Archive for August, 2007|Monthly archive page

Gmail Viral Video

Like some creative outlets for your videomaking talents? Google has launched a rather interesting video campaign inviting people worldwide to join in imagining how interesting can an ‘M-velope’ (Gmail’s icon) be, when it is passed from the left to the right of the screen in 10 seconds:

Help us imagine how an email message travels around the world. Take a look at the collaborative video we started, and then film what happens next. We’ll rotate a selection of the clips we receive on this page, and add the best ones to the video. The final video will be featured on the Gmail homepage and seen by users worldwide.

All it takes is a video camera, the Gmail M-velope ( ), and some creativity.

Submit your clip by August 13th, 2007 to be considered for the final collaborative video.

I certainly foresee all the bizarre and the interesting: perhaps we’d see the M-velope crossing Antartica, passed by pet otters, or other wild adventures along the line. It’s definitely a great marketing trick by Google, utilizing Youtube (which they own) – it’s engaging and it’s great publicity for their brands. Clever!

Interesting Flash Ball-Game

Boomshine

The game is simple. You have one click to ‘explode’ a ball. As the ball explodes, those near it will also explode in a chain reaction as well. The idea is also simple. Progress through the many levels by meeting the increasingly higher number of target balls to detonate. With a nice background music too!

And, perhaps weirdly, I find myself looking at this game as an analogy to bringing a successful product/innovation in the marketplace. At the higher levels, you’d realize that chances are, if you click when there are a large number of balls already converged and congregated, you wouldn’t meet your target. Instead, you have to somewhat project your mental picture forward in time, to anticipate and spot a converging trend before it happens. That way, the chain-link gets to be more sustainable.

Maybe I’m just thinking too much?

Minesweeper – the Movie

Unmissable – CollegeHumor churns out quite a bit of funny videos, and here’s a real gem – Minesweeper the Movie. It’s a brilliant, hilarious take on how Minesweeper (yes, the Windows game) would look like if it was in real life – wait a minute, more like reel life – in a typical Hollywood blockbuster.

This summer, Minesweeper the Movie comes to a theatre near you!

Thai Police dons Hello Kitty Armband

Hello Kitty Armband - Thai Police

In what sounds like a can’t-be-true story, Thai police are required to wear bright pink Hello Kitty armbands against their dull grey uniform as a punishment if they commit petty offences.

From the Bangkok Post article:

“A pink ”Hello Kitty” armband wrapped around a khaki-clad arm is shouting for attention at the police Crime Suppression Division. It is a new disciplinary measure introduced especially for police investigators who refuse to play by the rules.

Starting this week, the warning will come in the form of the popular Japanese cat cartoon sitting on a heart on a pink background. “The same old warnings no longer work for some officers,” CSD acting chief Pongpat Chayaphan said.

“This new approach is intended to engender a feeling of guilt and discourage them from repeating the offence.” Offences liable to earn an officer the pink Kitty include failing to report for duty, parking in a prohibited area, fighting, or being the subject of a complaint about poor service.

Policemen see it as a bitter pill to swallow. Most agree it would be quite embarrassing to have to wear the pink armband, which stands out in vivid contrast against their uniform.”

Wow!

Flickr DJ Music Slideshow

astronaut - flickr music slideshow

I stumbled upon this very cool project that’s a mash-up between a song file and pictures from Flickr. The idea is simple and captivating: as the song is played, pictures from Flickr are flashed according to the words/lyrics based on their tags. So you get a nice music in the background, while enjoying (somewhat?) relevant but random images. The interface is pretty cool too ~ you can drag them around just like a pile of real photos.

Try it out – it’s a little heavy though (~3MB).

Moon Lamp

Moon Lamp

This Moon Lamp is a whimsical giant lamp of – well – a crescent moon. While it’s certainly very literal and outright in its interpretation of the moon, it still somehow retains a magical attraction. Perhaps the moon itself has a strong sense of legacy, evocative mystery and beauty (can’t say the same for say, “Mars Lamp”). Although perhaps in real life, this lamp might just be the centerpiece of an extremely cheesy romantic proposal going along the line of “I’d even bring you the moon~~”.

[via English Russia]

Pixels or Pies?

Square Graphs

According to Anil, there seems to be an trend of using pixels and grids to represent percentages rather than the traditional pie chart. There are some speculations on why – perhaps it’s a reflection of our digitized age? Or maybe it’s simple aesthetics – a rectangular chart gives you less dead/white space around your chart than a circle, so the article looks better? Text description of each region looks more neat with rectangular matrix compared to a juxtaposition against a circle?

Well there could be really any number of answers. The important thing is, is it better? Or perhaps a better way to ask – in what scenarios would grid charts be more effective, and when are they less so?

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