- 3D's Tipping Point and Your Living Room
- Silicon Valley and Hollywood Now Fast Friends
- HP Comes in As Expected; Is It Time to Buy?
- Apple Comes to AT&T's Rescue
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- Dell Has Some Explaining to Do
- Dell May Start to Show Some Promise
- Has Twitter's Finest Hours (Seconds) Come and Gone?
- Intel's Andy Bryant Offers An Explanation
MOST SHARED
- The Executive Job Search
- Where Do Pardoned Turkeys Go?
- Chinese Overcapacity is Worsening, EU Chamber Warns
- Salvation Army's Kettles Now Credit Card-Ready
- Activision Prepares to Double Dip on ‘Modern Warfare 2’
- US Mint to Suspend American Eagle Gold 1-Ounce Coins
- Wal-Mart Price Pressure Hurts China Workers: Report
- Judge Erases Couple's $525,000 Mortgage Payment
- Topless Business Is Taking Off
- 4 Thanksgiving Week Buys For Your Portfolio: Market Pros
- There's a 'Great Chance' For a Double-Dip Recession: Strategist
- Revenge of the Gangsta Nerds
- Will TCU See The "Flutie Effect?"
- Retail Earnings and Sales to Improve in Q4: Analyst
- Consumers Catching the Holiday Spirit
- It's Beginning To Look A Lot More Riskless
- Crescenzi: Claims Level Suggests End to Job Losses
- Hedge Funds Take Early Lead in Warren Buffett's 'Big Bet'
- Dubai Seeks Debt Delay, Stokes Default Fears
- China Overcapacity Worsening, EU Chamber Warns
- Investing in Good Karma – and Making a Profit
- China Unveils Carbon Target Ahead of Copenhagen
- Wal-Mart Price Pressure Hurts China Workers: Report
- Black Friday to Avoid Red Ink; Greenback Gets the Blues
- Bankruptcies Jump, Hitting Highest Level in Four Years
- Steepest Black Friday Discounts, Revealed
- Where Do Pardoned Turkeys Go?
RSS FEED
Tech Check
Today's Netflix announcement with Roku about a new way to get movies from the net directly to your TV screen and bypassing the computer screen in your home office, is cool for a number of reasons.
![]() |
AP |
Sure the news popped Netflix shares in a big way before they settled back at the end of the day, but the story goes much deeper. It speaks to a massive trend gripping technology nowadays, and it's being embraced by Apple [AAPL
Loading...
()
], Google [GOOG
Loading...
()
], Yahoo [YHOO
Loading...
()
], Microsoft [MSFT
Loading...
()
], Oracle [ORCL
Loading...
()
], Cisco [CSCO
Loading...
()
], Intel [INTC
Loading...
()
], VMWare [VMW
Loading...
()
], and just about every other major player in tech. Netflix's announcement is a different spin on the concept of "cloud computing," that lofty idea of everything you'd ever want or need stored on a computer network or server elsewhere instead of on a drive inside your own computer.
The personal computer is "personal" no more. More like a vessel into a different, though parallel, plane. It harkens back to the glory days of Sun Microsystems when Scott McNealy, who was way ahead of his time, kept telling us "the network is the computer." Which made infinitely more sense than Ed Zander proclaiming, later as Sun's CEO, that "we're the dot in dot com." But I digress.
Back to Netflix, and all the others. We're rapidly approaching a time when memory is becoming obsolete. Not computer memory, but ours. A time when everything we need to know is a keystroke or two away. A time when watching a movie or TV show means logging on to the net and having the material wirelessly beamed to any TV, or laptop, or handset we might have laying around. Where the net becomes a massive Tivo not just for entertainment but any kind of data. AppleTV, Sony [SNE
Loading...
()
], Roku, Intel, Comcast [CMCSK
Loading...
()
], AT&T [T
Loading...
()
], Time-Warner, News Corp.[NWS
Loading...
()
], and certainly our parent NBCUniversal and General Electric [GE
Loading...
()
]. They're all doing it.
This is why Cisco's acquisition of Scientific Atlanta a few years back was such a stroke of genius. And why big server farms -- and the networking and memory companies equipping them -- and the security companies trying to protect them, are such compelling investor plays right now.
Google unveiled its Google Health yesterday. Another example of key data migrating its way out of your PC and your doctor's office and into the netherworld of Google's vast electronic data storage.
HP is buying Electronic Data Systems [EDS
Loading...
()
] for $13 billion. And IBM [IBM
Loading...
()
] is already a services powerhouse generating $57 billion in revenue from that part of its business. All of this business will need managing and service, and HP is trying to get a bigger piece of the IBM pie because of it.
Back to Netflix and its deal with Roku today. Sure, it's a fun little story that'll give us a neat way to buy movies. But it's the tip of the iceberg. Investors with their heads in the clouds may miss out on a longer-term trend that's beginning to show dividends now. And with such a massive trend gaining traction today, the sky is quite literally the limit.
Questions? Comments?









