Recently by Chris Smith

Quite a funny story was unveiled here in Las Vegas at Mix. Netflix VP of Web Engineering explained why they deployed a Silverlight-based video player. Netflix wanted to enable their MacOS customers to access their on-line video library. But because the solution worked for MacOS and Windows - and allowed them to use a solution that didn't require an installation of an application from their site, and allowed them to utilize adaptive streaming - dramatically reducing issues associated with "buffering", they've ended up standardizing on Silverlight for their video streaming. I was surprised to learn that they roll-out a new player every two weeks as they continue to try and improve the on-line experience - that's quite a short product development cycle!

Would you expect to develop a MacOS application using a platform from Microsoft? With Silverlight 3 developers are able to create applications that run outside the browser on the MacOS. While the idea might sound crazy, and certainly is landscape changing - it's smart for Microsoft. As more applications move to the Cloud, and applications consume Cloud services, Microsoft can continue its role as a big player in the emerging Cloud computing space, in developer tools, and in the platforms used for delivering content.

I saw a great example of this with KEXP developing a media player that works on-line and off-line, with auto-detection of network capabilities. The player is stand-alone (works outside the browser) and I saw it running on MacOS and WIndows. If you are a MacOS developer you can get the Eclipse Tools for Silverlight at www.eclipse4sl.org/mac.

Sometimes you see uses of technology that you've never considered - from vendors you would never expect. That happened today with a totally unconventional use of Silverlight for use with document management and repurposing content - print content.

I thought that Adobe had document management and cross-platform sharing wrapped-up with Acrobat and PDF. After all, PDF is an ISO standard, and Acrobat is on its 9th version. I've written a number of books on Acrobat and managed the largest PDF user's conference for some time - so I'm partial to it... but a short while ago I saw something that is potentially game-changing for publications looking to monetize legacy content. And with magazines and newspapers under pressure - who doesn't want to monetize their digital assets? So I nearly fell out of my chair today when I saw covertocover.com showing past issues of Rolling Stone that include full text search and easy navigation between issues and pages - and it was all leveraging Silverlight. This is a great, unconventional use of the Deep Zoom technology that Silverlight supports - and it solves an immediate business need that publishers are facing - how to monetize legacy content.

 

Microsoft has made some pretty significant announcement here in Las Vegas today that will impact the way you communicate on-line, develop Web and interactive content - and event how you think about what is on-line and what is a desktop application...

 

Silverlight 3 was announced here and has some technical features that are useful for developers -things like GPU acceleration and support for additional CODECs such as H.264, MPG 4, and AAC but the real mind-blowing things revolutionize the user experience:

 

·         Live streaming with full DVR-like controls - pause / slow motion / rewind for live streams. This puts Silverlight live streaming miles ahead of anything else. NBC announced they are renewing their use of Silverlight for all streaming of the next Olympics (Vancouver) using Silverlight.

·         HD streaming - you'll see this at the next Olympics as they'll be streaming all content in HD.

·         Out-of-browser experiences on Mac and Windows - not just a browser plug-in

·         Off-line support: Silverlight 3.0 applications can run as stand-alone applications. So they can consume services while connected, and then switch to an "off-line" mode when not connected.

·         Support for multi-touch - like the "pinch" - think Minority Report or iPhone

 

I'll have more updates throughout the event... as I'm at a Microsoft-focused event, most of my posts will focus on their technology this week...

 

Kindle meets the iPhone

Last week I discussed the Kindle as just the start of electronic distribution. The folks at Amazon have now released an iPhone application, allowing you to view and access eBooks. While this is nothing surprising - the cool capability is something they are calling whispersynch. You can start reading a book or story using one device, and continue it using another. According to a Wall Street Journal story, it supports up to six devices. While I don't think I need six devices to read a book - the ability move between iPhone and Kindle alone is a great advancement.

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There's been a lot of buzz around the Kindle lately,  the device from Amazon.com that lets you read books electronically, and download more books and content via an integrated cellular modem. The $259 device foreshadows how we'll be viewing content in the future.

As much as I love my Boston Globe and Wall Street Journal each morning, the economics of printing and delivering a paper to my doorstep each morning can't be viable for much longer in the current advertising market. The cost of printing and delivery alone are too high. The question is not whether these publication will move on-line - rather, it is a question of when and how they will do it.

Will they subsidize a Kindle like device when a subscription is renewed? Or will I buy one device to read both papers - and my Wired and Time subscriptions? The technology for portable reading devices is advancing - but the cost of the devices is the biggest barrier. There's a great story on it from Fortune reporter Michael Copeland here which discusses the economics and the technology.  As advertisers take advantage of this new medium, we'll eventually see motion graphics and video advertising in these devices. It's a few years out, but the advancements are impressive.

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800 newspapers participated in the Google newspaper ad program - including some big names such as The New York Times and Washington Post. Google started the program in 2006 and acted as a sales agent, taking of cut of the ads they sold. Their newspaper ad business provided a way for advertisers to buy ad space, and the pricing was intended to be more fluid than traditional ad rates. Google says that sales were good for some participating newspapers - but apparently it wasn't good enough for Google's bottom line.
Collaboration between print and online advertisers takes a set-back from this. Print publications will need to continue to seek out new ways to bring in revenues that have been sapped by the slow economy and the shift to more on-line advertising. The Boston Globe showed the first signs of that shift the day after the inauguration with a movie advertisement running the full length across the front page - something that was never done in the past, but is becoming mroe common. But it will take more than front-page ads to keep revenue flowing into newspapers - they need to find ways to monetize their content, generate revenue from their writing, photography, and other content.
Because we provide training to many newspapers - such as InDesign training and Photoshop training - we hope the business models can be changed to allow them to succeed. And I'm not ready to give up the Boston Globe with my morning cup of coffee each day.
A small pack of my colleagues gathered around a computer monitor in our office on Tuesday to watch the inauguration ceremony. To make certain we didn't miss a beat, we had a Silverlight stream in one window and a Flash stream in another. We weren't alone, as video delivery provider Akamai reported 7 million live simultaneous streams on the sites they serve - which appears small when compared to the 21.3 million live streams CNN indicates they streamed. While this shows this huge increase in demand for on-line streaming video, the bandwidth and infrastructure aren't quite there for a flawless performance with live streaming video. While the Silverlight stream looked better, both streams stopped from time to time - and neither stream could be viewed on an iPhone, where neither Silverlight nor Flash video have a player.
Because we provide Flash Training and Silverlight Training, we were pretty excited to be able to watch such an important event on-line using technology that we help organizations adopt. published by: Christopher Smith

A major, international daily newspaper based here in Boston announced last week that they plan to cease daily publication in the coming months - at least in print format. They'll be shifting to a weekly printed magazine format, and they'll be shifting more of their content on line. The Christian Science Monitor once had more than 300,000 daily subscribers, but that number has been dwindling fast. And the cost to print and distribute coast-to-coast simply can't compete with the cost to push pixels to your desktop or iPhone. Despite its name, the Monitor is an independent, professional publication well known for its detailed international and political coverage.

The generations that grew up on newsprint may be dwindling, and the Monitor is ahead of the curve in moving to reduce its costs and revaluate its distribution model. Monitor readers may be willing to pay for an iPhone application, or other news outlets that are cutting staff may pay for syndicated stories - all ways to make revenue on-line. And pushing more readers to the Monitor site will increase ad revenue - although it won't reach the levels of print advertising.

As a paper respected by journalist, the Monitor's greatest asset is the stories is collects each day. By finding new ways to syndicate these stories, and by reaching a broader audience on-line - an audience in the millions, not the hundreds of thousands - they'll be better positioned to find new revenue sources. The money won't come easily, but by moving On-line, the Monitor is moving in the right direction.

The night I met Paul Newman

I normally write about creative technology and items that impact marketing and design areas. But today I'm reflecting on a creative genius who died on Friday - Paul Newman.  We can learn a great deal from the way he lived his life - both professionally and personally. I had the chance to spend an evening with him, his wife, along with one of his daughters and several of his grandchildren - and it reinforced why so many hold him in such high regard.  

I don't know many folks that are as equally popular with grandparents and grandchildren alike. While younger viewers may only know him for his role in Cars, those of us who know his earlier work are also reminded that our creative energies can be put to good use. He showed us that we can and should invest in causes greater than ourselves, and that corporations can be successful and do good work. His leadership in supporting a camp for children with serious illnesses reminds us of how fortunate we are and how much good we can do, and his Newman's Own brand has donated more than $250 million to many charitable organizations.

When I met Paul Newman a few years ago it was unforgettable. We were both backstage at a theater. I was there at the invitation of a good friend that knew the performer well. Mr. Newman was there with his wife, daughter, and grandchildren. We were the only people backstage. I spent a great deal of time talking with his wife, not knowing who she was - what a wonderful woman. Mr. Newman walked over and joined our conversation and we talked about my several month old baby daughter.  As I didn't have any other daughters or sisters growing up, I asked for advice on raising girls. In his classic voice he told me, "Start your gun collection early" to keep the boys away. He was funny, gracious, and kind.

In an age where we see self-centered behavior in so many ways, Paul Newman reminded us that it's not what we take that is important - it's what we give back.

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Events

thinkLA: Annual Spring Conference

28 March 2010

Los Angeles is the only place on the planet where a confluence of leaders from such a wide range of industries goes beyond simply co-existing. They collaborate, encourage and challenge each other, ...

AIGA LA: Emerge Exhibition 2010

25 March 2010

Enjoy an exhibition of emerging new talent at the Pacific Design Center. Student design works representing design programs from all over Los Angeles will be showcased.

Aquent/AMA Webcast: Demystifying Social Media Measurement

25 March 2010

Speaker – John Lovett, Senior Partner at Web Analytics Demystified.

The social media frenzy is escalating as millions of consumers flock to sites like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and F...

thinkLA: AdU

23 March 2010

Program Overview

The perfect course for junior-level employees, professors and college students, AdU gives a broad introduction to the various departments within an advertising agency. The ...

APALA: Print's role in integrated marketing

23 March 2010

Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? Learn how print is being
used in integrated marketing campaigns, both in traditional and in some
innovative ways.

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