Category Archives: Technology

Photo of the Day – Neuromarketing

Flowers

Aromatic flowers on display in a restaurant entry area (photo by Kenn Stearns)

The scent of fresh flowers is distinctive. The appearance of floral arrangements is pleasing to most which is why they’re featured prominently in weddings, funerals, and to sell products. From marketing a property for sale to adorning hotel lobbies, fresh flowers signal elegance, beauty, love, celebration, devotion, and class. But neuromarketing is not about flowers – it’s about sales.

Last weekend I caught a story about Muzak on one of the morning television news shows. It was about how the 70-year-old company was overcoming adversity, recovering from bankruptcy, changing with the times, and doing everything they could to shake the elevator music stereotype. But what caught my attention was their new scent service.

Turns out Muzak signed a multi-year deal with Charlotte, NC-based ScentAir Technologies to distribute their patented environmental scent systems. The leading provider of aroma marketing solutions teaming up with the leading provider of business music to offer a “myriad of original retail experiences.”

Using Smell To Sell

Retailers use scents and music to affect customer choices. Consumers’ moods can be changed by what they hear and smell.  The Scent Marketing Institute is “the only professional organization dedicated to supporting scent-related marketing strategies.” There’s even a SCENTworld annual conference. Researchers have proven consumers feel as though time moves slower in a scented environment and their mode can be improved. A scent delivery system can prompt customers to feel better, be happier, look longer and be willing to pay a higher price. And that can improve the chances of a sale. So what exactly is the smell of success? That depends on what you’re selling.

Westin Hotels & Resorts scents lobbies with a fragrance named White Tea. NCP in the United Kingdom scents the stairwells in their parking garages and a page of their website is dedicated to the effort.  De Beers uses a scent mix of citrus, floral, and green tea to move more diamonds. Verizon Wireless used the scent of chocolate to market the LG Chocolate phone. Samsung reportedly uses a hint of honeydew melon to stimulate electronics sales in their flagship store in Manhattan. Sony scents their Sony Style stores, shopping bags, and even the hard plastics encasing their products. Yes, there are companies such as ScentSational Technologies that specialize in “retro-nasal olfaction,” adding scents to packaging (cups, closures, bottles, containers, etc.) so products smell, taste, and ultimately sell better.

This adds a whole new dimension to “scratch-n-sniff.” What about that new car smell? The Australian firm Atmosfera provides a “new car smell” product for used-car dealers to spray in vehicles. Or they’ll help create the smell of luxury by providing Scent Diffusers that emit essences of maple, birch, and leather. The smell of talcum powder can make us feel nostalgic and safe. Cedar and leather make us want to spend more. Cucumber makes us think the room is larger but barbecue makes us feel the space is smaller. Peppermint and citrus makes us feel alert.

The next time you make a purchase and later find yourself saying, “What was I thinking?” it may have been more about what you were smelling.

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Photo of the Day – Parking Meter

Parking Meter

The parking meter was invented in 1935 and first appeared in Oklahoma City on July 16, 1935 (photo by Kenn Stearns)

When I catch sight of a parking meter for some reason I think about Paul Newman in the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke. He gets arrested and is ultimately sent to prison for cutting the heads off parking meters. Speaking of 1967, there’s also The Beatles song about Lovely Rita, a meter maid  based on Meta Davis, the woman who issued a parking ticket to Paul McCartney outside Abbey Road Studios. A year earlier, Bob Dylan recorded Subterranean Homesick Blues that included the lyrics:

But users, cheaters
Six-time losers
Hang around the theaters
Girl by the whirlpool
Lookin’ for a new fool
Don’t follow leaders
Watch the parkin’ meters

American lawyer and publisher Carl C. Magee invented the parking meter in 1935. Although Magee died nine years later, his original design of a coin acceptor, dial, and flag remained mostly unchanged until the ’70s. Digital versions showed up in the ’80s. By the ’90s new solutions were appearing.

Pay and display parking meter alternatives are gaining favor these days, particularly in major cities that are implementing centralized “multispace” solutions that accept credit cards. Almost four years ago New York City retired its last spring-loaded, single-space parking meter. It looks like technology will render the parking meter extinct. To hold the memory close, check out the heartwarming Oklahoma Moment video below…

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Phanfare

I’ve been using Phanfare for years. I’ve tried Yahoo!’s Flickr, Google’s Picasa, Hewlitt Packard’s snapfish, Fox Interactive’s Photobucket, and others from Bilddagboken to Zoomr – none delivered the combination of work flow and presentation flexibility that I needed. From an iPhone app called Photon to customizable slideshows, Phanfare delivers most of what I need.

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SixthSense Future Technology

About a year ago Pattie Maes and Pranav Mistry demoed SixthSense at TED. A friend sent this video as a “demonstration of what technology will likely look like in 10 years.” Will we all be wearing personal interest tags, willing to “draw” a circle on our wrist to determine the time, and fulfilling our Tom Cruise-like fantasies from the film Minority Report? What do you think?

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Photo of the Day – Kindle

Amazon Kindle and a cup of coffee

Amazon Kindle and a cup of coffee on a tray table in the down and unlocked position (photo by Kenn Stearns)

About two years ago Amazon.com introduced the Kindle, an electronic-book reader that according to CEO Jeff Bezos has been purchased by “millions” of consumers. Barclays analyst Doug Anmuth predicts Amazon will sell more than three million Kindles this year.

Amazon offers best seller e-books on the Kindle for $9.99 to the “dismay of publishers” according to an article in today’s Wall Street Journal. Apparently to the glee of publishers, earlier this week Apple announced plans to gamble on a new tablet device (see Gadget Gamble) that takes them deeper in the electronic-reader space (Kindle for iPhone, yep there’s an app for that). Apple’s anti-consumer move with publishers Macmillan and now Hachette Book Group was to curiously advocate for higher e-book prices: $12.99 and $14.99. An electric tingle of excitement shot through the lethargic publishing industry – publishers can’t wait to force Amazon to raise their e-book prices.

Amazon stopped selling Macmillan both traditional and e-book titles last weekend while they wrestle with the publisher. If I were ever interested in reading Tatiana de Rosnay’s “Sarah’s Key” or  Andrew Young’s book about John Edwards, these and other Macmillan books won’t soon be in my Kindle queue. In a show of solidarity with Amazon I must also avoid any Hachette Book Group title (damn! I’ll miss Robyn Okrant’s “Living Oprah”).

Whether you love or hate Apple, one thing we can all agree on is their products and services always seem to come in at a higher price point. Thanks to Apple, my e-books will be more expensive. Here’s hoping book publishers become as relevant to books as music labels are to today’s performers. What if Madonna one day writes a book about dumping Warner Music in 2007 for a $120 million non-traditional deal with Live Nation? If she published directly with Amazon for another non-traditional deal, I’d buy that book for my Kindle.

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Gadget Gambling

Before and after iPad at www.apple.com

Apple.com before and after iPad

What has 3G wireless capability, weighs 1.5 pounds, is half an inch thick, and will let users buy books, music, and video from iTunes? No, it’s not an iPhone. The almost 10-inch touch-screen and top-end $800+ price tag come with the new iPad.

One day before the iPad release, a series of related patents showed up at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. These newly-granted patents include:

  • bandwidth detection – for multimedia conferencing applications
  • proximity – sensing and performing an action when an object is close
  • color management – a method for managing the color of certain “content elements” to render colors more accurately and to address how certain displays change over time
  • image delivery – a dynamic method to measure users’ network access speed to deliver pre-rendered content

Critics say the iPad announcement is a bit of a disappointment because the iPhone appeared to have more functionality. Analysts seem divided but generally interested – some expect iPad adoption to grow over time like the iPhone while others say the price point is right for Apple to generate a significant new revenue stream. These and other patents suggest Apple could spice up iPad and other product offerings in the near future. Bring it on Mr. Jobs.

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Photo of the Day – Godzillatron

Godzillatron at the Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium

Godzillatron at the Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium (photo by Kenn Stearns)

When the University of Texas at Austin decided to invest $160+ million in a new stadium it seemed only fitting the $8 million allocated for “audiovisual improvements” should include the largest high-definition video screen in the world. After all, this is Texas. Advertising on the screen at times fills more than 50% of the viewable area leading some to refer to it as “Adzillatron.” Non-stop audio from the device frequently drowns out the school’s popular band which was coincidentally repositioned to temporary bleachers directly below the display.

The “scoreboard” is 55-feet high by 134-feet wide totaling 7,370 square feet. With a pixel resolution of 2064 x 848, the screen delivers 4.4 trillion color capability. It weighs 52 tons and was assembled from 36 large pieces that were transported on flatbed trucks to Austin from the manufacturer Daktronics in South Dakota. The screen is no longer the largest in the world but remains among the loudest and can be “enjoyed” by virtually everyone in the stadium, except the band.

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How To Make a MacBook Look Old

BookBook is a one-of-a-kind, hardback leather case designed exclusively for MacBook and MacBook Pro.

BookBook is a one-of-a-kind, hardback leather case designed exclusively for MacBook and MacBook Pro

Apple’s award-winning designs are elegant and successful.  That’s why I was struck by the BookBook case for the MacBook and MacBook Pro. This “must-have” accessory is unique but I’m not so sure about the claim it will “enhance the Mac experience.” The vintage leather book design “protects you from being like everyone else.” It does sport a certain coolness factor – what if everything new could be old again?

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Photo of the Day – Nolan Bushnell

Nolan Bushnell

Nolan Bushnell (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Nolan Bushnell graduated from the the University of Utah College of Engineering with a degree in electrical engineering in 1968. In 1971, Bushnell and Ted Dabney formed up and developed a popular gaming technology. In 1972 they started Atari that introduced a driving game for Bally Manufacturing, Pong for Sears, and Breakout (with engineers Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs).

Named one of Newsweek’s “50 Men Who Changed America,” Bushnell has started more than 20 companies and is considered one of the founding fathers of the video game industry.

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The Known Universe

If you’ve wondered what it would be like to travel across the universe, check out this video from the American Museum of Natural History. Your trip begins in the Himalayan Mountains and zooms out father than you may imagine. A disclaimer up front assures viewers everything was painstakingly rendered to scale based on the best available 2009 scientific research. Fasten your seat belts and enjoy the ride.

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Power To The Google

I still get a chuckle out of Google’s Copernicus Center for a “planned lunar hosting and research center.” One of the ways G charms us all is by demonstrating its sense of humor.

When I visited the G campus in Mountain View a few years ago they discussed the inefficieny of PC power supplies and later announced plans to work with Intel on provding solutions. “Roughly 50 percent of the power delivered from a wall socket to a PC never actually performs any work,” according to Urs Hölzle, Google fellow and senior vice president of operations. But G said their own servers were 90 to 93 percent efficient. Back then G also said it was committed to becoming carbon neutral and ever since has been pursuing that goal by buying high quality renewable energy tax credits.

Google campus

Google campus in Mountain View, CA October 2007 (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Check out the Business Summary for Google Inc. and prepare to be illuminated by the litany of things this company provides, maintains, delivers, advocates, and offers. From Google Book Search and Google Goggles to Google Voice and their new cell phone Nexus One, it’s difficult to fathom this technology company is only a dozen years old.

While the latest G news seems China-centric, it’s interesting that Google Energy recently applied for approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to become an electricity marketer. What might Google be up to this time?

G’s non-profit Google.org is testing Google PowerMeter with  “a number of utilities and plan to expand our rollout later this year.” G’s philanthropic arm is also an advocate of clean energy, moving away from fossil fuels, and “re-investing our electric grid.”

Rich Miller at Data Center Knowledgesuggests G’s “…vast, power-hungry data center network could be the primary beneficiary” of the move to particpate in the energy markets. DCK also says G keeps a tight lip on details about their hosting facilities but a presentation late last year by a G engineer indicated the company was “preparing to manage as many as 10 million servers in the future.”

Also in the future maybe G will offer us phone services, cell phones with their own Android operating systems, computers with their own Chrome operating systems, zippy wireless access, and clean green energy to power our cars, homes and businesses with transportation to get there and back.  Is there a G in your future?

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Wireless Power and Video

At CES 2010 Haier is displaying an ingenious prototype TVthat utlizes WiTricity and the new wireless High Definition video standard (WHDI).  This is a LCD TV powered wirelessly from a distance and displaying content delivered wirelessly from a Haier prototype Blu-ray player.

Ultra-Slim LED HDTV

Haier's 22" LED HDTV

WHDI provides an uncompressed wireless link that supports delivery of 1080p, 1080i and 720p content in the 5GHz unlicensed band with a range beyond 100 feet, through walls, with latency at less than one millisecond.

WiTricity Corp. was founded in 2007 to commercialize a new technology for wireless electricity invented in 2005 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Initial venture capital funding came from Stata Ventures and Argonaut Private Equity.  Stata Ventures is a technology investment firm managed by Ray Stata, the founder, Chairman, and former CEO of Analog Devices. The technology transfers electric energy or power over distance without wires – the ability to provide electrical energy to remote objects without wires using oscillating magnetic fields.

There are a number of interesting implications for these technologies beyond the obvious convenience of being able to place a large TV virtually anywhere.

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