links for 2007-03-19
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danah boyd’s web3.0: “I believe that geographic-dependent context will be the next key shift. GPS, mesh networks, articulated presence, etc. People want to go mobile and they want to use technology to help them engage in the mobile world…”
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Y’know … to search … Twitter.
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Lawrence Lessig write a short, pithy, accessible and entirely convincing argument about why the US Supreme Court should not be deciding the Viacom Vs YouTube case … but nevertheless will, costing jobs and extending uncertainty in its wake.
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Close to realtime mashp of Google Maps and Twitter, showing the latest Twitter comment on a (moving) Google map … the Twitterati are spread far and wide!
links for 2007-03-18
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THe Battlestar Galactica font. Nifty.
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Ze Frank’s year-long daily vlog comes to an end. It’s been a great ride, sportsracers …
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Given the amount of Twitteration about Twitter, advice on using it well seems a good idea!
links for 2007-03-17
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“Scientists say they have found huge deposits of ice on the south pole of Mars that are so plentiful they would blanket the planet in 11 metres of water if they were liquid. The deposits are up to 3.7 kilometres thick and cover an area larger than Texas.”
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“Young people, wealthy families and graduates use the internet more than the elderly, poor or unqualified, according to a report that highlights Britain’s growing “digital divide”.”
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Andy Baio crunches the numbers to show Twitter’s actual growth – it has grown a great deal over the last five months – not quite exponentially, but close!
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Veronica Mars, one of the smartest shows on television, appears to have been cancelled. (I’m very disappointed.)
links for 2007-03-16
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Scoble predicts that Viacom will get its $1billion in 2008, but user-created content will continue to become king. (And Viacom will destroy a lof of public goodwill in the process.)
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“A Northern Ireland undertaker has begun broadcasting funerals live on the internet.”
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The Australian ban on the videogame Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure is proving as ineffective as it was uninformed; it can be downloaded instead of physically pruchased, and Aussie law can’t (currently) stop downloads!
links for 2007-03-15
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Larry Lessig looks at four of the key misconceptions in the debate about Google Books and copyright issues. (The comments on this post are also good reading, showing some of the complexities of the issues involved.)
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The short-list for the blookers (books based on blogs) has been announced. Some good reading in there. My money is on the Postsecret book to win.
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I was interviewed for two podcasts in the ‘Mobile Technology in TAFE’ series, one on Lectopia & Podcasting, and the other on social software in education more broadly. If you’re interested, please have a listen. (Feedback is most welcome).
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“Full-Time Intimate Community” (FTIC) … are the close group of friends (usually around 8-10 people) with whom you share presence. Most mobile youths know whether members of their FTIC are awake, at school, happy, sick, finished with their homework …
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“Entertainment giant Viacom Media says it will sue online search engine Google and its video-sharing website, YouTube, for more than $US1 billion.” (Just in case you’re 1 of the 4 people online who hasn’t had this news thrust upon them yet!)
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Rough transcript of Will Wright’s keynote from SXSW, looking at Spore, evolution and game narrative. Best Quote: “One of my real aspirations of this is I wanna see interstellar wars between Care Bears and Klingons.”
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The argument: Twittering pretty much ensures we never, ever reach full concentration. (It has graphs and pictures, too!)
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Chuck Olsen interviews Miles Beckett and Greg Goodfried, two of the creators and producers of lonelygirl15 (The talk business models more than anything, but interesting nevertheless…)
300: An Online Marketing Hit
There’s been a lot of talk about 300, which is now, financially at least, the first big blockbuster of 2007. Leaving aside Iran’s outrage at the film’s depiction of their history, one of the most interesting elements of the film was the clever and canny marketing strategies which found success in online arenas where many others have tried, but failed. Deborah Netburn’s article in the LA Times points out that 300 succeeded where others (most notably Snakes on a Plane) only appeared to work until the people voted with their feet at the box office:
Fanboy buzz is not enough to sell a film — “Snakes on a Plane,” anyone? — but Garabedian points out that while the online community was obsessively talking about “Snakes” they were ultimately making fun of it. The people who were driving the chatter around “300” were genuinely excited about the film, especially the way it looked. And after Comic-Con, Warner Bros. marketing department made sure that the fanboys got the usual dribs and drabs of movie art and trailers just to keep their excitement up.
The marketing folks also took full advantage of MySpace. There was of course the requisite MySpace page for the film (now standard for all movies) — featuring a ferocious looking muscle man in a metal helmet plus tons of video clips, wallpapers and links to the film’s official website. But the stroke of genius came when the studio sponsored a feature upgrade to the site that told users they could store 300 photos on their profile thanks to the movie “300.” (Previously the limit had been 12). That started Jan. 2 and was incredibly popular with teens. The result was billions of ad impressions and 8 million viewings of the trailer. Is it any wonder that the 52% of the people who saw “300” were under 25?
There are also mundane reasons “300” might have done well. A generally warm weekend across the country encouraged people to get out of the house and brave long lines, and no other major film was released against “300,” so it didn’t have much competition. And while the critics have been lukewarm on the film — faulting it for poor dialogue and a thin story — nobody has said anything negative about the visuals. And to a generation of kids who have grown up with the lush worlds of video games, “300” was a familiar visual masterpiece.
The ‘300 images’ idea is definitely a clever one, and shows that marketing online really has to think outside the box of traditional hype-building.
On a differrent note, 300 is also interesting in that it was entirely edited on Apple Macs. For the tech details, visit the Raw Feed.