November 2007 Archives
I haven’t had a chance to see Amazon’s Kindle, but I did see the iLiad by iRextechnologies here in the Netherlands. It is just awesome!
It’s like having the e-Ink screen, a WACOM tablet, almost all
of the Kindle functionality (but with a larger better screen with more shades of grey) and WiFi — all in one gorgeous, easy to use package..
The downsides - you need to connect with a PC or a Mac to get content on it - it’s not linked up with Amazon - so you may have to get your content elsewhere
It doesn’t have a mobile network card, but you can buy such a card with a USB connection (almost anywhere) and stick it in the iLiad, and you’re ready to go… :-)
I visited Philips last month and was blown away by their new TV - Aurea.. I was blown away by the effects.
Check the site and see for yourself!
This is a product worth talking about.
Facebook has a great thing going for them. As schoolkids grow up, they sort of jumped from one social network to the next - eventually settling down on the one where most of their core friends were. This tended to be Facebook for quite a few students. As Facebook increased the number of features and widgets on it, there was less temptation to go somewhere else online to hang out. Membership boomed. Facebook then opened itself to non-students, and membership grew even faster. There was just one problem - you needed to give up your existing profile on myspace or whatever and jump onto Facebook. This was the barrier.
It was also the barrier for a lot of other social networking sites. And then came Google's announcement. Some of the social networks have been brave enough to adopt opensocial which would let users of another social network access data of their customers and interact with them, and use common widgets. There's a strong strategic reason for to do so as it gets them access to new customers, and get more usage of their own proprietary widgets and services - especially those of Myspace which has adopted OpenSocial.
Will Facebook follow suit? Seth Godin feels that if one of the players breaks industry barriers, existing players in the industry will be hurt - except the one who actually broke the barrier.
I just saw this video on Capgemini's website. It's quite informative on how shoppers in the West go about making choices on products. Some takeaways
a) Health and Wellness are trends
b) People will buy organic produce or environmentally friendly products, but will not pay more for it.
c) The shopping experience matters more and more, and not just price and product range.
Watch the video and let me know what you think
