Wordout

Solid enough to stand on.
Light enough to take with you.

350 Is The Upper Limit
"If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted... CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm." Jim Hansen, NASA

Print This Post Print This Post

60Mbps Is Pretty Hot And Tempting

Ultra60small

May 26, 2009 – Sigh… my only cable choice is Time Warner, and the best download speed I get is about 15Mbps.

I really envy you guys in St. Louis, and everywhere else Charter is. Yes, they sponsored this post, but seriously, I’d write about this anyway.

Phatband For The Masses!

The more I learn about Charter the more I wish I could use their services. First I discover their 10 Grand giveaway, and now this. With 60Mbps the internet acts like it’s right there on the desktop.

Charter’s Ultra60 Mbps service is one of the fastest in the US, and definitely the fastest Internet speed in St. Louis. Charter plans to roll-out the Ultra60 service to other areas along with other high-speed products throughout 2009.

The Ultra60 Mbps service is part of Charter’s plan to provide customers with the fastest Internet speed available. With such a large percentage of web traffic going to sites like Youtube and Hulu, it’s critical to have a high-speed connection.

Ultra-Phat, Ultra-Fast

Providing speeds up to 60Mbps, customers can use the Internet in new and developing ways including gaming, movies, telecommuting with mega-files and much more at super high speeds. At these speeds, the Internet is a completely different experience – you can multitask the web in ways you’ve been wishing for, for years.

Hard-core gamers are going to love this. Downloading patches and game updates take less than half the time. And lag? Fuggetaboutit!

Charter’s Ultra60 Mbps service is the first of the Phatband speeds that Charter will be rolling out. With speeds overseas already topping 100Mbps, you can bet the Charter experience is only going to get better. Still, Charter’s PhatBand has already turned DSL into the new dial-up Internet service.

The next level of broadband is here. Check it out over at the Ultra60 Information Page.

Charter loves to hear your feedback – check out their conversation over at Charter’s Twitter Feed.

Post?slot_id=38414&url=http%3a%2f%2fsocialspark

 Get The Free RSS Feed! *OR* Get Wordout sent to your EMAIL! **AND** Add to Technorati Favorites

May 26th, 2009 Posted by Jon | Sponsored Post, The Net | Leave a Comment

Print This Post Print This Post

Win 10 Grand – Charter On Demand

Disclaimer: (May 22, 2009)This post is sponsored by Charter. I’m (currently) a Time Warner customer. I can’t win.

Win10grand2

Charter+Customers+$10,000=WIN

This is going to be short and oh so sweet, because you have just days to get entered in Charter’s latest contest. The contest is open only to Charter customers, so if that is you, read on!

Charter customers can win $10,000 or one of four 52″ Sony HDTVs just by dropping by over at the Win 10 Grand Contest Page and answering the weekly trivia question. (Charter customers: click that link up there and play!)

You want to go ahead on over there now, so you can go back again next week and get another entry. I know the 10 Grand looks good, but there’s a better chance that you’ll win the HDTV IF you enter more than once! This late in the month, the best you can do is to make 2 entries, so like I said, go now.

How Easy Does It Get?

All you gotta do is answer a trivia question about Charter’s On Demand service. That’s it! Go back again a week later and answer another trivia question. To break it down into technical terms, here it is:

Step 1: Go to the Win 10 Grand Contest Page

Step 2: Answer this week’s trivia question.

Step 3: Win!

Charter On Demand

Charter On Demand boasts an immense list of over 6000 titles, including new releases. If you poke around just a little bit, you’ll find free shows as well as the regular premium offers. It’s worth spending a few minutes there.

Of all the big cable companies in the US, Charter appears to be working the hardest to join the social world of the developing web. Back in April, they gave away HDTVs, including a grand prize of a home theater system and one year of free Charter Digital Cable® service with HD programming. In 2008 it gave away laptops and Xbox 360 game systems. One really lucky customer drove away in a 2009 Honda Civic Hybrid.

Keep up with everything Charter has planned. Follow Charter’s Twitter Feed!

Now, get over there and play! Time’s a’wastin!

Post?slot_id=38420&url=http%3a%2f%2fsocialspark

 Get The Free RSS Feed! *OR* Get Wordout sent to your EMAIL! **AND** Add to Technorati Favorites

May 22nd, 2009 Posted by Jon | Sponsored Post, The Net | Leave a Comment

Print This Post Print This Post

This Is About Options

This post borrows strongly from one I wrote back in March 2008. Didn’t get much response back then – didn’t expect it to. But much has happened since then so I thought it would be a good time to reprint these ideas.

A print advertisement for the 1913 issue of th...Image via Wikipedia

Living In The Past

Do you ever look through your favorite blog’s archives? Back in March 2008 Marshall Kirkpatrick published an article about the (then) new MySpace apps, and the conspicuous absence of a “long tail” in the adoption of apps by users. It was an interesting read, as it usually is over at RWW, even though I didn’t think the title was justified by the content. That is not what this piece is about, however.

I’m a comment reader, and sometimes I even add a comment, myself. The first comment on Marshall’s piece was from Antonio Evans:

When Myspace gets their self service advertising up and redesigns access to these applications we’ll see a great jump in applications getting well deserved installs.

Self Service

That phrase, “self service advertising”, jumped right out at me. I even chuckled a bit. Self service advertising is exactly what we need, but not the way it’s being presented. Three generations of the current model of free content in exchange for ads has conditioned us to expect ads on our web. But the model is completely backwards for the 21st century. When will the marketing and advertising industry just evolve already, and realize that as consumers, we all want to choose our own ads?

We’ve been promised that targeted advertising will make our ads more relevant to us, more pertinent to what we might actually need, but I’m willing to bet that each one of you reading this has had an ad on your screen today that was totally off the mark. For instance, maybe you’re a married man, and you get the “meet singles” ad. That’s a really popular one. Ever wonder why that happens?

I have. It’s because of a couple of things, as far as I can tell. First, the technology just isn’t there yet to do what they’re trying to do. Evidently, from what I see and read around the web, no one has written an application yet that can truly understand who we are. In a way, I guess that’s a good thing. I don’t know how I’d like it if a computer program allowed somebody to understand me that well.

The second, and most important reason our online ads suck so much is that the concept is applied incorrectly. Targeting ads personally is a great idea. It’s win-win for everybody. But the way it’s being done doesn’t really work. I’ll assume here that marketing professionals are benevolent entities who really do want to help the consumer find what they are looking for. That’s what the truly great ones are doing, anyway. Hopefully some will read the next paragraph.

Essentially what I’m talking about here is a complete shift in the way commerce is done. So far, it has been such that the consumer is seen as being exploited by the companies. With self-targeted advertising, the consumer has more control, and the ads are more effective. More effective ads mean less investment in wasted advertising, and higher sales ratios from the advertising that is produced. Companies, by allowing consumers to take the role of exploiter, will boost sales while cutting costs. It is, for sure, a no-brainer.

Self Serving

We, as consumers, absolutely hate for a product to be shoved at us if it’s something we know we’ll never use. I mean, come on! I get ads served about Muslim singles, only because I once wrote about a Muslim holiday here at Wordout. In a perfect ad-world, we could tell the “ad-universe” what we needed and it would respond with ads that were not only relevant, but right on time. Needless to say, it’s not a perfect world.

But if we can’t tell advertisers what we want, why can’t we tell them what we explicitly DO NOT want? Why isn’t there an “opt out” for these incessant singles ads? I keep “singling” these ads out, but you all know there are any number of intrusive and worthless ads shown to you every day. All I want to know is why we are still seeing such tripe. The answer is simple.

Advertisers are still operating under the 20th century notion that they are in control of the sales process. Advertisers, marketers, lend me your eyes! You are not in control! The consumer has the power to destroy you at a whim, and also the power to elevate you above your competitors. But only if you make us happy. You see, we’re growing up.

We’re not adults yet, no. But through the 20th century we were like small children. You could hold our hands and lead us wherever you wanted, and we went willingly. But we are growing up. We’re more like adolescents now, and we don’t like your hand-holding ways. We want some say in our choices. And if we don’t get it from you, we’ll go somewhere else. There’s always somewhere else. If there’s not, we’ll make one right before your eyes.

Why don’t one of you big guys create some way to get some consumer feedback? What if you could look at your clients and say that you could guarantee interest from your ads? You could have such a guarantee, if you let us tell you what we want. Just add something like “Don’t like your ads? Tell us what you want!” to your displays. Let us help you get it right.

That would be a step towards true “self service advertising”. What you’ve got now is mostly just self serving schlock.

I am Jon, and I want some options. If I don’t get them, I reckon I’m gonna have to make’m.

Last pic before Hubble repaired 2009

.

 Get The Free RSS Feed! *OR* Get Wordout sent to your EMAIL! **AND** Add to Technorati Favorites

May 21st, 2009 Posted by Jon | The Future!, The Net | Leave a Comment

ss_blog_claim=b99478ef357cf283b8f9c0bdec76d812