Archive for the ‘technology’ Category

Introducing Facebook Places

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Yesterday, Facebook introduced its latest feature - Places.  Similar to Foursquare, Places is all about location; it allows users to share where they are with their friends, see who is near them and find new places around them. 

Unlike Foursquare though, Places is less about gaming (e.g. getting points for checking in at various venues, becoming mayor of a location, etc.) and it brings a new level of engagement to Facebook’s 500 million users vs. the fraction of that number who use Foursquare.  For now, though, this first version of Places is only being rolled out in the U.S., and Foursquare updates (as well as a few other services) will be integrated into Facebook Places.

Places can be accessed through Facebook’s most recent iPhone app or via touch.facebook.com on a smart phone.  Users can add places or check into places that already exist, check in by themselves or as a group by tagging friends, see which of their friends are in the same area and discover what places are around them.

Facebook posted this beautiful video to show how Places can improve our lives -

For marketers of companies with physical locations, it definitely presents a new engagement opportunity, allowing for targeted interaction with consumers right outside - or inside - their door.  For example, companies can send coupons and special offers to consumers who check in at or around a store, restaurant or theater, enticing them to make an immediate purchase.  Once a location has been added to Places, the business owner can claim its location’s page.

From a user standpoint, it will be interesting to see how people - including myself - feel about these added updates that will pop up on the Facebook newsfeed (the check-ins will also show up on the user’s profile and the location’s page).  If you already don’t care about half of what is posted on your newsfeed, you may not be interested in the fact that your friend Joe just checked in at Starbucks in Kansas City.  On the flip side, you may find out that your friend Mary, whom you haven’t seen since college, is at a store right down the street from you - prompting a spontaneously delightful reunion.

As always, it will be interesting to see where this latest social networking tool takes us…

Tweet This…”Ruff Ruff”!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

So you just can’t stop thinking about your dog, Gator. It’s 10:30, you’re having a cup of coffee at the office….and you’re wondering “is Gator sleeping on the couch? or maybe he’s snacking in the kitchen?; or is he staring out the window, watching for the mailman?”. If only you had some way of knowing……sigh.

 

To the rescue, comes “PuppyTweets”, a product you can pre-order on amazon.com TODAY (hurry, what’s stopping you??!!). I don’t know if it’s a novelty aimed at people looking for the next greatest way to waste time at work, or if there are people who truly need to “hear” from their pets while they’re away (oh, maybe they’re the same people).

 

Here’s how it works — you connect a USB receiver to your computer, download the PuppyTweets software, create a Twitter page for Gator, and then place the PuppyTweet tag on his collar. Every time Gator barks or stretches a signal is sent to your computer, and one of the 500 pre-loaded phrases is automatically posted on his Twitter page. Yup, Gator’s Twitter page. So if Gator likes to stare out the window and bark at squirrels, or he likes to pace around the house from 2-5, you could be getting tweets every few minutes….yippee. 

As maker Mattel describes it , “a Tweet from your pooch is a virtual smooch!” – but I think even Gator would tell you “smooch this and get a life”.

Look At Me!…

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

NO, WAIT, STOP LOOKING AT ME!

In yet another glimpse at the fascinating inevitable convergence (i.e. ‘head-on car wreck’) of technology and personal identity, Microsoft recently announced the release of its miniscule auto-snapping Vicon™ camera, capable of being worn on a necklace and documenting up to 6 days of moment-to-moment daily life and interactions.viconrevue

 

 

The device, which was originally designed for more altruistic purposes of Alzheimer’s patient support, will reportedly soon be available to the consumer market—though for what purposes one can only imagine. Indeed, apart from the obvious issue it raises of who in the world could be so interesting as to watch for days at a time, it offers a more interesting observation altogether on an emerging sort of ‘author-consumer’ conflict  that the whole social-media environment continues to illustrate.

That is: a person who at one moment rails against retail sales clerks asking for their address to complete a simple cash purchase, or cries foul at customer service departments for soliciting participation in a survey at the end of a crappy phone call with some $3 per hour drone in Bangalore, and then the next runs home or pulls out their phone to foist every pedestrian, mundane detail and image of their lives into the public sphere.

 

So what gives? How do we reconcile the two? By understanding them as actually very different, even antithetical things. Not as apples-to-apples behaviors but rather a distinct cause and effect: one is a collective cultural force, the other a set of sterile technical practices that precipitated it.

 

It’s increasingly apparent that, at heart, the ‘new’ social media phenomenon is really driven by a very old innate need for identity and recognition—for some small proof that we still actually matter—only now on steroids in response to an increasingly vast, impersonal, disconnected world bent on starving it. It is a movement born less of technology, than as a sort of rebuttal to it and the ways it was being employed to invade our privacy by governments and corporations: essentially blunting their power to intrude by exposing ourselves (or the parts we choose) first. 

 

Similar to the way that racial epithets are co-opted by an aggrieved group to defuse their impact, our new exhibitionism and self-fascination are ultimately direct, natural human responses to the devaluation and even indignity inflicted by most interactions or experiences today. Meaning that posting some fish-eyed photo of my visit to the bank teller is less about me personally than my ability to turn the tables and starring role on the world, and then boast about it. The act empowers me, if only in some small way.

 

So, what then are we to make of Microsoft’s newest ‘life caching’ device? If you accept my totally unverifiable reasoning here, quite simply this: that social media is increasingly revealing itself as less a ‘technological’ trend, as initially thought, than a sociological one. It is a trend rooted more in the neuroses, appetites and human hard-wiring of psychology than in the circuitry of the phones, PDAs and laptops that facilitate it. The tools change, the disc storage grows, and the components shrink. But the behavior and its causes are as simple as elementary school playgrounds, and about as likely to change much until the world ever does. 

 

The camera, in short, is a mildly intriguing novelty, one of many to come. Why we want or need it at all is the far bigger and more interesting story.

Living Blade Runner

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Bladerunner billboard Times Square

As MSI’s Director of Interactive Services, I love the part of my job that involves geeking out over technology. I was about 12 years old when Blade Runner came out and remember thinking, “Giant video billboards. Pfft. Yeah, right.” I pooh-poohed my way through the movie, scoffing at such impossibilities as video conferencing, in-ear communicators, tablet computers, and glowing umbrellas, among many other flights of fantasy.

Watching Blade Runner while sprawled out on the brown shag carpet in front of my father’s monster Betamax machine, I don’t think I could ever have imagined that so many of these items would have trickled into our everyday use within my lifetime. They seemed so far away as I would get up on hands and knees to flip the knob (”ka-CHUNK”) on our living room TV. I certainly wouldn’t have believed that only seconds after the birth of my son, I could wirelessly beam an image of his beautiful newborn face to my 95-year-old great aunt in Galveston, Texas from our hospital room in Chicago. I pass no fewer than 5 massive video billboards during my morning commute. People Skype each other regularly, Bluetooth devices pegged into random ears, and even the infamous glowing umbrellas are for sale on Think Geek. Now come developments like the iPad and Google’s response, the Chrome OS Tablet.

Maybe take some time today to think about the differences between the world that surrounded you as a child and the convenience and amazement that technology offers today.

MSI makes it our business to keep up with the monster steps that Interactive technology takes every day and how you can apply it to your marketing strategy. It’s not just our business, it’s our lifelong passion. If you think of your website as a static piece of brochureware, give us a call. I bet you’ll be amazed by what technology, and MSI, can do for you.

Google’s Chrome OS Concept Tablet Breaks Cover With Demo

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

“With all of this iPad buzz stirring up the tech world over the past couple of weeks, Chrome OS has almost been forgotten. That may have something to do with the fact that Google has yet to officially release the netbook-centric operating system to the public, but still, you’d expect a company like Google to keep the details flowing about a forthcoming operating system. Today it seems we’re getting exactly what you’d expect, in response to all the recent tablet fanfare.” Read more & view pics/video after the jump >

MSI’s Latest Viral Campaign

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Check out MSI’s latest viral campaign for AeroBed: 

 

www.thinkaero.com/guestrating 

Print

 

Yes, I will Yearbook Myself

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

I may have just found my new favorite Web site/time-suck : www.yearbookyourself.com

This incredibly addicting site lets you upload a picture of yourself (or someone else) to see what you’d look like with classic (read: ridiculous) hair styles and outfits in various high school yearbook photos from 1950 - 2000.  As an added bonus, it plays music that coincides with each year.

After discovering this ingenious site/time machine (and then promptly spending entirely too much time on it), I looked into its background and found out that apparently it was first introduced last fall by Taubman Centers, a national mall development company, and has just recently been reintroduced - just in time for the new school year.  This makes perfect sense considering the site also offers discounts from a variety of retailers at Taubman malls across the country.  The new version also offers Facebook integration that allows you to post your photo directly to your Facebook page.

To Taubman and their agency (Minneapolis-based Colle+McVoy), kudos on the ingenuity behind the site and the ‘09 edition!  To anyone who hasn’t already yearbooked themselves, beware and enjoy.  It’s seriously awesome.   

Feel free to share your best (or preferably worst) yearbook photos online - we’d love to see them!  Or if you’d rather email them to me, perhaps I could create a commemorative 50th anniversary Mixed Nuts yearbook for a future post…

Here’s a random sampling of some MSI nuts (well, the PR team + Christos for now) throughout the decades…

Gaelen Bell

Gaelen Bell

MaryAileen Bell

MaryAileen Bell

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Maureen Brennan

Maureen Brennan

Mandy Meszaros

Mandy Meszaros

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

Christos Ellis

Christos Ellis

Emily Towey

Emily Towey