries to coerce you into bundling its services, which extract revenue from your customers. 

In the case of Flash, the player software was given away for free on the web, and Macromedia (the owner of Flash at the time) made its money by selling Flash content development tools.  The free Flash player eventually took on two roles on the web: it was the preferred way to create artistically-sophisticated web content, including an active subculture of online gaming, and it became one of the most popular ways to play video.  Flash reached a point of critical mass where most people felt they just had to have the player installed in their browser.  It became a de facto standard on the web.

Enter Japan Inc., carrying cash.
  The rise of mobile devices changed the situation for Flash.  Long before today's smartphones, with their sophisticated web browsers, Japan was the center of mobile phone innovation, and the dominant player there was NTT DoCoMo, with its proprietary iMode phone platform.  The folks at DoCoMo wanted to create more compelling multimedia experiences for their iMode phones, and so in early 2003 they licensed Macromedia's Flash Lite, the mobile version of Flash, for inclusion in iMode phones (link).

The deal was a breakthrough for Macromedia.  Instead of giving away the flash client, the way it had on the PC, Macromedia could charge for the client, have it forced into the hands of every user, and continue to also make money selling development tools.  The company had found a way to have its cake and eat it too!  In late 2004, the iMode deal was extended worldwide (link), and I'm sure Macromedia had visions of global domination.

Unfortunately for Flash, Japan is a unique phone market, and DoCoMo is a unique operator.  The DoCoMo deal could not be duplicated on most phone platforms other than iMode.  Macromedia, and later Adobe, was now trapped by its own success.  To make Flash Lite a standard in mobile, it would have needed to give away the player, undercutting its lucrative DoCoMo deal.  When you have a whole business unit focused on making money from licensing the player, giving it away would mean missing revenue projections and laying off a lot of people.  Macromedia chose the revenue, and Flash Lite never became a mobile standard.

Without fully realizing it, Macromedia had undermined the business model for Flash itself. The more popular mobile became, the weaker Flash would be.

Enter the modern smartphone.  Jump forward to 2007, when the iPhone and other modern smartphones made full mobile web browsing practical.  Adobe, by now the owner of Flash, was completely unprepared to respond.  Even if it started giving away Flash Lite, the player had been designed for limited-function feature phones and could not duplicate the full PC Flash experience.  Meanwhile, the full Flash player had been designed for PCs; it was too fat to run well on a smartphone.  So the full web had moved to a place where Adobe could not follow.  The ubiquity of the Flash standard was broken by Adobe itself.

To make things worse, Adobe was by then in the midst of a strategy to upgrade Flash into a full programming layer for mobile devices, a project called Apollo (later renamed AIR).  The promise of AIR was to make all operating systems irrelevant by separating them from their applications.  At the time, I thought Adobe's strategy was very clever (link), but the implementation turned out to be woefully slow. 

So here's what Adobe did to itself:  By mismanaging the move to full mobile browsing, it demonstrated that customers were willing to live with a mobile browser that could not display Flash.  Then, by declaring its intent to take over the mobile platform world, Adobe alarmed the other platform companies, especially Apple.  This gave them both the opportunity and the incentive to crush mobile Flash.

Which is exactly what they did.


The lesson: Don't be greedy

There are a couple of lessons from this experience.  The first is that when you've established a free standard, charging money for it puts your whole business at risk.  Contrast the Flash experience to PDF, another standard Adobe established.  Unlike Flash, Adobe progressively gave up more and more control over the PDF standard, to the point where competitors can easily create their own PDF writers, and in fact Microsoft bundles one with Windows Office.  Despite the web community's broad hostility for PDF, it continues to be a de facto standard in computing.  There is no possible way for Adobe to make money directly from the PDF reader, but its Acrobat PDF management and generation business continues to bring in revenue.

The second lesson is that you have to align your business structure with your strategy.  I think Macromedia made a fundamental error by putting mobile Flash into its own business unit.  Adobe continued the error by creating a separate mobile BU when it bought Macromedia (link).  That structure meant the mobile Flash team was forced to make money from the player.  If the player and flash development tools had been in the same BU, management might have at least had a chance to trade off player revenue to grow the tools business.


What can Adobe do now?

The Adobe folks say the discontinuation of mobile flash is just an exercise in focus (link).  They point out that developers can still create apps using Flash and compile them for mobile devices, and that Flash is still alive on the desktop.  Viewed from the narrow perspective of the situation that Adobe faces in late 2011, the changes to Flash probably are prudent.  But judged against Adobe's promise to create an "an industry-defining technology platform" when it bought Macromedia in 2005 (link), it's hard to call the current situation anything other than a failure.

I think it's clear that Flash as a platform is dying; the end of the mobile Flash player has disillusioned many of its most passionate supporters.  You can hear them cussing here and here. Flash compatibility will continue to live on in AIR and other web content development tools, of course, but now that Adobe doesn't control the player, I think it will have trouble giving its tools any particular advantage.

What Adobe should do is start contributing aggressively to HTML 5, to upgrade it into the full web platform that AIR was originally supposed to be.  That's a role no one in the industry has taken ownership of, web developers are crying out for it, and Adobe implies that's what it will do.  But I've heard these broad statements from Adobe before, and usually the implementation has fallen far short of the promises.  At this point, I doubt Adobe has the vision and agility to pull it off.  Most likely it will retreat to what it has always been at the core: a maker of software tools for artistically-inclined creative people.  It's a nice stable niche, but it's nothing like the dominant leadership role that Adobe once aspired to.

On a Thursday....



It's very very cloudy in Beverly Hills this morning, but for some reason, it is warm. Yep. It is 74°F | °C and the day was promised to be Sunny. Oh well, things could be worse, huh? Well,
I guess it would be time for all to head for a nice spot in the city that feels like ....home...The Paley Center For Media -
I know that's where I'll be today..I'll tell you all about it later..Smooches, Carla

Saturday, November 5, 2011

The Brotherhood Crusade Pioneer Awards Ceremony 2011 Honors Attorney General Kamala Harris ~

Attorney General Kamala Harris
You want to talk about an outstanding  Pioneer? On January 3, 2011, Kamala D. Harris was sworn in as the 32nd Attorney General.
Last evening, the Brotherhood Crusade honored Attorney General Kamala Harris at the Brotherhood Crusade
Annual Award Ceremony at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, in Beverly Hills, CA.
The Brotherhood Crusade (originally known as the Black Congress), founded in 1968, by the late Walter Bremond, and institutionalized by Danny Bakewell Sr., and we must add Berry Gordy, who's been there from the beginning - hats off to you gentlemen!

Founded in South Los Angeles, with the seed money ($15,000.00) that was gathered, the facts are the
 Brotherhood Crusade has mainly been
"Focusing on building and sustaining an institution that raises funds and resources from in the community and distributes the funds directly back into the community."

For the past 42 years the 5O1c(3) organization has had made a tremendous impact on thousands of youths who have be involved in the various programs, such as Soccer Program For Youth (free for ages 6-18, uniforms, equipment and healthy snacks provided) and G.R.Y.D. Program (Gang Reduction & Youth Development) at no cost. Keep in mind this is for the community, and they rely on contributions for those who wish to start doing something to make a difference, okay? Now, back to what I was saying...

Mr. Bremond, and Danny Bakewell, secured every stepping stone, every building block and took pride in the organization and through their resources made the foundation expand and grow. Charisse Bremond-Weaver is now at the helms of the organization and running it beautifully. She has a team that backs her 100% and though they all have different titles and duties, they all work together as a conscious team to make this world a better place, starting with their community, and that is truly a beautiful thing!

Charisse Bremond-Weaver - President

Re-cap of the evening:
Reverend Carolyn Tyler Guidry opened up the evening with a beautiful heartfelt, thoughtful prayer. Then the two MCs - Chris Shauble of KTLAs Co- Anchor of the Morning News, along with Pat Prescott of 94.7 the Wave, kept us all thourally engaged the entire evening!  Danny Bakewell so eloquently saluted those who dedicated worked tirelessly to enhance the quality of life for African Americans, mentioning Berry Gordy and his better half  - who looks fit and fabulous -
 Mr. George Beubian(Posthumous), Ms. Bertha Bremond, Mr. Cliff McClain, Mr. R.J. "Dave" Davidson, Mr. Karl Key Hemima, Dr. George McKenna, III,  Bishop H. Hartford Brookins, Ms. Lillian Mobley(Posthumous)What a lovely surprise to see Wendy Raquel  Robinson's Amazing Grace Conservatory danced through the aisles, and took the stage - they ROCKED IT!
Those Young, Gifted and Black children could sing and dance!

Will Downing got up on that stage and had women and men standing up and rocking to his mellifluous voice! Will Downing sang "I Go Crazy",  Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On?", Angela Bofill's " I Try". Pick up Will's cds "After Tonight" and "God is Amazing" - you will be glad you did!
Ginger Campbell of Snap Productions, you've done it again! You are an amazing woman and Snap Productions did the darn thing! Pamela Johnson - great job!

There is more to come regarding this fabulous event!...Smooches, Carla

Thursday, November 3, 2011

World Fashion Week Welcoming Gala ~ NYC 11.11.11

There is truly so much to see and do and to learn in the fashion industry. Oh, but between you and I, fashion is forever! This video comes our way via my friend, the beautiful, fabulous multi-talented Actress, Model and all around Glamour Girl - Fumi Desalu-Vold,  in Oslo, Norway! 
Check out what's to come our way~ via New York City on 11.11.11
Smooches, Carla