Skip to main content

Home/ Moxie FutureX/ Group items tagged Traditional

Rss Feed Group items tagged

2More

More users watching paid video on mobiles - UPI.com - 1 views

  • The report found tablets are the most popular mobile devices, with 18 percent of consumers using them for viewing paid video content, while mobile phone usage isn't far behind at 16 percent, a J.D. Power and Associates said. Gaming consoles remain the overall leader when looking at all digital devices for viewing video -- 6.3 hours per week, compared with 5.3 hours on a laptop/desktop, 4.9 hours on a wireless phone, 4.5 hours on a music player and 4.4 hours on a tablet, the survey results indicate. Still, gaming console viewing has yet to match traditional TV viewing, Frank Perazzini, director of telecommunications at J.D. Power and Associates, said. "These findings illustrate that while customers appreciate the convenience and value that gaming consoles provide, the TV screen is still a preferred viewing media," he said.
  •  
    trends presents
1More

Social Media Makes Early Verdicts on the Upfront | Special Report: TV Upfront - Adverti... - 0 views

  • "Cult," a creepy-looking drama on The CW, ranked first on a Social Index from Networked Insights, a social-media analytics company that advises brands and agencies on media planning. The index considers post volume and sentiment as well as other factors in chatter across Facebook, Twitter, forums and blogs. "Cult" follows an investigative journalist trying to find his paranoid brother, who went missing after becoming afraid that a hit TV show was out to get him. However much social traction it gets, "Cult" may have a tough time achieving big traditional TV ratings because it appears on one of the smaller networks and will arrive in mid-season instead of the fall, when attention is higher. "The Mindy Project" on Fox, "The Carrie Diaries" on The CW, "The Following" on Fox and "Revolution" on NBC round out the top five new series on Networked Insights' Social Index. On a network-by-network basis, buyers interested in shows' social potential should consider "666 Park Avenue" on ABC, "Vegas" on CBS, "Cult" on CW, "The Mindy Project" on Fox and "Revolution" on NBC, Networked Insights said.
1More

Five Things You Should Know About Advertising to Millennials - 0 views

  •  
    Focusing on TV and "digital" advertising
1More

Facing limits of traditional PR, Original9 Media will arm companies with content | Vent... - 0 views

  •  
    New PR firms focus on turning brands into media producers to generate earned media without relying on the media industry for coverage.
1More

Chinese Doctors 3D Print and Implant Shoulder and Pelvic Bone Replacements - 3DPrint.com - 5 views

  • One more interesting advantage of using 3D printing for prosthetics is the cost effectiveness  According to Doctor Guo Zheng from the Xijing Hospital of the Fourth Military Medical University, the 3D-printed bones cost approximately half the price that traditional bone implants do.
2More

The Age of Transhumanist Politics Has Begun: Will It Change Traditional Concepts of Lef... - 0 views

  •  
    2016 trend? Or too soon?
  •  
    Not too soon but maybe part of a larger trend
3More

Replaying a 1982 Football Match in an Urban Environment - information aesthetics - 0 views

  • "Refait" is a meticulous remake of the last faze of a football World Cup match between France and Germany in Seville, Spain (1982)
  • The aim was to visualize all the traditional football area in a new contextual environment that is common to all of us, the urban environment.
  •  
    oldschool example
1More

Catalogs by Barneys, Sears, J.C. Penney get creative - USATODAY.com - 0 views

  •  
    This article discusses how major brands are looking at their bottom line and deciding if catch all catalogues are a good use of money.  This show's Jc Penny, Sears and Barney's alternative offerings.
1More

I Believe in Advertising | ONLY SELECTED ADVERTISING | Advertising Blog &... - 0 views

  •  
    Print (I think?) Execution for Bose Noise-Cancelling Headphones
1More

Frenchies Go Gaga for Stupid Ads | Fast Company - 0 views

  •  
    This Diesel campaign won the Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival
1More

Social radio tool lets friends create shared stations - Springwise - 0 views

  •  
    daily 8.11
1More

Cola Wars reignited by Pepsi, TBWA\Chiat\Day - 0 views

  •  
    Pepsi has more to gain from this than Coke, since Coke has about 1.5 times the market share and, IMO, a much stronger hold on our collective imaginations.
1More

Apple freaks out over ad for iPad app - 0 views

  •  
    The ad depicts a guy smashing an iPad by accident.  The point being that that would be tremendously stupid.  But Apple has control issues, as we all know.  Article rightly points out that Blendtec's Will It Blend? series has generated a lot of attention for Apple by breaking their stuff.
2More

New, Cool Baby Carrots: the TV campaign - 2 views

  •  
    TV spots just came out for the baby carrots in the cool packaging, which we covered last week in daily. They play on junk food advertising cliches and are pretty funny.
  •  
    Weekly 9.9
3More

Twitter-Controlled Fiber Optic Textiles - PSFK - 1 views

  • It fuses traditional arts, digital electronics, interactivity, and data scraping with contemporary art. It is a new media canvas, woven from information, using fiber optic thread to carry information and data from the internet in the form of light.
  • The 50 Different Minds is an innovative project that uses hand woven fiber optics as a canvas to display live data scraped from Twitter feeds and flight arrivals and departures from the 9 busiest airports around the world. Particular terms trigger different patterns and colors within the fabric
  •  
    daily 9.14
1More

Conan drives explosives-packed car off cliff in new promo - 0 views

  •  
    Bad ass: they filled a 1969 Dodge Dart with ifireworks and unpopped popcorn and drove it off a cliff.
2More

Why the Internet Freaked Out When Fox Pulled House from Hulu - 0 views

  • Many observers immediately labeled Fox's block a violation of the principle of "network neutrality"—the idea that Internet service providers should allow subscribers to access all legal content online. Neutrality rules have been the subject of fierce debate in Washington, and activists are constantly on the lookout for perceived anti-neutrality maneuvering.

    Advertisement

    If Fox's move violated "neutrality," though, it wasn't in the way we've long defined that term. Advocates for net neutrality rules have mainly been concerned about the power that cable and phone companies can exert on the Internet. The theory is that in most local areas, broadband companies exist as monopolies or duopolies—you can get the Internet from your phone company or your cable company—and, therefore, are in a position to influence online content. What if, for instance, AT&T demanded that YouTube pay a surcharge every time a customer watches a video? To prevent such abuses, the Federal Communications Commission imposed Internet "openness" guidelines (PDF) in 2005, and since then regulators and lawmakers have been arguing about how to make those guidelines both permanent and enforceable.

    But this Fox-Cablevision-Hulu scenario turns the neutrality debate on its head. Here, it wasn't the broadband company—Cablevision—that blocked customers' access to content. Instead, it was the content company, Fox, that imposed the ban. Why is that distinction important? Because while it's easy to think of justifications for imposing neutrality regulations on broadband companies, it's less clear how we should feel about imposing rules on content providers. Telecom companies are regulated by the FCC, and there's a long history of the government forcing "openness" rules on public communications infrastructure. If the government can prohibit phone companies from deciding whom you can and can't call, shouldn't we have a similar rule preventing ISPs from deciding what you can get on the Web?

  •  
    B/c House is awesome, obviously!  I bet it's lupus!  Srsly though, article talks about how internet content is beginning to be subject to the same bullshit as TV and other traditional media.  And net neutrality comes into play of course.
« First ‹ Previous 61 - 80 of 137 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page