Eminem Augmented Reality Competition
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As head of design at Braun, the German consumer electronics manufacturer, DIETER RAMS (1932-) emerged as one of the most influential industrial designers of the late 20th century by defining an elegant, legible, yet rigorous visual language for its products.
There can’t be many more legendary & respected designers around today than Dieter Rams. For over 50 years Rams has been one of the most influential industrial designers around, producing elegant, stripped-down and flawlessly balanced everyday objects in such enduring forms that one is hard-pressed to identify a design of his that hasn’t stood the test of time.
Good design is innovative.
Good design makes a product useful.
Good design is aesthetic.
Good design helps us to understand a product.
Good design is unobtrusive.
Good design is honest.
Good design is durable.
Good design is consequent to the last detail.
Good design is concerned with the environment.
Good design is as little design as possible.
Back to purity, back to simplicity.
If you own an iPod, iPhone, or iMac you almost certainly owe thanks to Dieter Rams for some of the look, feel and simplicity of these products. His influence is explicit in the work of Jonathan Ive at Apple, across almost the entire range of Apple products.
David Fincher is in "advanced talks" to direct the Columbia Pictures movie about the origins of Facebook, according to Variety.
The movie, based on Ben Mezrich's upcoming "The Accidental Billionaires," was written by "The West Wing" creator Aaron Sorkin. It's being produced, Variety reported Tuesday, by Scott Rudin and Michael De Luca along with Dana Brunetti and actor Kevin Spacey. Variety said the movie is called "The Social Network." We hear this is a very preliminary working title. (It, obviously, could also be called "Accidental Billionaires.")
Fincher's past directorial work includes "Fight Club," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," and "Panic Room."
An entertainment industry source tells CNET News that early casting searches are under way and that the list of young actors being eyeballed to play Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg includes both Michael Cera ("Superbad," "Arrested Development") and Shia LaBeouf ("Transformers"). They aren't the only ones, and it's not clear whether either of those two in-demand actors would want to take a turn away from comedies (Cera) or action movies (LaBeouf) to play Zuckerberg.
Cera is, according to the source, a top choice because audiences find him particularly likable. Rumors about the plot of the book "Accidental Billionaires" hint that Zuckerberg is going to be portrayed rather unfavorably--basically, as an obnoxious nerd--and obnoxious nerds are not the world's biggest box-office sell. Cera could make the part a little bit more sympathetic.
But in LaBeouf's favor, I saw "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" last night, and the guy really does sound a lot like Zuckerberg.
Meanwhile, Facebook itself reportedly isn't thrilled. The social network consistently hasn't commented publicly about "Accidental Billionaires" and is said to have warned employees not to talk to anyone affiliated with the movie.
FOREVER PRESENCE, with its effortless getting and staying in touch, is already facilitating a deafening (well, metaphorically speaking) conversation, that will continue between friends, family, strangers, foes, and yes, brands, in every possible combination until the end of times.
And while we have no intention of re-hashing the benefits of co-creation, we just want to point out that, ten years after the cluetrain manifesto (‘markets are conversations’) was published, it took a real-time publishing / conversation platform like Twitter to entice (big) brands to finally publicly interact with their customers.
Not that the infrastructure (email! chat! comments!) wasn't already in place, or that consumers had no interest in interacting with companies (there must be a billion ignored consumer suggestions, complaints, comments, questions, and reviews floating around online), but it looks like the real-time, in-your-face, mass public conversation that is Twitter was just the straw that broke the camel's back.
Sure, Twitter is ‘just’ the next evolution in personal communications, and something newer will steal hearts in the future (Google Wave, anyone?), but unlike other Next Big Things, its low barriers to entry and ease of use are enticing even the most luddite consumers, celebrities and brands to join in. The forced brevity of tweets has helped, too: it's easier to deal with a barrage of interactions if both sides are limited to a maximum of 140 characters.
So while B2C brands that have jumped on the 'twitwagon' already use Twitter for anything from PR, news and marketing campaigns to Twitter-only sales offers to recruiting, the business reality is that conversations with customers are taking over, or will do so soon.
It gets better, though: for years, we only had William Sanders*, better known as the Starwood Lurker, to write about when it came to big brands monitoring and replying to customers' questions and suggestions in person. And we're talking championing them instead of sending them off empty-handed or referring them to yet another powerless customer support rep.
* Sanders spends 8 hours a day engaging in anything Starwood related on FlyerTalk.com, a community for avid business travelers, and has more than 17,000 posts to his name.
Now, all of a sudden, big brands have assigned Chief Bloggers, Directors of Digital Care, Customer Relationships Experts, Social Media Strategists, Heads of Social Media, and yes, ‘Corporate Twitterers’ to personally (wo)man their Twitter conversations. Oh well, better late than never...
Now, not surprisingly, after years of one-way conversations, brands that finally open up (like the twitter examples above) will first have to deal with a steady flow of pent-up anger, complaints and frustration from customers who previously haven't had anywhere else to go.
But over time, when honest problem-solving (in combination with improved performance, of course) will lead to more balanced relationships, the focus will shift to cooperation if not co-creation. Including brands actively initiating conversations.
Brand | Mentions | Followers | ||
1 | Starbucks | 3.37m | 120,868 | @Starbucks |
2 | 1.01m | 307,342 | ||
3 | BBC | 703,000 | 15.777 | @bbcnews |
4 | Apple | 512,110 | None | |
5 | AIG | 455,000 | None | |
6 | Amazon | 245,760 | 1007 | @amazon |
7 | Microsoft | 221,000 | None | |
8 | Guardian | 211,000 | 14,913 | @guardiannews |
9 | Dell | 185,000 | 287,575 | |
10 | Coca-Cola | 135,600 | None | |
11 | Ford | 130,000 | 2,256 | @ford |
12 | Sony PlayStation | 117,550 | 20,651 | @SonyPlayStation |
13 | eBay | 107,000 | 1329 | @ebayUK |
14 | Sony | 107,000 | None | |
15 | Disney | 106,000 | 7,354 | @wdwnews |
16 | Yahoo! | 94,500 | 9,541 | @yahoo |
17 | Sky | 74,370 | 10,248 | @SkyNews |
18 | IKEA | 72,300 | None | |
19 | IBM | 70,400 | 1,180 | @ibmevents |
20 | Nokia | 68,100 | None | |
21 | Ford Scott Monty | 62,600 | 16,562 | @scottmonty |
22 | Guinness | 59,700 | None | |
23 | HP | 56,720 | 1,682 | @hpnews |
24 | ComCast | 50,400 | 14,688 | @comcastcares |
25 | Skittles | 48,600 | None | |
26 | Canon | 48,200 | 605 | @canon |
27 | McDonald's | 45,340 | 234 | @MONOPOLYatMcD |
28 | Channel 4 | 39,300 | 6,932 | @channel4news |
29 | Lego | 39,100 | None | |
30 | Pepsi | 37,400 | 757 | @pepsi |
31 | Samsung | 35,800 | 582 | @samsungmobileus |
32 | Intel | 35,700 | 464 | @intel |
33 | Tesco | 35,500 | None | |
34 | Nike | 32,800 | 1,167 | @nikeplus |
35 | Honda | 31,400 | 2,693 | @Alicia_at_Honda |
36 | BMW | 30,600 | 1,265 | @BMWSauberF1Team |
37 | T-Mobile | 29,900 | 1,443 | @TMobile_USA |
38 | BT | 27,540 | None | |
39 | FedEx | 27,100 | 1,108 | @mattceni |
40 | O2 | 25,900 | 2,371 | @O2UKOfficial |
41 | Vodafone | 25,400 | 802 | @Vodafone_News |
42 | Bosch | 25,300 | None | |
43 | RyanAir | 25,200 | None | |
44 | Toyota | 22,600 | 2,321 | @toyotanewsroom |
45 | VW | 22,190 | None | |
46 | Mercedes | 21,600 | 1,506 | @TheFifthDriver |
47 | Subway | 21,200 | None | |
48 | Cadbury | 19,900 | None | |
49 | Audi | 18,600 | None | |
50 | Burger King | 18,500 | 2,496 | @thebklounge |
51 | Marmite | 15,600 | lovehatemarmite | |
52 | Chanel | 14,700 | None | |
53 | Citi | 12,600 | None | |
54 | EasyJet | 11,800 | @easyjetservice | |
55 | H&M | 11,500 | 2,701 | @handm |
56 | Porsche | 10,600 | None | |
57 | Zara | 10,000 | None | |
58 | Gucci | 9,990 | 436 | @gucciofficial |
59 | Nissan | 9,740 | @NissanSports | |
60 | UPS | 8,960 | 5,381 | @trackthis |
61 | Motorola | 8,320 | 346 | @motodev |
62 | Avon | 8,132 | None | |
63 | Marks & Spencer | 7,900 | None | |
64 | Heinz | 7,500 | None | |
65 | Royal Bank of Scotland | 6,945 | None | |
66 | Asda | 6,650 | 147 | @asda |
67 | Accenture | 5,970 | 2,126 | @Accenture |
68 | HSBC | 5,760 | None | |
69 | Lexus | 5,690 | None | |
70 | British Airways | 5,670 | 1,202 | @British_Airways |
71 | Siemens | 5,640 | None | |
72 | Gillette | 5,250 | None | |
73 | Barclays | 4,840 | None | |
74 | Sainsbury's | 4,300 | None | |
75 | Budweiser | 3,980 | None | |
76 | Louis Vuitton | 3,950 | None | |
77 | Lovefilm | 3,720 | 1,503 | @lovefilm_uk |
78 | Smirnoff | 3,380 | 514 | @Smirnoff_EXP |
79 | Banco Santander | 3,330 | None | |
80 | UBS | 3,330 | None | |
81 | Shell | 3,100 | @shelldotcom | |
82 | Colgate | 2,870 | None | |
83 | L'Oreal | 2,813 | None | |
84 | Citroen | 2,810 | None | |
85 | Rolex | 2,630 | None | |
86 | Cartier | 2,100 | None | |
87 | Knorr | 2,030 | None | |
88 | PG Tips | 1,400 | None | |
89 | Oxo | 829 | None | |
90 | Birdseye | 748 | None | |
91 | Levi's | 700 | None | |
92 | Specsavers | 665 | None | |
93 | Duracell | 621 | None | |
94 | BP | 600 | None | |
95 | Schweppes | 570 | None | |
96 | Habitat | 500 | None | |
97 | Direct Line | 500 | None | |
98 | Andrex | 474 | @Andrexpuppy | |
99 | Vauxhal | 470 | @vauxhallnewsuk | |
100 | Dulux | 208 | None |
Beautiful Losers film trailer from beautifullosersfilm on Vimeo.