Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

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Portroids – Portraits shot on Polaroids

via flickr.com

Also check out www.portroids.com

Posted via web from rickwilliams’s posterous

Bacon FAIL

Posted via web from rickwilliams’s posterous

Rainy Day

Posted via web from rickwilliams’s posterous

Linqia launches as a social network marketplace

Here’s how Linqia works.

If you have social networks on one hand and potential commercial partners on the other, Linqia is design to be a marketplace where the two can meet for sponsor partnerships or whatever. One of the partners it’s been working with has been Nike which has a new shoe for golfers. It needed to reach social networks, so Linqia worked with its agency on a test run of how to promote the shoes inside its test-bed of social networks. In real time the agency could see the response in the networks and just pay for results.

Linquia’s business model is that it gets a revenue share on the deal.

In December it launches its technology to enable the real-time transactions between commercial entities and networks, but for now it’s on a recruiting drive to fill out its marketplace of social networks.

Read more @ Techcrunch UK uk.techcrunch.com

Posted via web from rickwilliams’s posterous

Online video – insight from the East

Alot of the time it’s really obvious that Asia is a totally different market to the one in the West.

QRCode adoption and mobile phone interaction are 2 of the most glaring differences between our habits and Asia’s – what you learn from people’s insight, like that of Jan Chipchase, is that despite our differences the mindset, no matter how subliminal, is in tune.

Which is what makes these insights in online video viewing habits in Asia so interesting
.

Obvious differences include Anonymity but there are many more similarities that I relate to and believe in:

Participation – this is on the rise as a larger percentage of the audience engages and overcomes a technological barrier. e.g. Karaoke, Wii, 1v100, Facebook, Twitter etc.

Long form quality content is most popular online/VOD programming – As if you didn’t know, Content is King

Social Advocacy holds greatest sway – What your friends, family and peers think and say matters more than anything else in getting eyeballs – advocates not eyeballs matter in the long tail. e.g. BBC David Attenborough documentary fares better than Battle at Kruger (eventually…)

Local brands dominate Asian online video landscape – This is so much more relevant based on yesterday’s news in the UK that our Independent TV company, ITV, reported enormous losses. When will local advertisiers start having much more sway over national advertising?

Put a Donk on it!

I came across an extraordinary documentary yesterday (nod of the cap to Iain Tait @ Poke). This is by far and away the very best thing I’ve seen on the internet since the Kersal Massive.

This is Donk-tastic! Watch the full documentary.

At first I thought it was a spoof in a classic Chris Morris kind of way, but then I realised there are just too many good bits for it to be fake.

This is totally genuine.

The Blackout crew have 4million hits on YouTube with ‘Put a Donk On It’:

The scene is focused around Fandom & a strong DIY UGC ethic. In some ways it’s more digital than Digital and others are copying the style:

Newham Generals feat. Dizzee Rascal – Violence:

It’s affronting, cheap, sexist and refines the lowest common denominator…It’s totally Donk…

Oh my God – Philip Schofield is on Twitter

Is it the beginning of the end for Twitter…or is Twitter more than a fad?
Ben Ayers » Phillip Schofield talks Twitter on This Morning

Philip Schofield – http://twitter.com/schofe (2,366 followers in a week after that little piece to camera on This Morning)
Jonathan Ross – https://twitter.com/Wossy (13,933 followers)
Stephen Fry – https://twitter.com/stephenfry (51,000 followers)
Alan Carr – https://twitter.com/AlanCarr (4,018 followers)

And Dancing On Ice (wtf?!?!?) – http://twitter.com/dancingonice – In fact everything to do with Dancing on Ice has gone completely Social Meedja. They’ve got a Facebook page ( http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dancing-on-Ice/49073635635) and they’ve even given Schofield a Flip camera (!?!?!) to create impromptu pieces to camera and behind the scenes footage. I digress….
Twitter’s good for celebrities because it can be done on the go from your phone.
Twitter’s good for Brands because they can announce offers. Dell has achieved over $1million sales directly from Twitter: http://tinyurl.com/6hxk7d
Twitter’s good for fictional characters – as long as there’s buy-in from the studios – see the ‘Becoming a Mad Man’ article.

Twitter’s got some real legs when it comes to TV in general. or Dr. Who…What if you could follow the Doctor and get his thoughts whenever he’s not in a scene – The thoughts & emotions of the Doctor when he’s not in the scene; after a big argument for example or by adding a quick retort out of ear shot?? You could get the Doctor to ask for advice and get the audience to reference material online that could help him…Good for spin-offs or integrated two-way ARGs. Some fool out there is calling this Transmedia, but essentially it’s just a different way of telling a story….

Full list of 2008 Tumblr award nominees

Overall Best Tumblelog

Best Use of Reblogging

Most Creative Use of Tumblr

Best Group/Community

Best Audio Posts

Best Video Posts

Best Image Posts

Best Quotes or Conversations

Best Original Content / Editorials

Funniest Tumblelog

Best in Art/Design

Best Tumblelog Design

Best Tumblr Theme Designer

Best Free Tumblr Theme

And the winners were:

Overall Best Tumblelog
garfieldminusgarfield.net (76%)

Best Use of Reblogging
soupsoup.tumblr.com (44%)

Most Creative Use of Tumblr
domonomnom.tumblr.com (30%)

Best Group/Community
bonerparty.tumblr.com (35%)

Best Audio Posts
songsyouusedtolove.tumblr.com (30%)

Best Video Posts
jakeandamir.com (64%)

Best Image Posts
garfieldminusgarfield.net (80% )

Best Quotes or Conversations
whitewhine.tumblr.com (46%)

Best Original Content / Editorials
magicmolly.tumblr.com (35%)

Funniest Tumblelog
jakeandamir.com (28%)

Best in Art/Design
sarazucker.tumblr.com (21%)

Best Tumblelog Design
hrrrthrrr.tumblr.com (26%)

Best Tumblr Theme Designer
heather-rivers.com (27%)

Best Free Tumblr Theme
penguinclassics.tumblr.com (21%)

New BBC IPTV Interface with social features

New BBC IPTV Interface with Facebook as a backbone:

Boxee’s still offering the more exciting innovation, but the BBC is way ahead of the curve on this one simply in terms of its infrastructure to pull this kind of social viewing together.

12 examples of RFID across industries

Manufacturing – A major tire manufacturer is going to insert RFID tags into its tires. The tags will store a unique number for each tire, which will be associated with the car’s vehicle identification number.

Pharmaceuticals – Pharmaceutical companies have embedded RFID chips in drug containers to track and avert the theft of highly controlled drugs, such as OxyContin.

Airlines – Continental Airlines uses RFID tags to track passenger bags, while Delta Airlines is tagging customer bags with RFID technology to reduce the number of lost bags and make it easier to route bags if customers change their flight plans.

Restaurants – A premier coffee chain is considering using RFID chips and readers to enable its suppliers to make after-hour deliveries to stores, which avoids the disruption of staff members during work hours.

Toll Roads – Many tolls roads in the United States use RFID technology to collect fees without the need for toll booth personnel.

Retail – ExxonMobil uses RFID technology for its “SpeedPass,” which instantly collects payment on gas stations from a tag on a driver’s keychain, while Wal-Mart is requesting that all their suppliers apply RFID tags to all cartons of goods delivered.

Seaports – Three seaport operators in the United States, which account for 70 percent of the world’s port operations, agreed to deploy RFID tags to track daily arriving containers.

Government – The U.S. Department of Defense is planning to use RFID technology to trace military supply shipments.

Corporate & Municipal – Australia placed RFID tags in employee uniforms to aid in deterring theft. The same idea would work well in a corporate environment to help control desktop computers, networking equipment, and personal digital assistants or handheld computers.

Credit Card – Visa is combining smart cards and RFID chips so people can conduct transactions without having to use cash or coins.

Banks – The European Central Bank is considering embedding RFID chips in Euro notes to combat counterfeiters and money-launderers. This also would enable banks to count large amounts of cash in seconds.

People Tracking – The United Nations uses RFID technology to track the movements of its personnel.



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