Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Shaped.By.Us.



"Our idea is to bring local communities together to identify hundreds of areas where the council and public sector group can work with them to create radical new approaches to local problems and future challenges.

Over the coming months, Shaped By Us will be an open platform where you can publish challenges and ideas, pool resources, seek wisdom and collaborate to tackle the issues that matter most to you. Big or small we will help you find advice, money and support to solve your problems and make good ideas happen.

Simply set or select an existing challenge. Submit an idea. Crowdsource other ideas. Build a team. Access resources. Make good ideas happen."

Read more at Shaped.By.Us. 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Rise Of The Consumer Experience Economy

Online users’ patterns are changing: they no longer use social networks to broadcast, connect and share their lives. Consumers now seek deeper online and offline experiences for fulfillment. They are looking for something less superficial than what they currently find on social media sites. They want meaning and understanding. They want to be challenged.

In addition, consumers are beginning to prefer experiences over products. Rather than acquire more possessions, customers are more interested in spending their money and time on meaningful experiences, making memories and enriching their lives....

Read more at  FMM

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Don't Mean To Be Alarmist, But The TV Business May Be Starting To Collapse

How is convergence affecting the TV business model? To find out, read more at Business Insider

See also:

TravelPlot

Frequent visitors to this blog will recognise a mildly obsessive interest in audio guides... so it won't surprise you to see this article here. Thanks to Gary Hayes.

TravelPlot Porto is composed by several platforms such as an iPhone app, a Website, a Map, Live Events and Social Networks (YouTube, Twitter and Pinterest). All of these platforms are free with the exception of the live events.

The objective of TravelPlot Porto is to give tourists a personalized and engaging trip to Porto by getting to know its stories. With 9 story chapters and 42 locations to choose from, tourists will find locations for their particular taste and interest. They can opt to visit the locations near them, the locations that belong to the same chapter of the story, or even check the locations according to the story’s chronologic order.

Read more at TravelPlot

High-frequency military radio boosts data rates ten times over

International communications company Harris Corporation has introduced a new high-frequency (HF) radio which improves tactical data transfer by ten times over current models.
Read more at SmartPlanet

Monday, June 18, 2012

Mobile demand might outstrip capacity within 12 months

Right now, there is about 4 times as much radio spectrum available as there was in 2007, before the iPhone debuted in Australia, and before mobile broadband became a widespread phenomenon. But we use about 30 times as much mobile data as we did back then – and that’s increasing rapidly.

The 700Mhz band will be auctioned off November 2012, with known network operators – Telstra, Optus and Vodafone having already expressed their intention to compete, with Google a possible dark horse contender (Google has been getting into the telecoms game, deploying a Fibre-T0-The-Premises network in Kansas City).

The 700Mhz band, previously used for analogue TV transmission, is considered something of a prime candidate for data transfer- it provides the best compromise between throughput per-second and propagation (strength of signal over distance) currently available to RF engineers. Anything lower dips into frequencies used for emergency services.

But the 700Mhz band won't be operational until 2015 at the earliest; it will still reach capacity eventually, and we're short of spectrum right now.

Read more at Broadband News

See also the Ngara technology developed by CSIRO

And this white paper called 'Super Wifi' found at Carlsson Wireless

Search and Social: How The Two Will Soon Become One

Let’s put on our future-goggles and imagine how a fully social, personal-data-powered search would change our day-to-day...

Proactive: It’s Tuesday night and I’m hungry. Luckily, my mobile knows that I just got a CSA box containing sweet potatoes (Full Circle Farm’s Facebook integration), and that I tend to eat at home on Tuesdays (according to my historical pattern of check-ins). It also knows that it’s cold and raining outside. Before I’ve gotten around to opening a cookbook or the Epicurious app, my mobile pushes me a sweet potato soup recipe that my certified-foodie friend raved about on Facebook last week.

Personal
: Arrive at the Sao Paulo airport and search on my mobile for the city’s public transit map. My device knows that I’ve never been there (even though I bought a phrase book on Amazon last week), and it also knows (from scanning TripAdvisor comments about Sao Paulo buses) that the public transit is impossible to navigate for newcomers. While the map is loading, a message appears gently encouraging me to consider a rental car instead – there happens to be a great deal on an Audi (my favorite(!) as noted on Facebook) at the rental counter 10 feet away. Talk about targeting!

Social: Florence and the Machine is touring in New York, and I’m dying to go see them. I called the usual suspects, and they’re out of town during the concert. The only thing worse than not going is going alone. But who else do I know who loves them like I do? That’s a lay-up for a socially powered search if ever there was one. Two words: “Jason Hirschhorn”. Is that so hard?

Read more at Flud News

Digital Economy primer

We make getting online easier

Financial inclusion and digital inclusion - they’re one and the same
If you’re digitally excluded, you won’t bank online and so you can’t check your balance easily, you can’t look around for discounts and the best savings accounts or credit card rates, and you’re unlikely to pay your bills by direct debit and to take advantage of the savings this can provide.

Using the iPad at your hospital
See how technology is coming to a doctor’s office near you.

mHealthWatch
Tracking mobile health

5 Ways Mobile Apps Will Transform Healthcare
The numbers support Halvorson’s prediction...
Learning models are evolving via the influence of mobile technologies.

The Future of Money in a Mobile Age
Within the next decade, smart-device swiping will have gained mainstream acceptance as a method of payment and could largely replace cash and credit cards for most online and in-store purchases by smartphone and tablet owners, according to a new survey of technology experts and stakeholders.

Using portable computing devices (such as iPads, laptops, tablet PCs, PDAs, and smart phones) with wireless networks enables mobility and mobile learning, allowing teaching and learning to extend to spaces beyond the traditional classroom. Within the classroom, mobile learning gives instructors and learners increased flexibility and new opportunities for interaction.

Jackson noted that so far there have been three generations of Internet companies. Yahoo, a Web portal, is a great example as an online pioneer. Facebook then swept in as the second generation with the wave of social media. The third generation is all about mobile.

Mapping The Economic Landscape
P2P connectivity is changing things...

Democracy and Capitalism Are Heading for a Breakup
The main assumption here is that elected national governments and the global market economy are logical partners in the creation of wealth...

Can the story of a historical change and its consequences be told in 10 minutes? We think we can at least give the headlines of a new world.

Innovative Thinking Leads to Small Business Success
Download the free innovation secrets eBook now.

CTVR / The Telecommunications Research Centre, in collaboration with the Dublin Art and Technology Association (D.A.T.A) present Open Here, a four day festival that addresses social, technological and cultural issues surrounding the notion of the digital commons.

Google's 'Street View' Hits the Hiking Trail
There apparently is a man at Google who has strapped a 40-pound photography rig onto himself and is now hiking all over America's scenic parks and fields

Winning the Story Wars: The Myth Gap
That marketers are some of our most powerful mythmakers is, for now, a basic fact of life.

Our Voices, Our Stories:
First Nations, Métis and Inuit Stories

It is Not About the Tools
Self knowledge through numbers

Friday, June 15, 2012

Make your own app

Most social networks out there brag about the hundreds of millions of friends they have online. But, who wants to spend their days reading updates from hundreds of millions of "online friends"? You already have a real life, with real friends & fans, in your own real communities.

That's where Infinite Monkeys comes in. Our self-service, drag-and-drop platform allows anyone to simply create their own mobile social network, for FREE.

Read more here

Transmedia Storytelling: What Is It?

Omega3 Transmedia Blog – Transmedia Storytelling: What Is It?

Augmented Reality: A Film On Projection Mapping



'Augmented Reality’ is a short film documentary by Belgium filmmaker Dane Luttik that explores projection mapping; what it is, how its used and how far its come. So what is it? Well as any video or installation artist knows the underlying concept is simple; software to direct projections onto three-dimensional objects, shapes, anything but a flat screen.

Read more at  Mutantspace

The Beginning of the End of the Wallet

At WWDC on Monday, Apple introduced a new application for iPhones calledPassbook. This application is revolutionary and stands to change the way in which we make purchases. Businesses, both local and national need to start getting ready.

Getting Ready for Apple’s Passbook – The time to take advantage is now | Digital Possibilities

Augmented Reality & Print Media


Augmented Reality: Layar reveals their print strategy

World Map Of Social Networks Shows Facebook's Global Dominance

Augmented Reality & Retail Experiences




You are walking in the street, glancing at window displays. In front of a fashion store, you are given a printed card by a shop assistant... You pick up the card and place it in front of a screen in the window display and this is when your interactive experience begins. The screen starts revealing a story in which you can interact by simply moving your card, messages appear, your personal fashion show revealed, and that very same card can then be used for you to discover more attractive promotional experience inside the shop.

This is how shopping in the high street becomes techno and a lot more interesting. With scenarios aimed at adults and teenagers, the surprise interactive effect brought by Augmented Reality leads to a whole new meaning to window shopping. This forward concept is an instant win to convert passers-by into potential in-store customers.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Ten Facts about Mobile Broadband

Mobile broadband is reshaping society, communications, and the global economy. With smart phone usage surpassing that of personal computers, there has been a sea change in the way consumers access and share information. Powerful mobile devices and sophisticated digital applications enable users to build businesses, access financial and health care records, conduct research, and complete transactions anywhere. This revolution in how consumers and businesses access information represents a fundamental turning point in human history.
Read more at Brookings Institution

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Designing new digital public spaces to engage a disconnected public

Original article at  EngagingCities

Government policy is written by those who show up. Unfortunately, most of us don’t. Most don’t see the point: we don’t trust government. Or politicians. And we don’t believe that there’s anything we can do to influence them. I’ve been arguing that digital can help change this. Not set democracy on fire, suddenly re-igniting our latent passions for civic engagement. But just maybe break down the barriers so it’s easier to take part. Our personal tipping point is reached sooner, sustained longer.

None of this is new. The democratic drift in mature democracies started in the 1950s and has caused serious erosion in political participation and trust. And a concomitant complacent absolution of responsibility for our civic spaces. We delegate to elected representatives, public officials and – increasingly – private corporations.

There are significant, multi-layered barriers to democratic access for many people. Real-world problems include lack of time, money, knowledge and access. Digital exclusion creates another sub-class of citizens. They can’t use new engagement platforms and are increasingly frozen-out of others. Often missing and poorly taught, information and political literacy are vital pre-requisites for participation.

If we’re to arrest this decline we have to make it easier to take part. We have to transform our civic spaces so that they look like the world the majority of us live in (or want to live in) – more open, social, inter-connected, even games-based. Driven by issues not ideology. A lot of this can happen online but governments are not Facebook and Facebook is not government. Should we rely on unaccountable, unelected corporations to be the conduits of our 21st century democracy?

Let’s bring democracy back to the public, not only through their browsers but increasingly through their smartphones. And much, much more. New public spaces need to be designed to include points for democratic participation within them. Parks, schools, libraries, even shopping malls matter. Include everything from the simple, analogue and off-line places to congregate (and, yes, demonstrate – a legitimate and valuable part of our democratic heritage), through to integrated digital furniture and the legislation needed to enshrine our rights to use it. Kiosks let those who are offline connect, contribute and learn about democracy, their local communities and beyond. Public video displays link to real-time consultations and we can harness the ever more powerful location aware devices of people nearby. Two-way, conversational. Listening as much as talking.

All of this costs money. But perhaps not as much you might imagine and the beauty of the solution lies in the communities we already have. More and more of us can bring our own tools – a smartphone and a reasoned opinion. Many cities host active developers and democratic evangelists in ‘hack-days’. Using open source software, open data and community-government partnerships for co-design we can, now more than ever, bring democracy back to our public spaces and reconnect citizens with those who they elect to govern.