Sunshine on “cloud computing”

May 22, 2009

In his recent article “Going Mobile” in the Financial Post, Paul Barker defined “cloud computing” as a main driver to the “mobile computing” trend. The trend sees smartphones and other portable devices as the next inevitable tool of business. This is rather interesting to us at CleanPix, our total operation is based on “cloud computing” and we just received the go ahead plus grant money from the NRC Research Council to enable CleanPix to develop it’s service to be further extended to mobile devices. Clearly, our clients are savings hundreds of dollars per year as through us they are tapping in to our “cloud computing” knowhow. On this interesting point, Paul Baker focuses our attention on mobile computing and stresses the direct infrastructures saving from a business perspective awaiting its users.

The rise of mobile computing, however, cannot be attributed merely to the arrival of new devices..The main driver, however, has been the development of so – called “cloud computing,”…
With so much functionality increasingly being delivered to smaller, cheaper devices, mobile computing is poised to fundamentally alter our relationship to computing. And the biggest benefits will accrue to business. Paul Barker
The rise of mobile computing, however, cannot be attributed merely to the arrival of new devices..The main driver, however, has been the development of so – called “cloud computing,”…
With so much functionality increasingly being delivered to smaller, cheaper devices, mobile computing is poised to fundamentally alter our relationship to computing. And the biggest benefits will accrue to business. Paul Barker

Goodbye Press Corps… Hello Web Corps

March 26, 2009

That was today’s headline for The Huffington Post at around 8:30 MST this morning. The headline changed over every 5 minutes to create, I guess, an entertainment appeal to the story. This headline linked to a web video interview with Obama that happened solely on the web as opposed to simultaneously directed to traditional newsprint/TV media. Under the headline, a collage of traditional forms of media (still shots of TV casts and newspaper front pages) frames a YouTube video screenshot. I think that was the point of that headline… A sort of virtual Harakiri directed to traditional media. In reality, this is all more about the vehicle of news rather than the Media itself and it is certainty not about the content of the news. Of course, the surrounding advertisements are the same, cars cars, cars and expensive gadgets destined to lure our CEOs from their cherished bonuses (Sorry, I digress).

Basically nothing has changed… yet! In reality, TV has been engaged in its teenager years, decades ago, denouncing newspapers as a lesser way to portray the news. Now the web journals are basically boosting (bullying) the same discourse about TV and newsprint. But when you look at the content posted with a bit of scrutiny, there is no doubt that the core news, in large, originates from journalists working for paper and TV (see the BBC, CNN, Heralds etc. links after links.) Perhaps it is too narrow to say that a web journal’s primary virtue resides as repurposing worldly news?  Web-Corps provide great entertainment but we should give thanks to journalists and writers out there who bring us a take and opinion based on knowledge–beyond mere swirling headlines, hot flash videos and titillating abstracts.

Concluding on a more earthy level, I can certainty attest that this is a news-worthy world and all unequivocally agree that it pays to be out there. Getting your stories out is “in”. Media is media and what makes the “media corps” is the journalists, not the vehicle. Oops! The Huffington Post changed their headline yet again. What was that article?

Who invented the web journal? Take note
I seriously think it can be precisely sourced to the Harry Potter fantasy series as the live newspaper quaintly named “The Daily Prophet” (circa 1990) for its virtual animated viewings. What is worth noticing is how it is described in Wikipedia:

The Daily Prophet is the most widely-read daily newspaper in Britain’s wizard community. The articles include moving pictures. Unfortunately, its journalistic integrity is somewhat lacking; it has been known to be more concerned about sales than about factual accuracy and is often a mouthpiece for the Ministry of Magic, as described by Rita Skeeter “The Prophet exists to sell itself!”

My opinion is that J. K. Rowling invented the web journal (no it was not IT after all). Yes, a creative person… with a story to tell!  As a medium, The Daily Prophet is conceptually what a web journal is now.


Bypassing traditional media altogether!

March 17, 2009

Back from a conference in San Francisco dedicated to Social Media where, I must say, I learned a few things, or perhaps, I learned new questions? Here was a group of 200 or so participants that for the most part remained wired to their laptops as they followed the guest speakers. Many were blogging or twittering (tweeting) live at the conference proceedings. Twittering during a presentation is a good thing.

…an audience twittering or typing away as you talk is generally a good thing. It means you’re saying something that people want to share.
- Matt Eliot Sorry but I might just twitter during your presentation

Between sessions, you guessed it, many were networking, not with present peers but, rather, with those “elsewhere”, via their Berrys or smart-phones. The question that comes to mind is: Since the networking seems to operate mostly online, is there a reason why such a conference is not simply set up as a webinar? Funny enough, participants did set online meetings with one another, and during coffee breaks exchange a few words person to person…cool! So there was a reason the event took place in San Francisco and many of us flew a 1000+ miles to “see and to be seen”.

And yes, as an exhibitor at the event, we did speak to participants and also to travel writers, who took a minute to register themselves on pressuite.com. One blogger journalist said: “Wow you mean that I can go there and find news ideas and a lot of photos to match, and it’s free? Can I repurpose it on my web post?” The answer is yes, this is what it is all about.

The Role of Traditional Media

This brings us to the the big question. Are journalists, traditional media journalists, active in Social Media? Squeezing a second of attention between 2 twitter lines, I put the question to a few panelists and attendees. Here are the two types answers I got: A) “Journalist are looking for leads. Many stories we see in main stream publications like Times, CNN, etc., originate from there.” B) “We do not have the time or money to interact with conventional media journalists, they are too slow on the uptake.” Of course this was a Social Media conference, what was I to expect! Reality is that many players in traditional media are also operating on the web and already for quite some time. That said, being present on web should not be construed as a measure of their Social Media engagement. Engaging in these terms requires a cultural shift that perhaps translates as anarchy to the conventional corporate wisdom of ROI. There is, too, the fear of loss of control in communication protocols resulting from the speed of engagement inherent to Social Media.

Monetizing Social Media

One of the fundamental aspects of monetizing Social Media appears to find its appeal in bypassing altogether the traditional broadcasting stream of paid advertising or, for that matter, the need to be noticed at all by traditional media (TV or print). Publicizing might as well operate totally online and bank on free (for now) Social Media applications and their users. Conscientious feedback from the conference spells out the rules: Get bloggers to talk about you, forget the press! (Don’t dare say that!) Get posts started by your own clients, publish them at no cost, get your fans to publicize you and credit them for it, start your own virtual fan club. The buzzwords are “aggregate” and “engage”. These apply equally well to online tools and tactics as to your own virtual fan club.

In brief, go directly to your clients, and make them not customers but, rather, treat them as guests of your enterprise (a “vocabulary” tip from WestJet’s Catherine Dyer on corporate culture). Here are some travel/tourism enterprises working the space: Trip Advisor, Lonely Planet, Uptake, Yelp, Mobissimo, etc., and, yes, the traditional ink-on-paper media are also going Social, but a step behind.

Experiment or not, but familiarize yourself first

Should you be experimenting or not in Social Media? Is it true that the first to move in will have more of the pie? Let’s ask the experts? But according to Jeff Hanson (Regional Director of Marketing & eCommerce – Western Region, Marriott International), “…there is no expert!“. That said, everyone in the panels agreed that, before taking the plunge, it is best to learn the about the waters first.

Here’s a start:

Social Media Introduction for the Travel & Tourism Industry by Evo Terra. Evo goes over some of the basic questions many people have about how to get started with Social Media (flash presentation).


Our Twitter needs a voice

February 19, 2009

We have designed a new logo for our Twitter feed.  It is quite chirpy! It contains its own talk bubble.

Now what are we doing with it?
Literally speaking, this issue is the talk of the industry. “Now that we have a Twitter account and a blog… what do we do with it?” Yes, we can tweet about it on our blog or blog about it on Twitter but then what. Todd Lucier, of Tourism Keys, offers 15 ideas specifically for Travel Associations. In particular:

“3. Use Nearby Tweets to track local tweets within a defined geographic boundary.”

Building on this tip, you can use Nearby Tweets to pick up news stories ideas about your geographic region. These tweets can be used to inspire a new pressbrief post, for example.