Archive for December 14th, 2011

14 December
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Today’s Top Stories in Tech, Startups & Social Media

Social Media NewsWelcome to this morning’s edition of “First To Know,” a series in which we keep you in the know on what’s happening in the digital world. We’re keeping our eyes on five particular stories of interest today.

Government Agency Calls for Nationwide Cellphone Ban

The National Transportation Safety Board is seeking to ban cellphone use of all kinds behind the wheel, from texting down to talking hands-free with a headset.

UK Judge Sanctions Live-Tweeting for Reporters

Reporters can now live-tweet at UK courts without asking permission.

Facebook Could Launch Mobile Ads in March

Facebook may begin experimenting with mobile advertising in March, with a launch right before the company’s planned IPO.

Google Extends Free Calling to U.S. & Canada Through 2012

Google has extended free voice calls through Gmail in the US and Canada for one more year.

Apple Founding Documents Fetch $1.59 Million

Apple‘s original founding documents from 1976, which were expected to fetch between $100,000 and $150,000 at auction on Tuesday, were sold to Cisneros CEO Eduardo Cisneros for $1.59 million.

Further News

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, DNY59

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

14 December
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Please, NTSB, Don’t Ban Cellphone Calls From Cars

I have conducted, I think, two or three hands-free, in-car phone calls in my time. I’m not sure why this is. Do I intuitively agree with the National Transportation Safety Board that talking on the cellphone and driving is an inherently bad idea? Or perhaps I never found it as effortless as it should be and noticed that I was, maybe, just a little less focused on the road than I should be. Whatever the reason, I may not get a chance to do it again if the NTSB gets its way and enacts a nationwide ban on in-car cellphone calls. And that would be a crying shame.

The catalyst for this decision was a horrific crash in August 2010 that killed two people, including a young driver who sent 11 texts in 11 minutes — right up until crashing into a school bus.

That’s the event that really got the NTSB looking at the issue, but a chorus of voices since then may have further emboldened them. One of those voices was mine. Just this October I asked if tech “is too damn distracting?” I primarily focused on walking and texting and even included a silly, tongue-in-cheek comic to illustrate the problem (see above).

However, in my research for the piece I came across multiple studies that noted the deleterious effect of cellphone use on drivers. This one, in particular struck me. According to a 2009 University of Utah study, people were significantly distracted, even when conducting hands-free cellphone conversations. From the report:

“…even when participants looked directly at objects in the driving environment, they were less likely to create a durable memory of those objects if they were conversing on a cellphone. …Moreover, in-vehicle conversations do not interfere with driving as much as cellphone conversations do, because drivers are better able to synchronize the processing demands of driving with in vehicle conversations than with cellphone conversations.”

In my experience, driving and talking is a pretty natural experience. My wife and I have driven thousands of miles: to upstate New York, Canada, Vermont, Pennsylvania, North Carolina. During these trips, I talk to her and my two kids in the back of the car. We laugh. We sing (poorly). We play word games. None of this has had any impact on my driving. I try, as much as possible, to keep my eyes on the road.

I do not make phone calls with my cellphone if I can’t do it hands-free in the car and I have only texted when at a stop light (and for this I feel incredibly guilty).

Now, the act of hands-free calling is, for some reason I can’t quite pinpoint, not exactly like talking to someone in the car. Perhaps it’s the occasional glances at the phone to ensure that the battery isn’t dying or the act of dialing (which is not always hands-free). Still, it’s a tad different. On the other hand, not so different, that I feel particularly distracted when driving.

As I noted previously, I sometimes suffer from “Inattention Blindness,” a state where you’re going through what you’re doing (driving a car) without really remembering how you did it. Usually this is because you’re listening to music, having an intense conversation or simply day-dreaming.

I agree with the NTSB and virtually every other sane person out there that texting has no place in an auto (or sidewalks, for that matter), but banning hands-free calls while driving is throwing the cellphone out with the bathwater. There are simply too many other reasons people get distracted while driving and I do not think hands-free calling is the primary or even a tertiary culprit.

The accident that spawned this investigation of in-car cellphone use was about texting. I would like to see some data on how many people have been injured in hands-free dialing accidents. My guess is not many.

It’s also worth noting that cellphones are used for far more than calling and texting in cars. Many people use them as GPS devices. Others hand them to distracting kids to calm them down with a game of Angry Birds. They’re also, of course, excellent emergency devices. If you’re lost, or hurt or in serious danger, that phone can be a lifesaver.

I would suggest the NTSB focus on texting and other truly distracting activities like eating cereal while driving; putting on makeup as you make left turn, and shaving while merging. These things happen. They should stop, but please, NTSB and all states that follow its guidelines, don’t ban all cellphone calls from automobiles.

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

14 December
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Even on Two Wheels, the Thrustcycle Will Never Tip Over

Meet the Thrustcycle, a two-wheeled EV that relies on gyroscopes to stay upright and a flywheel for acceleration. If it ever becomes street legal, it’ll be like nothing else on the road — and it’ll never fall over.

At first glance, the Thrustcycle appears to defy gravity, balancing its 500 pounds on just two wheels. The secret to it remaining upright lies in a combination flywheel/gyroscope assembly located in the rear of the vehicle, which maintains lateral stability in direct proportion to opposing forces. Whether it’s sliding into a tight corner or getting hit by a car (or a foot, like in the video below) the gyroscope will keep the Thrustcycle standing even at a stop.

That flywheel/gyroscope assembly also recovers energy and assists the Thrustcycle’s LiFePO4 battery pack during starting and acceleration. Drivers can “tap in” to the gyroscope’s energy for bursts of speed without draining the batteries or destabilizing the vehicle, according to the designer. The Thrustcycle also features regenerative braking, and stores that energy in its flywheel kinetic energy recovery system (KERS).

“It’s unlike any driving experience,” said creator Clyde Igarashi, who said the gyroscope gives the small vehicle a feeling of weightlessness. “It’s a bit like gliding on land.”

Top speed with an average adult passenger is about 70 miles an hour, and steering is in the rear wheel. Igarashi said that setup was chosen to prove that even a two-wheeled vehicle with rear steering could remain stable with the proper use of gyroscope and flywheel, though the setup could also be applied to more conventional cars, trucks and even boats.

According to Igarashi, the Thrustcycle is a prototype and no pricing has been announced. His company is gradually working to install its technology on other vehicles while the Thrustcycle is in development.

“We will start by customizing more conventional front-steered vehicles to individual specs,” he said. Expect to see a scooter in addition to a more advanced Thrustcycle with an improved carbon fiber body and turn signals.

 

Photo/Video: Thrustcycle

 

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

14 December
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The most important page on the web is the page you build yourself

The internet is an engine of connection. It has been from the start (email, chat, forums, blogs, social media…)

One reason that so many of the most popular sites online are those that permit people to express and expose their ideas is that those are the pages we care most about. We go back to see how people responded, how the traffic is, what we can do to improve the page.

Lifestyle media isn’t a fad. It’s what human beings have been doing forever, with a brief, recent interruption for a hundred years of professional media along the way. That interruption is fading away, and lifestyle media is resurging. People publish. Instead of denigrating user-generated content (what an obscure way to describe human stories), marketers need to understand that this is what we care about.

We shouldn’t be surprised when someone chooses to publish their photos, their words, their art or their opinions. We should be surprised when they don’t.

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

14 December
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The New, New Twitter and What It Means to You and Your Business

The new, new Twitter is upon us and while some of you already have access to it, others will have to wait up to three weeks. I’m not one to write about new features or products as they’re released. But I would like to take some time to review why this version of Twitter is important to you and your business.

Twitter has undergone nothing short of a complete redesign…again. The new experience offers a much needed simplification. After all, almost six years following its debut, one of the most common searches for “how do you use…” on Google, is still…Twitter. With over 200 million Tweets soaring across Twitter everyday, the service is now aspiring to become something your father or mother or even your “sister” can easily understand and use.

Unveiled through a tagline of “let’s fly,” the new, new Twitter centers around five distinct tabs, Home, Connect, Discover, Me, and Tweet. Each tab presents a dedicated page that presents a snapshot of important features tied to particular actions or interests.

Home: One of the most notable improvements is in the intuitiveness of the design. The format is also now consistent. What you see on Twitter.com for example is the same as the Twitter app on smartphones and Tablets.I should also mention that TweetDeck be viewed as a TwitterPro version and is also now available on the Web.

Now, you have access to what you need in a simple and functional layout.On the “Home” page, you will find your social stream of course in addition to trends, recommended people, DMs, etc.

@Connect: The Connect tab is where you can see who’s talking about you as well as who’s interacting with you or your Tweets. The tab offers two views, “Interactions” and “Mentions.” Under Interactions, you can view conversations and Retweets, who’s now following you, who favorited your Tweets, who added you to a list, and other activities related to you. Mentions is just that…Tweets mentioning your @ name.

#Discover: As Twitter so appropriately states, the Discover tab is where simplicity meets serendipity. I love that…it’s very true and also it is serendipity that makes the egosystem so personal, exciting and valuable at once. In the egosystem, everything literally revolves around you. Your experience on Twitter is defined by who you follow, who they follow, trends based on relationships, and the interactions you have as a result. These interactions are unique to you and that is true for each of us. What you see is not what I see and that keeps things exciting. The new Twitter framework ensures that discovery and also serendipity remains personal.

Get Embed with Twitter

Before we move on, I’d like to call attention to one additional update to the Twitter experience. With the new Twitter framework, certain elements become portable to websites, blogs and other web platforms. To begin, Twitter is now making Tweets officially embeddable. As you know, there’s more to any Tweet than 140 or less characters. There are experiences, conversations, and expressions behind each. Not only will visitors see the Tweet wherever it may be embedded, Tweets become living pieces of interactive media wherever they’re placed.

Yes, embedded Tweets are portable and fully functional. Visitors can Reply, Retweet, Favorite or Follow without leaving your page, simply by clicking the respective trigger on the Tweet itself.

Twitter also improved its Tweet and Follow buttons. The new #hashtag button tells visitors that there is a relevant conversation taking place on Twitter and allows them to follow or join in with just one click. The @mention button gives people a shortcut to easily Tweet you and any desired account.

Go here to design your custom Twitter buttons.

Brand Pages

If you’ve ever clicked on a Promoted Tweet, you were either sent to a custom landing page, a traditional website, or perhaps a Facebook brand page. With Twitter’s new brand pages, it hopes businesses will design Twitter experiences that keep you in Twitter. It also hopes to increase the value of its Promoted products overall by giving brands more control in how they market themselves to consumers.

Twitter’s Chief Revenue Officer Adam Bain recently shared that in his meetings with CMOs over the past year, the most recurring requests focused specifically on brandable pages. Like its bigger social siblings Google+ and Facebook, Twitter’s brand pages have officially taken flight. Enhanced profile pages as Twitter refers to them, give marketers the ability to shape the impressions of visitors while adhering to the brand style guide. Previously, businesses were confined to creative backgrounds and bios as well as their Tweets to define the brand experience. Now Twitter gives brands more control in how consumers view the company in Twitter…free of charge. And, Twitter removes outside advertising from each brand page.

For examples and perhaps to glean insights into best practices, Twitter launched with 21 advertising partners. You can view their enhanced profile pages by clicking each brand: @AmericanExpress, @BestBuy, @bing, @chevrolet, @CocaCola, @Dell, @DisneyPixar, @generalelectric, @Heineken, @HP, @intel, @JetBlue, @Kia, @McDonalds, @nikebasketball, @NYSE_Euronext, Paramount Pictures’ Mission: Impossible – @GhostProtocol, @pepsi, @Staples, @subwayfreshbuzz, and @VerizonWireless.

What does this mean for businesses specifically?

1. Businesses can host a branded experience for consumers in Twitter without forcing them outside of their preferred network

2. Brands can adhere to brand style guides to present a uniform color, typeface, presence, etc.

3. Guide the consumer experience with intentionally presented Tweets, media, and information.

4. Chart a new click path that starts with a Promoted Tweet and/or media to lead consumers on a more meaningful journey that can start and end in Twitter or continue outside of the information network. Much in the same way Facebook offers landing tabs, Twitter can offer a similar experience that changes based on the priorities of the brand.

5. Allow brands to present a more engageable profile where people follow companies because of the thoughtfulness that is invested in presentation and a meaningful Tweet stream. Brands are now measured not only by their actions, but also their words and content.

It’s now your turn. Are you ready to take flight on the new, new Twitter?

Click herefor your favorite infographics…now in 22 x 28 poster format!

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

14 December
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Microsoft Billionaire Paul Allen Launches New Space Venture

 

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and famed aerospace engineer Burt Rutan are once again teaming up for a space venture. This time they’re heading to orbit and calling in Elon Musk and SpaceX to help them get there. The project, Stratolaunch Systems, will use an air-launched booster rocket to deliver cargo, and eventually people, into low earth orbit.

The plan amounts to building the biggest airplane ever, then using it to launch rockets into space from about 30,000 feet. Allen, who reportedly is financing the project himself, announced the new company today and said it “will bring airport-like operations to the launch of commercial and government payloads.”

“By the end of this decade, Stratolaunch will be putting spacecraft into orbit,” he said.

Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, joins super-wealthy entrepreneurs like Musk, Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos in looking to the heavens for his next venture, as NASA turns to the private sector for help getting to space.

The company will use a launch system similar to what was developed for Rutan and Allen’s SpaceShipOne project. But it will be much, much bigger.

 

The mothership will employ six 747 aircraft engines and have a wingspan of 385 feet — more than 120 feet greater than an Airbus A380, currently the largest commercial passenger plane in service. The airplane will have a gross weight of 1.2 million pounds, including a 490,000-pound booster rocket being developed by SpaceX.

“Paul Allen and Burt Rutan helped generate enormous interest in space with White Knight and SpaceShipOne,” SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said in a statement. “There was no way we weren’t going to be involved in their next great endeavor. We are very excited.”

The aircraft itself will be designed and built by Scaled Composites, the Rutan-founded company currently developing SpaceShipTwo for Virgin Galactic. The aircraft will be be designed to operate from a large airport or spaceport like Kennedy Space Center, eliminating the need for launching pads. Allen said that will cut costs and increase versatility.

The advantage of using an airplane to launch the rocket isn’t as big as it was for reaching suborbital space, according to Rutan — just 5 to 10 percent. But every little bit counts.

“It’s a small advantage to air launch,” he said, “but it’s in a world where a small advantage is big.”

Scaled will build the Stratolauncher in a hangar slated for construction at Mojave Air and Space Port in Southern California. The aircraft will require a 12,000-foot runway, and it will be able to travel about 1,200 miles.

Former NASA administrator Mike Griffin is a member of the Stratolaunch board and said the air launch system will make launching more dependable.

“We believe this technology has the potential to someday make spaceflight routine by removing many of the constraints associated with ground launched rockets,” Griffin said in a statement. “Our system will also provide the flexibility to launch from a large variety of locations.”

A first flight of the system is expected within five years. Stratolaunch will begin by launching cargo into orbit, but the company says sending people into orbit will happen once the technology is proven.

UPDATED 6 p.m. EST with additional information.

Video: VulcanInc/YouTube

 

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

14 December
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Insulate yourself…

from anonymous angry people

Expose yourself to art you don’t yet understand

Precisely measure the results that are important to you

Stay blind to the metrics that don’t matter

Fail often

Ship

Lead, don’t manage so much

Seek out uncomfortable situations

Make an impact on the people who matter to you

Be better at your baseline skills than anyone else

Copyedit less, invent more

Give more speeches

Ignore unsolicited advice

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

14 December
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The State of the Blogosphere 2011

Part 13 in a series introducing my new book, The End of Business as Usual…this series serves as the book’s prequel.

When you think about social media, what do you envision? Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, Foursquare? If you’re like me, blogs would have made the top of the list. But how can blogs survive in a time when the attention of connected consumers is not only precious, it’s elusive. After all, people can read no more than 140 characters at a time right? With the surplus of networks and a river of social activity that washes away personal information levees, how can we be anything but distracted?

I believe that we are indeed overwhelmed, but we are not distracted. We are in fact focused. Let me restate that last sentence. We are focused, against a different standard than that of five years ago, on what is important to us. If long-form content is shared within our interest graph and possesses relevant information that is true to our interests, it will be consumed. If it content, no matter how great its length, is true to who I am, I will share it. Not just because I want others to share in its relevance, but because doing so is a form of self-expression and the words of others can lend to a piece of the puzzle that completes me online and offline.

Over the years, blogs have formed the foundation of social media, democratizing the ability to publish thoughtful commentary, build a noteworthy community and equalize influence along the way.

Blogs are underrated and largely underestimated. Not only are they platforms for self-expression, shared experiences and observations, they are becoming a live index of history in the making as told by people for the people. Each year, I take to my blog to share the state of the blogosphere based on the annual report published by Technorati. Going back to 2004, Technorati has documented how blogs have changed the landscape for information commerce to not only provide insight into the world of blogs and the bloggers whose voices we are growing to trust across a variety of topics, but also into the numbers behind their ascendance.

The Age of Influence

Bloggers span from hobbyists to professionals, both part-time and full-time, corporate and also entrepreneurs. The vast majority of bloggers polled by Technorati fall into either the Gen Y or Gen X category.  It’s important to note that this isn’t reflective of the age demographics of who’s reading blogs, simply which age groups are actively publishing blogs.

Where in the World is my Blog?

The study was distributed only in English, yet bloggers from all over the world participated. While the majority of respondents blog from the United States, Europe, Latin America, and South Asia made notable appearances.

This reminds me of a trip during the winter of 2010 to Gdańsk, Poland where I had the opportunity to present at the annual Blog Forum event. To this day, it’s still memorable for many reasons. First, it was held in the original shipyards noted for its role in the Solidarity (Solidarność) movement recognized as one of the first steps in leading the collapse of communism across Eastern Europe. Second, the enthusiasm around blogging was euphoric, reminding me of the early days of social media in San Francisco circa 2005/2006. I presented the 2010 State of the Blogosphere at this event and here we are, one year later, and the passion only continues to intensify among creators who channel relevance through words and media.

The Blogger Experience

Bloggers are a diverse bunch. The majority of casual and professional bloggers have posted their views and experiences over the last two years. However, the concentration of bloggers closely follows with many blogging 4-6 and also greater than 6 years.

At the same time, bloggers aren’t focused on any one property. Professionals will blog at as many as four properties. This is up from an average of two blogs noted in the 2010 report.

It’s Time to Blog

In aggregate, most bloggers will spend anywhere between one-to-three hours blogging per week followed by three-to-five and five-to-10 weekly hours. 25% of professional bloggers are dedicating upwards of 40 hours or more per week. I’m not a professional blogger in that I do not derive revenues from my posts. But, I do invest over 10 hours on a weekly basis on researching and writing blog posts.

In terms of frequency, bloggers across the board will publish two-to-three posts per week. However, a notable percentage of professional, corporate, and entrepreneurial bloggers post once or twice per day.

Of those bloggers who are investing greater volumes of time and energy in blogs, it’s for good reason. It’s not just about pontification or sharing experiences in long-form. Bloggers can point to the ROI specifically…and it’s encouraging many to invest more in their blogging routines.

Most note that blogging has proven to be valuable for promoting their business or to one’s profession. Additionally, professional, casual, and corporate bloggers city audience engagement as motivation to create.

And, bloggers find that their work is getting taken more seriously as sources of trusted information and news.

From Traditional to New Media

As many as 40% of today’s professional and 35% of corporate bloggers once worked as a writer, reporter, producer, etc. in traditional media. The skillset is certainly optimized in terms of content creation. Learning social skills becomes critical for their continued success. On the corporate or entrepreneur fronts, the move to brand publishing or brand journalism as it’s often referenced, appears to be gaining momentum…thankfully. I’m relieved to hear that businesses are taking a more useful and informative approached to leading customers toward insight and resolution. My patience for marketing speak eroded long ago.

What is Your Source of Inspiration?

I found this slide interesting and also not surprising at the same time. Among the top influences for bloggers to find material to blog about is…well…other blogs. That also says everything at the same time. Blogs are often viewed as the people’s press and there can be an element of implied trust that yields the type of power that traditional media possessed in its golden years.

Nobodies are the New Somebodies

Brands look to influencers to help communicate the value or mission of the business to hopefully drive favorable actions. Bloggers continue to prove instrumental in brand marketing, advertising, and engagement. Let’s set aside the SEO and SMO advantages of blog influence for a moment. Let’s talk about everyday consumer influence. In the social web, people make decisions based on the information that’s presented to them in either the results of their search or the words of their friends and peers. Influence is the ability to cause effect or change behavior. Technorati found that between 40-50% of all bloggers, whether personal or professional blog about brands. The advantage of blogs for brands comes down to resonance. Blogs will live longer than Tweets or any status update for that matter.

Upwards of 70% of bloggers are already following their favorite brands in social media.

And knowing this importance on the relationships between bloggers and their communities, only 40% in aggregate have ever been approached by brands. Remember, it’s not just about the A-list, it’s about the magic middle!

With the love affair content creators, creators and consumers experience with the micromedia in social networks, blog posts contribute to the library of knowledge around any subject. They offer the ability to express perspective and offer context in  statusphere and they influence decisions, actions, and behavior. Whether it’s to demonstrate thought leadership, earn authority, generate leads, change perception or sentiment, blogs continue to lead the way while disrupting traditional media along the way. For businesses, the time is now to embrace your influencers and their networks, of all shapes and sizes, while blogging to become influential in the process.

Live to blog.

Blog to influence.

Image Credit: Shutterstock (Edited)

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon