Be your own producer with social magazines

Many years ago, just prior to the birth of the World Wide Web in 1995, a friend and I attempted to create something unheard of at the time. The idea was based on that of a print magazine but would feature two things uncharacteristic of a magazine:

a.) Interaction
b.) Personalization

We weren’t sure how to pull it off, as print media does pose limitations. We didn’t even have a clear idea all that it would ent

ail.

What we did know was that we wanted to come out with a periodical print, probably once a month, featuring stories, local businesses, local people, local events and activities, all the normal stuff that would appear in a local journal, but we wanted a way to interact with people as close to real-time as possible and also keep the publication personalized, letting readers influence their own experience.

Not surprisingly, the idea never went anywhere. Primarily because we couldn’t figure out technologically how to achieve what we desired. We didn’t even get far enough with the idea for funding to become an obstacle. But we spent months with the idea in our think tank.

In recent years, I have come to realize that it blogs have been achieving some aspects of this  idea since the late 90s, so in a way when I think back to our efforts I recognize that while the idea at the time may not have been possible, it was this type of thinking that led to the innovation of blogs and social media.

But now something new is on the horizon that is almost PRECISELY what we ultimately wanted to achieve nearly 20 years ago. It’s called a social magazine and you can read about it on a recent post at HubSpot called The Next Big Thing for Marketers: Social Magazines.

A social magazine is based on the notion that tablet computing, such as the iPad, is here to stay and that consumers now need and have the ability to custom tailor their marketing experience.

Already there are applications such as Flipboard and Pulse for the iPad that give users the ability to pipe in content from various sources and organize it in a way that allows them to consumer the information to their taste.

As HubSpot points out, social magazines are important for marketers because they a.) reduce info-noise; b.) are rich with visuals; c.) result in social segmentation.

The noise reduction benefit is huge. People are overwhelmed today with information and the pursuit is on to filter and reduce this noise to its most useful and beneficial purpose for each individual.

The visual aspect is important because micro-blogging, which arguably has dominated conventional blogging, is limited when it comes to multimedia. Social magazines keep micro-blogging on the forefront and incorporate rich multimedia experiences.

The segmentation aspect, which in a way coincides with noise filtering, gives consumers the ability to custom tailor the information they consume. Essentially makes the consumer the architect of his own experience.

Ultimately what social magazines bring into the world is the possibility of making sense of the ever-chaotic Internet for each individual. Unlike radio and television programming, which packages choice select content determined by the producers and delivers it to viewing and listening audiences, social magazines let the consuming recipient be his or her own producer.

How will this impact your marketing efforts as a business?

Brightcove Publishes, Distributes and Monetizes web video for iPad and other Apple devices

iPhone Blue CubeLast month Brighcove announced Brightcove Experience for HTML5, a framework for publishing and delivering high quality, interactive and advertising-supported Web video experiences for HTML5-compatible devices.

The new solution enables you to easily expand the reach of your online video initiatives to popular consumer devices including the Apple iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.

The Brightcove Experience for HTML5 provides support for intelligent device detection, playlist rendering, and playback of H.264 encoded video content. Over the course of this year, Brightcove will expand the Brightcove Experience for HTML5 to include full support for customization and branding of the player environment, advertising, analytics, social sharing, and other capabilities currently found in Brightcove experience solutions for other platforms.

The Brightcove Experience for HTML5 is provided at no charge to customers with subscriptions to Brightcove Professional, Enterprise, and Express $499 editions. An early version of the automatic device detection and HTML5 player template are available in the Brightcove Developer Center.

As Brightcove customers, we are pleased with this announcement for a couple reasons.

  1. It demonstrates Brightcove’s commitment to innovation, something which played a big part in our decision recently to Brightcove’s video hosting & streaming platform.
  2. It gives credence to the direction Apple is headed on the web by abandoning Flash and counting on web developers and software makers to adapt.

Brightcove is a Web-based platform that makes it easy to deliver professional-quality video experiences through your website. Unlike free video sharing sites, Brightcove gives you complete control over the video experience you put on your site. Organizations of all sizes choose Brightcove for its ease of use and its power to scale from the simplest project to the most complex

For more information about this and similar topics, visit our website at www.autoburstwebs.com

Are you going to re-develop your websites for Apple's iPad?

A recent report on Marketplace by Farhad Manjoo from Salon.com throws out a compelling case as to why Apple has chosen to abandon Flash support on it’s new iPad. The decision by Apple to do this was not an idealistic one to simply “snub” Adobe as Manjoo puts it. It was a calculated choice based on where the Web is headed – a web without Flash. As you can imagine, this has sparked a bit of controversy.

But Adobe’s Flash, which was originally created by Macromedia many moons ago, has always been somewhat controversial. Many once argued that Flash ruining the web, making it clunky and cumbersome for people to experience web pages. However with the increase in bandwidth that has become available, and the improvement in web browser technology, I don’t think that argument holds much water. Flash has made our web experience far more interesting and constructive.

The debate in its simplest form goes like this: Apple’s new iPad does not support Flash because it it is banking on a Web that does not hinge on Flash for video display and interactive media such as gaming and advertising. This future is only possible because of HTML5, the next generation of HTML.

HTML is the construct on which everything you experience on the Web is founded. HTML is like the brick and mortar of a physical building. It is what makes the things you see in a web browser able to appear. Without HTML, you can not view a web page. Any web page.

HTML5 supports video on the web differently from how you watch video now, which is through plug-ins – small pieces of software that install on your computer and permit you to view things in your web browser like video. Flash is a plug-in provided by Adobe and it is the most widely used plug-in for video display. HTML5 permits websites to display video much like the way images are displayed, so essentially it eliminates the conflicts many people encounter attempting to watch video on the web, e.g. long download times, crashing browsers, etc.

HTML5 sounds ideal, eh? Well, it is. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that Flash is on its way out.

As John Herrman explains on gizmodo.com, the stir is only a stir and Flash is not going away, at least not any time soon. There are numerous reasons for this and Herrman gets into them at length in his article “Why HTML is not going to save the Internet“. With Apple’s track record for anticipating the future of certain technologies, you can imagine the stigma surrounding this topic.

In the end, it’s Apple taking the big risk here. iPad users will not be able to experience websites running Flash which 85 of the top 100 most popular sites use to display content like videos or games or slide shows. If you go to those sites with the iPad, you’re likely to see an error icon instead.

With this chance, Apple is counting on web developers to make non-Flash versions of their sites using HTML5 standards for video and advertising. If the iPod is any testament to how the market could respond, it is possible we will see a lot of shuffling going on over the next few years in how websites are developed. Are you going to re-design your websites to meet HTML5 video standards that do not require Flash or other plug-ins?