Thursday, April 19, 2007

The way computing is meant to be

How many times have you been on the sofa watching tv wishing you could also be surfing the web? Or on the train reading the news on your phone but wishing you could clipmark it to your blog? Never? Well then this might not be for you, but for the rest of us it's nirvana!

http://asia.cnet.com/reviews/photo_gallery/0,39034081,62006450-001p-1,00.htm
clipped from asia.cnet.com
It's ultramobile PC day in China
19/04/2007
Wednesday was UMPC (ultramobile PC) day at the Intel Developer Forum in Beijing.

Slideshow image


Wednesday was UMPC (ultramobile PC) day at the Intel Developer Forum in Beijing. Intel's Anand Chandrasekher showed off several models based on McCaslin, the 2007 version of Intel's chips for UMPCs, as well as mock-ups of devices for which it envisions using the next-generation platform, code-named Menlow.
Credit: Tom Krazit/CNET News.com

Slideshow:   

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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

It's just all ads

I was wondering when this would happen in indeed it finally has. Buildings with and entire LCD shell, and webpages that are a 2D pile of billboards.

"The Sandberg Institute in Amsterdam got inspired by the Million Dollar Page goldrush and is selling out a building facade one 35x29cm (about 10x10in) tile at a time, 20 euro apiece."

and

http://milliondollarhomepage.com/


Million Dollar Building

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Marketing with the Poor

Fascinating discussion. Click though to read instances in which Nestle worked developed a distribution network of poor, rural saleswomen in India to extend the sales reach of their milk. This benefited both the company and the rural communities.

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/5529.html
clipped from hbswk.hbs.edu
Harvard Business School Working Knowledge: Home

Business and the Global Poor

Published:
February 5, 2007
Author:

Are the world's poor, who individually have less than $5 a day in disposable income, a viable market for new goods and services? Consider the fact that there are four billion people around the globe that fit this description and you have the start of an answer.

But businesses that want to enter this market at the bottom of the economic pyramid (BOP) must look beyond just selling products—they must find ways to create social and economic value, according to the editors of a new volume, Business Solutions for the Global Poor.

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Monday, April 16, 2007

Sometimes the imitators do it best.

Check out Rohit's analysis of Flixster and the vast array of social mechanisms its lifts directly from other successful sites.

The Ultimate Social Network You Haven't Heard Of

I2m_flixster_screen_1

Ok, maybe you have ... and it just might be Flixster, a social network dedicated to film, actors, Hollywood and movie fans. The obvious question you could be wondering is how it can be "the ultimate" when there are so many other social networks that have been around longer, pull more traffic, have more users and generate more buzz? The main reason is because after using the site, you realize that they have taken what seems like every trick from every other social network, and integrated it into their own site to add to a user's experience.

For example, visiting an artist's profile page with it's aggregation of images and videos has a look that reminds you of a cross between a Technorati search and a MySpace profile page. In fact, you can select a skin for your own page or add one to the system - just like you can with MySpace. Users of Netflix will recognize the rating systems for DVDs, however Flixster extends this to films that have not yet come out and includes links to trailers. The site has lots of images of actors and actresses - with a built-in scale for rating taken right from the pages of HotorNot. You can browse for specific actors, or use the Random feature to find a random page, the same powerful philosophy behind services like StumbleUpon and much of curiosity marketing. Each image and video trailer also has code included below it to cut and paste into your own blog post or other content (just like YouTube). Users can submit news stories about actors as links and other users can vote for them just like Digg and any other social news site. Oh, and you can comment on everything - photos, images and news stories.

The social network element of the site is equally engaging, with the ability to search for people who like the same types of films as you (based on the results of their Movie Compatibility Test) and get in contact. The Movie Night Planner also lets you and a group friends share movie choices you would like to see, evaluate times, and rate the films based on trailers. I have railed in the past against the suckiness of some movie theater websites. Flixster is the exact opposite - a social network dedicated to movie fans with just about everything a movie fan could ever want all rolled into a single interface. About the only thing missing was the big movie advertising. That gap probably won't exist for too much longer. Sony's cool new Face of the Fan - SpiderMan Movie Network promotion could be a great first candidate ...


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Saturday, April 14, 2007

Intel's Future Video

Intel's vision of the near future. It looks cool, and not that far fetched. Just have to make the voice recognition more reliable and familiar.
clipped from www.engadget.com
Engadget
In Intel's future we wear computers, still have to work and exercise

Intel's got a whole bunch of fancy ideas for the wearable and ultramobile computers of the future in this cute little conceptual video it pushed to the YouTubes. Thankfully Intel escaped the oh-so-tried Minority Report concepts and skipped straight to wrist-based computers and a myriad of OQO and iPhone look-alikes. Mostly it's just a ploy to promote Intel's upcoming McCaslin UMPC platform, which can do few of the actions depicted, but it's always fun to peep one manufacturer's vision of the future, no matter how unlikely or impractical its vision might be. Peep the video after the break.
[Via GigaOM; thanks Dillon]
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