The next big thing?
Pocket IM is a new product from Motorola. It lets kids (or kidlike adults) roam about the house, IMing their friends via AOL instant messenger.
A walkie talkie on worldwide steroids.
Pocket IM is a new product from Motorola. It lets kids (or kidlike adults) roam about the house, IMing their friends via AOL instant messenger.
A walkie talkie on worldwide steroids.
I just got a note from the guys at http://www.snapnames.com/. A quick visit to their site shows a neat idea–you reserve a domain and they check it all the time, grabbing the domain the minute it expires. What’s remarkable is how they got the little things right. The banana is right there (twice) on the page. The design communicates quite obviously that this isn’t a scam (actually, it might be a scam, I haven’t tried it, but I doubt it’s anything less than it appears to be.)
They’ve got an API and even though the business isn’t inherently viral, it has many of the markings of a smart net business. Just FYI.
Flawlessly executed.
Go to google, type in “weapons of mass destruction” and hit “I’m feeling lucky”.
It’s going to spread fast.
So, it appears that the New York Times has discovered the fact that politicians are starting to use the Internet. Their insightful analysis begins and ends with several articles describe the Dean site as a place where donors use credit cards to make donations.
The Times (and the entire beltway establishment) appears to see the Net as just a modern version of TV–with a little junk mail thrown in. For them, it’s all about being in charge, about marketing AT people, not with them.
My favorite part of the article in today’s Times is this quote from Bob Bauer, “whose company represents Mr. Kerry, Mr. Gephartdt and … Senator Joseph I. Lieberman”. Mr. Bauer says, “…But the Internet as a revolutionary tool? I don’t know.”
So what’s the real point? The internet isn’t a tool. It’s a medium. And it’s not a medium for interactions between Dean and person A and Dean and person B. It’s a medium for interactions between A and B –about– Dean. In other words, by enabling an ideavirus to spread, the Internet allows someone without the money to buy a lot of TV to be the topic of (many) conversations.
The insight of the Dean campaign (accidental or not) is that sites like meetup.com and constituencies of online sneezers can dramatically increase the chances that your candidate will get talked about. Add to that a site optimized for the interactions you desire (where’s that banana!) and a candidate can radically recast the entire campaign process.