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TV Executive Realizes Live TV Sucks
Just heard on Talk Of The Nation:
http://www.npr.org/programs/talk-of-the-nation/
Story is a TV executive found this show with his son that they really liked. They went and found the series online. They watched the whole season and then watched the finale live and HATED it. He could not handle the breaks in story for advertising
Talk about losing one of your own. Talk about not knowing how your own product effects your user base. TV FAIL
DATA revenues now best SMS.
My buddy Chetan at Chetan Sharma Consulting has released his latest forecasts and for the first time data wins over SMS. This was to be expected but it happened a bit faster than I expected. As smartphone adoption increases globally this trend will accelerate because the modern OS's use of their own messaging platforms which skirt the carriers own ancient platforms.
Old story from February but I think it's worth bringing up again because of the push back from clients. "I really don't think people will buy X through a mobile site or application."
The smart brands like Ebay, Amazon, and Google are figuring this stuff out and securing their stranglehold on the market while many other brands are still wondering about the value of online let alone mobile. "TV works, why should I do anything else?" Nobody is doubting the value of TV only that there are other channels that are potentially even more valuable depending on context.
The research is in contrast to Nielsen but not that surprising to anyone who is somewhat smart and or works in marketing. The Nielsen research presents users as an aggregate (Nielsen shows that games and social networking are the dominant categories) which skews the data towards the larger younger demographic for smartphone owners.
The point is as usual is to know your audience and don't pay attention to top line data other than as a directional tool
In a survey completed by Vuclip my world was rocked by the style over substance debate. There is a third paradigm and that's cost. Women, ever the smarter of the race choose Substance (function) and Style over Cost. The cost angle was left for us men.
Some highlights: "37 percent of women responded that the device features were their top consideration." "33 percent of men responded price was their top consideration."
"90 percent of Apple users reported that they intend to purchase an Apple device in the future.
21 of the most useless iphone cases ever. Some really useful useless cases here.
First day of spring: A bumble bee in Germany
Pay phones have become like an extinct species. Seeing one now gets me excited. This one like so many pigeons I see in the city has been mangled.
Seen inside the Li Po Lounge in China town sf.
This is a really interesting piece that looks at tracking from a macro instead of the micro level. In other words instead of being concerned with being tracked on a individual level we should perhaps be more concerned with the larger data set and what can be learned about a group. It cites the brilliant Target case study. Target was able to successfully determine which women were pregnant based on a subset of other products they purchased. By knowing this they could subtly include products for new born's in direct mailers.
This article points out brilliantly the error of our DSP/DMP platforms because we use them for short term monetary gain instead of longer term understanding of underlying behaviors. For instance how teens look at and consume information. Instead were continually playing pin the tail on the donkey when it comes to the creation of creative and content. So again. Use the data to create better creative to subtly drive conversion instead of simply more clicks.
Awesome
The online privacy debate is complex but it's interesting that the average user will make a choice for something less expensive even if it means giving up privacy. In this case that number nets out at a mere 65 cents.
"While it should be encouraging that consumers will opt for “privacy-friendly” providers when there is no price difference, that much should be obvious; no more than telling a driver to choose a lane of traffic that is gridlocked or a lane where no other cars are present. Further, it’s discouraging to find that people will forgo concerns of their privacy at even the slightest hint of a discount. 65¢? Really? That officially makes you the cheapest date ever, people. "
Marshall McLuhan circa 1977 on the Global Village and how it will change the way we interact. Amazing that he wrote this initially back in the 50s and its still relevant today
I love when technology can really make peoples lives better instead of just sucking more of our time. In this case it's software that may be installed on a smartphone to turn sign language into words for the deaf.
"
Scientists translate sign language to text in pioneering phone software
The app will be available on smart phones. Picture: PA
Published on Monday 12 March 2012 00:52
PIONEERING technology which translates sign language into text is being developed by Scottish scientists in a major boost for people suffering from speech and hearing difficulties.
The new software – the first of its kind in the world – has been developed for use on portable devices, such as smartphones, and will allow users to turn sign language into words. Users will even be able to customise the sign language to their own specific needs.
The Aberdeen University scientists behind the breakthrough claim the technology has the potential to transform how sign language users – from the profoundly deaf to those who have lost hearing in later life – will be able to communicate.
The Portable Sign Language Translator (PSLT ) has been developed by computing scientists at Technabling, a spin-out from Aberdeen University. The PSLT recognises sign language using a small camera which can be integrated in most mobile devices, such as smartphones, tablet Pcs and netbooks, and then renders it as text displayed on the device’s main screen.
Dr Ernesto Compatangelo, a lecturer in computing science who is director of Technabling, said: “The aim of the technology is to empower sign language users by enabling them to overcome the communication challenges they can experience, through portable technology.
“The user signs into a standard camera integrated into a laptop, netbook, Smartphone or other portable device such as a tablet. Their signs are immediately translated into text which can be read by the person they are conversing with."
Some shameless self promotion. A piece that appeared in DigiDay.
Brodeur Partners published some research on the differences between GenY shoppers and Boomers. GenY shoppers value a more "stimulating," "sharable" experience. Call me a cynic but I think Boomers are just grown more pragmatic and have a stronger sense of self because they are older. They don't need as much social reinforcement as younger shoppers. I'd bet a dollar that GenY shoppers will rate the same in 30 years. The entire report can be read here: http://bit.ly/retailrelevance
This is not up on Bob Lefsetz blog yet so in the meantime you can read it here. What he says is SO TRUE.
Apple is the Beatles of tech
Once upon a time, the youth of America looked forward to the new releases of their favorite bands. Now they look forward to the latest from Apple.
Why is this?
1. Apple Surprises Us
A band would make the iPod and give up. Tour incessantly on the fumes of a ten year old device, charging us up the yin-yang for the privilege of reliving our youth.
The iPod is dead. It's barely advertised. Like a band in the seventies, Apple's playing its new album live, with only nodding reference to the hits. Why is it tech fans are interested in the new when you can't get them to sit through anything they don't know live? Furthermore, we've trained them not to want it live, to have it canned, so it's perfect. Tablets are inherently messy devices. You install apps, you customize them, you get frustrated, you make them your own. Whereas every show of the major act is the same whether you see it in Detroit or San Diego, Tampa or Seattle. In a land where it's all about having it your way, in music, the customer has no control.
2. Apple Innovates
The Beatles analogy fits because the band never repeated itself. We could not foresee "Sgt. Pepper" after "Revolver". Great artists take chances. No one takes chances in music anymore, they just repeat what they've done successfully, endlessly.
3. Bean Counters Come Last
Tim Cook may be an efficiency expert, but he knows he's subservient to designer Jonny Ive and the engineers. It's all about new products and risk. Whereas it's all about the money in music. Every member of the infrastructure, from label to manager to agent, focuses on cash first. Do that endorsement! Take that sponsorship! Play in the biggest hall you can! Musicians are playing for their handlers as opposed to vice versa. Somehow, Clive Davis and Jimmy Iovine became bigger than the acts. Innovation is scary. Only creative people are willing to make the jump. To believe the suits will endorse your exploits is like believing your mother will be fine with you dropping out of college and hitchhiking to find yourself. But it's when you've got your thumb stuck out, with the wind in your hair, that you learn, that you become inspired.
4. The Money Is Secondary To The Products
What I mean is everyone talks about the value of Apple stock, but it's AFTER they speak about the products. Most people know about U2's tour grosses, but they couldn't care less about the band's new music. Bruce Springsteen puts out a new album that's dead on arrival. Our favorites have ceased to amaze us for so long, most of us have stopped paying attention. It's like being excited over a new HP release, or caring about a new BlackBerry. Our trust has been eroded, we've given up on the past, we're interested in the new.
Sure, everyone uses Apple products, red state and blue, rich and relatively poor, young and old. But once upon a time, everyone knew who the Beatles were, and were aware of both the Stones and Louis Armstrong. And you can credit the Top Forty radio of yore, but still the acts have abdicated their power. They got in bed with MTV, they became beholden to the labels, they bitched about people stealing their music, they completely marginalized themselves.
As for the newbies yelling loudly without talent... We see that game in tech all the time. We've started to tune the pronouncements out. Just like we won't give your music a listen. We only have time for great, do you sell great?
And we want cool. Features we could not foresee. Like the ability to find your lost iPhone, iPad and Mac online. Apple didn't need to include this feature, nor did they need to provide free iCloud services, but the company wanted to blow our minds, keep us paying attention and in the fold. Whereas all we hear from musicians is who they slept with and where they went on vacation.
The acts have to give up on the money. They lost that battle. Until America realigns, no musician can make the kind of money Tim Cook does, never mind Lloyd Blankfein. But instead of complaining about this, musicians should realize that power is not merely money based. Music has more power than any amount of cash. But it must be honest and true and new.
Lady Gaga marketed her second album better than she made it. Imagine if it had been an improvement upon what came before. If we didn't hear Madonna's "Express Yourself" in the single, but something that was completely unfamiliar.
But Gaga didn't do this. And despite all the hoopla, most of America just doesn't care about her. She's the biggest of the marginal. Like the endlessly repeating himself Jay-Z. Kanye takes a few risks, but he's such a narcissist, we're turned off.
As for the rock acts... They're repeating a formula, growing their hair to look the part. Huh? We've seen that movie before, we don't care.
As for country... It's just bad rock and roll. Country music sales dropped precipitously when the audience got computers and the sphere will be hugely impacted when terrestrial country radio tanks, which it will.
The Apple iPad announcement is bigger than any album this year. Bigger than Van Halen, Springsteen or... People were waiting for it, salivating. They talked about it. Anticipation was palpable.
This is the way it used to be in music.
Ford Motor Co. (F), which has plunged in quality rankings, on March 8 will begin sending more than 300,000 owners of the Ford Explorer, Edge, Focus and Lincoln MKX a USB flash drive loaded with new software to fix problems with MyFord Touch and MyLincoln Touch systems, the company said.
“We know that there’s a group of customers that reported that there were features of MyFord Touch that were not working properly and we’ve taken that feedback seriously,” Derrick Kuzak, Ford’s product-development chief, said today at a briefing in Dearborn, Michigan. “We expect these improvements will put us back on track in the quality rankings.”
Glitches with the touch screens controlling audio, phone, climate and navigation systems were one reason Ford fell the most of any car company in Consumer Reports’ annual Automaker Report Cards last month. Ford slid to 10th place, from fifth a year earlier, in the magazine’s testing of braking, handling, comfort, convenience, safety and fuel economy.
“Subpar reliability of some new vehicles, due largely to the troublesome MyFord Touch infotainment system and Power-Shift automatic transmission, hurt its report-card grade,” the Yonkers, New York, magazine said in a Feb. 28 statement.