Archive for May, 2009

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100 Most Creative People in Business

20 May, 2009
From Fast Company

From Fast Company

The 100 span all sorts of fields and all sorts of business, from design to economics to jokes.

Fast Company invites you to comment or quibble, but to me the list seems extensive, diverse and global.

One of the most interesting axis of diversity for me was that some of those recognised are artists operating alone (Damian Hurst), some are in relatively small companies focusing on one industry (Stella McCartney), and a many are from the corporate world where common wisdom says that innovation and creativity are not possible.

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TED goes multi-lingual

19 May, 2009

Just one more reason to love TED: they’re now offering many of their talks in multiple languages. This one is available with subtitles in English, German, Greek, Hungarian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian and Turkish.

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TED video, subtitled in Japanese

To see the languages just click on the scroll bar below the video image. To search only on one language start by clicking on translations at the top of the page.

There are more than 300 translations, and there are about 45 languages listed, although some only have one video in the new language.

TED have set up a translation volunteer process, translators work in pairs or in a translator-reviewer tandem.  Translators get a transcript and have a month to work on it.

The number of multilingual videos is growing fast, and the number of languages is also growing. TED already has a great international community and this is a great way of engaging them and using that resource. Perfect Crowdsourcing.

It also opens the door for TED to have non-native English speakers and events in non-English speaking countries. Fascinating.

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Twitter is for Everyone in the Universe

18 May, 2009

Three Stories about Twitter last week caught my eye; there’s a common theme of manipulating the audience – whether that’s other twitterers or a mainstream media audience.

Tweet from Space

I’ve seen reports this week that the first “Tweet” was sent from space, which sounds like a huge fantastic technological advance until you read.

Massimino transmits his messages to Mission Control on the ground, and NASA posts them to the Web at: http://twitter.com/astro_mike.


OK, so still cool, but not as breakthrough-geek-cool as it first sounded.

World’s Oldest Tweeter

Ivy Bean's first two tweets

Ivy Bean's first two tweets

Then there’s the report of the World’s Oldest Tweeter in the UK’s telegraph science section, Ivy Bean who “talks cuppas and casserole on Twitter at 104″. Well not when the photo was taken she didn’t, at that time she’d only made two tweets and neither mention tea or casserole.

I’m delighted that she’s on twitter – I wish her many happy tweets. I think it’s fantastic that she enjoys it, and that technology is becoming so simple to use that everyone wants to.

But this story has “manufactured” written all over it. I’m not the only one to notice, Techcrunch came to the same conclusion, specifically

Bean signed up and sent her first two tweets at the time all these guys were writing their stories. Or, to put it more clearly, this whole story was staged.

Tweet the Life you Wish You Had

Kanye West, a famous rap artist (I know this because I read it on wiki) has complained on his blog about misuse of his name in various twitter accounts. Which was picked up in the mainstream news and has led to twitter looking at verifying accounts in order to avoid confusion.

This could be a good move, and not just for twitter.

It’s interesting that the most calculated manipulation here is by mainstream media – who often defend their status as “keepers of the truth” against user generated content. They’re now using the tools of the social media world to create manipulation in their own stories.

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Bienvenue à…

15 May, 2009

It’s a cute ad, there’s a nice twist, clever shots to trick you initially, and the styling is very “French Art Movie”.

The seaside resort of Blackpool in the UK, famous for Blackpool rock (a teeth-breaking candy invented by dentists), a roller coaster and a tower. The tower has a very approximate resemblance to the Eiffel Tower, which seems to have inspired the Blackpool tourist board to create the ad designed to appeal to French visitors.

I like the ad, it’s funny and well done. If they’ve done their homework it could get some viral spread. But I don’t think it’s effective – there’s not enough in the ad to make me want to research Blackpool let alone visit there. They are competing with some wonderful beaches along the Mediterranean, I’m not sure this is enough sell.

Will the French Spot the Difference?
Blackpool Tower

Blackpool Tower

by kevinzim, via flickr

VS

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Eiffel Tower

by johntrainor, via flickr

Blackpool Beach

Blackpool Beach

by jayneward, via flickr

VS

French Riviera

French Riviera

by Mitch Allen, via flickr

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Data Visualisation

14 May, 2009

Data visualisation techniques can give new insights into large amounts of data, the results can be quite artistic. Because so much of what we do online is now tagged and categorised there are some tools out there to help us analyse patterns on the web in close to real time, and some data visualisations become new ways of navigating information online – occasionally the reveal more information at a meta level in the process.

Just for fun the people at Pitch Interactive created a visualisation of Oscar winning actors and directors (positioned on the inner ring) and their connections to non-Oscar winning actors (positioned on the outer ring).

The density of the connecting lines indicates that there are a few non-Oscar winners who repeatedly work with Oscar winners. It’s a pattern that would have been very hard to see in the original data.

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We feel fine searches for “feel” and “feelings” on the internet, and presents them in several ways. Madness is the format shown at right, with a cluster of emotions and the text of the selected emotion above.

One of the dataviews is a bar graph of the terms used, it’s sobering, apparently we specify our feelings online when we’re feeling low. Frighteningly the word most often used was “whatever”

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Amaztype have a freakishly mesmerising way of presenting search results on Amazon, you can search by title or author and the results are displayed as book covers that appear in the form of your search term. Picture 9
The Newsmap offers a great way of viewing news across a range of categories and several countries based on google news. The size and shade of colour give information on the ranking and age of the article. Comparing countries gives an insight into what’s important locally. Picture 5
My favourite is the Allosphere, it’s a collaboration between musicians, visual artists and scientists. The results are presented on the inside of a 10m diameter sphere in 3D. It is being used by scientists to understand biology at the molecular level and chemistry at the atomic level. The image at right is a visualisation of a lattice of atoms of hydrogen, oxygen and zinc which forms a new material for transperant solar cells.

It almost makes me wish I’d stayed in Science.

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Apprentice 8: Brand Me Baby!

13 May, 2009

margateThis weeks challenge is the most difficult so far, the teams are charged with rebranding – updating the seaside town of Margate. I’ve never been to Margate but I can’t say I’ve been impressed with UK beaches in general, and the Apprentice site itself refers to Margate as having “Once a jewel of the Kent coast, Margate still has a faded grandeur, but it is up to the teams to bring a much-needed sparkle for the 21st century.”

Their job is to produce posters and information that will attract new tourists to the town – and pitch their campaigns to tourism industry experts and residents of Margate.

Debra led Mona, Howard and James for Empire and they quickly decided to target the gay market – over Mona’s objections, she didn’t think it was “suitable” for Kent. Yasmina lead Kate, Ben and Lorraine for Ignite and target the family market based on the logic that in the current financial crisis families won’t be able to afford foreign holidays.

The pitches were well done by Howard and Kate, but the posters and brochures were horrendous. Extremely old fashioned looking and with way too much text on them, in the case of Empire the brochures weren’t finished. In the end the experts and residents gave Empire a total of 8/20, and Ignite 14/20.

Picture 20Debra bought James and Mona back into the board room, a great debate started which Sir Alan quickly labelled it a “Punch and Judy Show”. Debra tried to pretend that the “gay market” wasn’t James’ idea, and tried to claim that she couldn’t make decent posters out of the content sent to her.

Debra played a smart boardroom game, keeping relatively quiet but pushing all Mona’s buttons. James isn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer but he’d pulled his weight on this task – even so Debra managed to neatly discredit him.

But it was Mona’s half-heartedness for the task that seemed to bother Sir Alan the most, after deliberating for a minute or two he pointed the finger at Mona and said the words she feared hearing “You’re Fired”

photo of Margate beach from anaru via flickr

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4 Business Models in the Age of Free Content

13 May, 2009

According to CNN Rupert Murdoch expects News Corporation newspaper websites to charge users for access within a year. The comments on the article are pretty negative, only three of the most recent 50 comments would pay for content and two of those specify that they would not pay for News Corporation content. Most of the comments indicate a high expectation for free content to continue some of the rhetoric paints this as a threat to the democratic nature of the internet, while some analysts predict a shake up the culture of free content.

So who’s right?

Wall Street Journal requires paid subscription to access most content.

WSJ requires paid subscription to access content.

Amongst all the commentary on the death of the print media I came across this chart from the Silicon Alley Insider, showing an overall drop in newspaper circulation on newspapers across America, with one notable exception, the Wall Street Journal. News Corp owns the Wall Street Journal, and they require a paid subscription for almost all content. It’s an incomplete picture but it may indicate that maintaining a fee based subscription for content online provides a dis-incentive for people to switch to online content.

It’s been clear to me for a while that there’s something a bit screwed up about the business models of most web 2.0 sites. I wrote a couple of weeks ago about YouTube’s money worries, their ad income doesn’t cover their bandwidth bill.

There seem to be three possible models to make money from online content;

Subscription: It can work, but it is tricky to get people to subscribe. It seems to be most successful when some content is available for free and some available as premium content, this has worked for Salon for example.

Advertising: Only a few high traffic websites will make significant advertising alone. This was true back in 1997 when Jakob Nielson wrote about it and it’s certainly now when the growth in online content has been growing significantly faster than the number of users. As site numbers drop the advertising spend drops rapidly, compare the user numbers and advertising revenue of AOL.

Plus there can be a significant dissonance for the reader between the content on the site and the ads served  – although this is getting better all the time.

Commissioned Content: Writing and publishing content as commissioned by a company blurs the separation of editorial and advertising copy. It’s generally considered bad journalistic practice and it’s not a quality strategy. It’s the content behind sites like ArticlesBase.com, their “top authors” produce 25 articles on one subject in a sort of link farm attempt.

Picture 14But there’s one further model not widely used; Micropayments. In this model some content can be freely available and some content can be for pay. The “for pay” content is sold for a small amount per read. This model replicates the iTunes model for music, and has a similar transforming potential for written content. This model can work at the blogger end of the publication schedule right up to New Corp.

Some bloggers have already been experimenting with micropayments, often providing blog content for free and seeking a small payment for an ebook. This model was discussed for WSJ but generally slammed by the blogosphere, many of whom deplore the idea of paying for news.

In other media we pay. We pay because we want a measure of independence and quality. So why not on the web? Why do we suddenly feel we have the right to free news? I think our perspective has got skewed by television. We feel we don’t pay for news on TV, we feel it’s beamed for free into our homes. It’s free content (or nearly free, if you pay a licence). What we fail to realise is that in the TV business model we are the product. Television funded by advertisements sells those advertisments based on viewer numbers.

Back to the original question; I think both are right. The bloggers are right in that our expectation for free content is not going to disappear, and there’s so much of it available. The commentators are also right, content driven sites are already facing the challenge of finding a sustainable revenue model. It’s unlikely that one model will fit all – and it’s unlikely that it will feel as “democratic” as the blogosphere expects.

coin photo from dichoheco via flickr

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Mind Mapping

12 May, 2009

I’ve used mind mapping before, both for creative problem solving and for organising information. I finding it easier to find connections across groups of information this way. I’ve also found it easy to categorise or colour-code the types of information. Usually I make mind maps alone using a big sheet of paper and pens in several colours.

Last weekend I found a cool online tool to do this, called Mindmeister, here’s a quick mindmap I made regarding a webproject – go ahead and improve it.

A mindmap of a web project

A mindmap of a web project

The tool lets you add nodes, each node can be customised;

  • text colour
  • icons
  • add links
  • add documents (not in free version)
  • connect to other nodes on the same mindmap.

You can can export it as a mindmap file or a pdf to use elsewhere.

You can also work on a mindmap as a team, or make a mindmap open for everyone to work on, if you’d like to improve my mindmap above, go ahead – it’s here.

You can try up to six mindmaps for free, after that you’ll need to tradeup – which will open up several features to play with.

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Size does matter: Kindle gets bigger

11 May, 2009

Amazon launched a new kindle last week, bigger and better than before. The bigger screen size will improve readability and graphics display, but it’s not just the size of the device that’s grown.

The selection of content has also grown; It was launched with 90,000 books, had 230,000 in February and now has around 275,000. It’s also become a favourite way to get newspapers with significant partnerships developed with New York Times, Washingtion Post and the Boston Globe. Partnerships textbook publishers and pilots with universities will also help sales – not to mention the state of student’s backs.

But perhaps the most dramatic change of all is in the sales figures. Where there is a Kindle version 35% of purchasers choose it.

I can see all the reasons for using an electronic book reader – and here I should point out that as I’m in Europe Kindle is not available so my experience is limited to using a Sony reader in a Waterstone’s store. It’s small, portable and you can store a lot of content on it. With the wireless delivery you can pick up newspapers at the moment of publication without leaving your home. There’s some discussion about it making life easier for those who need to carry a lot of documents – this argument I don’t buy, Kindle doesn’t let you work on the documents and I don’t think it offers any advantage over having a laptop and a passable internet connection.

Picture 34I just don’t like it.

I love reading, I love books. I like the feel of them, I don’t even care if they’re old or new. I grew up with them and have always lived with books. A house without books isn’t a home, it’s a hotel room.

I suspect this might be the piece of technology that reveals my inner luddite.

image from darwinbell via flickr

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Pandora’s Box

8 May, 2009

I’ve heard Pandora’s Box applied to the current crisis as the unraveling of the financial services kicks into other industries. Who is Pandora? And why is her box such a problem?

Pandora was the first woman on earth according to Greek mythology, created by Hephaestus, the god of craftsmanship, using water and soil. The gods gave her many gifts, including the gift of curiosity.

picture-25Zeus gave her a jar, pithos, with instructions not to open it. Ever.

That was doomed, you can’t give a curious woman an instruction like that and expect her to follow it. Of course she opened it and unleashed all the evil on the world. Although she closed the lid quickly almost everything had been released except for hope, which lay at the bottom of Pandora’s jar.

Pandora’s jar?

It seems there was a translation error from the Greek pithos (jar or urn) to the Latin pyxis (box), and the error is usually accredited to Erasmas.

It’s a term that’s inspired art and puzzles.

And if it’s an accurate term for the current global financial crisis, at least there’s still hope in the bottom of the box.

image from takomabibelot via flickr, of a sculpture of Pandora at the Victoria and Albert Museum