09.25.07

web 2.0 boot camp from the electronic frontier foundation - EFF

Posted in Internet Business at 5:44 pm by Administrator

From the EFF a seminar I am hoping will be recorded, edited and available on the web, for I can not afford the travel to make it out to Cali right now. It’s a great price for those who can make it, and the topics are important, with experts offering advice worth more than the price of travel and admission. If you are thinking about starting a social network or already have a site that harnesses user generated content check it out:

What

One-Day bootcamp. EFF’s staff attorneys will be teamed with private attorneys specializing in the various legal issues. We’ll give you the basics on the key topics and you’ll leave better able to protect your customers, your company and your job.

Topic areas

  • Defamation, harassment, and other accusations of bad behavior.
  • Fair use, free culture, and the right to remix.
  • Copyright take-downs and put-backs: Understanding the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
  • How to respond to cops, crooks, and courts who want your customers’ communications and other private information.
  • How to avoid becoming the next Napster and stay on the safe side of the Copyright Wars.
  • The rights of anonymous speakers.
  • Porn, predators, and the pressure to police.
  • Lightning rounds on Creative Commons licenses, webcasting and what to do when you’ve been hacked.

Who should attend

People who do front-line or mid-level work for companies and projects that rely on user-generated content and communications. This includes compliance, customer service and community management workers.

Info orignally found via boing boing

07.01.07

Young ad stars show old pros new tricks

Posted in Marketing at 10:54 pm by Administrator

In an article found recently via reuters / yahoo news it is finally noted that newer marketing people may sometimes be years ahead of older more established marketing people and companies. This is why I think companies should use several marketing choices to cover many possibilities, and marketing companies should employ teams of people to work on projects and ideas.

Some excerpts from the article:

By Gavin Haycock Sat Jun 30, 12:58 AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - To court new generations of consumers, advertising executives are discovering that experience has become an impediment.

It is a far cry from the glory days of advertising, when newcomers spent years working their way to the top. But unprecedented change in media and technology has given teenagers and kids an advantage in forecasting what products will appeal to consumers.

Put simply, too many executives have grown up with traditional media — television and newspapers — which is now losing audience and revenue to Web sites, cell phones, chat rooms, social networking sites and online games.

“I would say you have experts at the age of 14 of fantastic value because those people are extremely intelligent, they have time and they produce a lot of very good counseling on technological issues,” said Pierre Bellanger, chief executive and co-founder of Skyblog, Europe’s top social network site.

-snip-

HOLLYWOOD IN THEIR POCKET

Younger people spend more time online than watching television, have access to millions of on-demand content channels and are fueling a boom in video gaming, an industry that is bigger in terms of sales than Hollywood’s box office.

As some media executives note, who needs Hollywood when almost every teenager carries a personalized film studio in a phone in their back pocket?

“The people coming into and out of college don’t look at things in terms of media or marketing. They look at what is cool,” said James Hilton, co-founder and executive creative director of advertising consultancy Akqa.

This was borne out at the Cannes’ Advertising festival earlier this month, where thousands of advertising executives met to brainstorm on the next big idea.

Akqa held a creative competition at the festival inviting young talent to draft an ad campaign using tools not available five years ago.

Art director Todd Parker, 27, and copywriter Peter Trueblood, 26, picked up joint trophies for an Earth Day campaign using 3-D City-making imaging and Google mapping to show the future impact of global warming.

Interacting with the campaign triggered snow falls on mountain peaks to symbolize how action makes a difference.

“Technologic advances, changing media landscape and the way messages are consumed has turned convention on its head,” the two said in an e-mail response. “There are only two possible reactions to this — terror or excitement. We choose both, we’re terrified about how excited we are.”

-snip-

David Brown, who studies at the Miami Ad School, picked up a trophy for an interactive campaign he created for Prevent Child Abuse America. One element of this showed a digital billboard whose image changed as donations were texted to a specified phone number, transforming a sad child into a happy one.

Although Brown is only 25, he looks to his teenage brother for inspiration.

“The scary thing is that, when I watch my younger brother and his friends, I’m amazed at the stuff they pull off with their camera phones and cutting video and editing and making songs,” said Brown. “It’s great to be in this industry now when you never know what’s going to happen tomorrow.”

10.12.06

Nashville Delivery, Courier and Limo sites

Posted in General at 8:36 pm by Administrator

Two new Nashville web sites created by Global Advanced Media

These sites are currently in version 1.1 and will have some revisions as we work with our clients to get them exactly what they want. Delivery and courier services in Nashville TN are being handled by the fine folks at We Deliver Nashville and for transportation in uber luxury look into the Limousine services inNashville with the Nashville Limo Company.

Delivery drivers, couriers, professional drivers and more, getting the word out with Global Advanced Media.
We are currently handling the design and web hosting for these fine companies!

08.05.06

Blog Feeds Provide New Security Threat

Posted in Internet Business, Internet Users at 8:41 pm by Administrator

How are we going to fix this one? Just keep turing off java, flash and every other cool web service that makes the net great?

Blog Feeds Provide New Security Threat
From XBIZ

By Steve Javors

LAS VEGAS — Exploiting the vulnerability of blog feeds, hackers have found a new medium to surreptitiously attack PCs.

Bob Auger, a security engineer with SPI Dynamics, said that hackers could insert malicious JavaScript in blog updates that are delivered to subscribers’ machines via Really Simple Syndication (RSS) or Atom feeds. Auger presented his findings during the annual Black Hat Briefings, an Internet security conference.

Auger said blog feeds can be compromised in two ways: hackers setting up a corrupted blog and getting users to subscribe to its RSS feed, or more likely, inserting malicious code into a popular blog’s comments section, which often have their own feed.

Attackers also can send malicious code to mailing lists that offer feeds to attack compromised systems, Auger said. Feeds have risen to prominence because they allow users to consolidate information from websites into a single interface. This eliminates the need for clicking on a plethora of different websites.

Many RSS or feed readers do not include security software that can filter out malicious code. Auger said these applications should prevent JavaScript from running.

“A large percentage of the readers I tested had some kind of an issue,” Auger said. Vulnerable feed readers include Bloglines, RSS Reader, RSS Owl, Feed Demon and Sharp Reader, according to Auger.

Filtering out JavaScript at the feed reader level can get complicated because many readers use the code to deliver ads like one would see if they accessed the blog homepage.

06.23.06

Pluggd podcast community launched

Posted in Podcasting / Podcasts, Software and Web Apps at 3:22 am by Administrator

Pluggd podcast community launched

Found via TechCrunch, this new podcast directory / social sharing of tags and stuff-kind-of-site is very cool. Incorporating many features that make it the best on the web. I would expect every other podcast directory to adapt many of the features that this is incoroporating, especially the web crawl feature. - Check it out - Pluggd Podcast Directory.

There are many cool social netwrok / sharing / tagging featured with this cool new directory, read more about it at TechCrunch.

06.17.06

TalkShoe podcasting

Posted in Podcasting / Podcasts, Software and Web Apps at 10:38 pm by Administrator

Very cool, glad someone else is doing this so I don’t have to…

From Techcrunch

TalkShoe is a podcasting service and directory that combines recorded conference calls with revenue sharing for show hosts. It appears to be very simple to use and the community elements make me think this service could be successful. I can’t imagine many show hosts are going to make much money off of this, but the online video world has shown that when sharing is easy people will do it.

If the world really is changing to put user generated content at the center of media, some body’s going to find the right formula for audio. This looks like a move in the right direction.

Here’s how TalkShoe works. A Windows desktop client allows up to 25 people to participate in a conversation and chat behind the scenes. Calls are automatically recorded and entered into the site’s podcast directory. Show hosts receive money from the site’s ad revenues according to the number of their show’s listeners and for referring others to the service.

Google ads, ads in feeds and audio ads inserted in the podcasts themselves will all be used to monetize the site.

Conversations can be public or private and site visitors are encouraged to call in to live recordings underway. Participants can use telephone, Skype, Vonage or Yahoo to call in. The company says that SIP support is coming soon.

Finished podcasts are entered into the TalkShoe podcast directory where users can write reviews and leave comments. The site is set up to encourage subscription and scheduling of future episodes. There’s not a whole lot of activity on the site yet, but it looks like it could really catch on.

Featured podcasts so far include shows on Barry Bonds’ home run race, wine making at home, traveling in Italy and a debate between Mac and PC enthusiasts.

Many people say that podcasting is still too difficult for non-technical users. TalkShoe seems pretty simple. If there really are a large number of people interested in creating or listening to home-made audio content, this service could be a good way for them to do so.


Read the whole article with photos and comments at TechCrunch.

06.08.06

Web 2.0 - what it may be and where it is going

Posted in Internet Business, Software and Web Apps at 3:38 am by Administrator

From Business Week:

But behind the peculiarities, Web 2.0 portends a real sea change on the Internet. If there’s one thing they have in common, it’s what they’re not. Web 2.0 sites are not online places to visit so much as services to get something done — usually with other people. From Yahoo!’s (YHOO) photo-sharing site Flickr and the group-edited online reference source Wikipedia to the teen hangout MySpace, and even search giant Google (GOOG), they all virtually demand active participation and social interaction (see BW Online, 9/26/05, “It’s A Whole New Web”). If these Web 2.0 folks weren’t so geeky, they might call it the Live Web.

And though these Web 2.0 services have succeeded in luring millions of consumers to their shores, they haven’t had much to offer the vast world of business. Until now.

Read more from Business Week…

06.06.06

Hack your router - easily add more power and features

Posted in General at 8:16 pm by Administrator

So I was tipped off about this open source frimware upgrade from the rss feed I subscribe to at digg. It seems pretty easy to upgrade the firmware on your router to add many features and boost the wireless power, and more…

From an article at lifehacker:

Of all the great DIY projects at this year’s Maker Faire, the one project that really caught my eye involved converting a regular old $60 router into a powerful, highly configurable $600 router. The router has an interesting history, but all you really need to know is that the special sauce lies in embedding Linux in your router. I found this project especially attractive because: 1) It’s easy, and 2) it’s totally free.

Read more about it from lifehacker click here.

« Previous entries · Next entries »