Obama makes play for videogamers (AFP)

Obama makes play for videogamers (AFP)

AFP - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has made a play for online videogamers, placing campaign advertisements in a series of popular titles from videogame giant Electronic Arts. Full text

OK, so I'm a tech Pollyanna. Sue me (CNET)

2008.10.06 - Technology - Source: RSS.NEWS.YAHOO.COM - Comments [0]

By Charles Cooper, CNET 1 hour, 15 minutes ago

You know that it's grim out there when the television talking heads report that the stock market only finished down 369 on a day when it fell as low as 800 points.

With banks disappearing, liquidity drying up and the political class clueless about events overtaking the economy, this is what a crisis looks like. If you want a good primer on the origins of what's now turning into a global credit crunch, check out the primer, courtesy of "60 Minutes," that I've embedded at the bottom of this post.

The $64,000 question (now $32,000 and falling) is the impact on the technology industry. So it is that just today, the following items came in on the transom:

: • SAP issued a third quarter warning

: • Netflix lowered its quarterly outlook

: • Another Wall Street house cut estimates on Yahoo

:• eBay announced plans to lay off 1,000 employees

Heading into the teeth of earnings season, the news won't be much more encouraging. At best, it promises to be a rough patch. At worst, who knows? The VIX, a volatility index, has climbed to levels today which now basically price in the coming of Armageddon. OK, we've seen better times. But before jumping off a ledge, some historical context is in order.

The pendulum swings both ways. Fact is that we've been here before, folks. Not in the exact same circumstances, of course, but in an atmosphere where the fashion of the day favored sackcloth and ashes.

Remember the Oct. 1987 crash? In its aftermath, technology companies couldn't get the time of day from investors. Back then, I was a young reporter and was amazed that it didn't seem to matter that companies like Apple or IBM had beaten expectations. Their stocks would still get creamed. The herd simply was too frightened to think past the headlines du jour.

But Silicon Valley kept doing what it always does, inventing better hardware and software. Venture capitalists regained their nerves, entrepreneurs got funded and innovation flourished.

More people have fresher memories of the Internet bubble burst. That was an especially ugly time as tech got nearly obliterated after 2000. For a while, it seemed the weekly additions to the Dead Pool of former high flyers would never end. But as bad as it got, that was only a brief chapter in the longer-running story of the computer industry. Normalcy returned and market valuations - for real companies, not the fakers - would later recover.

As the author of Ecclesiastes wrote a long time ago, there is nothing new under the sun. Clich?' or not, take that advice to heart in the days and weeks ahead. It may come in handy.

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