Posts Tagged ‘future’

  • Content design with cojones

    tweet: no groundbreaking experience for magazine or TV content it seems

    Or so I tweeted whilst watching the recent Apple keynote. A month later and I don’t think I could have been more wrong.

    Immediately after the iPad’s reveal, the interweb rippled with an argument between two tribes, those that want a computer that allows them to tinker under the hood, and those that don’t care about getting their hands dirty – they just want to email, surf, watch and listen. For me, this isn’t the interesting debate. It’s how the speed, screen size and controlled environment of the iPad now means that content design on screen can finally come of age and grow some balls. Big ones.

    Or so I tweeted whilst watching the recent Apple keynote. A month later and I don’t think I could have been more wrong.

    Or so I tweeted whilst watching the recent Apple keynote. A month later and I don’t think I could have been more wrong.

    Immediately after the iPad’s reveal, the interweb rippled with an argument between two tribes, those that want a computer that allows them to tinker under the hood, and those that don’t care about getting their hands dirty – they just want to email, surf, watch and listen. For me, this isn’t the interesting debate. It’s how the speed, screen size and controlled environment of the iPad now means that content design on screen can finally come of age and grow some balls. Big ones.

    Your content isn’t the same as my content

    There are some sites that people check two or three times a day. BBC News is one of them for me. However, out of the 50 or so articles on their home page in the morning, I’ll probably only read around ten stories. As I check back during the day, there’s a law of diminishing returns, in fact every time I visit I usually end up reading half as many stories as I did the previous time.

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  • Time for a reassessment of the human-computer interface

    A great blog post by Lukas Mathis has been floating around Twitter for a few days now. In it he talks about the removal of features in software development. Specifically:

    If you don’t pay attention, what started out as an elegant, simple application that perfectly solves a single problem, can quickly turn into a huge behemoth of an application that solves a ton of problems, but solves all of them poorly.

    This, and some other tweet comments, got me thinking about the iPad (who isn’t?) and how I believe it’s a glimpse of the future for how we interact with personal computers.

    In the 35 years since the arrival of the personal computer we’ve been on a continuous upward trajectory of feature enhancement and specification bloat. It’s not just the software, it’s infecting the very machines that we run the bloated software on.

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  • Creative Review, D&AD and Adobe round table discussion on the Future of Advertising

    Back in the summer William and I were invited to take part in a Creative Review round table discussion to debate the ‘Future of Advertising’. Chaired by Patrick Burgoyne, Editor of Creative Review, we were joined by the great and the good from agencies across London.

    Over the hour and a half chat the topics we talked about varied from measurement mechanisms for digital campaigns, payment models, client-agency relationships and a load of other stuff.

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  • Howard Rheingold speaks at MxM Event: Smart Mobs Revisited

    Has the future turned out the way it was supposed to?

    That’s something we’re very interested in here at Made by Many, so we’ve invited world-renowned author and futurist Howard Rheingold to present an evaluation of the outcomes and predictions he made in the 2002 best-seller “Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution”.

    Howard’s talk will be followed by an open discussion – I’m sure it will be a lively one! The event will appeal to anyone interested in new models of mass collaboration, crowd-sourcing and emergent intelligence that are made possible with the advent of ubiquitous social computing. We’ve only got a few free seats left, so if you’re interested, get in touch with me asap at elin@madebymany.co.uk and I will try to get you on the guest list.

    The event will take place next Wednesday (July 8th) at 15:30 – 17:00 in BBH’s offices at 60 Kingly Street.

    Below is a video clip of a talk Howard gave for Ted on collaboration, and Smart Mobs has also got it’s own blog over at smartmobs.com. And of course, don’t forget to follow @hrheingold on Twitter!

  • Designing the Future of The New York Times

    That was the title of a talk at the SxSW Interactive Festival here in Austin, Texas, that a few of us went to yesterday afternoon.

    We were all looking forward to it. We’ve got some form with newspapers in the UK, having designed sites and blogging platforms for UK broadsheets and tabloid newspapers as well as creating a hugely successful blog-based community site for the UK’s leading quality broadsheet The Daily Telegraph. We’re also long-time fans of NYTimes.com. The site delivered 20 million unique users in October 2008 (okay, it was the election but even so…) and was the fifth-ranked news site on the Internet in terms of total visitors. Consistently brilliant interactive and information graphics, and restless experimentation with new technologies and new models led us all to expect a great deal from this talk. Like many in the packed conference room, I was sadly disappointed.

    The talk was astonishingly boring and backwards-looking, as web-hating Design Director Tom Bodkin droned on and on about a glorious past that quite frankly no-one was there to hear about, starting with his college days which were a very long time ago (Tom seemed about 130 years old). Tom, the clue here was in the title of your talk – the “future” of The New York Times.

    A full 20 mins of the hour were dedicated to Tom’s slides from the heyday of hot metal. He managed to dis Razorfish in passing – the agency charged with channeling his ‘genius’ during the website’s redesign a couple of year’s back. He then set about ripping up the Web medium in general for a ‘lack of innovation’ before claiming the NYTimes website didn’t support serendipitous discovery as much as the paper product: a claim so ridiculous that I checked my ears to see if they were working properly. I say ridiculous for the simple reason that the online experience provides billions of hyperlinks that allow one to move from today’s top stories through extensive archives and related content on a fairly joyous journey of discovery in a way that the paper product simply does not.

    Next up, digital Design Director Khoi Vinh presented a series of haiku-like chunks of design philosophy – statements like “we are a platform” – and some slides of the website’s extravagantly over-designed style guides. Always suspicious of interaction designers who put so much effort into crafting linear style guides like this. There then ensued a kind of mumbling competition between the two men mainly involving the words “err” and “umm”. During this phase of the talk, delivered in a hypnotic monotone, neither man looked at the audience and Bodkin mainly looked at the table. People started leaving.

    The most staggering stuff came towards the end of the session, when Bodkin started to talk about the commercial model: “Big display ads is sort of what we’re good at”. Oh dear. Having read Clay Shirky’s brilliant description of newspapers’ broken economic model only hours before this NYTimes talk, I’m pretty sensitive to the fact that the future is *not* about big display ads. The fact that Bodkin and Vinh are still able to delude themselves to this degree speaks volumes about why some newspapers are in so much trouble. What a shame this includes the Old Grey Lady.


    Until recently, the prevailing wisdom has been that newspapers still have a few years to transition into ’something else’. Indeed, it must have looked pretty good until very recently, with online ad revenue rocketing throughout 2008. The recession changes all of that, and it now transpires that newspapers have very little time at all. It’s ten to midnight, and the style guides we were shown by Bodkin and Vinh are rather like a layout plan of deck-chairs on the Titanic’s decks made on the morning of the collision. The nostalgia is like the newspaper’s life flashing before its eyes as it lies dying, utterly surprised at the sudden worsening of its long-term illness.

    Across the industry, we’re looking at a sudden collapse rather than a managed transition, but it’s noteworthy and encouraging for us Brits that our newspapers seem to ‘get it’ much more than our US cousins. It is utterly unthinkable that the Guardian or Telegraph would make the kind of presentation we saw yesterday, and it’s clear that both are gearing up very quickly for the next surge towards becoming Web-driven products.

    I doubt you’ll find the NYTimes presentation on SlideShare. And if you did wouldn’t find much at all about the future. They can’t admit it to themselves, let alone tell anyone else about it.

  • Welcome to the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Again.

    Web 2.0 mosiac

    Image courtesy of nswlearnscope

    Over the holiday I’ve been reading Seth Godin’s new book ‘Meatball Sundae’, in which he argues that we stand on the brink of a fourth industrial revolution. His chronology goes something like this (I added the clock stuff):

    • Industrial Revolution 1.0 – 1760-1840: The big one. Where steam, water-power and pocket-watches begat production and employees.
    • Industrial Revolution 2.0 – 1840-1950: Production on a massive scale in more efficient factories. Think Henry Ford, the wristwatch and *much* bigger clocks.
    • Industrial Revolution 3.0 – 1950s-present: Time-punch machines. The moment the Service Sector took over. Mass-marketing created demand and communication technologies connected people and ideas with stuff being made. The age of what Seth might call ‘the TV-industrial complex‘.
    • Industrial Revolution 4.0 – Now: Welcome to the ‘Web-industrial complex‘. Ten years in, there’s a clock in your face pretty much all of the time. Look at your screen right now. Nevertheless, the technology finally starts working properly and becomes ‘enjoyable’ and cheap enough for everyone to join in. Seth describes 14 trends that result from this, including: infinite on-demand access to just about everything, infinite channels of communication, the atomisation of information (as it can be represented, sliced, diced and piped the way you want it). Most exciting are the effects of power shifting from top-down to bottom-up and consumers getting direct access to producers and each other. Welcome to The New Marketing.

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