... A collection of all things digital

Article / The dollars will follow (The Australian - IT)

Another interesting article on social networking. How to convert large numbers of users with small revenue into viable offerings - something beyond a phenomenon.

“IT is the sheer pace of growth that is astounding. Piczo will be an unfamiliar name to many readers, yet in just 13 months this networking website for teenagers has grown eightfold, increasing its number of users from 1.2 million to 10.5 million.”

Read the article

Article / Games are going mobile (SMH)

The mobile games market must be booming if gaming giant Electronic Arts has come out to play…

http://www.smh.com.au/news/games/games-are-going-mobile/2006/12/10/1165685544813.html

Article / Free-to-air copping a download (News.com.au)

AUSTRALIA’S $3.5 billion free-to-air commercial television industry is being threatened by the internet more quickly than expected, with a new online study showing 53 per cent of respondents regularly download TV shows from the internet, most of them illegally.

http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/story/0,23663,20922909-10229,00.html

Article / Top tech trends to watch in 2007 (SMH)

- Blogosphere growth tapers
- Vista take-up slows, Linux following grows
- Web 2.0 start-ups weeded out
- HD DVD vs. Blu-ray format war decided
- Continued migration from desktop to online applications
- VoIP takes off
- Computers in the living room still won’t fly
- Mobile video proliferates
- YouTube won’t feature in the 2007 Federal Election
- Microsoft ramps up its online business
- Downloadable movie space heats up
- Wii wins next-gen console war

http://blogs.smh.com.au/mashup/archives//009082.html

Article / Time Person of the Year


Time magazine has named us (you), “Person of the Year”. You have been so named for the massive growth of user generated content filling sites like YouTube, MySpace, Frickr and more. The cover has a mirror on it to reflect the reader and enhance the “You” message.

From the article: “It’s a story about community and collaboration on a scale never seen before. It’s about the cosmic compendium of knowledge Wikipedia and the million-channel people’s network YouTube and the online metropolis MySpace. It’s about the many wresting power from the few and helping one another for nothing and how that will not only change the world, but also change the way the world changes.”

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1569514,00.html

Article / Graphic Design vs. Illustration

Interesting article on Design Observer about the changing nature and importance of illustration as a communication tool.
Read the article

Article / NetX Hires Award School Team

From Campaign Brief Blog: NetX Hires Award School Team

Sydney digital agency NetX has once again delved into the ‘offline’ advertising world and appointed two creatives as the agency continues to strengthen its creative depth, following the appointment of Executive Creative Director Shaun Branagan earlier this year.

Ben Pearce joins NetX as Art Director and Patrick Tonkin joins as Copywriter after completing this year’s
AWARD school. Their appointment follows that of Lead Creative Josh Rowe, who joined NetX last month.

Prior to AWARD school Pearce spent time at the Launchpad at DDB working on campaigns for McDonald’s, Continental and Energizer. Prior to DDB he was Art Director at Red Pepper Design, the design arm of Macquarie University’s in?house creative company, working with university departments and a number of external clients. He started his career as a designer at McCorkell & Associates and has also worked at humidity and The Twelfth Man and has freelanced at a number of agencies.
Tonkin was previously with Lincinc Productions as a Designer / Writer where he worked on Telstra and BigPond. He has written and directed several short films, produced soundtracks for various directors , short films and websites and had short stories published in Idiom 23.

“Ben and Pat have diverse backgrounds and are a natural fit for NetX as it becomes an ideas company. We are increasingly being asked by clients to lead the creative strategy on various campaigns and it is important to have depth not just in digital creative talent but also big brand ideas. Ben and Pat will help lead us in that direction,” Shaun Branagan said.
“The creative resource we are building at NetX will not be able to be matched by any other digital agency and gives us a distinct competitive advantage.”

Article / User Generated Content

So what is User Generated Content (UGC) and why is it technologies latest buzz phrase?
(I started off keeping this brief and it kinda just expanded so here goes…)

It’s a term that started to hit the mainstream during 2005 and refers to online content that is produced by users of websites as opposed to traditional media producers (publishers, production companies, broadcasters etc). In a nutshell, UGC is the democratisation of content production through the availability and use of new technologies. Some now commonplace examples of this include blogging, podcasting, vodcasting and mobile phone cameras. Web users today are empowered with mobile devices and relevant applications that allow them to quickly and easily capture, create and publish text, image and video.

Websites leading this revolution include this (Blogger), Flickr, Wikipedia, MySpace and YouTube - all places where us, individuals, have a voice. In effect, we not only visit and use the site, we are the site.

There are a number of impacts of UGC to organisations such as Devotion. No longer will we solely create sites with pre-determined content and structured architectures, there will now exist the opportunity to develop frameworks and infrastructure for ‘non-media professionals’ (Wikipedia term) or ‘citizen reporters’ to publish their own opinions/pieces/work. The great thing about this is that what makes the web live is us. Our presence, is the web and brands/companies are now realising the power of giving some of the freedom they tried to control back to the user.

The hard part for marketers working in this space will be to understand what happens when user-amassed wisdom forms communities of influence. Will technology deliver the ability for massive brand backlash seen recently with Coke Zero, or will we be able to step past that?

The thing to be aware of is that this isn’t just emerging, it is here. Forrester (April 2005) states, that “nearly half of all on-line consumers say that they’ve watched streaming video in the past month… With broadband households doubling from 31 million to 64 million in the next four years, access to online video is becoming standard both at work and at home.”

Flickr (bought by Yahoo!) has a community in excess of 2.5 million users while MySpace, recently acquired by Rupert Murdoch has 65 million users. Both of these Sites are indicative of the resurgence in the new high-tech wave brought on by Web 2.0.

In April 2005 the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) established a UGC team with 3 staff. Following the July 2005 London bombings and the Buncefield oil depot fire, the team was made permanent and rapidly expanded. ‘Citizen journalists’ sent in over 5000 photos of Buncefield and broke the true scale of the London bombings on the web 10 minutes after the first bombs occurred. It took the radio and TV broadcasters over 45 mintues to actually confirm that these were indeed acts of terrorism and not ‘gas explosions’ as was first reported.

Closer to home, the September 2004 Australian Embassy bombing in Jakarta was instantly captured and the images published on Flickr by 3 different users. At the time, Flickr had only 60 000 members.

These patterns haven’t gone unnoticed and sites like the SMH have cottoned on and are now seeking audio, image and video footage from their users. The following snapshot shows a footer that now appears after most articles the SMH publish. Also note the links to del.icio.us and Digg, but that’s for another time - more really cool UGC stuff… go investigate.

Websites such as Newsvine and AC Associated Content, The Peoples Media Company are now garnering huge spheres of influence. Although delivering yet more content to the web, they allow us, the user, the ability to legitimise what we read. We now have the means to pull content from many sources, commercial and free, and develop our own opinions. An example of this would be to read an article on the conflict in the Middle East on the SMH or News, both commercially backed entities and then clarify our own position by seeking independent reports from UGC sites such as Newsvine. To quote the late Don Chipp, this is a way for us to “Keep the Bastards Honest”?

And it’s not all about news. It’s a well documented rumour that MTV, at the cutting-edge of youth broadcasting across multiple mediums, is currently developing a standalone UGC channel. A whole MTV sub-brand essentially owned and run by the audience.

Triple J has very successfully launched Triple J Unearthed in the last 3 months to amazing success. After being in radio format for 30 years and the breeding ground for unsigned Australian artists, they have handed it over to the people. No longer do Triple J manage the music they receive, no longer do they play what they believe will be of interest to the audience – the audience now choose what they hear and when they hear it. Essentially, it’s about empowering the user.

Further to this point, here’s an except from an interesting article in Newsweek Magazine, The New Wisdom of the Web. I’ve included a large slab here but if you have time, and it is long, it’s well worth reading.

“The smartest guy in the room is everybody. Tim O’Reilly, an early promoter of the Web 2.0 idea, says, ‘The central idea is harnessing collective intelligence.’ This sounds lofty, but is actually happening all the time on the Web. Every time you type in a search query on Google, what’s happening under the hood is the equivalent of a massive polling operation to see which other sites people on the Web have deemed most relevant to that term. Magically, it yields a result that no amount of hands-on filtering could have managed. ‘It’s clear that the Web is structurally congenial to the wisdom of crowds,’ says James Surowiecki, author of a book (The Wisdom of Crowds, naturally) that argues that your average bunch of people can guess the weight of a cow or predict an Oscar winner better than an expert can. That’s why some people believe that an army of bloggers can provide an alternative to even the smartest journalists, and that if millions of eyes monitor encyclopedia entries that anyone can write and rewrite (namely, the Wikipedia), the result will take on Britannica.”

And the wake up call:
“Less than a decade ago, when we were first getting used to the idea of an Internet, people described the act of going online as venturing into some foreign realm called cyberspace. But that metaphor no longer applies. MySpace, Flickr and all the other newcomers aren’t places to go, but things to do, ways to express yourself, means to connect with others and extend your own horizons. Cyberspace was somewhere else. The Web is where we live.”

Article / Google CEO joins Apple board (SMH)

Could be interesting to watch the potential pairing of Apple and Google vs Microsoft > SMH article

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