GoodGuide is great. It helps you find healthy, safe and green products. And - most importantly - it's now available on the iPhone. The fact that it's on the iPhone isn't the important bit. It's that it can be used at the point of purchase, which I'd imagine impinges much more on buying decisions than the memory of the site from home or work.
Monday, 10 November 2008
a good, good guide
Posted by Will at 16:02 0 comments
Labels: data, digital, internet, ordinary, software, technology, websites
Saturday, 8 November 2008
50,000
Hit 50,000 hits today on Flickr for digitalbites and not much else happened so I thought it was worth a post. Good times.
Posted by Will at 00:02 0 comments
Labels: blogs, communications, design, digital, internet, media, mobile, photography, software, websites
Friday, 7 November 2008
getting creepy
New technologies can look like magic. That's Douglas Adams speaking.
But magic comes in two shades: black and white (which if the last posts are anything to go by seems to be a minor obsession at the moment).
The black stuff indicates some dark intention; the white stuff a benevolent effect.
New tech goes the same way. Phorm looks black. Genius looks white. But, in essence, they both do the same thing: use our data to sell more effectively.
And there's going to be a load more black technologies as the web breaks out and evolves into an Internet of Things.
Throw into the mix that data capture will get a whole lot smarter not only because of new ways of getting it (through GPS, RFID, accelerometers and the like [SPIME devices]) but because our increasing desire for personalisation means absolute transparency (that's Kelly), and you have some really quite creepy tech around the corner.
Stuff that knows about YOU. Where YOU are. What YOU like. Maybe even why YOU like it - and tense changes of all those. It's gonna get freaky.
The challenge is to tweak and present these technologies from having a perceived dark purpose (I don't really think Phorm does) to being understood as benevolent. We need to fuzz them up.
Posted by Will at 23:01 0 comments
Labels: data, digital, geotility, internet, media, psychology, software, technology, trends
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