Comment

New iTunes (uniquement en Français?)

Just installed the new version of iTunes on my two machines (Mac & PC). It's interresting to see how identical this piece of software runs on both platforms. Actually, I can't see the difference.

The interface for managing my iPod has greatly improved, in fact, it has now become integral part of the experiences rather then being hidden somewhere in the settings menu. Good work.
Browsing the new video store (US version) is an interresting experience, the 3D effect makes looking for movies very intuitive. If Telenet could do this for their interactive TV interface, THAT would push content sales for them.

But ... videos are only available in the US. Something strange I noted is that the Belgian iTunes store only exists in French. I guess they're running late with the Flemish version. Not a big point to me, but still ... for a company like Appple, simply saying "migrate to The Netherlands" to more than half of the Belgian population. That's not polite at all.

Comment

4 Comments

I know i look older ...

... but I turned 38 today.

Gift ideas:
- New iPod video
- A flat screen TV (to hook up to my mac with)
- Sony Ericsson P990 (finally out)
- A new Mac
- A new driver (golf club)
- Swimming pool (says Charlotte, next to me know, claiming to be "hot")
- A sabatical

But a small comment or some link love from your blog is OK too.

4 Comments

Comment

Geriatric1927

Euuh ... this 'charming' gentlemen seems to have gained quite a bit of popularity. When I was young, we used to make jokes about the elderly talking about the war or any other story from the old days. Two learnings:
1. It's more important for entertainment to be genuine then for it to be professional.
2. I guess this is another example of "The Long Tail". In my opinion this is damn boring stuff, but in the long tail of YouTubers, there is a considerable number who actually enjoy this. Great for them, let them have fun!

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9in-eYkvU_4]

Comment

Comment

Podcasts à gogo at Podshow.com

My podcast listening habits are getting organized. Since a few months I'm using podshow.com to organise my podcasts and it's starting to work.

The podshow site is very ambitious, but I only use it to manage the podcasts I (want to) listen to. The concept is simple: you select podcasts that intrest you and put them in your collection. Next, you group them in channels. I have a 'regular' channel which I always listen to, an 'under evaluation' channel where I put shows I may want to listen to when I've listened to everything in my regular channel. The third channel is one with video podcasts. Now, the cool thing is that I download the two audio-podast channels (regular and under evaluation) to my iPod through iTunes on my laptop, and the video channel goes to iTunes on my Mac at home.

It's great to be able to manage your stuff online, so when you change hardware you don't need to start over. And of course it's cross platform, so my iPod is fed trough my (windows) laptop, and the video stuff is stored on my Mac at home. And I can manage it from anywhere.

Podshow also offers all kinds of searching and sharing tools, and even your own blog and stuff. But hey, apart from this blog I'm swamped with free blogs (myspace, windows live spaces, libsyn, skynet.be, and I'm probably still missing some). So no blog on podshow for me. I guess the social networking works great if you're in need for more content, but for now my commute time is full with the podcasts I have (and lot's of business calls).
Last thing, the usability of podshow is not there yet. They fiddled around with a lot of ajax & stuff, but I get lost all the time.

But if you feel 'social', go check out my channels, they're all public:
ibert.podshow.com

Comment

2 Comments

Joseph Jaffe discovers how difficult marketing through social networks can be ...

This is an interresting one. Joseph Jaffe -new marketing guru- has run into trouble with Adam Curry. He did an interview with Adam and Ron Bloom (they're the guys behind Podshow.com). He ran the first half of the interview in his podcast Across The Sound and then (quote) "held the second part hostage" untill Adam Curry would "give him some love" (read: "promote Jaffe's show") on the "Daily Source Code" (a much listened to podcast by Curry).

Adam responded in his typical way (half fun, half serious) and claimed back the right to use the second part of the interview untill (go listen to the podcast). I agree with Curry, Joseph's idea about keeping the interview hostage is fucking lame. But the story gets even better. Apparently Joseph sent Adam an apology of some kind, but Adam won't play it "for Joseph's own protection". A lot of negative reactions also towards Jaffe.

Looks like Joseph is running into a similar problem as Agency.com when they launched their failed atempt to leverage viral marketing in a pitch for Subway.

New marketing and social media, it's not all that easy. But if you ask me, it all comes down to common sense, being transparent and honest, and a minimum of emotional intelligence.

2 Comments

Comment

Early adopters rule

Early adopters are indicative for the future (by definition), That's what I like about this survey that I found through emarketer.com. Check this graph and discover the numerbers for the general public in say 2 years or so.

Interresting trends:
- Half of the online activities are communication-related, three out of eight have to do with video or sound.
- E-mail is nowhere (as discussed in e-mail is dead) and instant messaging rules.
- 14% uses RSS (probably not counting the ones who use RSS without knowing it)
- 13% listens to Podcasts!

Comment

Comment

Burning Belgian Man

Proud to have a (crazy) fellow citizen at the burning man, working on an even crazier project. Arne Quinze (long term customer of my wife's chocolate shop) is building an increadible construction there together with a team of 'awesome' Limburgers. Go check them out online: www.uchronians.org.

Keep'm going guys, it looks great!

Photography by: Thierry van Dort

P.S.
Regenachtige groetjes uit Oudenaarde.
:-)

Comment

1 Comment

Blogger upgrade

The blogger software was updated recently, and today I upgraded to the new 'template'. I had to re-integrate most of the stuff on in the right column, but at least you can do that in an organised way now (rather then fiddling around in the HTML). You can now simply add 'blocks' with HTML or javascript, and also choose from a number of predefined blocks (e.g. archive, profile, etc.).

It was a bit disappointing however that there a no blocks for:
- RSS feeds
- Technorati integration (is that competition for Google?)
- Google adwords (imagine that!)
- Any other cool tools
In fact, they just offer the basics. I hope new features will be added soon.

1 Comment

Comment

Good viral marketing

I've always be kinda sceptical about viral marketing. The reason being that it's always been much too dependant on a cool or freaky idea. If it was nog sexy, funny, controversial or voyeuristic, nobody would send it on to friends. And the people that would send it mostly fitted in the target groups "advertising professionals" or "people with an internet connection at work and no boss looking over their shoulder". Not really the kind of targetting everybody was dreaming about when the internet was discovered by advertisers.

But the world is changing (of course). The online crowd is growing so our target group expands in all directions. YouTube and Google Video let us forward links to online movies without congesting the mailservers. And broadband overcapacity lets us play freely with all kinds of interactive viral applications.

So what's happening now ...
"Viral" has simply become another way of distributing advertising. It can be video, which offers new challanges to TV-spot creators: no rules, no limitations. Or it can be an interactive application, a challange for interactive marketeers. But in any case, the consumer is the judge. If it's uninterresting, not compelling and not targeted at a target group with which I feel connected, it won't work.
Surprise, surprise: bringing a relevant message in an compelling way to the correct target group is what communcation has always been about.

In fact, good viral marketing comes down to simply good advertising. So we can stop making up lists of reasons WHETHER to use viral marketing, but work on a vision about WHEN to use this channel. This is my first attempt:

1. Objective: It works for branding, more then for selling or activating.

2. Target group: If your target group consists of (a) clearly defined community(ies), which you can reach in some way.

3. Timing: Being in a hurry doesn't work, there is no guarantee when the virus wil spread.

Feel free to add your ideas ...

To close this post, here is a great example of something that works:
Wanna work in advertising
Why?:
1. It makes me feel this brand has something to offer me.
2. Me = an advertising professional = part of a community that communicates a lot amoung each other.

Comment

1 Comment

Meet the interface of the future ...

Whaaaw ... Maybe it's just a simply good presentation, but boy I'm impressed by this interface. Really, if there's a next generation interfaces this must be it.

During the latest TED on August 1st Jeff Han (research scientist for NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, and the inventor of an "interface-free" touch-driven computer screen.) presented a touch screen application with which you can use multiple touchpoints. Simply said ... us ALL your fingers on a touchscreen.

1 Comment

1 Comment

At least they did it ...

Our New York collegues sure stirred up some online emotions. In case you were hiding under a beach towel on the french riviera without a WiFi connection ... this is what happened.

Agency.com NY is in a pitch for "Subway". To give the best possible answer, they made a video of how they prepared everything. Next they put the video on YouTube to go viral. Did it work? Well they are over 41 000 views. The reactions in the online world however have been mixed (well ... mostly negative in fact). Go check out www.whenwerollwerollbig.com and read about it.

My idea? Looking back I would have made the video much more fun, a parody, not taking ourselves so seriously. It's professionally produced and has all the right content, but it's a bit 'fake'. Especially when looking with European eyes at this American-MadisionAve-Poeha ... On the other hand, they did it. It's easy to criticise and do nothing.

...

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8eV6OuC8Oo]

P.S.
We've had loads of fun in the office shouting "When we roll" -answer- "We roll big!". Hey, life's too short not to have fun, right?

1 Comment

Comment

Out of office - filling the library

Hey, I'm back from holiday full of fresh energy!

I take pride in making my out-of-office something more then just the usual blabla. So this time I listed the books I intended to read during my summer break:

> I’m on holiday right now and will be back on August 1st.
>
> I plan to use this relaxing holiday to catch up on some relevant
> literature which has been dusting away in my library. If you’re still
> looking for inspiration for your holiday:
>
> - The Attention Economy
> - Blink, The power of thinking without thinking
> - The world is flat, A brief history of the twenty-first century
> - The wisdom of crowds

As usual I' didn't read all of it of course. But I did get quite some positive (and funny) reactions.

Here's what I learned from the reading:

1. The Attention Economy
An 'old' book, but 'attention' has had my attention for some time so I thought it was high time to read this book. In some parts the examples (e.g. about the Internet) are outdated, but the basics remain solid and fascinating. In fact, looking at it a few years after the first publish date ... the writers even underestimated the impact of the 'attention deficit'. It's influencing our daily lives and jobs even more then what they suggested.

2. Blink
Another must-read. Malcolm Gladwell uses the same style and technique as in the famous "The Tipping Point" to explain that we often make (good) decisions in a split second. These are based on the experience we gather over time and that is stored somewhere in our brain.
The implications for marketing & adverting according to me? In short, two things:
> Succesfull businesses communicate with people, they don't try to pump an offering in their minds. If it's not genuine, it'll be rejected in the end.
> Marketing/communications is a long term business. Brands are not invented, they are carefully build on sound (genuine) fundamentals and it takes time.

3. The Wisdom of Crowds
Still working on it :-)

4. The World is flat
I need another week of holiday ...

Two more books have been added to the living room table in the mean time:

- The Cluetrain Manifesto
Another one of those oldies (2000) I wanted to read to be sure I'm not missing anything.
- The Long Tail
As already announced, it's finally there. I hope to learn a lot more and who knows, write my own little annex to it ...

Happy readings!

Comment

Comment

The Long Tail: Launch Day!

It's finally there, the book I've been waiting for for months now. As some of you may know I'm a big "Long Tail promotor". Chris Anderson's theory, which was initally based mainly on the entertainment industry and internet search, is applicable to any business model in the internet age. Digital communication takes away friction from any business process and that gradually moves us into long tail models.My pre-order on Amazon.com apparently didn't work out and I'm leaving on holiday soon, so it'll be another few weeks before I can actually read the book. But judging from reviews he indeed takes The Long Tail further then in the initial article (well ... that's quite obvious of course).Still looking for some summer holiday readings? This is the MUST READ!Trackback: http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/5293913

Read more at www.thelongtail.com/the...

Comment

Comment

Consumer Generated Content (CGC) and traditional media

I was asked to write an article for the Media Morgen conference organised by VRT (national television and radio in Belgium) and it's website some time ago. But after all the energy I put in it they never published it. Too bad, but no worries, here’s an English version for you.
(By the way, if you already believe in CGC, start reading after the table.)

Creativity is what makes the difference between man and animals, and that creativity is constantly looking for a way to spread itself. It started with the prehistoric paintings in the caves of Lasceaux, boomed thanks to the invention of book printing and even Uncle Joe’s boring slide show is a proof of that. Luckily those slide show evenings are a thing of the past; today a wide range of tools is available to let our creativity blossom. The PC has become a semi-professional print shop, making bad photos is more difficult then making good ones (or you just shoot until you have a good one), load digital video into you PC, add a music track in MP3 format and in two hours you can cut and paste an entertaining piece of video together.

The obligatory slide show is being replaced by a CD, DVD or website (Flickr.com or Youtube.com) where family pics and videos can be shared worldwide. Friends on the other side of the country (or globe) can now too enjoy your work, whereas there is not obligation of those who happen to live close but are not interested in what you want to share.
With broadband becoming ubiquitous (at least in some countries) this evolution is truly booming. Anybody can spread his/her creations very cheaply (and simply) worldwide.

Just look at a number “consumer generated content” websites:

(source: iMediaconnection.com)

But what’s the secret behind this success? In the entertainment business democracy and consensus lead to average results. Soaps you watch half asleep and reading a newspaper at the same time are the result. Have a similar story that really happened told by someone who was there, and the result will be totally different. Less professional, but from the hart. A bunch of people will not like it, but a small group won’t miss it for the world. And that is the secret of consumer generated content. A community that consciously chooses to dedicate a part of it’s time and attention to for them truly compelling content.

The future of our leisure time will be increasingly taken up by this CGC. I expect that we will find 50% of our entertainment in the long tail of CGC. There will always be room for professional material, but a big part will be taken up by niche-content with which we feel a strong connection, something typical for the communities in which we spend our lives.

This means the role of journalists, program makers, TV/Radio stations, editors and publishers is fundamentally changing. The playing field is populated with new competitors, ranging from Skynet or MSN as a possible channel for publishing CGC, over Telenet’s iDTV of VodafoneLive (mobile) who provide an infrastructure, to mega-blogs like Engadget and zattevrienden.be who create their own channels. Everybody in this market wonders what their role will be. Medium or moderator, catalyst or filter, all options are open.

Offering platforms, both soft- and hardware, is already a very competitive terrain. MSN against Skynet, Belgacom ADSL against Telenet Internet and traditional publishers (HLN.be) have started the fight for the consumer.
Some people see the future of the professional media specialist in safeguarding the quality of what appears in the media. Intelligent journalists check their sources and only deliver quality, is what they say. On can argue about that, but more importantly this is old-school thinking. The consumer decides himself what he or she considers to be correct or relevant. And to help them out, there are a number of online tools, ranging from a simple voting system to complex algorithms that map out the relevance of an item. Check out memeorandum.com, bloglines.com or dig.com. The relevant content pops up automatically.

A truly innovative media company must embrace consumers and coach them in the development of good content. Teach people to handle new media, support them in their creativity and help to reach their audience. In this way even small regions (like the one I live in) can play a creative role in the world, with needing loads of cash and multinational structures.

Comment

2 Comments

A word from gadget hell ...

I'm usually not the ranting type of guy, but all my electronic stuff seems to let me down.

Let's start with the gadget (well ... tool) I use most, my SonyEricsson P910i. Great phone, but oh so fragile. In fact I got it one year after my P900 died on me. I dropped it on the kitchen floor and the screen broke, took it back to the shop. They couldn't fix it, not because of the screen but because the inside of the phone had been humid ... (although the phone did work perfectly before the screen broke). Humidity? Well, the only thing I can imagine is that some sweat got in the phone when I was carrying it in my trouser pocket. Pffffff
Now, end of last year I heard about the P990 being launched in spring 2006 (with a decent camera build in, WiFI and a new Symbian OS), so I start dreaming (and saving). 8 months later the P990 is still in the "available soon" status. In the mean time, the flip-open keybord died on my, and I at least met two other people with the same problem. Fragile!
To hell with the P990, I'm going for another phone. In fact, I just bought a Sony Cybershot 100 (8.1 megapixel) camera, so my next phone could be an M600i, which has no build-in camera (if it only had Wifi ...).

Next piece of electronic junk is my iPod Nano. I bought one last October in the Apple store in Chicago. After a few months the battery failed and it got replaced (without a problem in a store in Belgium!). Again a few months later, the screen dies on met ... replaced again. And now the battery has broken down again. I'm taking it to the store next week, so I may end up with my third Nano in 10 months ...

NEXT! Dell ... Our company policy says we must use Dell computers. My laptop is my life, but apart from the horrible design of the Dell, I don't care to much for which brand it is. However, when it comes to audio and video, I grew up with a Mac (at home). So I'm a bit (only a bit) demanding on that side. Well, this Dell Latitude D610 SUCKS! First of all it doesn't have microphone ... Can you imagine that? A laptop in the age of Skype and Podcasting that won't allow you to record anything without plugging in an external microphone! BAD!
And it gets worse, the sound card on this thing isn't even close to the stuff in my mobile phone. Already when Windows starts up, you can hear a crack in the sound. Playing music over headphones is almost acceptable (although it sounds like an old record player with the disc skipping every now and then). Due to iPod failure I hooked up the laptop to my car stereo to listen to some podcasts while in a traffic jam. Total disaster! the sound is so bad it sounds as if somebody is knocking on the mike every 3 seconds on the other side.
PAUL, I want a MACBOOK PRO! (Paul is our sysadmin and übergeek)

2 Comments