Archive for the ‘Web 2.0’ Category

Chris & Kat Show on TVNZ ?

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

chris-and-kat-show

I was in Auckland the other week for TUANZ Award conference. It was a great chance to catch up with my sister, who I had not seen in ages. Kat is editing the News at TVNZ. I got the obligatory tour of the infamous rabbit warrens, where all the “technology action happens” and where New Zealand’s largest video wall lives. It was a great opportunity to briefly meet some of the very friendly and very talented team who help keep broadcast TV alive in this country, as well as a unique chance to practice some “clinical News-Laughter poses” on the official TVNZ news set, with Kat. Thank goodness, but I dont think our performance will make it to Air, YouTube or even Bebo.

However keep an eye out on Bebo for future TVNZ shows, as the mighty TVNZ looks to embrace ‘the brave new world’ and has partnerd with New Zealand’s largest website Bebo (I have not checked the stats about Bebo being New Zealand’s largest website, however that is what they state.)

At this stage their intended model is the standard advertising model. They now claim they will be able to provide advertisers access to a combined audience of over 1.5 million New Zealanders. Traditional shows they are planning to port into their Bebo strategy are TVNZ news and current affairs. Lets hope that this will pave the way for some new thinking for innovate new local shows directly focused on taking advantage of web2.0 and mobile delivery. The Gibson Group’s “My Story” is a good start. (…perhaps the Chris & Kat Show will get picked up after all ?)

Zodal RugbyMate Popular for Mobile Rugby World Cup

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

rugbymate-mobile

Zodal has released RugbyMate, a next generation 3G mobile utility for keeping track of the Rugby World Cup on your mobile phone. The application is receiving rave reviews in the Mobile Blog Sphere and has also been highlighted in the popular Idealog magazine, a top magazine in New Zealand with a publication focus on entrepreneurial business.

RugbyMate was originally developed for Series 60 mobile phones, such as the new Nokia N95 which support the free Adobe Flash Lite Player, other moble handsets that support the Flash Application are Sony Ericsson, Samsung and Panasonic Phones. The rich graphical mobile utility is also available for free on the Apple iPhone. An updated version of RugbyMate was released today, available for Smart Phones such as i-Mate, Treo, and Blackberry.

The mobile utility is receiving thousands of views, as rugby fans want to support their favorite team such as the All Blacks on mobile, the Wallabies on mobile, South Africa on mobile or their Northern Hemisphere teams and want to keep up-to-date with the exciting Rugby events in France during this 2007 World Cup Rugby Event.

As peoples lifestyles continue to demand more freedom they are they must have access to the scores and information or the ability to check the schedule for the upcoming games while they are out and about with friends, at the beach, or socializing in the city. RugbyMate provides constantly updated information about the latest events at the World Cup direct to your mobile phone. The Rugby Mate application is free, so you don’t have to wait until you get home and back to your old desktop computer to find out what is happening in the action.

If you are interested in downloading the Free Adobe Flash Lite Application or viewing the mobile iPhone Sports Utility on your Apple iPhone then visit the www.rugbymate.co.nz website for more information.

Also keep an eye out for the new Apple iPod Touch available in New Zealand and World Wide and the possible rumors around the Google gPhone for the new mobile experiences which Zodal are preparing to deliver for your enjoyment.

Facebook Versus Myspace

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Facebook membership has exploded to more than 29 million active users, up one million users in just the past week and 5 million from six weeks ago. Facebook says it’s adding more than 150,000 members a day, up from its pace of 100,000 six weeks ago.

Founder Mark Zuckerberg of the Palo Alto based company has seen this huge spike since recently opening the site up from “only student access” combined with the “Web 2.0 style of opening up the site”, allowing software developers to build plug-in programs by the thousands for the site.

CTO Adam D’Angelo says their “far bigger rival MySpace has difficulty striking a balance between sharing personal data and not divulging “too much information.” Due to the more private nature of Facebook many Facebook users post their mobile phone numbers, political affiliations or changes in dating status, while retaining a feeling of better security than MySpace users.

Facebook is inherently not open the way the Web is open. Users share all kinds of information on the site they would never share on the Web, we get users to divulge more information because we protect users’ privacy.” However if you have checked out MySpace recently there is no shyness of many users there either…

A US academic, Danah Boyd, a PhD student at the School of Information Sciences at the University of California. Berkeley, who has been looking into the epistemology of social networking web sites, says there are very distinct class-based differences between users of MySpace and those that favour Facebook.

In a paper recently published Danah Boyd writes that Facebook users, “Tend to come from families who emphasise education and going to college. They are in honours classes, looking forward to the prom, and live in a world dictated by after school activities. They are primarily, but not exclusively, white.”

Meanwhile, she says, “MySpace has most of the kids who are socially ostracised at school because they are geeks, freaks, or queers. MySpace is home for Latino and Hispanic teens, immigrant teens and other kids who didn’t play into the dominant high school popularity paradigm”

It is interesting that the US government has banned their troops from using MySpace while still allowing them to use Facebook.

Greg Claymen – Vice President of Wireless Strategy and Operations for MTV “loves FaceBook” and infact is one of the few people who got me hooked on the site. He writes an exciting article here about why he prefers FaceBook to MySpace, and how not only the privacy of FaceBook is different from MySpace but the fact that FaceBook is not really just one community but rather millions of groups forming millions of communities ranging in size from extremely big to the very personal of one on one.

Sherry Turkle thinks the new generation being constantly connected to either their parents or friends via cell phones and social networking sites like MySpace and FaceBook is drastically transforming human psychology.

The “new Generation” or “social networking Generation” are being given the tools to only express themselves, constantly express their state with banal icons or limited to a one word drop down menu. They are not taking time to think during alone time, as they are never in fact alone.

Some also argue that the new SN Generation are constantly lonely as they miss alot of “real” human to human interaction. Of course the flip side of the coin is that the SN Generation are using Social Networks to create groups and organize new type of social reunions and that in fact they have plenty of social interaction, well as much as past generations anyway.

Sherry says “Our society tends toward a breathless techno-enthusiasm: We are more connected; we are global; we are more informed.” However “We communicate with quick instant messages, “check-in” cell calls and emoticon graphics. All of this are meant to quickly communicate a state. They are not meant to open a dialogue about complexity of feeling. The challenge for this generation is to think of sociality as more than the cyber-intimacy of sharing gossip and photographs and profiles. This is a paradoxical time. We have more information but take less time to think it through in its complexity. We’re connecting globally but talking parochially.”

There are many new social networking sites out there: Jawad Karim one of the original founders of YouTube lists the following sites on his YouTube video as Key Killer Apps leading into the new Social Networking ‘revolution’:

- live journal
- Founder: Brad Fitzpatrick

- hot or not
- Founder: James Hong

- wikipedia
- Founder: Jimmy

- friendster
- Founder: Johnathan Abram

- del.icio.us
- Founder: Joshua Schachter

- Flickr
- Founder: Caterina Fake & Stewart Butterfield.

Other newer mainstream social networking sites are:

- www.bebo.com
- Founder: Michael Birch

- www.weblogs.com
- Founder: Jason McCabe Calacanis

- www.siphs.com
- Founder:

- www.lightstalkers.org
- Founder:

- www.care2.com
- Founder: Randy Paynter

- www.librarything.com
- Founder: Tim Spalding

- www.mog.com
- Founder: David Hyman

- www.linkedin.com
- Founder: Konstantin Guericke & Reid Hoffm

- www.jaiku.com
- Founder: Engeström &

- www.numpa.nl
- Founder: Yellow Mind

- www.twitter.com
- Founder: Ev Williams & Biz Stone

- www.pownce.com
- Founder: Diggs Co Founder Kevin Rose

and there are probably many more…

UK's Biggest Social Networking Site Sign iTunes & Kate Modern

Monday, June 25th, 2007

kate_modern

Bebo is the UK’s biggest social networking site, of a similar vein to the well known MySpace, owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

Currently with 8.8 million users in the UK and Ireland, Bebo has signed a deal with Apple iTunes enabling their users to download iTunes music files right from the Bands profile pages within the social networking site. Bebo, which is actually based in San Francisco has over 500,000 registered musicians on their site, and they plan to shake up the paradigm by offering promotional ‘Free Single Saturday’ to promote the new service.

Bebo is backed by Benchmark Capital Europe, who also heavily backed the virtual world “Second Life” through the USA division of Beachmark Capital. (Bill Gurley is my favorite ‘Benchmarker’) Bebo are exploring dynamic revenue expansion techniques by diversifying from traditional Web and Broadcasting models, such as the ‘CPM model’, says Joanna Shields, who was recently made President International of Bebo, after leaving her role of Managing Director of Strategic Partnerships for Google Europe. Bebo is experimenting with new ways of incorporating TV series right into its social networking site, in a new style that complements these modern landscapes where the users hang out for endless hours effectively living a digital lifestyle.

Lonely girl 15 caused huge controversies on YouTube when it was first released. A new Zealander Jessica Rose, playing a lonely girl named Bree caused huge speculations as to the whether her video posts were “real” or part of some sort of video marketing ploy. Eventually after much hype and delima it was tracked down to a professional filmed set of Webisodes produced by the famous Hollywood powerhouse talent agency, Creative Artists Agency (CAA). The original “Lonelygirl15″ has garnered well more than 50 million hits.

Bebo have now approached the makers of Lonely Girl 15 to produce a new Social Networking “television” series especially for the digital lifestyle site – called Kate Modern. The show will be totally specific to the UK and the UK audience. Bebo users will be able to make friends with the stars, view the photos that the characters upload, and get to meet them in real locations, which will all be published via the social networking site; and of course download the constantly updated videos to keep on top of what Kate Modern is up to in the UK.

Joanna Shields says: “There is a true revolution of personal expression underway. Social networks provide a unique platform for people to connect with others anywhere in the world in new and innovative ways. Bebo is at the forefront of this phenomenon and has tremendous potential to connect its massive user base with media companies, brands and artists worldwide.

Alot of the advertising, marketing, subscription and revenue concepts that Bebo are developing are untested – and really push the bounds in a convergence of Traditional Internet and Traditional Broadcasting ways of thinking, to deliver new digital content and develop new revenue models around that content. The question remains as to how successful these untested models will be – and also to when will Australia and New Zealand develop their own localized versions of this new Social Lifestyle Infrastructure. If you know of anything that comes close, please post a comment.

ADOBE Flexes & Apollo takes to the AIR

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Adobe® AIR™, formerly code-named Apollo, is a cross-operating system runtime that allows developers to use their existing web development skills to build and deploy rich Internet applications to the desktop.

Adobe Labs also features articles that discuss how developers already using HTML, Javascript, CSS, Ajax, Flash, or Flex can start using Adobe AIR to build desktop-based rich Internet applications.

Thus now with the right technical specifics Flash Developers such as Zodal can deliver content and applications not just across devices such as Mobile Phones and the Internet but Build Rich Desktop applications for Mac and Windows computers.

The convergence of Rich Internet applications, better enabled with the new release of Adobe® Flex™ 3, which is a cross platform open source framework for creating rich Internet applications that run identically in all major browsers and operating systems, combined with Adobe AIR means there are some interesting niches and new markets to be captured at the intersections of these methodologies.

There is a great list of showcase apps built in the beta release of AIR – My personal favorites are TWITTER, yourminis.com and Finetune Desktop.

As a side also keep an eye our for the new Flash Player 9 now available and coming soon for Solaris too!

Rod Drury – Entrepreneurship Workshop

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

Just reflecting on a great workshop I attended two days ago. The workshop was put on by Connect New Zealand with a focus on launching a successful international product. Rod Drury is a passionate speaker talking emotionally about business from the point of view of ‘a great sport’ and opening up a conversation about the trials, tribulations and of course successes of SME’s in New Zealand reaching a successful international goal.

Rod Talks from a great deal of experience, from selling his company AfterMail, to one of the few involved in the recent “trade me” sale of the biggest New Zealand “ebay” style website.

Rod is also on the board of advisors for the New Zealand Beachheads project. This should be a great event in Auckland during the middle of March, and I’m really looking forward to heading up for the week of events around this New Zealand New Thinking Week.