Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or urlAudi Smart Factory | Pictures, Details, News | Digital Trends - 0 views
HP partners with Yahoo for targeted ads - Computerworld - 0 views
Technology Review: Flexible Touch Screen Made with Printed Graphene - 0 views
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"You could theoretically roll up your iPhone and stick it behind your ear like a pencil," says Tour.
Time Inc. Frustrated by Apple Over iPad Subscription Issue | Peter Kafka | MediaMemo | AllThingsD - 0 views
Ads on bike seat covers - 0 views
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Becoming popular in bike-centric European cities like Amsterdam. Ads are printed on plastic bike seat covers, which are then placed over the seats of parked bicycles, keeping seats dry and leaving an unavoidable impression. Marketers are targeting by geography and bike style - fixies near colleges for example.
The Rise Of Ultra High-End Books - PSFK - 0 views
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So how do publishers react to the rise of ebooks and (even further) commoditization of the book as a medium? Ultra high-end.
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Not the same at all, but reminds me of these high-concept books/art: http://bit.ly/bjcZYp
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daily 7.20
The Next 5 Years in Social Media - 0 views
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YouTube – which I called the most important social media innovation of the past decade
Dutch agency pioneers 1-second stamp film - 0 views
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Amsterdam ad agency KesselsKramer just completed a strange project for postal service TNT-creating a postage stamp that, when slowly rotated, appears to show a 1-second film featuring the popular Dutch actress Carice van Houten. The stamp achieves the effect through the latest in lenticular printing, which allows the viewer to see 30 separate frames when turning the stamp
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weekly 10.14
High-tech helps revive low-tech habits | JWT Intelligence - 3 views
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Good old-fashioned reading is on the rise thanks to the booming popularity of e-readers. In 2007, a study by the National Endowment for the Arts found that half of 18-24-year-old Americans read no books for pleasure. The e-book era may be changing that. A Sony-commissioned survey conducted in May found that 40 percent of e-reader owners report reading more than they did with print books. Amazon says its customers buy roughly three times as many books after getting a Kindle. And finally, smartphone apps have re-popularized classic games and toys. The much-anticipated Scrabble iPad app hit the market this fall after the wide adoption of Newtoy’s Scrabble knockoff, Words With Friends. Electronic Arts has turned the classic Lite Brite into a digital experience.
New York Times on Social Commerce | It's Not a One Night Stand | Social Commerce Today - 0 views
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J CREW launched an advertising campaign in September, featuring splashy print ads and a photograph of a well-dressed young man on its Web site, sitting atop a ladder. Surrounding him was an assortment of items: umbrellas, medicine balls, a retro-looking trailer, a slab of raw meat. All of those items were available for purchase. But J. Crew stood to profit only from the sale of its clothes. The other goods were merely recommended by J. Crew to its customers, with Web links to the purveyors of those goods. J. Crew saw a business opportunity in assuming the role of a sophisticated and self-assured friend, guiding customers through the infinite offerings of the Internet without pushing them to buy only its own wares. “What the world needs now is curators and filters,” said Anthony Sperduti of Partners and Spade, the New York advertising agency behind the campaign. “J. Crew is savvy enough to know that the Internet has changed our buying patterns.” J. Crew is hardly the only company trying to sell something by befriending you. The idea that social commerce — which mixes networking with online shopping — can win business has spurred companies to try to connect with customers through sites like Facebook and Twitter.
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