01.22.06

Boing Boing: Broadcast Flag is back, this time it covers iPods and PSPs, too

Posted in Internet Users, Podcasting / Podcasts at 12:31 am by Administrator

Broadcast Flag is back, this time it covers iPods and PSPs, too
Update: Here’s EFF’s action-center item for writing to your Senator about this.

The Senate has introduced the “Digital Content Protection Act of 2006,” a bill that will create “Broadcast Flags” for all digital radio and television, leading to FCC oversight of all new digital media technologies from iPods and PSPs to TVs and DVD recorders.

Under the DCPA proposal, digital media technologies would be restricted to using technologies that had been certified by the FCC as being not unduly disruptive to entertainment industry business-models.

Read the whols story from Boing Boing:
Boing Boing: Broadcast Flag is back, this time it covers iPods and PSPs, too

01.19.06

Online attacks common for business, FBI says - Yahoo! News

Posted in Internet Business at 9:37 pm by Administrator

Excerpt from an article about businesses being cyber attcked…

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nearly nine out of 10 U.S. businesses suffered from a computer virus, spyware or other online attack in 2004 or 2005 despite widespread use of security software, according to an
FBI survey released on Thursday.

Online attacks common for business, FBI says - Yahoo! News
Those attacks inflicted average damages of $24,000 on businesses and other institutions even as antivirus software security tools have become standard, the survey found.

Though 98 percent of respondents said they used antivirus software, nearly 84 percent said they had suffered a virus attack in the 12-month period covered by the survey.

Three-quarters said they employed anti-spyware tools, but 80 percent said they had dealt with a spyware attack.

Other types of security problems, such as network sabotage or unauthorized pornography, were less common and less costly.

Some 44 percent of attacks came from within the organization, the survey found.

01.16.06

Web users judge sites in the blink of an eye - Potential readers can make snap decisions in just 50 milliseconds.

Posted in Internet Business at 12:08 am by Administrator

Web users judge sites in the blink of an eye
Potential readers can make snap decisions in just 50 milliseconds.

Michael Hopkin

Like the look of our website? Whatever the answer (and hopefully it was yes), the chances are you made your mind up within the first twentieth of a second. A study by researchers in Canada has shown that the snap decisions Internet users make about the quality of a web page have a lasting impact on their opinions.

We all know that first impressions count, but this study shows that the brain can make flash judgements almost as fast as the eye can take in the information. The discovery came as a surprise to some experts. “My colleagues believed it would be impossible to really see anything in less than 500 milliseconds,” says Gitte Lindgaard of Carleton University in Ottawa, who has published the research in the journal Behaviour and Information Technology1. Instead they found that impressions were made in the first 50 milliseconds of viewing.

Lindgaard and her team presented volunteers with the briefest glimpses of web pages previously rated as being either easy on the eye or particularly jarring, and asked them to rate the websites on a sliding scale of visual appeal. Even though the images flashed up for just 50 milliseconds, roughly the duration of a single frame of standard television footage, their verdicts tallied well with judgements made after a longer period of scrutiny.

In the crowded and competitive world of the web, companies hoping to make millions from e-commerce should take notice, the researchers say. “Unless the first impression is favourable, visitors will be out of your site before they even know that you might be offering more than your competitors,” Lindgaard warns.

First impressions last

For a typical commercial website, 60% of traffic comes from search engines such as Google, says Marc Caudron of London web-design agency Pod1. This makes a user’s first impression even more critical, he explains. “You’ll get a list of sites, click the top one, and then either say ‘I’ve engaged’ and give it a few more seconds, or just go back to Google,” he says.

The lasting effect of first impressions is known to psychologists as the ‘halo effect’: if you can snare people with an attractive design, they are more likely to overlook other minor faults with the site, and may rate its actual content (such as this article, for example) more favourably.

This is because of ‘cognitive bias’, Lindgaard explains. People enjoy being right, so continuing to use a website that gave a good first impression helps to ‘prove’ to themselves that they made a good initial decision. The phenomenon pervades our society; even doctors have been shown to follow their initial hunches, Lindgaard says, relying heavily on a patient’s most immediately obvious symptom when making a diagnosis. “It’s awfully scary stuff, but the tendency to jump to conclusions is far more widespread than we realize,” she says.

Beauty and beholders

Link: news @ nature.com - Web users judge sites in the blink of an eye - Potential readers can make snap decisions in just 50 milliseconds.
So what are the key ingredients of a good-looking website? Caudron suggests that the amount of graphics on the page should be strictly limited, perhaps to a single eye-catching image. “It’s not about getting as much stuff on the page as possible,” he says.

These days, enlightened web users want to see a “puritan” approach, Caudron adds. It’s about getting information across in the quickest, simplest way possible. For this reason, many commercial websites now follow a fairly regular set of rules. For example, westerners tend to look at the top-left corner of a page first, so that’s where the company logo should go. And most users also expect to see a search function in the top right.

Of course, says Caudron, the other golden rule is to make sure that your web pages load quickly, otherwise your customers might not stick around long enough to make that coveted first impression. “That can be the difference between big business and no business,” he says.

Info originally found via Digg

01.15.06

Pictureal Offers iPod Video Conversion Service

Posted in Podcasting / Podcasts at 6:33 pm by Administrator

New video conversion service makes it easy to have your videos converted for ipod / podcasting, sony psp, etc.

From podcasting news:

Pictureal has announced a new service for video iPod owners. Send your raw footage to Pictureal via a pre-paid FedEx kit, and within days a professionally-edited version will be posted online, along with the unedited footage and a scene index.

Choose the scene you want, click “Download to iPod” on the Pictureal menu, add the file to your iTunes library, and it will show up on your Video iPod the next time you sync.

Pictureal accepts video by upload or in any format including VHS, S-VHS, VHS-C, MiniDV, Hi8, Digital8, MicroMV, DVCAM, Beta and DVD. Pricing for tapes shipped begins at $29 per hour of video sent, with prepaid packages ranging from $99 (3 hours of video and one DVD) to $299 (12 hours of video and three DVDs).

Read more: Podcasting News: Pictureal Offers iPod Video Conversion Service

01.10.06

How to Improve Your Logo from Fizbang Web Design

Posted in Marketing at 11:13 pm by Administrator

A great read for those designing logos, or for those who want to know a little more about what to look for in a company that is designing yours…
from Fizbang, logo article originally found via digg…

Fizbang Web Design - How to Improve Your Logo
How to Improve Your Logo

Logo “touch-up” is one of our most frequent requests. Our final work must be more effective, more visually appealing, and most importantly, recognizable as a revision of the old logo. How do we go about this? I wrote this guide both to offer potential business clients insight into our graphic design process and to help aspiring graphic designers.

* Logo Design Objectives
* Tips for Improving Logos
* Apple’s and Microsoft’s Logos
* How We Improve a Logo
* Conclusion

The Last iPod Video Guide You’ll Ever Need at Plastic Bugs

Posted in Podcasting / Podcasts at 6:34 am by Administrator

The Last iPod Video Guide You’ll Ever Need at Plastic Bugs
We’ll go over all the options you’ve got and how to convert absolutely anything and everything: DVDs, TiVo video, messy AVIs, muxed MPEGs and more to iPod compatible video - all within OS X.

01.06.06

Google Video Announcement

Posted in Internet Business, Software and Web Apps at 10:44 pm by Administrator

News of the enhanced google video service was announced today, and the effects across the video industry could be amazing. Truly there are many pluses and minuses to the new service, but one thing is for sure, google offering a 70/30 split of revenues for content producers, and giving access to a quick video upload and world wide delivery service, will put very small video producers into the game without the television network executives getting in the way… This new video delivery / rev share service is bound to become a major portal for many internet users, and may be another form of user chosen entertainment that will take even more time from the traditional boob tube.

This new service will obviously put a major competitive strain on many other video on demand services already online. Online video companies such as revver must be biting thier nails about the future onlinevideo profitability outlook
..
Very interesting post by John Battelle’s Searchblog…

John Battelle’s Searchblog
What is really interesting is the pricing leverage: Google is splitting revenues 70/30 - that’s 70 to the content producer. Also very important is that the producers of content are the ones who set the price - again, totally different from traditional models. Thirdly, Google is doing its own DRM. That’s very interesting, and probably best left as the subject of another post. Producers can decide to not use DRM, as Charlie Rose did, Feiken told me.

This is a major step toward entirely new models of content distribution, and if I were Comcast, DirecTV, the telcos, or frankly anyone in the traditional video business, I’d be a bit concerned. It gives content producers far more power to connect directly to audiences, and the leverage will only increase - in five years, it won’t be 70/30, it’ll more likely by 80/20. Gary has a good roundup of some of Google’s competitors in video. Clearly they are not the only player here, and the video/content industry has no interest in insuring that one party owns distribution.

More news and opinions about the google video story breaking today were found at Boing Boing.

As of today there is no direct link from google.com for the video service, although today searching for “google video” yields results for http://video.google.com/. Suprisingly there is also no mention of the new google video services on the official google blog either. Instead today the google blog featured a post about the new google pack download, and a link to that new product is listed on the google.com page today just under the standard google search box.

Yahoo Launches Content Service for Cell Phones

Posted in Software and Web Apps at 10:23 pm by Administrator

Looks like the bug race is on to provide mobile cell phone content. When a giant such as Yahoo makes an announcement at the CES show about Yahoo Go Mobile for cell phones, you know the projections for mobile cell phone content are looking good, but also much more competitive. Amp’d mobile is jumping into the 18-35 year old market quick, pushing thier own line of phones and service for enjoying mobile content, with sexy ads for thier soft prerelease, and now yahoo is jumping in with both feet…

Yahoo Launches Content Service for Phones: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance
Yahoo Go Mobile will work on any cellular network, but for now, only on Nokia’s Series 60 line of smartphones. Support for additional mobile devices is planned.

The product encompasses a new user interface designed to fit on the small screen of a smartphone.

Instead of the plethora of links now viewable at once on a user’s personalized Yahoo home page, Yahoo Go streamlines the main menu content into major categories such as search, mail, news and calendar, which users could then scroll through.

Yahoo’s music and video services is not yet available through Yahoo Go Mobile but may be added later, company officials said.

The Yahoo Go application is downloadable for free at Yahoo’s Web site. However, the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Internet giant says it has also signed a deal with Nokia Corp. so the cell phone maker will be pre-installing the Yahoo Go program on select mobile devices. Cingular Wireless also plans to promote Yahoo Go.

Here at Global Advanced Media we began development of cell phone content for clients in 2004, now it seems everyone else thinks it’s a good idea to deliver your content to users on the go…

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