11 February
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Jay-Z’s Joke Was Twitter’s Top Moment During Grammys

Justin-timberlake-at-grammys

“I would like to thank the swap meet for his hat,” Jay-Z jokingly said to singer The-Dream at the end of their acceptance speech for Best Rap Collaboration at the 55th Grammy Awards.

Jay-Z’s remark about The-Dream’s hat was the highest tweets-per-minute moment of Sunday night’s ceremony for east coast viewers from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. ET — with the show attracting 13.2 million total tweets during that time span, Twitter told Mashable.

A swap meet is like a flea market — a place where people sell merchandise at low prices.

Top Tweets-Per-Minute Moments

  • Jay-Z, Kanye West, Frank Ocean and The-Dream win Best Rap Collaboration: 116,400
  • Prince announce’s Gotye winning Record of the Year: 109,400
  • Fun. wins best new artist: 100,600

Most-Mentioned Artists

  • 1. Rihanna, who performed “Stay” with Mikky Ekko and then was part of a Bob Marley tribute with Bruno Mars and Sting
  • 2. Frank Ocean, who performed and won Best Urban Contemporary Album and Best Rap Collaboration
  • 3. Taylor Swift, who opened the show with “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together”
  • 4. Beyonce, who along with Ellen Degeneres introduced Justin Timberlake’s performance
  • 5. Justin Timberlake, who performed at the Grammys for the first time in four years
  • 6. Ed Sheeran, who teamed up with Elton John for a performance

Notable Tweets from Celebrities

Miguel responded via Twitter after Kelly Clarkson mentioned his performance during her acceptance speech for Best Pop Vocal Album: “Miguel, I don’t know who the hell you are, but we need to sing together. I mean, good God. That was the sexiest dancing I’ve ever seen.”

Zac Brown Band thanked fans by tweeting a photo of the inside of the winner’s envelope after the band won Best Country Album:

First lady Michelle Obama gave a shout-out to Janis Ian:

And the winners are …

For a full list of winners, click here.

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Image via Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Topics: 55th Grammy Awards, Celebrities, Entertainment, grammys, Hot Story, Music, Television, Twitter

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

09 August
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Remembering Robert Hughes, The Art World’s Guardian Of Rage

Legendary art critic Robert Hughes died Monday at age 74. It is a tremendous loss, not least because the former Time columnist counted among the few critics who could break through the practiced esoterism of the art world–all that cultish mystification that gets thrown over Great Works like a thousand-pound dung blanket–and make art matter to everyone. His best weapon? Anger. Raw, pungent, beautifully worded anger. And nowhere was this more evident than in his laser-eyed takedowns of the messy collision of art, celebrity, and money.

Here he is on Jeff Koons:

He has the slimy assurance, the gross patter about transcendence through art, of a blow-dried Baptist selling swamp acres in Florida. And the result is that you can’t imagine America’s singularly depraved culture without him.

On Julian Schnabel:

Schnabel’s work is to painting what Stallone’s is to acting–a lurching display of oily pectorals.

On Alex Katz:

The hallmark of the minor artist is to be obsessed with style as an end in itself.

On Jean-Michel Basquiat:

Far from being the Charlie Parker of SoHo (as his promoters claimed) he became its Jessica Savitch.

Hughes’s rage wasn’t just nasty good fun (though there was definitely some of that). It was in service of a higher calling. Embedded in every dig at Damien Hirst’s talent and barb against Jeff Koons’s famewhoring was the notion that art is about more than pretty pictures; it’s a sort of cultural town hall where our values and mores all mingle. In Jean-Michel Basquiat: Requiem for a Featherweight, the essay from which the quote above is excerpted, Hughes lays Basquiat’s unimpressive career squarely at the feet of the “mania for instant reputation that so grotesquely afflicts American taste.” Here’s more:

It was a tale of a small untrained talent caught in the buzz saw of art-world promotion, absurdly overrated by dealers, collectors, critics and, not least, himself. This was partly because Basquiat was black; the otherwise monochrome Late American Art Industry felt a need to refresh itself with a touch of the “primitive.” Far better black artists than Basquiat, such as the sculptor Martin Puryear, did not have to contend with this kind of boom-and-bust success. Its very nature forced Basquiat to repeat himself without a chance of development.

The sense you get from Hughes’s best writing is that something greater than fame and aesthetics is at stake. He brought moral outrage to art criticism, and in so doing he reminded you that art is something worthy of moral outrage.

Image: Ted Thai/Time-Life Pictures/Getty Images

Via FastCoDesign: http://www.fastcodesign.com/

17 March
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10 Strategies for Non-Profits on Pinterest

Volunteer Pinboard

Non-profits are utilizing Pinterest as an extension of their organizations, using photography, infographics and other visuals to show supporters more about their missions.

Pinterest’s goal is to connect “people all over the world based on shared tastes and interests.” Non-profits, then, can use the social site to connect people based on their social passions, and since non-profits work with and for the community, Pinterest can certainly come in handy.

Last week, we covered 10 non-profits that are particularly awesome at leveraging Pinterest for social good, but how did they get there? What are their strategies?

 

SEE ALSO: 8 Strategies for Launching a Brand Presence on Pinterest

Here are 10 tips from non-profits that are currently using Pinterest. With these suggestions in your back pocket, your own organization can further (or even reinvent) its image in no time.


1. Know Your Audience


It’s important to understand who is using Pinterest before you start branding through the network. Of Pinterest’s 10 million+ users, 87% are women, and the average age of users spans between 25 and 54. So, what do you do with this information? How do you know what to pin?

Daljit Singh, office manager intern at Jolkona and curator of the organization’s Pinterest, says that a fun project helped. The staff of the non-profit, which is a web platform that connects you with global development projects and shows you the impact of your donation, asked: If Jolkona were a person, who would it be? They decided that Jolkona would be a woman in her mid-to-late 20s with mixed ethnicity. She would also drink coffee, ride the bus and listen to indie rock.

“Because so many of our regular online donors match the demographic of users on Pinterest,” says Singh, “it wasn’t really a question of if we should request an invite, but rather when we would receive an invite.”

Jolkona tries to keep its pins colorful, light, creative and relevant to the non-profit’s mission. Whenever Singh needs to determine if a pin is relevant, she can think back to the description of Jolkona as a person.


2. Get Personal


When it comes to social media, users respond better to personal influence than widespread branding.

Sarah Cohen, communications and development manager at charity: water, a non-profit that brings clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations, says it’s important for staff members who are pinning to be familiar with Pinterest and really love the site. “Our staff is young, curious and hungry for information,” she says. “We love sharing books we’ve read, bands we just checked out, the newest gadget or some new gear for the field.”


3. Reveal Yourself


 

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Give your followers a look at your non-profit from behind the scenes. Pin images that show staff and volunteers working with your organization, as well as those who benefit from that work. It’s a good idea to show supporters the human faces behind your logo.

When the Jolkona staff looked at its Facebook statistics, they found that the most engagement came from posting visuals. “At first, Pinterest was a great place to find new infographics and pictures to provide content for Facebook and our blog,” says Singh. “However, as we started gaining new followers, our strategy changed and we decided it was best to pin things…that help show our audience who we really are.” You can find various campaigns, projects, goals and photos of staff members and volunteers on Jolkona’s Pinterest page.

The folks at charity: water have a board called “Photo of the Day,” a concept that founder Scott Harrison came up with in 2009 for the organization’s Twitter page. Mo Scarpelli, the multimedia producer at charity: water, says, “Many of our followers on Pinterest and Twitter look to the POD as a daily source of inspiration and hope, a reminder that we can change (and are already changing) the water crisis.”

Cohen adds, “This idea of showing the impact is core to the work we do…The spirit and the joy of our photography was a perfect fit for the optimistic nature of Pinterest.”


4. Focus on the Achievable


It has become a trend for individuals to use Pinterest for dreams — dream houses, dream weddings, etc. But as a non-profit organization, you’re all about making things possible.

The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network‘s mission is to advance research, support patients and create hope. “Our goal is to provide helpful content for all individuals who have been affected by pancreatic cancer,” says Laura Behrman, social media manager at the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, “whether they are a survivor, have a loved one diagnosed with the disease or have lost a friend. In an effort to attract more support for our efforts, we are educating the general public about the organization and the disease through Pinterest.”

For charity: water, Cohen says the staff “looks to inspire our supporters with images of hope and opportunity that the water crisis is solvable.”


5. Make It a Team Effort


Get various staff members involved with your organization’s Pinterest to diversify your boards and flesh them out.

A recently added charity: water board is “Products We Love.” Cohen says that the board is comprised of brands the staff admires, most of which “are partnering with a non-profit or have a philanthropic component to their business model, like Feed Projects, TOMS and Falling Whistles.”

You don’t necessarily need to have multiple staffers use the Pinterest account directly. At the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, for example, Behrman is currently the only one pinning, but employees and volunteers contribute ideas and repin on their personal boards.


6. Fundraise


Pinterest makes it extremely simple to sell various items, helping you raise money for your non-profit. Whether it’s a t-shirt with your company logo or an inspiring poster, all you need to do is pin the image and type the “$” sign with the price in the description box. Pinterest automatically adds a nifty banner in the top-left corner of the image, displaying the cost, and the item will be added to the Gifts tab on the Pinterest homepage.


7. Repin/Highlight Other Non-Profits


Like all forms of social media, Pinterest isn’t a place to over-promote. Avoid this is by mixing original pinning with repins of images from other non-profits within your sphere of influence. Users receive an email notification when their images are repinned and they are credited on your repin, which can increase their following. The non-profit you repin may return the favor, allowing Pinterest to become a channel for valuable, non-disruptive cross-promotion.


8. Add Pinterest to Your Website/Project Pages


This may seem obvious, but it’s often overlooked with new networks. You can add various Pinterest “goodies” (a “pin it” button, follow button, logos, etc.) not only to your homepage, but also to project pages for more exposure.


9. Pin Videos


 

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Videos aren’t very common on Pinterest, but they’re on the rise. YouTube videos are especially easy to add, and Pinterest even has a special section for pinned videos.

 

SEE ALSO: Need More YouTube Views? Try Pinterest
Jolkona’s “Campaigns” board consists of numerous videos. Singh says that people are more likely to donate when they’re asked. “We wanted to make sure that that happens interactively online, so we offer the online campaign feature, which allows our donors to honor a special person, celebrate a birthday or special milestone, or just show the impact you and colleagues or friends can have on the world…Videos offer an added emotion and call to action that pictures sometimes don’t.”

She admits that Jolkona hasn’t received many repins for videos, but it has helped to increase traffic to the blog and adds something interesting to the Pinterest page. “There are far fewer videos than images on Pinterest at this point, so use them to distinguish your non-profit,” Singh advises.


10. Be Inviting


Pinning can sometimes seem like an individualized, solitary action, but it’s important to interact with others and keep community in mind. For non-profits, Pinterest is more than just posting interesting visuals — if used properly, it can be an extension of your organization and, when applicable, a support system.

Through the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network’s Pinterest, says Behrman, “We create a community that is inviting for others to share their story and connect with not just our organization, but with others going through a similar experience.”

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, mattjeacock, JamesBrey, 1stclassphoto, ContentWorks.

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

27 February
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The Long and Winding Road to Personal Heads-Up Displays

With the rumors churning about Google’s potential “heads-up display glasses” coming out at the end of the year, we thought it was important to look back at the history of this technlogy.

Heads-up displays allow users to receive data on a screen in front of them, so they don’t have to look somewhere else, thus disrupting what they’re concentrating on. Each HUD has three parts: the combiner, which is the surface the data is projected on — like a windshield or lens; the projector unit, which puts out the image; and a video generation computer, which creates the images.

 

Heads-up display in a commercial plane

The combiner is coated with a transparent film that allows all other light to pass through, but reflects or refracts the light generated by the projector unit, making it appear to float on the screen. As you can see in the above image of a HUD on an aircraft, the information appears over the sky so the pilot doesn’t have to turn his head. The projector units are powered by cathode ray tubes, similar to older televisions, an LED, or a LCD.

Video games are a common way to encounter HUD; interfaces players use to keep track of their health, ammunition or objective are all displayed in some variety of HUD, a technique that evolved especially as first-person perspective games, like shooters and RPGs, became mainstream. They’ve also appeared in sci-fi movies as part of everyday technology.

But before they were even futuristic concepts, basic HUD’s were first put into practice by the military as early as World War II. Read our slideshow to learn the history of heads-up displays, from then, to now, and even into the future.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, lsannes

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

04 November
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The Fake Curiosity Shop: Altoids Makes Ridiculous Online History PICS

altoids imageVisitors to the Hall of Curiosity website will find a mini-model of a T-Rex with an Altoids box for a head, a tarot card called the “Knight of Altoids” and a variety of other strange creations featuring Altoids boxes.

At first blush, the website appears to be a well-designed site for historical absurdities. In reality, the Hall of Curiosity comes from EnergyBBDO, the ad agency behind Altoids. Each item in the hall is meant to illustrate a fake-historical moment in Altoids history (such as the Altoids T-Rex). Most of the artworks are being auctioned on eBay with proceeds benefiting Americans for the Arts, a charity that supports arts education.

If it sounds like a strange way to market a mint, well, you’d be right. The idea for the Hall came from Andrei Chahine and Ryan Stotts, two Altoids creative leads at EnergyBBDO. The two made most of the artwork and what they couldn’t do, such as create a functioning solar system model, they commissioned outside artists to create. “We made 89% of it,” says Chahine. “We commissioned a couple artists, like the one who made the Russian dolls — she was a media buyer who’s actually a really kick-ass artist.”

The Hall of Curiosity has a home-spun, cobbled-together spirit that makes it different from traditional marketing campaigns. Indeed, most of the artwork was done for fun without Altoids even knowing. “We had all of these tins sitting around our office,” Stotts says, “and the mind wanders.”

altoids image

That tongue-in-cheek nature is inimical to the Altoids brand. Each tin carries a silly fact and a “Curiosity,” or crafty how-to, like turning the Altoids wax paper into a dunce hat for your hamster. The ironic, vintage feel is very much in style. “That was something we talked about,” Chahine says. “There is this kind of resurgence of this old-timey-ness, ornate wallpapers and wooden frames.”

“Little shops will have this apothecary vibe,” Stotts chimes in. “I think Altoids fits very well with this sort of curious craftsmanship.” People have bee using Altoids tins for crafts for some time, Chahine says. A Google search turns up guitar amps or survival kits made from discarded wrapper and boxes. Placing the items for sale on eBay was a way of proving that a Altoids hood ornament was a real thing someone made as opposed to some snazzy Photoshop work.

Some of the items are going for curiously high amounts. Bids start at a dollar, but some have shot up to $71 (the Altoids Orrery), $50 (the Altoids tarot cards) or $29 (the Altoids hood ornament). Bidding ends November 5.

The team says more curiosities will be added to the hall every week — some from the in-house crew, some from commissioned artists such as a “strange sort of ski-scene” from Minimian, a studio specializing in tiny dioramas.

“I think the site feels really genuine and people appreciate that,” Stott says. “Originally we just wanted it to look like some dude just making these things who was an Altoids fan.”

If that was the goal, then (ridiculous) mission: accomplished.

Is the Hall of Curiosity a hit or a miss? Do any of the items look worthy of purchase? Check out some of the images below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

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

29 October
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First Motorola Droid4 Photos Surface PICS

The first photos of Motorola’s next big Android 4G LTE release, the Droid4, have surfaced, just one day after the handset manufacturer’s super-thin, super-light, 4G-sporting Motorola Droid Razr went on sale at Verizon.

The biggest difference between the Droid Razr and the Droid4 is the slideout QWERTY keyboard. According to Droid Life, which obtained the images, the Droid4 also boasts a 4-inch Super AMOLED Advanced screen, a non-removable battery and two cameras, one of which (presumably an 8-megapixel) is capable of recording 1080p video. The device runs Android 2.3.5 (Gingerbread).

The dimensions and processor have not yet been identified, although we can expect the former to be thicker than the Droid Razr, and the processor to be at least as good as the 1.2 GHz dual-core processor that the Droid Razr uses.

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

21 October
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Twitter Opens New York Office on Madison Avenue

Twitter Opens New York Office on Madison Avenue

October 6, 2011 by Sarah Kessler


New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg joined Twitter Co-founder Jack Dorsey Thursday morning to announce the opening of the company’s first official New York office.

Although New York is likely, as a statement from the city reminds us, “the largest developer population outside of California in the nation,” we have a feeling it’s not engineers Twitter most hopes to reach out to from its new East Coast headquarters.

The company’s new headquarters are located at 340 Madison Avenue (the former address of Facebook’s NYC office space), in close proximity to potential advertising clients.

New York is the city with the most Twitter users in the world, Dorsey says.



1 Comment to Twitter Opens New York Office on Madison Avenue

  1. by Soham Banker

    On October 6, 2011 at 3:26 pm

    Great News, I want it in India :) , Check This : Apple Launches iPhone 4S : Features, Images And Price http://goo.gl/ik2NM

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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

31 August
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Stunning Photo Animations Go Beyond 3D PICS

Take one look at these multidimensional photos and you’ll think there’s magic afoot, but there’s a reasonable explanation for this. Artist/photographer Ignacio Torres used conventional digital SLR cameras and a bit of fairy dust to create a series of photos that give you a peek into the third dimension.

How was it done? We asked Torrres, and he revealed his secret that you might have already figured out: He combines four images in an animated .gif file.

“I created the images shooting the subject from four different angles,” he says, taking the pictures “all at the same time with a synched flash.” At the same time, he sprinkles a bit of dust and reflective confetti into the scene, and the result is magic.

In this project entitled “Stellar,” Torres is making a deeper philosophical point, channeling Carl Sagan with the notion that “we are all star stuff.” On his website, he describes his “Stellar” project:

“This project began from the theory that humans are made of cosmic matter as a result of a star’s death. I created imagery that showcased this cosmic birth through the use of dust and reflective confetti to create galaxies. The models’ organic bodily expressions as they are frozen in time between the particles suggest their celestial creation.

“In addition, space and time is heightened by the use of three-dimensional animated gifs. Their movement serves as a visual metaphor to the spatial link we share with stars as well as their separateness through time.”

Photos courtesy Ignacio Torres, used with permission

Ignacio Torres, via Gizmodo

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

29 June
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10 Mobile Astronomy Apps for Stargazers

One of the best parts of summer is sitting outside on a warm night, glass of wine in hand (or bar of dark chocolate, whatever your pleasure), good company by your side and nothing but brilliant sparkly stars above you. If you’ve ever had the good fortune of spotting a shooting star, you’ve witnessed an amazing display of light and cosmic energy.

You always hear people talking about the relative insignificance of the human race in the grand scheme of the universe. That feeling is never more reinforced than when you start to explore astronomy and what really lies beyond our galaxy.

Whether you’re a stargazer who can only point out the Big Dipper and Little Dipper, or whether you much prefer calling it Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, the following 10 mobile apps can help you in your stargazing pursuits.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, sololos

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

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