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Bill Sodeman writes about management, mobile computing and information systems

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Delta, Northwest Airlines may merge this week

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Posted Sunday, 13 April 2008

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According to the Wall Street Journal and Reuters, Delta and Northwest Airlines may announce a merger within the next 48 hours. The New York Daily News had a similar report yesterday. Last month’s merger attempt failed when Delta’s 6000 pilots rejected the proposal. DAL and NWA may press ahead this time, regardless of the pilots.

The merger would create the world’s largest airline. Delta and Northwest have been linked for years through code sharing and marketing agreements.

No word on what the combined airline might be named. Creating a new brand is risky and expensive. The usual pattern is for the stronger airline to provide the branding, although America West decided to adopt the US Airways brand after their merger. TWA didn’t exist for very long after its merger with American.

Both airlines fly into Honolulu. In this morning’s Honolulu Advertiser, there’s a long front page article about a possible reduction in the airport’s modernization plans. Honolulu needs a better airport. The current facility wasn’t built to handle long lines of passengers in the security screening areas. Moving sidewalks, more buses and a train system are key success factors for large international airports. No one flies to Honolulu to visit the airport, of course, but the airport is the first and last thing that visitors to Honolulu will see before they leave the state.

Sure, there’s a 14% dip in passenger seats after Aloha and ATA closed down. Other airlines will fill the gap. Hawaiian and United have already added flights. I’d expect a combined DAL-NWA would follow suit.

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Tags: airline, airport, Aloha, brand, government, Hawaii, Honolulu, marketing, USA

MySpace keeps trying to sell music downloads

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Posted Sunday, 13 April 2008

Smells like… depseration! The New York Times reports that three of the largest recording companies will sell digital music through an updated MySpace music store. ReadWriteWeb has more details on the updated store, which EMI is avoiding for now.

While MySpace does have a large user base, the site can’t offer the easy integration that Apple’s iPod and iTunes have developed.

Previous efforts like Helio might have survived if MySpace had done a better job with its earlier music sales sites. See this 4 September 2006 New York Times article and an earlier article from Mashable for more details.

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Tags: Apple, audio, e-commerce, helio, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, MP3, music, mvno, myspace, network, social, value-chain, video