Subscribe to Angel Blog Reviews Subscribe to Angel Blog Reviews's comments

Posts tagged ‘world’

German company apnoti.com has today launched what it claims is the world's first mobile price search engine with integrated barcode scanner. It's an iPhone app called iBARCODE , which enables users to scan product barcodes and find the best prices. It currently only works in the U.S., U.K, Germany and France. To scan, the user simply holds the iPhone over a product's barcode. The integrated camera in the iPhone essentially takes a photograph of the barcode, from which the app recognizes the product and finds the best offers on the Internet for it. Sponsor These are located via the recently launched real-time price search engine smart.apnoti.com , which the company says has more than 65 million product offerings from more than 10,000 online shops worldwide. The mobile application recognises the following kinds of barcodes: UPC8, UPC12, EAN and ISBN. These barcodes can be found on a range of products, including cameras, audio and hi-fi devices, computers, furniture, books, DVDs and medicines. The iPhone app also enables users to store and send product watchlists. Last year we ran a series entitled The Scannable World: Barcode Scanning In The Real World . But we're only now beginning to see user-friendly consumer applications that allow scanning of barcodes via mobile phone. Next page: screenshots of iBARCODE Discuss

ibarcode logo iBARCODE: Real Time Price Search Engine Launches

Read the rest here:
iBARCODE: Real-Time Price Search Engine Launches

Recently I was the keynote speaker at the Unlimited Potential W2W (Wellington to the World) event in Wellington, New Zealand. The topic of my presentation was running a virtual company . In the presentation, written by our Marketing Manager Elyssa Pallai , I spoke about the unique nature of ReadWriteWeb's virtual business model and culture. Watch the video of my entire presentation below, for details of how our company is run and the Internet tools we use. Sponsor As I explain in the video, ReadWriteWeb is a totally virtual organization. We have no head office, or any office for that matter. Our team work from home or on the road, around the globe, in multiple time-zones, 24/7. Being totally virtual is about a cultural change - a mind shift. Presentation, video-taped by Spring TV and available on Viddler : Slides, via Slideshare : Discuss

totally virtual 150 Totally Virtual: How ReadWriteWeb Operates

Read more from the original source:
Totally Virtual: How ReadWriteWeb Operates

It has been a few weeks since the ReadWriteWeb Real-Time Web Summit . Workshops ran the gamut of real-time Web applications and services. They addressed the impact of the real-time Web on search, feeds, aggregation and even branding and marketing. But several topics and terms were not discussed as much as one might have expected: "social," "interaction," and "communication." Perhaps they were assumed. But their absence from discussion spoke of something bigger; namely, our tendency to still view Web content, even real-time content, as information . Sponsor This guest post was written by Adrian Chan. Of course, communication involves information. Information access and distribution are part of what makes social media interesting. Information is also an attribute of social relationships — which are another good reason to respect social media. But the tools and practices of our "status culture" are also a means of communication; communication that uses social media in personal, social and public ways and that combines both system messaging and user messages in ways that are conversational. Making Meta From Conversational Media This "conversational" content may look like information. But when it is the product of mediated conversation, content conceals dynamics and relationships: social forces that are by their nature implicit and tacit. The real-time Web industry is poised to go "meta" and to extract and extend greater value from the information captured, mined and repurposed in real time. But for this to occur, the implicit of social interaction and communication will need to become explicit. Consider what we can already observe and infer from content and information produced on the real-time Web: influence, social capital, attention, relationships, trending topics. We accomplish this by means of algorithms and analyses based on incomplete social information. The real-time Web doesn't yet furnish much social meta data. Could it be restored after the fact — from interactions, relationships and social meanings read between the lines? The real-time Web's conversational content is produced through uncoupled, or at best loosely coupled, posts. Can dialog, relationships and social structures be detected amidst monological posts? The Content Is People. Long Live the Content! Social media are the new means of production. We are no longer in the information age, but are now in the age of communication. And in this age, the attention economy may explain the disruptive impact of social media on established industries; industries, not coincidentally, built around the production and distribution of information — as well as control over its consumption. Content is king. The content of the real-time Web is people. And yet the socialized Web is much more than a Web of, by and for the people. The social world is not flat, open and transparent. It has distinctions, boundaries, biases and preferences. It is also about who chooses, what is chosen, who is chosen, who replies and why. Social Value Add "People" content produces social information, and it is relevant because it reflects the social preferences, tastes and interests of individuals, groups and communities. Communication is how we produce this information; attention is how we consume it. Real-time Web analytics and metrics already understand this. Influencer metrics count who chooses whom as well as what. Influence is contingent on the ongoing attention paid by an audience. It is not a quality owned or possessed by the influencer. It's a relation between influencer and an "audience" willing to pay attention and help pass it forward. This is the medium's power. That power is as much in social relations as it is in information and content. Understanding what interests a user, by means of their contributions and activities but also by means of their relationships and social interactions, is at the heart of the value that the real-time social Web holds for brands and businesses (as well as the value that the user adds to their reputation and visibility). Attention spent in communicating reproduces brand value by redistributing it socially (and free of charge). Social Context The real-time Web is built on uncoupled posts. But many online social interactions are at least loosely if not densely coupled. This coupling restores some degree of social context (social information). It may reveal social relationships (relational information). The speed, reach and redistribution of tweets and updates expose social organization (attention information). And when observed and analyzed over time, changes in this activity can reveal persistent interests and relationships, as well as those that are changing (historical trends and predictive information). Social contexts can be partially reconstructed out of other communication forms: chains, loops and circuits, clusters, clumps (and more). Satellite "conversations" fashioned from re-aggregated comments (see PubSubHubbub , Dave Winer's RSSCloud and the new salmon protocol ) will spark innovation in contextual analyses. But all the social analytics in the world won't work unless the architectural and data models can capture communication. If tools and applications can increasingly provide ways to communicate in ways that also expose social context, and if data-mining efforts are enhanced with models of social action, then the world of real-time social interaction will surface immensely valuable information indeed — at which point we may be able to say that in the midst of all this information, we are also better informed. Adrian Chan is a social interaction design specialist and SNCR Sr Fellow. You can find him on Twitter @gravity7 and on his blog . Discuss

realtime challenge nov09a Getting More Out of the Conversation: The Real Real Time Challenge

View original post here:
Getting More Out of the Conversation: The Real Real-Time Challenge

7db4d7a39fn mark.jpg 95x150 Merrill Lynch: Cloud Computing Market Will Reach $160 Billion...Really?

More here:
Merrill Lynch: Cloud Computing Market Will Reach $160 Billion...Really?