Name the Volt – GM asking the consumer to name the colors

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After developing and marketing what promises to be the world’s first mass-produced extended-range EV, the folks at GM are too tired to come up with names for all the paint colors, so they’re asking for your help.

Apparently not satisfied with “kinda silvery and greenish” as a description of the exterior color of the pre-production Chevy Volt shown above, the General is asking for help from the general public to officially name the color for press and marketing materials. You can enter — and eventually vote — at chevroletvoltage.com.

The three top vote-getters win a trip to the L.A. Auto Show, while first prize gets their own addition to GM’s paint codes and the chance to drive a pre-production Volt. Props to anyone who submits “Autopia Emerald.”

We’ve always driven home whatever color is on the lot — or whatever color our mom chose before she handed the car down to us. Still, for some buyers, color matters. According to GM’s Global Color and Trim guru Chris Webb, 39 percent of consumers “will walk out of a dealership and purchase from another brand altogether if they can’t get a vehicle in the color they desire.”

While the Volt looks good in the various shades of gray and black that the public has seen so far, we can’t imagine anyone turning down a car as eagerly anticipated as the Volt because they don’t like how the paint looks. Heck, we bet it would sell in Mary Kay pink with profane graffiti covering the hood. The Volt is about what is — and what isn’t — under the hood, not what’s covering the exterior.

Name the Volt’s Color, Win a Prize

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Fastcompany.com: The Six "Wow" Features of Windows 7

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By Kate Rockwood

„We set out to ask: What’s the Windows way to do something?“ says Sam Moreau, Microsoft’s head of user-experience design for Windows 7. „We had to make sure that we took care of Windows as having an authentic soul.“ He knows you may be snickering, especially if you use Vista. „Vista tried to do a lot of things, and the places where we didn’t finish the job are the places people feel,“ he says.

The early positive reviews suggest that Moreau has helped make Windows 7 much more satisfying to use. Engadget called it „fast, painless, and complication free,“ and as Gizmodo charmingly notes, „Even the Mactards will have to tone down their nasal David Spadian snide, at least a little bit.“

Silencing Mac snobs is merely a side benefit of Moreau’s official goal: Quiet desktop clutter and shave seconds off of daily tasks. „Windows‘ point of view is about adding value and solving distractions,“ he says.

A career Web designer, Moreau was an unlikely choice to pull this off. „I was told that was the point,“ he says. In turn, he amassed his own band of architects, artists, and writers who could bring fresh perspectives to Windows 7. We asked Moreau and his team to tell the tales behind six buzzed-about Windows 7 features.

Vista opened with a series of blinks and beeps that reflected the under-the-hood technical operations. With Windows 7, Moreau wanted to mask the mechanics with stirring cinema. Writer Rolf Ebeling led the design of the 105-frame sequence. „It was nerve-wracking when Sam leaned into my doorway and asked, ‚How good is your animation?‘ “ says Ebeling. He used swirling fireflies that coalesce into the Windows icon to foreshadow the operating system’s use of light. „As a journalist, I knew I needed to make the point quickly, but how do you get the tone just right and make it something people want to come back to again and again?“

Windows Vista used a sheet-of-glass effect on the task bar, but Moreau and company made it more realistic. Industrial designer Stephan Hoefnagels studied physical properties of everything from Audi taillights to bioluminescent sea creatures to lava lamps, and then crafted more than 90 prototypes to make the task bar’s light look „energetic and alive“ and the refraction realistic. „As you hover over an application, the tile glows, but as you move, the light trails and follows you,“ he says. Rather than cast a monochromatic aura, Windows 7 pulls color from the application (Firefox, for example, burns orange). „The task bar is the face of Windows, but the icons are the stars of the show.“

Windows 7’s wallpapers eschew placid landscapes for psychedelic anime turtles and slick Seattle streetscapes. „Choosing the safest options would have been the Microsoft default, but we wanted to provoke a strong emotional connection,“ says Denise Trabona, a former design director for MSNBC. She also broadened the range of photographers and illustrators, to reflect Microsoft’s global reach, and added architectural pics into the mix for the first time. She says, „Our guidance to the artists was straightforward: Give us light and energy.“

A pop-up menu of application-related shortcuts, Jump Lists is a powerful feature hidden behind a right click. In one prototype, the design team indicated the feature with a button and an arrow next to each icon, but a few players balked. „There’s a tremendous amount of functionality hidden behind a kitchen’s cabinets and drawers,“ says Joey Pitt, who worked as an architect before joining Microsoft. „Rather than an immediate cacophony of labels and flashing signs on every drawer, it’s better for users if the experience unfolds over time.“

Aero Shake’s back-and-forth mouse motion has its roots in a feature called Aladdin, which allowed users to „rub“ a window to keep it hovering temporarily in the foreground. „Aladdin was fun,“ designer Hoefnagels says, „but at some point, the rubbing got tiresome and it was like, Okay, let’s just click over.“ Aladdin’s on the cutting-room floor, but the gesture’s whimsy became the Aero Shake. Use your mouse to vigorously „shake“ an open window and watch the others fly closed. A gimmick? Maybe, but users rave about its ability to quickly declutter desktops.

Lisa Cherian, an industrial designer and design teacher, raised more than a few eyebrows when she first joined the Windows 7 team and asked nondesigners to diagram how they’d train an alien to brush his teeth. „What we need in a software environment is the concept sketch,“ she says. „In industrial design, you return to it again and again: ‚This is what I’m making. This is what it feels like.‘ It’s essential to your focus.“ Employing that industrial-design discipline, Cherian created a concept sketch for Libraries, a feature that lets users easily access and sort their pictures, music, and video no matter whether they’re buried deep in a file folder or stashed on an external hard drive. Returning often to the sketch helped rein in the feature creep that threatened to choke the project.

See the whole article at:
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/140/windows-into-the-soul.html

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Rumor: Bing to Get Its Clutches on Twitter's Feed Before Google

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BY Kit EatonWed Oct 21, 2009 at 7:22 AM

We’ve heard suggestions like it before, but apparently Microsoft is now very close to securing a connection to Twitter’s digital data stream to get live Tweet search powers into Bing. Google’s execs will surely be foaming at the mouth at the news.

Bing and TwitterBack in July we reported on an experimental connection between Bing and Twitter that gave Bing users access to a real-time search on certain „prominent“ Tweep’s Tweets, and it was only a few weeks ago that more rumors popped up of talks between Google, Microsoft, and Twitter for a full access plan.

All of that seems to have concluded with a deal between MS and Twitter that’s absolutely ready to pop, according to AllThingsD’s sources. MS executives and engineers have apparently been busy chatting and problem-solving with Twitter right up to yesterday–all of which could point to an announcement at the Web2.0 conference which starts today.

It’s big news for Bing–even if Google follows not too far behind, since it’ll be beating its arch-rival to the real time data prize, garnering much press coverage and excitement along the way. And it represents a significant step for Twitter too, placing it as a significant player on the real-time data stage with enough negotiating power to avoid an exclusivity deal with Google, Bing or anyone else. The rumors seem to be suggesting that Twitter’s ad-avoiding plans may also be about to change, with embedded Bing or Google ads on Twitter’s site being a part of the deal.

Twitter’s clearly very much on the surge right now, though even while Comcast’s CEO is noting it’s such a powerful tool it’s „changed the culture“ of Comcast (thanks to consumer complaint Tweets) Twitter’s own CEO Ev Williams is carefully restating that Twitter’s business model is still not revenue-centric. Speaking to BusinessInsider, Williams remarked that the team was spending „97% of our efforts trying to improve the product“ with a view of building-in long term value. Letting Microsoft tap into the flow of Tweets will clearly generate cash for Twitter, but it tallies somewhat with what Williams is saying–it doesn’t require too much effort or front-end adaptation on Twitter’s behalf, which won’t distract from the business of pushing Twitter’s powers onwards and upwards.

http://www.fastcompany.com/blog/kit-eaton/technomix/rumor-bing-get-its-clutches-twitters-feed-google

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Ford Spending 25% of Marketing on Digital and Social Media

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Ford goes digital!

Ford Motor Co. this year will spend 25% of its marketing dollars on digital media, more than twice the amount spent by the industry.

Read more at BusinessWeek The Auto Beat

Want Teens to Notice Your Product Placement? Use the Web

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fastcompany.com:

Teens and college students are skipping or tuning out traditional advertising more and more, minimizing screens or muting the volume. Being able to be part of the content youth consume or even creating branded content is one way brands can make sure their product is seen, and advertisers are spending millions of dollars to ensure that happens. The problem, as our research shows, is that even when teens and college students do notice product placements, it doesn’t necessarily change their feelings about that product.

Product placement aimed at kids and teens is not new. Toy companies began placing their products on children’s TV shows back in the 1950s on programs like Romper Room, you might have noticed the queen bees of Gossip Girl using Verizon phones like the LG Chocolate, the orange EnV, or Motorola Krzr–all part of an integrated deal with the wireless carrier. For many marketers product placement remains a viable way to create brand awareness among young people–but with this generation having been marketed to on multiple screens pretty much since birth, does product placement even work?

The answer is yes, but not in the way marketers are hoping. We found that 72% of teens and 77% of college students notice product placement, and the top three products they notice on television shows are beverages, cell phones, and cars. But only one in seven report that those product placements have any effect on their perception of the brands.

But it turns out there is one „product“ teens and college students say they not only notice but actively pursue: Web sites. 38% of teens and 26% of college students noticed Web sites in a TV show or movie. And 53% of them reported going online to check the site out.

Web sites

So while we don’t have tangible evidence that the products youth notice most are having much of an impact, we do know that getting your Web site featured on a popular TV show or in a film is a great way to drive youth awareness, not to mention traffic. Maybe we’ll start seeing fewer soda cans on TV, and more characters playing a game on the soda maker’s Web site.

About Youth Pulse, Inc.
Ypulse is the leading authority on tweens, teens, collegians, and young adults, providing news, commentary, events, research & strategy. Our integrated platform comprises www.ypulse.com, a daily newsletter, conferences and an online research community: www.surveyu.com.

Here s the link to the article on FastCompany.com:

http://www.fastcompany.com/blog/anastasia-goodstein/youth-pulse/when-using-product-placement-reach-youth-web-sites-stand-out

Deutsche Bahn testet Touch & Travel

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Die Deutsche Bahn testet aktuell ihr neues mobiles Ticketsystem Touch & Travel.
Mittels speziellen Mobiltelefonen, die bereits über die neue Technologie NFC (Near Field Communication) verfügt. Dieses modernen e-ticketing ermöglicht es Bahnreisenden am Abfahrtsbahnhof mittels des Mobiltelefones die Fahrt an einem entsprechenden Sensor zu starten und am Zielbahnhof auf selbige Weise als beendet zu markieren. Der Ticketpreis errechnet sich automatisch am Ende der Fahrt und kann mittels Abbuchung beglichen werden. Möglich soll das sogar in Bus, Tram, U- oder S-Bahn, Regional Express oder ICE sein. Nach erfolgreichem Tests in Berlin, Potsdam und Hannover erweitert die Bahn nun ihre Tests im Raum Frankfurt, Köln und dem Ruhrgebiet.

Fragen, die sich für mich ergeben:
-Wieviele Touch & Travel Säulen bräuchte man pro Gleis wenn die Kunden starkes Gefallen an dem Angebot finden?
-Wie verhält es sich mit der Sitzplatzreservierung, wenn ich erst wenige Minuten vor der Fahrt mich einbuche?
-Wie lege ich fest in welcher Klasse ich reise / gereist bin?`
-Wie schnell wird sich die NFC-Technik in gewöhnlichen Mobiltelefonen durchsetzen?
-Wie unbequem ist es Privathandy, Firmenhandy und Deutsche Bahn Handy mitzuführen?
-Wie transparent sind die entstehenden Kosten? Theoretisch sieht man den Preis ja erst am Ende der Reise

Dennoch freut es mich, dass die Bahn sich neuen Techniken öffnet. Jetzt müsste Sie nur noch kostenloses Highspeed Internet in den Zügen anbieten. Das wäre ein richtig gewichtiges Argument für die ICs und ICEs. Da aber nicht mal McDonalds es schafft völlig kostenloses WLAN anzubieten, werden wohl eher Premium PKW auf breiter Front über Highspeed Internet verfügen…..

Social Media Monitoring Tools

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Credits to Paul Marsden for sharing this piece of information:

At http://wiki.kenburbary.com/ Keb Burbary offers a nice selection of useful social media monitoring tools. Give them a try and see what they can do for your social media examination.

Chris Anderson – Free

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I much enjoyed Chris Anderson’s Free (the future of a radical price). I really recommend getting the audio book which is absolutely entertaining and easy to listen to.
„…by Chris Anderson – That’s me.“ – Just love that line.
Anyways, in case some of you have not yet read his book or listened to the free audiobook (indeed, it is free, other than the book), here is a short appetizer for you:

O2 wagt sich an eine eigene Social Media Plattform

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Nach dem kapitalen Missgriff von Vodafone versucht sich nun O2 am Modethema Social Media. Erster Unterschied vorneweg: ohne den richtig großen Rummel wie Konkurrent Vodafone. Denn neben vielen anderen Faktoren waren mit Sicherheit das enorme Budget und der daraus resultierende Mediendruck Faktoren, die Vodafone bei den jungen digital natives als unglaubwürdig und kapitalistisch erscheinen ließen. Letztendlich bekommt der Kunde das Gefühl, dass es seine Handyrechnung ist, die derartige Kampagnen finanziert.
Aber zu O2. Die Brötchen die hier gebacken werden sind deutlich kleiner. Man will Web 2.0 erstmal richtig verstehen, so das Statement von O2 . Das Ziel, den Kunden durch die Plattform einen echten Mehrwert zu bieten ist ambitioniert – gerade in Zeiten, in denen täglich neue Portale aus dem Boden schießen. Doch genau Mehrwert und Relevanz sind die Garanten für den Erfolg von Social Communities. Für den Start der Plattform wirbt O2 auf MTV mit einem TV-Spot. Anlässlich der Europe Media Awards am 5.November wird O2 als Sponsor des Events 150 Tickets über sein Portal www.o2crew.de verlosen.

Schau mer mal was draus wird.

iSnack 2.0 oder Was Crowdsourcing so bewegen kann

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Ein sehr netter Artikel über crowdsourcing in Australien am Beispiel Kraft Foods.

Kraft Foods Vegemite

Kraft Foods Vegemite

Aufgeschnappt im Fischmarkt Blog von SinnerSchrader

Hier gehts lang