Tag Archive for 'media'

Media in the Lives of 8 to 18-Year-Olds

20
Jan
10

If it is not texting and looking and TV, it’s computer and listen to my iPod (…) If i know i’m gonna miss a show i record it.

I have facebook on my cellphone. I could research a word, do anything on my phone.

— Diamond, 14

The Kaiser Family Foundation released today a report on Generation M(2), a research on media habits of 8-18 year olds, with a sample of more than 2,000 young people across the US. Impressive how this 100% connected generation is using mobile as the main gateway to digital content. Not to mention the multitasking habits. But you knew that already, right?

Key findings of the report include:

  • Over the past five years, Young people have increased the daily consumption of media from 6:21 to 7:38

    kff-consumption

  • An explosion in mobile and online media has fueled
    the increase in media use among young people.

    kkf-ownership

  • Youth who spend more time with media report lower grades and lower levels of personal contentment.

For a short overview of what kids have to say, follow the video below:

SanDisk wants you to buy your music on Memory Card. Yeah, sure.

22
Sep
08

slot.gif

After trying to sell us albums on USB keys, the (desperate) music industry suits just announced that Walmart and BestBuy will offer SlotMusic to its consumers, a LP on a microSD card.

OK, they got some points right: high bitrate (320kbps), DRM-free, and extra content along with the tunes (photo, videos…). Apparently, the advantage is that you can stick the card in your computer and/or portable music player. Except, well, the Apple ones, and I would not hold my breathe until I see a SD card slot on an iPod. But never mind, iPods and iPhones are not that successful, right?

Oh and did I mention that you need a USB adaptor to be able to transfer files on your computer? How much money is gonna be put wasted into that launch, and for how long they will try?

Last week, I bought myself a flat-screen TV, long overdue purchase, and the crisp temperatures of fall coming made me realize that I needed to invest before winter. Then I had to decide what to hook to my monitor. Cable? Too many frustrating commercial breaks, and way too expensive. A DVD/Blu-Ray player? Not really, most of the things I watch are TV series that I download from iTunes, so my only decent option was: the Apple TV. This box is awesome. It synchronizes all the movies/TV series/music/photos with your computer, is hooked to the Internet wirelessly, so that you can buy/rent directly and (most of them) in HD any movie from their catalog, get automatically TV episodes of your favorite shows ready to be watched the day after its network airing, and watch YouTube videos. I can’t go to bed anymore, I’m addicted. And the best of all is that it is like magic: I decide what I want to watch and when! All of this without any kind of “hard-media” (DVD, CD, Blu-Ray, SD card, USB…)

And then you have the iPod Touch. And the iPhone. Buy all the music that you want from your portable music device. No “hard-media” involved either. Seamless download straight to your iTunes library, in a couple of clicks (can we say click when it comes to a touch-screen interaction?) Okay, iTunes still needs some ironing with better bit rate and no DRM protection, but iTunes Plus is supposed to fix it.

I am not saying that Apple holds the only key to selling music, but they have a pretty good system in place. And they are not the only ones to believe that wireless is the way to go.

So, SanDisk, no thank you.

Now, Apple, if you could let me download music over the 3G network (I can download heavy files on Safari and Mail already, plus I pay a stiff price every month to use that supposedly faster network), fix the Remote App on the iPhone to control my TV so that I don’t have to hold my iPhone in the right hand and the white remote in the left hand, let me play music from my iPhone through my AirTunes speakers, and convince HBO and Showtime to make their TV series available on the iTunes Store the day after they air and not one year later, I swear that I will never ever again insert any kind of media in my hardwares. Except maybe if I decide to go to the video store to see if there is a cute guy wandering in the aisles.

The Esquire issue with an e-ink cover, that we were mentioning last month, is out! Who’s gonna be one of the happy fews to get one?

By olivier PEYRE [FullSIX USA], Comment

One day, newstands will be as blinding as Times Square at night

13
Aug
08

esquire.gif

100,000 copies of the September issue of Esquire will use E-Ink technology to make “The 21st Century Begins Now” text blink, before fading off 90 days later, when the battery runs dry. Still far from that copy of USA Today in Minority Report!

Once again, blogs/tumblr/twitter were first to report the earthquake in LA, beating the mainstream media.

By olivier PEYRE [FullSIX USA], Comments

Insert Coins!

28
Apr
08

In the era of media fragmentation, your target is multitasking between TV, internet, mobile, in-game, instant messaging, social network…
So what the F*** is the best strategy?

Let’s play with your ROI…

The Bowling Strategy

Media planners are now reacting and preaching a bowling strategy with a ‘360° approach’: Each media is a bowling pin and your two bowling balls are the communication investment waves you have to reach your target. If you’re lucky/agile you’ll hit it at the right angle to get a strike or at least a spare.

But if you’re not… you’ve just killed no birds with two stones!
;-)

What about a cool pinball game?
Size does not really matter… you can still have fun with smaller balls!

The Pinball Strategy

The pinball (your investment) is way smaller but the goal of the game is radically different too. Its no longer about a linear ’shoot’ but rather a surprising continuous game. Some of the tools (flippers, shaking the machine) are under your control, others react themselves (bumpers, ramps…) and help you if you play the game well to increase your score.

The goal now is to develop non-linear strategies, and to keep a small ball going and going, bouncing around everywhere giving you unique opportunities like extra balls and jackpots.

Same player plays again?

STUMBLEUPON THEM, DIGG THEM… THEY’RE DEL.ICIO.US.!

07
Jan
08

One week into 2008, we thought that it would be interesting to make a 100% subjective list of the 10 things that shaped our digital landscape for 2007. So the team at Trendwatch Daily went post-fishing last weekend to celebrate our 6-month anniversary and this is what we came back with, in chronological order.

Stresstetainment
A new form of stress born from the over-exposure to too many sources of entertainment at once.

Design Class #1: The Homepage
It’s very often the 1st impression that users get from your site, so you’d better get it right the first time!

Never Ending Friending. Just not with a TV-set.
Understanding the shift in media consumption: it’s all about Return on Involvement.

Social Networking Profiling Part 1 – The Consumers
A typology of the SN users to better understand users and consumers.

Branding in an age of User-Driven Innovation and P2P Production
What are the consequences when individual and communities become more productive than profit-seeking companies?

Mobile and developing countries: Mobile and developing countries
Because you can’t find a Starbucks with Wi-Fi in Nigeria.

Facebook Redefines Privacy
Probably one of the biggest PR screw-up of the year.

The Slow Death of Campaign Microsites?
Social Networks taking over, is there still room for those dedicated mini-sites?

Virtual World theft just got real
The line becomes very blurry between first and second life.

Google’s rule: don’t waste time debating
Or how to reduce development costs and pointless meetings.

Up for grabs in 2008: the coming 2008 dot-com crash, Wall Street gets frustrated with Google, Nintendo banks on fitness, smartphones become mainstream, online social networks grab more ads $ and integrate hi-def video.

And you, what’s in your crystal ball for 2008?

(post written with Manuel Faisco)

Natural Evolution – The Top Ten Iphone Replacements That Microsoft Wants [PIC]

10
Dec
07

Interesting News…
Social Bookmarking Websites are definitely a trend – most of the techies/geeky receive a feed from one SBW every day, telling them what’s the new buzz, what’s the news with the Iphone in Yugoslavia or the best top 10 reasons to stop questioning your parents. But, with the rise of new competitors to the market that bring new added value, are SBW going down the same path Newspapers went – from source of news to shallow tabloids?. Continue reading ‘Natural Evolution – The Top Ten Iphone Replacements That Microsoft Wants [PIC]‘

Social Media Marketing – Decieving Carpe Diem

27
Nov
07

Don, Apple is not in the top spot of our links!
After reading an article making an interesting paralism between a movie and a web 2.0 symbol, I couldn’t help but to sit and think about it. Web hits are becoming more and more a way for Brands to evaluate a site’s performance. Although true to a certain extent, aren’t the Social Media websites acting towards these results in the same way that the TVs’ effect of creating a public opinion did on their audiences?
Yes and no. In my opinion, Social Media has given birth to a new form of Marketing, specific to each of the Webstartups it’s related to – Digg-Marketing, Reddit-Marketing, etc… – as each has its own specificities. This Marketing, while attractive as a way to add visibility to a Brand, promotes false results as the results that are on top of a page in one day vary, which originates a huge influx of visitors at one moment and a big pitfall in the next. So, in one way, the Social Media websites are shaping the apprehension of the online public opinion to a certain extent. But, there are two variables that differ from the original effect that the TV had – time and interactivity. People might be curious to check a link that is on top in Digg, but the truth is that in the next hour, he’ll be back to check the new number one link, almost forgetting about the original one – information overload syndrome. And there are instant comments – people refute and approve the information in real time, thus shaping and steering information towards a common ground with online audiences.
The bottom line is that Social Media is indeed acting as a opinion shaper, but only towards a certain extent. Yes, it is important for Marketers to acknowledge these tools and their effects, but it isn’t a good strategic pillar to focus on them for pure brand awareness – it will only originate the desired brand awareness if more people actually create links related to the same topic. If it’s a single interesting link, it will definitely create a lot of traffic, but only in a 1 hour maximum time slot.

‹‹RWD: 2001

11
Sep
07

google11.gif

I’m just coming back from dinner in Red Hook, and the taxi drove along downtown Manhattan across the river on the way home. When I realized that it was September 11, and would have I been taking the same ride exactly six years ago, I would have seen the Twin Towers for the last time.

But six years ago, i was living in London. And I was at work as usual when I’ve received that email from my old boss in Paris (roughly quoting): “Un avion s’est écrasé sur l’une des Twin Towers. Va sur le site de cnn.” Or in English: “A plane hit one of the Twin Towers. Go on cnn.com”.

The attacks on the WTC were the first and most seismic news events in the Web Era:
(Pew Internet Report, The commons of the tragedy)


More than two-thirds of Internet users (69%) have used the Web to get news and information related to the attacks and their aftermath. Half of Internet users – more than 53 million people – have gotten some kind of news about the attacks online. Many online Americans have used the Internet to stay “on alert” for news developments by subscribing to email news updates and getting newscasts streamed to their desktops.

The demand for online information was so overwhelming that most of the news site became unaccessible, forcing their editor to strip them down to text-only version.

Few links:




The TrendWatch:


The TrendWatch is the collective postings of some of the FullSIX Group’s designers, strategists, and consultants on new media and marketing trends. It is meant to be an impromptu think-tank, and is a way for us to share theories and beliefs about how we think communication and connectivity is evolving.

We work for The FullSIX Group; a leading full service marketing agency with digital DNA. From our 15 international offices with over 600 employees, we constantly embrace and encourage innovation to make integrated marketing and communication campaigns that are more accountable and efficient for our clients.