Archive for September 19th, 2011

19 September
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Confusing obedience with self-control

It’s an expensive confusion.

We organize our schools around obedience. Tests, comportment, the very structure of the day is about training young people to follow instructions.

We organize our companies around obedience as well. From the resume we use to hire to the training programs to the annual budgets, revenue targets and reviews we create, the model employee is someone who does what he’s told.

And the rationale for this appears to be that at some point, obedience transforms into self-control. That at some point, people start obeying themselves and become leaders. Self-control is without a doubt one of the building blocks of success, a key element of any career worth talking about. We need self-control if we’re going to make a difference.

But help me understand why obedience is the way to get there? Compliant sergeants rarely become great generals.

By Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

19 September
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Give Your iPhone a Glowing Logo With This Mod

Are you annoyed by that all those MacBooks strut around with their glowing Apple logos, and their little brother, the iPhone, has to settle with a regular, dull Apple icon on its back?

Grieve no more, as a UK company called iPatch has developed a modification that will make your iPhone’s logo glow majestically, just like in the photo on the right.

According to iPatch, the illuminated logo can be made to glow in different colors by applying filters. It glows when the screen is on; it also starts glowing when you receive a call or a message. It also does not noticeably increase battery use, nor does it increase heating of the back of the case.

Unfortunately, applying this modification yourself might prove a daunting task, as it requires of how the iPhone functions “on the circuitry level.” The folks at iPatch will be glad to do it for you starting mid-October for an estimated price of £50-£100 ($79-$158), plus shipping.

iPatch via PC World

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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Microsoft Prepares Windows 8 for Battle Against the iPad

Microsoft is set to unveil the next-generation of Windows tomorrow. The new operating system, currently known as Windows 8, is the tech giant’s attempt to regain ground that it has lost to Apple, which surpassed Microsoft last year as the world’s most valuable company.

It isn’t the MacBook or Mac OS X Lion that has Microsoft executives worried, though. It’s the sheer dominance of the iPad.

The iPad hasn’t skipped a beat since its debut last year. Thanks to Apple’s ingenuity, a shockingly low starting price and a strong marketing campaign, the device has sold more than 25 million units in less than a year-and-a-half. More importantly, it has defined a whole new category of consumer devices. And it dominates that category with an iron fist.

iPad competitors have come and gone, but none have been able to make a dent in the iPad’s rapid growth. HP has given up on the TouchPad, the RIM Playbook has underperformed and countless Android tablets have fallen by the wayside. Nothing has emerged as the alternative to the iPad.


Windows 8: One OS to Rule Them All


This presents a dangerous problem and an opportunity for Microsoft. The tech giant cannot let Apple monopolize the tablet market like Microsoft did with the desktop OS. That would seal its fate as a technology power destined to diminish into a shell of its former self.

There is a need for a legitimate alternative to the iPad, though, and the company that gets it right will emerge in a strong position to take a big piece of the fast-growing tablet market. Success in tablets would boost Microsoft’s profits, ease investor concerns about the shrinking PC market and set it up for future growth.

That’s where Windows 8 comes in. The next-generation OS, which will be unveiled at the Microsoft Build conference on Tuesday, is not only designed for PCs, but it is also made to work on tablets as well. We got a taste of its touchscreen capabilities at the D9 conference earlier this year, but we expect Microsoft to unveil the first Windows 8 tablet during Tuesday’s keynote. Our sources tell us that the device will be manufactured by Samsung, but has been designed meticulously by Microsoft in an attempt to create the iPad alternative.

Will Microsoft’s gamble work? Can the company create an OS that works seamlessly on both tablets and PCs? And most of all, will it be useful enough, different enough and cheap enough to give the iPad a run for its money?

We’ll be closer to knowing the answers to those questions on Tuesday morning. The tablet wars are about to begin in earnest.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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CTRL + C Your Way to Instant Search Queries & Social Sharing

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.

Name: Click.to

Quick Pitch: Click.to turns copy, pasting and sharing or searching into a single action.

Genius Idea: You’re just one CTRL + C command away from copying content to your favorite app or service.


Select, copy, open application, paste and submit. We repeat these actions on a daily basis any time we want to share links with friends and followers on Facebook or Twitter, query a search engine or ecommerce site, and grab videos or images to send to colleagues via email.

Click.to, an add-on for Windows 7, XP or Vista, packages up all these actions into the CTRL + C command. Once installed, highlight whatever video, text or image content you want to look up, post, share or save, press CTRL + C and select the app icon of your liking.

“Click.to extends the most used short cut in the world: CTRL + C,” explains co-founder Peter Oehler.

Should you want to quickly Google a few words in a text document, Click.to comes to the rescue. Instead of selecting the text, opening a browser and pasting it into Google, you can copy the text and hit the Google button in the Click.to pop-up — voilà, you just CRTL + C’d your way to instant search results. Rinse and repeat.

Click.to works in much the same for sharing content on social networks. Say you want to post a picture to Facebook. “Click.to will start your browser automatically, it will select www.facebook.com, log into your account, choose picture upload and publish it on your wall … with one click,” Oehler explains.

This simple, little convenience could certainly save you a lot of time, especially since Click.to”s quick copy-to third-party service list is quite exhaustive and includes support for Facebook, Google, Google Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Twitter, Flickr, Box.net, Wikipedia, Evernote, Amazon, Pastebin, Outlook, Word, Excel and others. You can even click to convert text into a PDF, and create your own shortcuts for the web services and programs of your choosing.

Best of all, perhaps, is that Click.to works system-wide. So what’s the catch? Click.to is PC-only for the time being. A Mac-compatible version is said to be in the works.

Click.to, released in early July, is a product from Axonic Informationssysteme GmbH, a Germany-based startup.


Series Supported by Microsoft BizSpark


Microsoft BizSpark

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark, a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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7 Ways to Improve Your Event Planning With Facebook

The Facebook Marketing Series is supported by Buddy Media. Now that Facebook will no longer allow your brand to hide comments from your followers, knowing the right strategies for moderating is paramount. Download our guide to Facebook publishing and moderation now.

From professional event producers to volunteer committee members, event planners see Facebook as must-have tool in their belts. How can Facebook give a boost to your next event?

We spoke with a few experts on using the world’s largest social network for event planning. Read on for their pro tips and let us know how you use Facebook for your events in the comments below.


1. Get Inspired


Looking for some creative inspiration? Facebook to the rescue. Adrianne Mellen Ramstack, owner and principle planner at Adrianne Elizabeth LLC, uses Facebook to discover new, innovative ideas.

“I use Facebook a lot for inspiration,” she says, “I ‘Like’ The Knot, Real Simple, Rose Bredl Flowers, La Jeune Mariee and Big Rock Little Rooster (to name a few) to stay up on inspiration and new trends in wedding and event planning.”


2. Stay Connected


During the event planning process, organizers often need to share updates with the planning committee. A “closed” or “secret” Facebook Group can be more collaborative and interactive than countless emails going back and forth. As the event organizer, use this space to share event updates, solicit input or delegate tasks to volunteers. Selling tickets? Ask group members to share what approach they’ve found most successful. Looking for sponsors? Throw it out to the group to see if someone can facilitate an introduction.

Groups can also help attendees connect with each other in advance. For example, NASA hosts #NASATweetUps to offer a behind-the-scenes experience to @NASA followers. A closed Facebook group connects attendees leading up to the events. According to the group description for the STS-135 tweetup, members “discuss travel plans, organize group housing, and generally GEEK OUT about the amazing opportunity they have been given.”

Remco Timmermans, who attended the STS-135 tweetup found the Facebook group to be a helpful resource. He appreciated the direct interaction with participants and the helpful resources housed within the group, such as lists of hotels. The private group provided a forum for attendees to reminisce and relive the excitement by sharing post-event photos and videos.


3. Scope Out Vendors


Vendor selection is critical to the success of any event, so as you’re researching caterers, photographers or entertainment, take a peak at their Facebook pages to read feedback from previous customers. If you notice negative feedback from unsatisfied customers, think twice before hiring that company for your event.


4. Increase Attendance


According to recent Eventbrite data, 10% of those purchasing tickets through Eventbrite share the event on Facebook. Including social sharing options at the point of purchase is helpful, however, event planners may find more value by following Eventbrite’s step-by-step guide to creating a Facebook event that syncs up with Eventbrite’s ticket-selling platform. Friends and contacts can view event details on Facebook and then register by clicking on the event link, which takes them back to the original Eventbrite page.

In addition, developing exclusive offers for Facebook communities can spark new sales. According to Ramstack, the Central Ohio Capital Area Humane Society has generated additional ticket sales for its upcoming fundrasier by offering a Facebook-only discount. Tickets, normally $80, are available to Facebook “likers” for $60.


5. Recognize Sponsors


Kelly O’Donoghue, an event planner in Tampa, FL, suggested offering Facebook recognition as an additional perk for sponsors. A few ideas:

  • Create an album to feature sponsor logos
  • Tag status updates to show appreciation to sponsors and help them expand their Facebook community
  • Invite sponsors to write a “guest note” on the organization’s Facebook page
  • Post a video interview about why sponsors support the event
  • Share sponsors’ relevant updates/news on the organization’s Facebook page

6. Share Real-Time Updates


During the event, don’t forget to continue to offer as-it-happens updates through a brand or organization’s Facebook page. Bringing the event to Facebook can help create additional interest in the event (and future ones). Posting photos, sharing video clips and livestreaming are a few opportunities to spark interaction with your Facebook community.


7. Post-Event Follow-Up


After the event, use Facebook to increase online engagement. Provide an event recap with photos and video. Thank people for participating, collect feedback by posting “Questions” or a survey link, and invite them to stay connected by subscribing to the company’s blog or e-newsletter.

Now, let’s hear from you. What other ways can Facebook help event planners?


Series Supported by Buddy Media


The Facebook Marketing Series is supported by Buddy Media. Now that Facebook will no longer allow your brand to hide comments from your followers, knowing the right strategies for moderating is paramount. Download our guide to Facebook publishing and moderation now.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Antonprado

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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The alternative to failure

“What would you have me do instead?”

To the critic who decries a project as a worthless folly, something that didn’t work out, something that challenged the status quo and failed, the artist might ask,

“Is it better to do nothing?”

To the critic who hasn’t shipped, who hasn’t created his art, anything less than better-than-what-I -have-now appears to be a waste. To this critic, progress should only occur in leaps, in which a fully functioning, perfected new device/book/project/process/system appears and instantly and perfectly replaces the current model.

We don’t need your sharp wit or enmity, please. Our culture needs your support instead.

Each step by any (and every) one who ships moves us. It might show us what won’t work, it might advance the state of the art or it might merely encourage others to give it a try as well.

To those who feel that they have no choice but to create, thank you.

By Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

19 September
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Cars Don’t Waste Fuel. Drivers Waste Fuel

Researchers at the University of California, Riverside’s Center for Environmental Research and Technology (CERT) are developing a new way of boosting fuel efficiency by as much as 30 percent without changing a car’s powertrain at all.

Their secret? Finding ways to change our behavior so we’re more attuned to maximizing their mileage while behind the wheel.

Sure, it may sound easier than reducing vehicle weight or adding batteries or developing some new engine technology, but it’s a daunting task. It’s relatively easy for engineers to tinker with a car, but even Sammy Hagar knows that people tend to resist efforts to change their behavior.

With a $1.2 million grant from the Department of Energy, the research team is in the very first stage of developing their study. Researcher Kanok Boriboonsomsin said he’s studying ways cars with network connectivity might offer a fuel-saving route on a GPS system, and how infotainment systems can provide real-time feedback on fuel economy without distracting or annoying drivers.

“When you get in the car, you have the vehicle recommend the route you could take based on traffic conditions on the route, and on the way if there’s anything wrong with your driving it may provide some feedback to you to adjust your driving behavior,” Boriboonsomsin said.

That’s key, because, as any hypermiler will tell you, the best way to increase fuel efficiency is to adjust the nut holding the steering wheel. Snarky, yes, but CERT’s research could help automakers help us improve our fuel economy without spending a dime on powertrain engineering. But first, the researchers at CERT have to find the best way to change driver behavior. That means creating a system that immediately emphasizes the benefits of efficient driving without creating a needless distraction or aggravation.

Ford’s SmartGauge, shown here in the Lincoln MKZ Hybrid, provides real-time feedback on your driving style and fuel efficiency. Photo: Ford

The Nut Holding The Wheel

The team at CERT is hardly the first to try changing drivers’ habits to improve fuel economy. They were, however, the first to prove that drivers presented with real-time feedback about their fuel economy turned into instant hypermilers — reducing their fuel consumption by six percent on average by coasting to stoplights, laying off the gas while accelerating and upshifting as soon as possible.

It’s getting easier for drivers to know how their driving affects their gas mileage. Many modern internal combustion — and every EV and hybrid we’ve ever driven — features a dashboard display showing real-time and average fuel economy. Ford’s is among the best, encouraging drivers to embrace their inner hypermiler through an LCD display that turns lush and verdant when you’re cruising nicely at 55 but withers and dies during an impromptu stoplight drag race.

We’ve experienced this first-hand using the engaging and intuitive SmartGauge (shown above) in the Ford Fusion Hybrid and Lincoln MKZ Hybrid, and the very impressive energy management systems in the Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Volt. In every case, the real-time info made us much more vigilant about our behavior and, yes, improved our fuel economy.

Fiat has gone so far as to give drivers extremely detailed report cards of how to improve their fuel economy. All Fiat 500s have Eco:Drive, a system that saves vehicle diagnostic data on a USB drive. Plug it into a computer, and the Eco:Drive software will generate a progress report that analyzes CO2 emissions and fuel consumption in terms of driving style. It’ll also compare you to all Fiat owners who use the program — about 66,000 people.

“Even though our cars are fuel efficient, we don’t want that to stop at the factory,” said Fiat brand manager Andrew Waterhouse. “We want people to continue to be mindful of how they’re driving and how to improve their driving.”

No Time Like The Present

Cliff Nass, a professor of psychology at Stanford University and author of The Man Who Lied To His Laptop, said there’s one problem with telling drivers how to improve their fuel economy after they’re out of the car: People learn best when they’re being coached in the moment. It’s called just-in-time learning, and it’s crucial to developing new skills.

“When you’re not driving, you’re not thinking about driving,” he said. “When you get this feedback and analysis, you’re not in the car. That’s one of the problems with these systems: When you can’t act on the problem right away, it’s not as effective.”

The only thing harder than teaching old drivers new tricks when they’re not driving is teaching old drivers new tricks while they are driving.

“When your car is moving, especially at reasonably high speeds or in cities where there’s lots of stop and go, that’s the wrong time to try to transmit messages to people. Their brains are elsewhere,” Nass said.

It’s a problem that Boriboonsomsin knows well.

“If a vehicle provides too much feedback, a driver could be overwhelmed,” he said, suggesting that audio feedback may be less distracting than visual prompts. Additionally, feedback must be nuanced and positive so it doesn’t become a source of irritation.

“The way we provide the feedback could turn off the driver if it’s too aggressive or commanding,” he said.

Don’t Tread On My Lead Foot

Cars that actively try to change a driver’s behavior inherently run the risk of making a fast enemy of the driver. Take, for example, Nissan’s Eco-Pedal, a system that makes it increasingly difficult to press the accelerator pedal in a way that would waste fuel. We once drove an M56 equipped with the feature, and immediately became exasperated with its nagging before turning it off 30 seconds later.

The Eco-Pedal certainly is effective at providing just-in-time learning, Nass said, but it’s useless if it’s always off.

“Not shockingly, people don’t like to be nagged,” he said. “The reward for not pressing the gas is it doesn’t nag you. Well, the sensation of a negative is not a positive. So people get angry and resentful and turn it off.”

Cars with “eco” modes are just as ineffective, said Nass, because they usually require drivers to flip a switch to engage them. They don’t provide any immediate benefit to the driver — people don’t think things through and realize saving gas saves them money — but they do give a noticeable drawback in the form of decreased throttle response. That’s why Fiat made its most fuel-efficient throttle mapping (and fastest upshifts in the automatic gearbox) the default mode. Drivers must “opt-in” to a more responsive, and less fuel-efficient, sport mode.

Even passive feedback systems, like fuel economy displays, may not be terribly effective if they force drivers to think in the abstract. Nass said the public good of “helping the environment,” as represented by an LCD pictogram of a growing vine, isn’t nearly so strong a motivator as saving money. For that reason, it might be far more effective if the LCD display showed dollar bills flying away as the driver laid on the gas.

“It’s an issue of people doing better understanding consequences for themselves,” he said.

Boriboonsomsin said the financial reward of fuel-friendly driving is a powerful motivator, as we so often see when fuel prices spike and sales of small cars increase.

“If gas is cheap, there’s not much incentive for them to change their behavior,” Boriboonsomsin said. But as fuel prices rise, “they may be more willing to change their driving behavior.”

Accentuate The Positive

Boriboonsomsin said a large aspect of driver feedback research will focus on connecting cars to intelligent transportation networks that determine the best routes for fuel economy. Such a system could help drivers avoid congested road — and therefore spare them from idling in gridlock — or direct them toward routes free of stop-and-go traffic. He calls this “completing the loop,” using real-time driving data to create useful strategies that keep drivers from wasting fuel.

Nass said that kind of feedback, the kind that encourages positive behavior such as, “make a right to avoid unnecessary idling at a stoplight,” is sorely missing in current dashboard displays and meddling gas pedals.

“The problem is, the negatives in these systems are much bigger than the positives, and that’s a mistake,” he said.

Another powerful motivator? Getting fired for lead-footing or getting a bonus for saving fuel. That’s why fleets are especially interested in changing driver behavior to reduce fuel bills.

“In a fleet system, you have someone else who can penalize you or reward you,” said Nass.

He said a fleet driver’s corollary to the abstract goal of “saving the environment” may be helping the company’s share price, which has little effect on the individual driver. However, getting a bonus for having the lowest overall fuel consumption directly impacts the individual.

“The key in fleet is there are direct consequences,” he said.

Driver’s Ed

Cars already can tell us how to save fuel, but they can’t effectively convince us to change the way we drive with a happy tree, a report card or a dashboard display.

They may, however, help us save fuel with a smartphone app that can detect stoplights. The SignalGuru project, from researchers at MIT and Princeton, uses a smartphone camera and traffic signal data to tell drivers whether they should start slowing down to avoid waiting at an upcoming traffic light. In trials on the streets of Cambridge and Singapore, drivers using SignalGuru have been able to cut fuel consumption by 20 percent.

Thanks to researchers like those at MIT, Princeton and CERT, the cars we drive in the not-so-distant future may become better teachers, subtly guiding us to fuel-efficient driving patterns. Connected with an intelligent transit network, they’ll help us save money, showing us more fuel-efficient ways to get to work, gently reminding us to lay off the gas pedal and allowing us to make decisions on engine programming based on our own historical driving patterns.

And instead of people redesigning cars, cars of the future will change the people who drive them.

Photo: The Honda CR-Z hybrid, being driven somewhat less than fuel-efficiently. Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

19 September
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3 New Takes On Digital Books, ID Cards and Shopping

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.

Each weekend, Mashable hand-picks startups we think are building interesting, unique or niche products.

This week we’ve chosen three new takes on established online staples: digital books, ID and shopping.

Booktrack, for instance, adds audio to digital books. Miicard provides reliable digital identity verification. And Grabio takes online classifieds local.


Booktrack: A Soundtrack for Books


Quick Pitch: Synchronized ambient sound effects for books.

Genius Idea: Technology that recognizes an individual’s reading speed and paces the soundtrack with corresponding text.

Mashable’s Take: Booktrack’s sound effects for iPad and iPhone books are designed to create a background soundscape that matches the text. Sherlock Holmes, for instance, opens with the sound of a heavy rain. At moments that match the text, there might be sounds of footsteps, an explosion or suspenseful music. A scrolling arrow keeps track of the reading speed at which the app is matching sounds to text and can be easily sped up or slowed down.

Says Booktrack founder Paul Cameron, “It makes a new and engaging way to read and really enhances the experience and enhances your imagination and keeps you in the story longer,” he recently told The New York Times.

PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel, the company’s lead investor, evidently agrees. HarperCollins, Penguin Books, Sony/ATV Publishing, and others have agreed to at least try the format.

Crazier concepts have succeeded, and other book platforms are experimenting with adding social networks and videos to texts — both of which are arguably even more distracting than sound.

But one thing I like about books is that they’re not movies. There’s an inherent silence on the written page that is part of the experience of reading and a pleasant departure from the constant pinging of screens.

It’s not hard to imagine that concentration on one medium at a time will become outdated. But for me, the written word is still perfectly adequate on its own.


MiiCard: A Digital Identity Card


Quick Pitch: A digital passport that proves ‘you are who you say you are’ purely online and in real time.

Genius Idea: Using verified online accounts to validate your identity.

Mashable’s Take: MiiCard is an identification “card” for the Internet.

Signing up for MiiCard involves the familiar process of verifying your email address. Before the site will vouch for your identity, however, you need to link to other accounts such as those from your bank, credit card and utility companies. Adding more links gives you a “stronger” identity verification.

After you establish your MiiCard identity, you can use it on its partner sites. When you attempt to purchase a product or service online, the “Level Of Assurance” that you need is pre-determined by the vendor or service provider and its regulator. This could be handy when buying and selling online or on an online dating profiles.

It might be hard, however, for people to hand over data about their financial accounts to a startup. The company tries to counter this hesitancy with a safety explanation: “miiCard uses bank-level security to protect your information — utilising multi-factor authentication and industry-standard encryption to ensure your data is secure.”


Grabio: A Location-Based Marketplace


Quick Pitch: A location-based marketplace that connects buyers and sellers within a predefined radius.

Genius Idea: An alternative to online listing sites like Craigslist that brings classifieds closer to their roots at local papers.

Mashable’s Take: Let’s say you want to buy tickets to a sports game at the last minute. You don’t have time to take an hour-long drive to receive them, and the tickets that people posted last month on sites like Craigslist have already been sold.

Grabio aims to be your solution. Its app lists items and services for sale near you in real-time and allows you to post things you’d like to buy (“Need two tickets to the Cubs game tonight”). Buyers and sellers can connect within the app to set up an exchange.

It’s an obviously good selling method for a number of items: tickets, textbooks on campus, dog walking services. But it’s so useful, Grabio has a slew of established competitors.

Zaarly focuses more on odd jobs and services (“Bring me an ice cream cone and I will pay you $10), Goshi hosts image-based listings and Taap.it also has a similar platform.

Grabio’s success depends largely on its ability to distinguish itself from the many other players in the space.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, mbortolino


Series Supported by Microsoft BizSpark


Microsoft BizSpark

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark, a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

19 September
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It’s different here

The other day, walking through Grand Central, I bumped into a friend, here on vacation with his fiancee.

I got to thinking about why New York City attracts so many tourists, more than just about any city in the world. Not because of natural wonders or even outdoor sports activities. It might be because:

  • It’s different here (as in not the same)
  • You can find someone to have an argument with, about just about anything
  • There are fringes–cultural, educational, architectural, societal
  • More than 42 languages are spoken at the Queens public library
  • You can get something that’s not the regular kind
  • There are profit-seekers who will happily sell you something, anything
  • There are many who do things for no profit at all and will eagerly entertain, entrance and change you for the better
  • You will find a diversity of religious belief like no other
  • It’s changing
  • The food hasn’t been entirely homogenized
  • People are active
  • A stranger will go out of his way for you, perhaps, and more often than you expect
  • There is more information per minute, per meter and per interaction
  • Neighborhoods are more important than homogeneity, and co-existing is most important

The thing is, here can be anywhere. There are New Yorks going on in towns large and small, in companies big and tiny and in families that support and respect at the same time they embrace and encourage difference.

I remember ten years ago like it was yesterday, looking out the window of my office and wondering if it (all of it) was over. I remember those that suffered and were lost, and those brave enough to risk everything. Not sure we’ll ever forget, or if we should.

But now more than ever, I believe we have an obligation to stand up, stand out and to do work that matters. Wherever you are, there’s an opportunity to be different, with respect.

By Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

19 September
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Go Mono: 3 iPhone Apps For Black & White iPhotography PICS

While many iPhone photography apps offer a monotone filter, there’s a lot to be said for having an app in your iPhotography arsenal that’s dedicated to creating excellent black & white photographs.

We’ve tried and tested a handful, and here bring you three brilliant black & white iPhone photography apps — complete with screengrabs and some sample photographs.

Take a look through the photo galleries below. Let us know in the comments about your experiences shooting monochrome imagery on your iPhone, and any apps you’d recommend.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon