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Mark Evans

the blog - examines the world of telecom  and  technology  from  a distinctly Canadian perspective.

the person - lives in Toronto, CA with  his  wife  and  three children, and  works  as director of community with PlanetEye Inc.
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View Article  Blog-arism Rears its Ugly Head
As a journalist, committing plagarism is the death penalty. This is why I'm fascinated with Crunchnotes' nasty war with Josh Stomel, who has been stealing Michael Arrington's work and posting it as his own. This guy claims he didn't mean to steal and blames his stealing on being too busy, his newness to blogging, and the fact he "writes" during the day and then edits his work at night. That's as lame as it gets. Stomel has lost his credibility and, I think, his right to blog. You knew sooner or later plagarism would rear its ugly head on the blogosphere but this is such a blatant example of blog-arism, it will likely become the example on what not to do. See you later, Josh!
View Article  Canadians Blase About E-Commerce

Why is it that Canadians are among the world's most enthusiastic users of high-speed Internet service but less than keen about e-commerce? According to eMarketer analyst Jeffrey Grau, the Canadian market is "caught in a demoralizing supply-demand cycle that is impeding market development and leaving its vulnerable to U.S. competition. There is little to buy online, so consumers don't make purchases electronically. And retailers, observing low demand, have no incentive to build retail Web sites." Translation: it's your classic Catch-22 situation where consumers don't shop due to the lack of retailers, and retailers don't sell because of the lack of buyers. I ran into this problem first-hand last week when trying to order flowers for my sister's birthday. I must have spent 30 minutes looking for a e-commerce store that could deliver flowers to Whitehorse but was frustrated by high shipping costs and the lack of Canadian-focused retailers selling in Canadian dollars. That said, Taylor Nelson Softres expects e-commerce sales in Canada to climb 20% to $1.8-billion this year. The leading e-commerce sites in Canada are Sears.ca, Futureshop.ca, Indigo.ca, Amazon.ca and Canadiantire.ca. eMarketer said the popularity of the leading U.S. e-commerce sites - Overstock.com, Shopzilla.com, Apple.com and Yahoo! stores - have not crossed the border. You can blame that situation on high shipping costs (hey, we're living across the border, not across the ocean!) and duty slapped by Canada Customs at the border.

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View Article  AOL-Google: A Done Deal; Now What?
The most straightforward part of Google's investment in AOL were the terms: 5% for a cool $1-billion. Now comes the hard part as the two high-profile companies figure out how to work with each other. Clearly, this isn't a passive investment for Google. Instead, it's a partnership that could lead to much bigger things. There is already evidence the partnership is already in full swing with Google Talk to work with AOL's AIM instant messenger. AOL will let more of its content to be searchable via Google, which makes you wonder if AOL content will receive preferential treatment. Google will also feature AOL content on Google Video, which raises the preferential treatment question again. So is this the big deal everyone was expecting from Google with its $7 billion war chest and $127-billion market capitalization? Does Google double down (or more) on AOL to establish itself as a content player to take on Yahoo while giving itself more AdSense-friendly properties. Or does Google have another big trick up its sleeve? This is what makes Google such fascinating fodder strategically. At this point in the game, it's impossible to tell what Page and Brin are going to do.
My blog has moved. Check out the new Mark Evans. It's part of my mini-blog empire that also includes All About Nortel and Twitterrati. You can subscribe to Mark Evans Tech by clicking on the RSS symbol above.
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