Showing posts with label show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label show. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Instagram-powered Art Show To Open In London

Instagram, the free iPhone photography app that's grown like a weed, has a lot of both fans and critics. Some critics allege that the app's photo filters ruin perfectly good images and will be looked back at later in the photographer's life with regret. Surely there are some great photos on Instagram though, right? I've seen some great stuff posted by others in my experience using it. I wish I was a better photographer myself so I knew how to use the app better.

One group of fans in London believe they've learned to use the app very well and they've gone from geographically nearby to each other, to having regular in-person meetups to what's now perhaps the next logical step: their own gallery art show. Here at ReadWriteWeb we love democratized publishing online and we love art, so we had to take a look at MyWorldShared - a gallery show of Instagram photos that opens in London on October 22nd.

Sponsor

MyWorldSharedPoster.jpg"My World Shared captures the concept of Instagram," the group says, "to record in images our world around us, our lives, our outlook, our views, and share that view with the rest of the world. It is an individual view, but one that others can relate to, like postcards from a friend."

Instead of postcards from exotic far-away places though, Instagram photos are often taken from right nearby your home. You've always got your phone on you. If you see something visually interesting - why not record it in a snapshot? It's an interesting intersection of ideas: Unusual sights, but in the usual places, perhaps with a slight tweak of a color filter and often of things that other people pass by regularly. It's a system of visual interpretation that anyone (who has an iPhone) can participate in.

Is this some kind of symbol of today's celebration of mediocre, unconsidered, shallow, frivolously decorated amateur art? Not if it's curated well! If most of the content on Instagram brings joy to no one but the people who post it - so be it. But the large body of images that the app makes easy to create are clearly leading to some great photos.

Why not put the best of it in a gallery? There are certainly Instagram users here in my home town of Portland whose work I would enjoy seeing printed large and on a wall.

I don't know if MyWorldShared is the first Instagram art show but I'm sure it won't be the last.

The show also got a write-up by Josh Wolford at WebProNews, who writes about his love of Instagram frequently. I found out about it from Ricky Yean of Crowdbooster.

Discuss




Instagram-Powered Art Show to Open in London


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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Want to make your TV show more social? Start with the script

We usually think of social TV when a show hits the air and viewers start tweeting about it and sharing moments on Facebook. But to leverage social media for TV promotion, networks need to think about how the campaign will fit in to the content itself.

Want to make your TV show more social? Start with the script


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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Microsoft To Show Tablet Software Next Week (MSFT)


Windows 8 Internet Explorer

Microsoft Windows chief Steve Sinofsky will show Microsoft's upcoming tablet software at the AllThingsDigital D:9 conference next week, according to sources who spoke to Bloomberg (no link because its on the Bloomberg terminal).

We speculated that Sinofsky would show the tablet version of Windows 8 when his appearance was announced earlier this week, but Bloomberg has confirmed it with three separate sources, the report says.

The demo will show Windows 8 tablets running on hardware with an Nvidia Tegra chip. Microsoft OEM chief Steve Guggenheimer will also show similar demos at a show in Taiwan next week.

Microsoft has previously said that Windows is being ported to the ARM processors used in most smartphones and tablets and some screenshots of what look to be a new touch interface have leaked, but this will be the first official set of demos.

Earlier this week, Steve Ballmer said that Windows 8 would come out next year, but the company backtracked from that statement.

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Microsoft To Show Tablet Software Next Week (MSFT)


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Sunday, May 1, 2011

Leaked Emails From Google Show How Important Location Data Is To Android (GOOG)

Larry Page

The San Jose Mercury News landed some leaked emails from Google CEO Larry Page, as well as other top Google executives, which show how important gathering location data is for its mobile plans.

Last year, Motorola, one of Google's biggest mobile partners, was planning on using Skyhook Wireless's location data for its handsets over Google's location data.

The Mercury News says that when Page read about Motorola's decision to use a "competitor's" location service -- we're guessing it was Skyhook -- he pasted the article in an email to top executives at Google and asked, "Can I get a response on this?"

The Mercury News says "a detailed memo" was quickly sent back to Page, with Android boss Andy Rubin writing, location data from mobile phones was "extremely valuable to Google," because it was having trouble getting the data via its Street View cars.

Google's Street View cars were busted for gathering data from unsecured wifi networks. That blow up made it more challenging for Google to build a location database driving around and collecting data from wifi networks.

To build its location network, it would have to rely more heavily on Android phones. But if its partners weren't going to use Google's location technology, that would be much more difficult.

Google location product manager Steve Lee wrote to Larry Page, "I cannot stress enough how important Google's wifi location database is to our Android and mobile product strategy ... We absolutely do care about this (decision by Motorola) because we need wifi data collection in order to maintain and improve our wifi location service."

Skyhook is currently suing Google saying it unfairly blocked Motorola from using Skyhook's services.

Related: Everything You Need To Know About How Phones Are Stalking You Everywhere

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Leaked Emails From Google Show How Important Location Data Is To Android (GOOG)


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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Netflix Gets Into The Original Content Game, Buys Upcoming Show For A Rumored $100m

Netflix got its start as the red-envelope movie rental service, later turning into the video streaming authority (bankrupting Blockbuster in the process), and now may be making yet another major move: bankrolling original content. Deadline Hollywood reports that Netflix successfully outbid HBO and AMC for the rights to House Of Cards, an adaptation of the successful 1990 British miniseries. The show reportedly stars Academy Award winning actor Kevin Spacey, who we know isn’t cheap, and David Fincher, who is hotter than ever following the success of The Social Network.

Netflix Gets Into The Original Content Game, Buys Upcoming Show For A Rumored $100m


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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Top iPad Apps Show How It Took 7% Of The PC Market (AAPL, MSFT)

Steve Jobs with iPad

Market research firms may not count it as a PC, but the iPad is clearly a computer, and Apple's latest sales figures show that it's now got about 7% of what used to be the global "PC" market.

So what are all those people doing with it, other than sending email and surfing the Web?

According to Apple's list of top free and paid iPad apps, which the company released this morning via iTunes, people are using their iPad to have fun and get information from the Internet.

Popular uses include listening to and identifying music (Pandora and Soundhound), finding things to do nearby (Yelp, Flixster, Fandango), playing casual games, and reading electronic books. (Full list at the end of this post.)

They're not creating documents and spreadsheets. They're not playing fast-action twitch games that require tons of processing power (a dying market -- a lot of hardcore gamers have already switched to consoles like the Xbox 360 and PS3). They're not creating videos or recording songs.

In the past, these people might have paid $800 or more for a simple laptop that let them send and receive email, get information from the Web, and maybe download and play a few casual games. They don't need a full computer, but they still had to think about all the hassles of owning a computer, like antivirus software and OS updates.

The $499 iPad is rapidly taking this casual computing market. And when the next version comes out at perhaps half the price or less, the switch from computers will accelerate.

How big is this casual computing market? Apple -- and Microsoft -- are about to find out.

Here's Apple's list of top free iPad apps of all time:

  • Pandora (music streaming)
  • Google Mobile (voice search)
  • Movies By Flixster (movie information)
  • Google Earth (3D mapping)
  • Yelp (online reviews)
  • Fandango Movies (movie information)
  • Remote (control Apple TV or iTunes on another computer)
  • iBooks (e-reader)
  • Bible (reading)
  • Solitaire (game)

And here are the top paid iPad apps:

  • SoundHound (music identification)
  • StickWars (game)
  • FlightTrack (flight information)
  • Backbreaker Football (game)
  • Calorie Tracker (diet aid)
  • Blocks Classic (game)
  • iFart Mobile (seriously?)
  • GoodReader for iPad (e-reader for PDF files)
  • CroMag Rally (game)
  • Ambiance (background noise)

A lot of iPad users may be downloading apps that were originally designed for the iPhone, but the common areas of interest are about the same.

Top all-time downloaded free iPhone apps:

  • Facebook
  • Pandora
  • Google Mobile
  • Shazam (music identification)
  • Movies by Flixster
  • The Weather Channel
  • Google Earth
  • Bump (share information by bumping phones)
  • Skype (voice calls)
  • Paper Toss (game)

Top all-time selling paid iPhone apps:

  • Doodle Jump (game)
  • Tap Tap Revenge 3 (game)
  • Pocket God (game)
  • Tap Tap Revenge 2.6 (game)
  • Bejewled 2 + Blitz (game)
  • Traffic Rush (game)
  • Tap Tap Revenge Classic (game)
  • AppBox Pro (alarm clock and other utilities)
  • Flight Control (game)

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Top iPad Apps Show How It Took 7% Of The PC Market (AAPL, MSFT)


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