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MasterCard Send Speeds Up Money Transfers With A Little P2P Magic | TechCrunch - 0 views

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    Send allows instant disbursements - imagine payments from insurance companies that land to your bank account nearly instantly - and P2P payments that let consumers "seamlessly send and receive funds from friends and family typically within seconds through providers including issuers, money transfer operators, merchants and more."
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iBeacon Case Studies: The Beginners Guide To Beacons - Lighthouse - 0 views

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    "McDonalds beacon case study (retail) 26 McDonald's franchises in Columbus, Georgia tested out iBeacon technology with its customers. Over the four week trial, the franchises were pushing special deals for McChicken Sandwiches and 10 piece Chicken McNuggets. The iBeacon powered promotions pushed McChicken Sandwich sales up 8 percent and Chicken McNugget sales up 7.5 percent. Based on the initial results of the pilot it looks as though McDonald's will continue to explore the technology for an additional 263 retail stores in the southeast. "Everyone is looking at their phones, millennials especially, and that's where we've decided to engage," Jack Pezold, a McDonald's franchisee of 40 years, said in a statement. Spotless beacon case study (enterprise) Spotless is an Australian owned and managed provider of integrated facilities management services. In 2014, Spotless partnered with Lighthouse to build and deploy a custom workforce management solution with the goal of reducing litigation claims in the commercial cleaning service line. The solution allowed Spotless to understand when cleaning KPI's are missed in real-time and produce employee location reports that can be used as legal defense against slip and fall litigation claims in shopping malls. Spotless has also been able to optimise their workforce and reduce operating costs by analyzing Lighthouse powered heat mapping of employee movements. The solution has been so successful that Spotless are extending the capability across other service lines including facilities management, security and maintenance. Read the full case study here. Pause Fest beacon case study (events) Pause Fest is Australia's premier digital event, aimed at supporting and showcasing the best in creative and tech from Australia and all over the world. In 2015, Pause Fest partnered with Lighthouse to deploy a network of beacons that delivered proximity based content and experiences to attendees, while enabling real-time event analyt
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Sonic Solutions cuts online movie deal with Sears, Kmart stores | VentureBeat - 0 views

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    Sonic Solutions said today that its movie services will be available on consumer electronics gear sold at Sears and Kmart stores. Novato, Calif.-based Sonic provides the RoxioNow platform, which can deliver digital movies over Internet connections to home devices such as PCs, TVs, Blu-ray players and mobile phones. In a multi-year deal with Sears Holdings, owner of 3,000 Sears and Kmart stores, Sonic will offer movies and TV shows for rent or purchase. The new services are expected to launch later this year and will be broadly promoted at retail stores. used in daily 6.22
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Qualcomm Flo TV Needs Wider Adoption, More Services - Bloomberg - 0 views

  • “If it’s only mobile TV, we’re dissatisfied, we’re not happy with it,” Bill Stone, the Flo unit’s head, said in an interview. “There are going to be a lot of revenue streams off this service.”
  • Stone says the strain on mobile-phone networks caused by ballooning demand for video and data should make Flo attractive to service providers and phone makers. Flo works on a system using airwaves that Qualcomm bought in federal auctions. Flo- enabled devices have separate radios and chips that enable them to receive the service from Qualcomm’s transmitters. “One person streaming a video takes up as much bandwidth as 100 cell phone calls,” said Stone. “Networks break down and can’t handle it. For me, whether I have one or 1 million users, it doesn’t matter.”
  • Distributing magazines with high-resolution pictures is another area where Flo can send content to mobile devices more effectively than wireless-service providers, Stone said. His network would broadcast the data to everyone at once, with only handsets that have subscriptions enabled to access the files.
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Looking Beyond Coffee, Starbucks Seeks a New Digital Future - 3 views

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    Ok so I thought this was sort of interesting when I first saw it, but now I think it's really interesting due to the following:    -"And this fall it will launch the Starbucks Digital Network, a partnership with Yahoo that will provide customers free unrestricted access to pay sites such as the Wall Street Journal. Additional content providers in the new, in-store network offering include iTunes, The New York Times, Patch, USA Today and Zagat." 
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The CrowdFlower Blog - Regulating Distributed Work (Part Three: Why It's a Good Idea)** - 0 views

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    This ties in to what we were discussing after the personal futures workshop. The article makes the case for providing legal structure to crowdsourced systems and employment.
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The Most Social Music Game Yet: "Def Jam Rapstar" - 0 views

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    Def Jam Rapstar lets users record their own rhymes in a "freestyle" mode over tracks provided by Konami and Def Jam. The freestyle mode uses the Playstation Eye or Microsoft Kinect to record video of the performer which can then be edited to include effects for upload to Def Jam's online community. Def Jam hopes the game + community will become a breeding ground for new talent.
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What's Next for the Online Experience? | UX Magazine - 0 views

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    UX Mag identifies three major "types of trends" impacting the future of online experiences. 1) Capabilities: Changing Technology Platforms - tablets, ambient devices and smart alarm clocks + anytime, anywhere expectation for rich online experiences. 2) Consumers: Evolving Online Behavior - broad consumer interest in new technologies and a desire to experience them and rapid rates of tech adoption. 3) Competition: Millions of New Entrants - flood information providers. The article also features the CARS attributes of online experience by Forrester. Customized. Aggregated. Relevant. Social. CARS. See? They then go on to discuss the Nationwide Insurance iPhone app and the Avis car rental site/iPhone app.
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Twitter Gets Video Ad Network 07/13/2010 - 1 views

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    The article discusses how twitvid will provide a social ad model that can help tweeters get up to 400 new followers in under an hour.  
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    daily 7.13
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The insider's guide to mobile Web marketing in Japan | mobiThinking - 0 views

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    A must read for all of us... talks about Mobile marketing in Japan, it provides a glimpse into our own future.
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CMP.ly aims to facilitate transparency - 0 views

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    CMP.ly aims to provide bloggers and advertisers with a set of easily identifiable disclosures and codes that can be used to identify any material connections in blog posts, tweets or other communications.
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megatrends.jpg (927×684) - 0 views

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    TechCrunch provides this list of megatrends from a venture capital firm. 
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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.

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    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?

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    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.
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Extracting Business Ideas from IT Logs  - Technology Review - 0 views

  • Edmunds.com, which supplies consumers with information on new and used cars, provides an example. IT workers at the firm originally began using Splunk to better understand patterns of visits to the website—for example, to determine whether a sudden spike in traffic was a cyberattack or the result of an article that went viral—and to help track system logs. Today Edmunds uses Splunk for much more. "We now provide data dashboards to business groups in the company to show them up-to-date information that helps them make decisions," says John Martin, senior director of application operations at Edmunds. "The information that business groups need is in our IT logs, but it wasn't being looked for." One such dashboard allows the editorial and marketing staff to track in real time which auto brands and models are attracting the most views. This allows the business to experiment with ways to be more responsive to what users are doing hour by hour. For example, ads could be shuffled to match what people are most interested in at any moment.
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Navteq Doubles Audience for Location-Based Ad Network | ClickZ - 0 views

  • Location-based ad provider Navteq is doubling the reach of its LocationPoint network through partnerships with major handset manufacturers RIM and Samsung. It has also signed with location-based app providers Appello, CoPilot Live, Navigon, NDrive, Poynt, and Telmap.
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Why Twitter Must Expand Beyond 140 Characters - 0 views

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    Deck.ly is providing a way for tweeters to tweet tweets that are over 140 characters long. the article suggests that twitter will soon follow. This could make twitter more useful for brands.
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AT&T to Buy T-Mobile, Becomes No. 1 U.S. Wireless Carrier - 0 views

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    AT&T said on Sunday it would buy T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom for $39 billion, creating the largest wireless company in the United States from what were the nation's second and fourth providers.
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Are iPad Competitors' Business Strategies 'Fatally Flawed'? - 0 views

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    "Such tablets, Epps claims, won't be able to compete with the low price point and in-store experience that Apple can provide, leading to Forrester's prediction that Apple will score upwards of 80 percent of the U.S. tablet market in 2011."
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