Just to prove the guys at Google London have way too much time on their hands
Just to prove the guys at Google London have way too much time on their hands
Twitter (for those who actually use it) has been a source of endless mirth this election. The diagram below from @tweetminster covers just one small part of the past activity.

Stephen Walker: Island LondonThis is a real 'oh wow' project. Not least for; 'how the hell does anyone have the time to do that?'
Jaw droopingly detailed hand drawn map of London as an island. down to events and personal experiences seen street by street. You can even find your own house or local kebab shop. This as a layer on Googles Maps/Street view linked to an augmented reality phone app would be really amazing.
That's my house!
Now that's what I call a motor! Jamie at Carisma Cars does the business on the first two Old Spice Capri's. Driving them back from Colchester to London was an eye opener, so many people taking pictures or simply pointing (!) I drove the Mr3 which it has to be said once at full speed got not only very warm inside but developed a strong smell of something dead.
Well first ever UK political debate is done, lots of great and (from Sky**) not so great tech'
Twitter was a clear winner, loads of gags (worst Kraftwerk gig ever. etc) But the new tech of the event must be the live 'Worm' of voter intentions. ITV had a single white line running about 120 sec delayed. The BBC had a better 3 colour version, albeit still with a slight lag. The BBC also had the weirdest looking studio audience ever. But on balance appeared to be at least 20 years younger than the lot ITV had shipped in.
** = Sky had Cameron as the winner, latter changed after a heap of Twitter abuse
- also fun, exciting and intriguing. Looking at what it can do brought out so many thoughts about its possibilities, most of which were not in the apps on show this week. I am sure that if Apple are right and this is a new category of device then the true worth of it will come when designers stop designing for a big iTouch and start thinking about New from New - motion and action process's.
I feel mapping and tutorials are key human interactions for a digital device like this. Should also be noted that with all Apple first gen' products there are teething issues, at least two of the demo models i used this week had 'issues'
After a couple of days playing I like the size and hand feel of the device. The controls are almost familiar with a small amount of learning, (mind you zero time spent reading any instructions) You feel a certain joy with the interface because it just keeps doing things for you!
Philip Slade & t7F London on an iPad
The final stage of the general election is upon us. Really looking forward to see how the clash of advertising styles works out. The Labour party had been doing well with its under funded campaign being boosted with Internet japes. However it all came unstuck this week when its user generated poster back fired. The issue of using figures from popular culture is all very well, its just no one seems to have thought it through, that people actually like Gene Hunt and his 1980’s style of command, that’s why it’s a popular icon. How the Labour Part thought this was going to appose rather than attract(see comments) is bizarre. I do hope however that it does not put them off seeking crowd sourced creative. The theory is sound and keeps the campaign alive. A few more calm heads needed for the reality checks however.
Still looking for a better use of Facebook from the parties. There is so much that could be done with Facebook targeting, messages and friend groups. There is too much broadcasting at present and not enough under the skin cohesion. The other thing that’s missing at present is an app for campaigning. Either party could have an AR app that tells you how much has/hasn’t been spent on hospitals/police stations/schools as you walk past. Now the Ordnance Survey have open up their code, an easy mash-up of local authority spending on very pretty maps would appeal greatly. Philip Slade.
Now we have all cocked-up online at some point. But the Conservatives seem to be making a career out of it at present. The chart below sets out the speed with which some Tory bright sparks Twitter adventure ended after just two hours. Full story HERE. Fuller list of Twitter responces HERE. The news that Saatchi are back on board (after the David Cameron air brush debacle) we presumed was steadying the ship, obviously not!
A while back I gave a presentation about brands and there online shadows. I used the analogy of digital donuts that came in a box owned by Google. Sample charts HERE. When this chart popped up it was a good time to adlib gags about the Evil empire/Big brother (Google) and how we were all owned. The Beast File (Google) is a lovely bit of animation currently doing the rounds that sums this thought up in a much funnier manner and includes a better Star Wars reference. Graphics by Patrick Clair, written/presented by Elmo Keep. Seen on http://www.geekfill.com
THE BEAST FILE: GOOGLE ('HUNGRY BEAST', ABC TV) from Hungry Beast on Vimeo.
I always work out all my ideas on paper, there is a real joy to just running with a thought across pages and pages of scribbles and loose sketches. Just found this animation that gives proof to the power of lo-fi visuals. Seen on Vimeo, user Saggyarmpit.
parkour motion reel from saggyarmpit on Vimeo.
Seems obvious, but the clear issue with under performing digital campaigns is analogue thinking. Social networks suit a continuum of stuff rather than a big burst of noise. Again you would have thought obvious, but the nature of a consumers interaction with chums online puts a premium on regular, relevant content, that does not bore.
Highlighted by Alan Mitchell of www.ctrl-shift.co.uk. The harsh realties of Social Media in a nutshell. Full presentation by Bart De Waele below.
Because we are people, (not cliche office drones) we each respond in different ways to our environment. Once a company grows beyond the dream team sized start-up of 9**. Any attempt to create the 'perfect' environment, how ever funky, will always leave some poor soul at odds with there work space. Corperatised fun environments are exactly the oxymoron they sound like. Slides and fake grass in reception are as bad as grey cubicles and strip lighting. It all smacks of a lack of innovation within the work force. Natural light, decent coffee and fast internet connection normally does the trick. -oh and a cracking place to bitch/gossip/flirt. Best if the latter is the same place as the decent coffee, bananas and free toast. The agency kitchen therefore should be the most homely, most useful place for a company to invest in.
Personally I love noise/loud music and am unable to work tidy. I also feel the ability to change where you sit in an office frequently, stops staleness. Actually the only time I had to work in a regimented office environment was at Saatchi's in the late 80's. The resultant chaos (and occasional fire) led to my nickname of Professor Piehead (Viz character)
Great collection of online video techniques from Google Labs. With a succinct set of five rules:
re-Chatroulette. There is a huge storm of Daily Mail style angst building about this site. (it twins random web cams, with hilarious results) Including a Newsnight debate that came across as a Chris Morris/Brass Eye style parody. But in all this outrage about the morals of the country. I really think these commentator's are missing the point. Tim Malbon of Made by Many summed it up best I thought;
"...It was brilliant to be reminded of how subversive and mad the Web is. In our increasingly settled, sanitised and locked down Web era Chatroulette is a timely warning to us all that we must hold on to the crazy stuff, because what it really represents is the Internet’s culture of freedom and culture of innovation..."
News sites currently awash with stats on this, but From Read Write Web has a neat set of quotes= In December 2009, Chatroulette had 500 users. Today, just four months later, the site sees 1.5 million daily visitors. That statistic alone is enough to inspire investors to beat down the door of its creator, Russian high school student Andrey Ternovskiy. "the purest form" of the Internet and its userbase, and "a great way to kill time," one of the most common uses of the social web. (Muhammad Saleem, authority on engineering virality) "I've frequently described it as a box of game pieces with no rules. Users are invited to create any kind of experience they choose given a simple set of constraints. It's inherently viral, addictive, imaginative and essentially human"
In all honesty i can't see anyone trusting me with it either.
Back in October we made a short demo film for Harman International. (produced by the excellent Th1ng.co.uk) The film was a demonstration of new sound synthesis technology developed in conjunction with Lotus engineering. The aim being to demonstrate how electric cars of the future could be made safer by emitting various sounds to alert pedestrians. I just did a Google search on it to find the film has made its way onto over 60 web sites, weirdly its had some of its most views on the Pistonheads web site, I never took those TVR boys for being keen on hybrids
Came across an interesting stat with regards Facebook breaking the 400 million user barrier last month. On both sides of the Atlantic a prime driver has been the playing of Sim type games like Farmville. Both US and UK players are manily proffesional women. However the age differences are really telling. Average of 31 here in Britain and +55 in the States
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Well so far, apart from the Tories most of the pre-election communications have been rather dull and unremarkable. The Conservatives on the other hand are proving to be such a gift to the spoofers, HERE, and HERE you almost can't wait for their next mind boggling missive. Some of the regional David Cameron supporter groups have taken to Flickr with (unintentionally) hilarious results, really no spoof required.
An interesting view on the current debate about innovation (i.e. there isn't any) A group of writers (Norman Lewis, Nico Macdonald, Alan Patrick, Martyn Perks, Mitchell Sava and James Woudhuysen) have published a paper called: Big Potatoes, A new 14 point Manifesto for Innovation. I really like the insight that the Great Depression saw real innovations from companies that have gone on to be durable brands of the new century; Nestlé, Penguin Books, General Electric and Texas Instruments. But so far the credit crunch has seen almost the opposite level of thinking.
"..The Big Potatoes Manifesto is call to arms: for leadership and risk taking, for accepting failure and unexpected outcomes as the necessary and inevitable path to success, for bold and ambitious experimentation and an end to the instrumentalist short-termism which has institutionalised a culture of limits..." MORE