Tag Archive for 'technology'

Two technologies spotted on CNN during Elections 08 season, supposed to enhance the viewer’s experience.

1/ Interviewing an hologram

2/ Large Touch Screen that allows the anchor to manipulate images and data

Both have been heavily mocked by the Saturday Night Live and Daily Show teams, and you can understand why. But I really enjoyed watching the presentator dig into layers and layers of data, state by state, last Thursday.

By olivier PEYRE, Comments

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, Comment

Ralph Lauren wants QR codes to be mainstream

29
Aug
08

The other day, I saw an ad for Polo Ralph Lauren on the back of my NY mag, featuring one of those bar codes that I believed had never crossed the Japanese borders. Since I’m a sucker for marketing experimentations, plus I’ve been wondering about these for a while, I decided to give it a try. I grabbed the magazine and my iPhone, ready to dive in the wonderful world of real-life shortcuts to the Internet!

Unfortunately, I wasn’t so lucky. It took me 15 minutes to go from that ad to where Ralph wanted to take me. A quarter of an hour when I had to struggle with broken web pages and far-from-optimized layouts. For an insulting result… being sent to the site’s homepage! The 21 steps I had to take are detailed in the slideshow above.

I know, we need to be “educated” before actually seeing some interesting marketing applications, but you can only make one first impression. So please, marketers, if you want consumers to use new technologies like QR codes, make sure you make it effortless for us. Because it’s gonna take a while before I take a picture of one of these again! And dear people at Polo’s Interactive Marketing Department, if you need an agency that can develop a gorgeous, premium, advanced iPhone/mobile-optimized site, drop us a line and we’ll give you a sneak preview of a pretty awesome example we’re about to launch for one of our client!

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

13
Aug
08

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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!

Edy-body got some change?

03
Mar
08

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Denshi mane (electronic money) was first used by NTT DoCoMo in Japanese mobiles, Edy (which stands for Euro, Dollar, Yen) is a free electronic pre paid money service that allows you to charge money on your phone or card. This can be used in convenient stores, shops and even vending machines. You can even use your phone when going on the train, instead of using your suica card. That’s the name of the JR Lines metro card, it uses a magnetic strip that you swipe. You can even use it to buy things from vending machines in train stations.

So how does this work? A small magnetic like chip is inserted on the back of a mobile. This chip uses Sony’s FeliCa technology. A small scanning device is placed next to a register, or is attached to a vending machine. All you need to do is scan the bottom of your mobile over the device, and it reads the strip inside.

How does it take your money? You actually have to charge your eddy account. You can do this in several ways. They have small stand alone machines where you can deposit money in and then scan your phone, which adds the money to your account. You can also use your home computer and charge your credit card, but the website only takes certain cards.

Today AU by KDDI and Softbank Mobile also offer this feature and it seems to be doing rather well, although some are better than others. While I was living in Japan I never used mine. The one time I had no cash on me and was really thirsty the convenient store I went into had a broken Edy Machine. I was very disappointed. I do however think this is a very useful tool because I feel this feature will let you even leave your wallet at home. Japanese mobiles seem to play a huge part in life in Japan. It’s almost as if you leave your mobile at home, you leave a part of your life. That’s pretty scary.

My Bedroom 2.0

14
Nov
07

Chumby
Have you met my rabbit? It can tell me when I have new emails, read them out lout, play internet radios, etc. I thought that was cool.

Then I met Chumby. A true 21st century alarm clock, so much better than the previous one: It is completely open source, connects to my home network, has a wide touch screen and not only will it display weather forecasts, flickr pictures, my facebook status, and give me a few chuck norris facts; I can also customize it with my own widgets. All I need, is a little flash lite knowledge to write my own widgets.

Those new devices are slowly erasing the line between “being connected” and “being offline”. What took a computer yesterday, can now be done with an alarm clock and tomorrow with a fridge or a table.

Now I wonder, what smart services do we expect in the 5 minutes between alarm ringing and actually leaving bed?

I Wish I Had Designed It: Good Things Should Never End

07
Nov
07

Part of Orange Unlimited campaign, a web-page that never seems to end, an addictive crazy little world of never ending doodles, mini-games and interactive animations including breakdancing monkeys, musical chickens and of course where would you be without a guitar playing pot-plant! Building upon the seemingly never ending scrolling page of endless wacky character the site communicates the campaign message of limitless free text messages, by encouraging us to follow the never ending rainbow of fun found in its online, print and television campaigns.

The Tech-y World We Live In

12
Oct
07

These days we are relying on technology maybe a little too much. In the world of advertising it changes the way we consume media. The new ways of utilising technology are emerging every day. Some of them reach just the early adopters (the geeks :-)) but some of them actually change the way we live our lives.

From this article you will hopefully learn about those new, funky and clever technologies which might become really widespread soon.

Most of us in the digital industry have heard about Google’s Street View on Maps. In response to that Microsoft Live Labs are tackling the challenge to overlay photography on 3D structures, without having to resort to going out and taking the photos themselves (as Street View does). Instead they are seeking to utilize the collective power of a global consumer base by tapping into their photo albums. The software, called Photosynth, is able to take a large collection of photos (i.e from Flickr) of a place or an object, analyse them for similarities, and display them in a constructed 3D space.

One of the more useful creative applications of the technology is a product called Rave Guardian. Designed by mobile services company Rave Wireless in New York, it is a GPS-based mobile phone service to keep students safe. A student sets a timed alarm on their phone when they leave a friend’s dorm at night to return to their room. If they return safely they can simply turn off the alarm. Otherwise the alarm transmits their location on Google Maps every three minutes to campus safety. The software also enables students to track buses as they move around the campus and to access academic information that was digitally ‘tagged’ during a lecture.

Also worth mentioning is the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology. Fedex is using it for tracking deliveries and BA is using it for tracking luggage. It is only relatively recently that businesses have starting using them to engage with consumers. Luxury brands like Prada allow consumers to access further information about the products via in-store RFID readers. Garments held up to screens in the Prada flagship store trigger catwalk shows and recommend accessories.

Now, going away now from the US and UK, in Japan, over a third of mobile phones have scanners built into them. It has become second nature for consumers in Tokyo to scan products for reviews or price comparisons with Amazon.co.jp. Image recognition software even allows camera phones to request information from the Internet based on tagged photos in magazines or on posters. The question arises: how long before we can access somebody’s blog or Facebook page simply by taking their photo? Sounds pretty cool, but scary at the same time!

Whilst in the UK MySpace has only recently reached mobile via Vodafone, in the US Nokia and other premium handsets have started introducing a functionality to allow users to track down the whereabouts of their friends using in-built GPS and Google Maps. Mobile technology has recently been developed that enables users to stay signed in to Second Life and listen to their online friends whilst moving about in the real world. This technology also promises to convert real world activity into a virtual equivalent (you walk and your online self walks).

So, what is the implication for brands and agencies?

It will be necessary for all brand managers to become more aware of the technological advances and us, agencies, should help educate them and also help them in their approach to creativity. We may even find that technology itself is the creative idea, in some instances. This is why agencies need to be equipped with experts in order to engrave technology into the essence of an idea.

Nokia has recently released a campaign against the IPhone focused on its blocking system. And this isn’t the first time Nokia has attacked Apple in such a direct way. Two thoughts come to hand at the same time:

1 - Isn’t it just a little too aggressive to create a campaign that focus on flaws from competitors instead of just showing that your can do better?

2 - Is society tech-informed enough to process and understand this sort of advertisement? I mean, my mother surely doesn’t know what an IPhone is, let alone about its blocking system.

Has Society crossed the gap created by the steep evolution of gadgets and technology, enabling more the 50% of users to understand techie references such as this Nokia campaign? Or is it a campaign target specifically at techies? If so, would this work in any other city besides New York?

In any case, I think it’s just bad for a brand like Nokia, who has such a high Brand Affinity and Brand Awareness rates, to resort to direct war. Couldn’t they have just done another Nokia Game instead?

By luis FREITAS, Comments

THE FUTURE OWNS US.

21
Sep
07

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I know the blog is called TRENDWATCH and not PHONETECHWATCH but be still folks. This is important stuff. A special little informational treat about your future I’m writing about today. This one goes out to all the peeps who obey their shiny new internets communication devices and yearn for more.

I’d like to introduce to you 4G. But before I do I’m going to make a quick attempt at clearing the smoke and haze of confusion that has quietly permeated your head as soon as you began reading this paragraph:

We’ll start with the networks used today and how they measure up:

Your AT&T, T-Mobile, O2, Orange, et al.

Your Sprint, Verizon, Vodafone, et al.

  • CDMA = 3G = FAST
  • EV-DO (Rev. A, B) = 3G = A LITTLE FASTER

So, what’s next?

T-Mobile’s Hotspot@Home and Sprint’s planned roll out of WiMax in NYC and a few other insignificant cities at the end of the year has probably stirred Verizon enough into looking at Vodafone’s LTE (long term evolution) technology for a 4G network.

If you were wondering, a “G” is a unit of speed based on the amount of time it takes for an “LOL” to travel 4 timezones. Kidding. I actually have no idea but it sort of makes it easier to understand, yeah?

iPhone. So the point of this little note is to let you know that in a year or two — those willing to pay — are gonna be sending drunk pictures to their friends even faster!

Really though, if you think web 2.0 is getting out of control now, just wait. Maybe we’ll all be wearing holographic emoticon charms that change based on our real emoticonal status and emit a wireless signal received by WiTooth headphones that read your friends’ Facebook status to you in real time.

I seriously cannot wait!




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.


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