Jing is one of my favourite things.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/islandinthenet/feed/~3/201216968/

Maybe because this is one of my favourite childhood songs or maybe just because… but I really like this.

We do know that if you want to meet the Jing team in a new light, check out the music video. Oh–and we apologize if this song gets stuck in your head and friends and colleagues start giving you strange looks… 

(Via Start the Singing! Jing 1.4 is Out the Door! (Jing Blog).)

Jing is one of my favourite things.

Maybe because this is one of my favourite childhood songs or maybe just because... but I really like this.

We do know that if you want to meet the Jing team in a new light, check out the music video. Oh--and we apologize if this song gets stuck in your head and friends and colleagues start giving you strange looks… 

(Via Start the Singing! Jing 1.4 is Out the Door! (Jing Blog).)

Yahoo! Music player fails to impress the Street.

Over on The Street, Jim Cramer has this to say about the Yahoo! Music Player made by SanDisk.

The morning paper gives you the best reason why. Check out this one for irony. On the front page of The Wall Street Journal's B section, the headline is simple: "A New Wireless Player Hopes to Challenge iPod."

That's all well and good. Yahoo!'s got a big installed base. SanDisk (SNDK - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr - Rating), its partner, has some clout.

But then turn to the back page. You will see something that tells you about the success, or lack thereof, of this new venture: A heart made up of iPods and two lines -- "100 million iPods sold. Thanks to music lovers everywhere."

It's called "installed base." It tells you all you need to know about where Yahoo! stands, which is nowhere.

I have to say I agree with Cramer. The iPod's success is driven by great design, ease of use and access to an ever growing catalog of music, movies and television shows. This is what Rule #1 Investor, Phil Town, calls a durable competitive advantage or "moat". Just like a castle moat presents challenges to invaders, the iPods installed base protects the iPod. The iPod has become the dominant platform and as such will be as difficult to unseat as Microsoft.