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Google ready for free Voice rollout

Google has been developing its Voice application, which used to be called Grand Central, since 2005. Now almost ready to roll out on general release (free, of course!), Voice has the potential to replace all internet voice applications with a single call manager. It can collate all your phone and messaging contacts, handle all voice calls and has many sophisticated add-ons such as call monitoring and automatic transcriptions. 

Google has been in talks with the major terrestrial phone service providers. I, for one, am really looking forward to the day (coming soon) when I need only one phone and only one address book.

New York Times, 12-03-2009

Online sales to increase through 2009: Forrester

UK online sales will actually increase during the recession at a rate of 6% a year, according to research by e-commerce consultancy firm Forrester.

Despite the current economic downturn, the research predicts that online sales will continue to rise as an increasing number of customers move away from the high street.

"The recession will hit online sales less hard than other channels as people shop online to find better prices," said a spokesperson from Forrester.

Online is one of the few sectors in the UK that is still experiencing a growth in sales, and all small business owners are advised to make sure that they have a fully functioning website where customers can purchase their products and services online.

The survey predicts UK online sales for retail and travel will total over £37bn in 2009 and will rise to £56bn by 2014. 

Forrester Research, 11-03-2009

New online Ad Formats get the thumbs-up

Now I've seen plenty of the new ad formats, I have to say I prefer them. They seem like a more 'natural' addition to editorial content. But I wonder why ads have to be in fixed format? Isn't this just a lazy hangover from press - where subeditors worked to a fixed layout? 

It seems that, just as the press liberates itself from fixed layouts (thanks to computer technology), new (entirely computer-generated) media choose to adopt the old Press constraints! Easier for buyers, certainly - and necessitated by templated CMS. 

If online media are more restrictive than print ... has something gone wrong?

Business Insider says:

27 publishers with a reach of about 109 million unique visitors per month -- that's 66% of the total U.S. Internet audience -- have agreed to try one of three new online ad formats sometime before July. The publishers are all members of the online publishers association (OPA).

Here's how an OPA rep described the units:

  • The Fixed Panel (recommended dimension is 336 wide x 860 tall), which looks naturally embedded into the page layout and scrolls to the top and bottom of the page as a user scrolls.
  • The XXL Box (recommended dimension is 468 wide x 648 tall), which has page-turn functionality with video capability.
  • The Pushdown (recommended dimension is 970 wide x 418 tall), which opens to display the advertisement and then rolls up to the top of the page.

The formats they've agreed on all have one trait in common: they are much bigger and more attention-grabbing than the banner, which is despised by publishers, advertisers and readers alike as an ad unit.

Business Insider, 10-03-2009

More local Government info online

Whitehall's information-sharng programme lumbers on. I'll welcome it when it actually works ...

Jill Sherman reports:

Parents will be able to compare the cost and quality of nurseries and childminders under plans to publish much more data on government interactive websites.

By early next year they will also be able to post comments and challenge data on a childcare site. Poor providers will be highlighted through a mixture of Ofsted scores, council information and parental grumblings.

On a linked website, cyclists will be able to look up the worst blackspots in England and Wales by the end of this year, says yesterday's White Paper on public services. The Transport Department plans to extend the information to all traffic accidents once the cycling data has been tested.

Crime rates are already provided locally by individual police forces throughout England and Wales but by the end of this year recorded levels of burglaries, robberies, and violent attacks will be standardised to provide, in effect, a nationwide “crime map”.

These sites would link to a range of maps and interactive charts about recycling rates, parking charges, council tax increases and service performance tables, provided by town halls. At the press of a button residents should in theory be able to find out almost everything about the area in which they live.

Times Online, 10-03-2009

Royalties demand prompts YouTube music video blackout

YouTube has begun blocking UK users' access to music videos and is blaming the move on a hike in fees sought by the British body that collects royalties for composers and publishers.

YouTube said it failed to reach an agreement because PRS was asking it to pay an amount that was "many, many more times higher" than the previous licensing agreement.

Patrick Walker, YouTube's director of video partnerships in Europe, wrote on the company's blog: "The costs are simply prohibitive for us -- under PRS's proposed terms we would lose significant amounts of money with every playback.

"PRS is unwilling to tell us what songs are included in the license they can provide so that we can identify those works on YouTube -- that's like asking a consumer to buy an unmarked CD without knowing what musicians are on it."

Steve Porter, CEO of PRS for Music, claimed he received the call informing him of YouTube's decision only yesterday afternoon.

"PRS for Music has not requested Google to do this and urges them to reconsider their decision as a matter of urgency."

The move means YouTube will be blocking premium music videos in the UK that have been supplied or claimed by record labels, though it will take time to go through its catalogue.

It will not block music uploaded by artists or users.

Brand Republic, 10-03-2009

Web unites witty losers

Two young French entrepreneurs are celebrating their triumph in exporting a very Gallic and un-American product to the United States: an internet forum for wallowing in self-pity.

They have been surprised by the way that Americans are flocking to an English-language version of VieDeMerde.fr (which translates as s***ty life), a popular website on which the French tell hard-luck stories and lament their misfortunes with black humour.

The US version of VDM, called F***MyLife (fmylife.com), opened in January. A million people a day are now visiting to read about other people's disasters or recount their own, Guillaume Passaglia, the co-founder, told The Times. "This sort of humour is quite specifically French but nevertheless it has worked in the US straight away," he said.

VDM has become one of France's top ten sites since its launch in January 2008 by Mr Passaglia and Maxime Valette. It has spawned half a dozen others. The latest of the haunts for "des serial losers", as they are known, opened to instant success on Monday under the name RaterSaVie.com (FailYourLife). The spur was a remark last month by Jacques Seguela, a veteran advertising man and friend of President Sarkozy, that anyone who did not have a Rolex watch by the age of 50 had "failed his life". Mr Sarkozy is often criticised for his Rolex taste.

With their sardonic despair, the hard-luck sites reflect the pessimistic streak in the French character, as well as illustrating Voltaire's remark that "the misfortunes of some make for the happiness of others". Some have described the sites as Twitter for losers.

The idea of VDM and FML, the American offshoot, is simple: losers tell their sob story in a few words, the darker and bleaker the better. It must start "Aujourd'hui/Today" and end with the curse VDM - or FML in English.

For example: "Today my boss fired me via text message. I don't have a text messaging plan. I paid $0.25 to get fired. FML." Or, from VDM: "Today, I received two text messages from my girlfriend. The first to tell me that it was all over. The second to tell me that she had sent it to the wrong person. VDM."

Mr Passaglia, whose site produced the material for a book last December, said that his team rejected the great majority of the 20,000 stories they received every day and published only the best. They had been helped by the economic crisis. "That favours this type of mentality. You have even more need to distance yourself from the difficulties of the world by laughing at your daily problems."

Times Online, 06-03-2009

Internet-ready TV makes a comeback

Netflix Inc. is expected to announce a deal with Korea's LG Electronics Inc. that will make a Netflix online-video service available on a new line of high-definition TV sets from LG due out this spring. The online service offers 12,000 movie and television titles.

Amid other developments pegged to this week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Yahoo Inc. and Intel Corp. plan to announce support from several major consumer-electronics companies to sell TV sets that come with software, dubbed widgets, that make it easier to call up Web content on TV sets using ordinary remote controls rather than computer keyboards.

Efforts to combine Internet technology with TV sets first emerged in the mid-90s. The current economic climate could be a stumbling block, deterring consumers from upgrading their existing TV sets. Observers have remarked that TV and Web are already interchangeable to some degree, and consumers may not wish to pay the estimated $300 more for a Web-ready TV.

Still, the topic remains a hot one in high-tech circles because of the potential impact on existing business models in the entertainment industry. Instead of the often expensive packages of video content from cable and satellite providers, the Internet could theoretically deliver a much wider array of entertainment and information choices -- many of them free.

Wall St Journal, 05-01-2009

Mother invents satellite tracking device for lost children

Sara Murray's daughter, Rowenna, got lost on a ski-ing trip. Shocked by the realisation that - in this mobile age - there was no fast way to find out where Rowenna was, she used her contacts & business know-how to develop the Buddi, a square box, not much bigger than a watch, which can hang around the neck.

To find someone's whereabouts, you log on to the buddi website and are directed to the relevant page of Google Maps. Movements can be tracked in real time. The device also contains a panic button, which alerts one of two constantly monitored call centres and allows them to locate it. They call the named guardians, listed in order of preference. The panic button also sends an audio feed to the call centre.

The guardian has the option, based on what appears to be happening at the scene based on the sounds on the audio feed, of going there directly or calling the emergency services. 

The buddi also has uses in the care of elderly or disabled people.

Times Online, 03-01-2009

 

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