From the category archives:

Technology

The Simpsons wins Best Movie Website at the Webbys

by Ambrose Heron on June 10, 2008

The Webby Awards are kind of the Oscars for the web presented by The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. They recognise excellence on the Internet, including websites, interactive advertising and online film and video.

The winner for the Best Movie website this year was The Simpsons Movie, created by 65 Media.

Not only was it well designed but it managed to preserve the unique flavour of the TV show.

Some of the functions proved popular, especially the ability to create a Simpsons avatar which spread like wildfire when people used them for their Facebook profiles.

At the Webby ceremony in New York the winners were only allowed speeches of 5 words and here are some of the highlights:

> Official site for the Webbys with video and photo coverage
> The Simpsons Movie site
> Listen to our interview with Matt Groening and Al Jean about the Simpons movie

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iPhone 3G advert

by Ambrose Heron on June 9, 2008

It seems Robert Downey Jr is a busy man - not only is he appearing in Iron Man and The Incredbile Hulk, but he is also the voice for the new iPhone 3G ad:


Apart from higher download speeds due to being 3G, the other key features of the new iPhone are:
  • Thinner edges
  • Plastic back
  • Flush headphone jack,
  • iPhone 2.0 firmware
  • Runs 3rd party apps
  • Cheaper (8GB is $199, 16GB is $299)
  • Better battery life
  • GPS
The phone goes on sale in the US and the 22 biggest markets (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK) on July 11th.

UPDATE: Here is the keynote announcement from Steve Jobs:

On a more lighthearted note here is the 60 second version:

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Steve Ballmer on the future of advertising

by Ambrose Heron on June 7, 2008

There’s been a lot of talk in recent years and months about the death of the film critic, the wider future of journalism and how advertising will work as print declines and publications go even further down the online route.

Steve Ballmer of Microsoft recently spoke to the Washington Post about the future of media and advertsing online and made some key points.

Microsoft is the 10th biggest advertiser in the United States

For a software company (albeit the biggest in history) this isn’t bad.

On the media he predicts a fundamental shift:

In the next 10 years, the whole world of media, communications and advertising are going to be turned upside down - my opinion.

…there will be no media consumption left in 10 years that is not delivered over an IP network.

There will be no newspapers, no magazines that are delivered in paper form. Everything gets delivered in an electronic form.

This I believe is correct - in fact, it could be even sooner than ten years. But the key point here is that there is no going back.

Check out the video:

He also discusses if TV shows will be free with ads or paid for by fees and subscriptions:

I think there will be some things people subscribe to on the Internet, but I think that’s going be more the exception than the rule.

My favorite TV program, ‘Lost’, I watch on the Internet now. I don’t DVR it, I just watch it on the Internet.

Maybe Windows 7 could be renamed The Dharma Initiative?

[Link via Buzzmachine]

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Twitter in Plain English

by Ambrose Heron on May 31, 2008

I didn’t really get Twitter the first time I used it - only second time around did I realise how useful it was.

This video does a good job of explaining why it is such a good web app:


Twitter in Plain English from leelefever on Vimeo.

> Subscribe to my Twitter feed
> Find out more about Twitter at Wikipedia
> Official site
> Jeff Jarvis on the benefits of Twitter and how it can help newsgathering

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Rupert Murdoch at All Things Digital

by Ambrose Heron on May 29, 2008

Rupert Murdoch was interviewed at the All Things Digital conference yesterday by Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher.

The News Corporation boss made some revealing comments about technology, the media and US politics.

Here is the video and some key quotes:

On movies and the future of distribution:

I would love to see all windows closed …but there are lots of people’s interest to consider.

The theater owners are powerful, but we will try and move to close that gap as much as possible.

On whether newspapers have a future in a digital world:

I’m totally technically neutral - I don’t care what platform our news appears on, if it’s on printed paper, or the web or mobile or whatever.

If you look at the last 6 months, the average newspaper is down 10 to 30 per cent in advertising revenue.

They [newspapers] are going to deteriorate tremendously

On the change that is needed at the Wall Street Journal:

Every story at the moment [in the WSJ] is worked on by 8.3 people [on average]. That is ridiculous.

On MySpace:

We came to [the Internet] late. We’d been asleep.

We found they [MySpace] were like 3 days away from being bought by Viacom, so we said ‘what does it cost for you to lock yourself in a room with us for the weekend?’.

They said ‘an extra $50 million’ and …we came out with a company.

Facebook came in an did a brilliant job - went past us all.

On Google:

Google is so good. They’ve established the best search engine by far.

It’s gushing money and you can see exactly why Microsoft is worried.

You’ve got all these bright people at Google with unlimited ambition.

On Yahoo:

There was a possibility at one stage that we’d add to the portal.

Here is the second part:

On Hulu:

It is changing every week. We are putting more and more [content] on each week.

As far as we were concerned we want to control our own copyrights and we thought this was the way to do it.

On choosing not to sue YouTube like Viacom have done:

We had mixed feelings about it. We felt it was doing more to promote our shows than it was to hurt them.

On Fox News:

People laugh when I say fair and balanced. All it does is give both sides, which the others (media) haven’t done in the past.

On Barack Obama:

I think you’ve probably got the making of a complete phenomenon in this country.

Politicians in Washington …are despised by 80% of the public.

You’ve got a candidate who has put himself above that and said he’s not the average politician.

And he’s become a rock star - its fantastic.

On John McCain:

He’s been in Congress a long time and you’ve got to make too many compromises.

What does he really stand for?

He’s a very decent guy. I say this sympathetically [but] I think he’s got a lot of problems.

On Apple:

They are brilliant marketers and beautiful designers.

On the recession:

The average family is [being] squeezed to death.

On the energy crisis:

I’d let people drill off the west coast. We didn’t buy Alaska to save a couple of elk.

You can read more detailed notes on the interview at the AllThingsD website here.

> All Things Digital conference
> Find out more about Rupert Murdoch at Wikipedia

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