Saturday, July 19, 2014

iCloud in a box: Bitcasa CloudFS API gives devs — and users — control, privacy, ownership

GUEST POST

iCloud in a box: Bitcasa CloudFS API gives devs — and users — control, privacy, ownership

The Cloud Wars are in full force.


With total worldwide mobile traffic having reached more than 1.5 exabytes per month in 2013 and digital data expected to increase 10 fold by 2016, mobile app developers need to figure out a better storage solution. Simultaneously, the global cloud services market is expected to grow at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 17.6% from 2014 to 2020, reaching a market size of $555 billion in 2020.


Every developer and every device generates more data than storage, which is a major problem. Microsoft, Amazon and Apple are all engaged in a battle for the millions of consumers who are looking to keep their content stored safely and securely.


bitcasa cloud filesystemIn tandem with its presence at this year’s MobileBeat 2014, Google announced two terabytes of annual online storage to businesses for free. Not to be outdone, Bitcasa recently opened up its technology stack for developers who want to take advantage of the company’s CloudFS APIs. This will allow developers to benefit from Bitcasa’s secure, scalable file system without having to invest time and resources into building their own file system on a public cloud infrastructure.


I met up with Bitcasa’s Ranajit Nevatia, SVP, Marketing and Product Management at this year’s MobileBeat, who told me that more than 7,000 developers have already signed up to take advantage of its pre-built APIs.


Ranajit emphasized that the mantra for any developer should be: Don’t surrender your data or your customers to a third party; take ownership and have more control. That’s where the Bitcasa CloudFS API comes in – it lets you engineer a vendor agnostic, scalable architecture to store petabytes of data with ease. More importantly, developers don’t have to surrender their customers’ data to a third-party brand. They will get full ownership, thus getting more value out of their data. A number of features are included, such as “on the fly” media transcoding, file sharing, and management — all on public cloud storage.


CEO Brian Taptich recently described Bitcasa’s new developer platform as “iCloud in a box.”


Taptich also announced that Bitcasa customers’ data will be stored in the region of each user. This means customers in Europe, Asia, or South America can rest easier knowing their data is housed on their continent. As a public cloud file storage vendor, Bitcasa is the first major cloud file storage vendor to offer regional-based data storage. This also adds an extra lmobilebeatayer of security while enhancing performance, including reduced data latency.


Former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden’s disclosure of widespread data surveillance undertaken by the U.S. government has sparked intense conversations for customers based outside the country.


Because of Snowden’s recent revelations about NSA surveillance within its borders, Germany has asked the CIA station chief to leave the country. The paranoia in today’s digital download society would make anyone concerned that no amount of encryption can prevent even the U.S. government from identifying the location of your data.


Bitcasa seeks to allay those fears, however, by giving customers a choice in where to house their data. Such regional storage capabilities should certainly offer users and developers more peace of mind.


Bitcasa’s CloudFS platform sits on top of existing cloud infrastructure, providing added security

Above: Bitcasa’s CloudFS platform sits on top of existing cloud infrastructure, providing added security


When a user downloads Bitcasa’s software from any of the existing cloud infrastructure, the company will encrypt the user’s data before it leaves the end device, ultimately bypassing the need to do any syncing. Bitcasa is further whetting the appetite of developers by providing a “Turn–key Drive” that gives OEM’s and Telcos the functionality of Bitcasa’s consumer cloud service via their own brand, which will accelerate product time to market.


Bitcasa has come a long way since its launch back in 2011 when it was selected as a finalist at the TechCrunch Disrupt Conference. With more than 40 petabytes under management deployed across 140 countries and millions of devices connecting everyday, Bitcasa’s regionalized storage should make the sending and retrieving of information from the cloud a speedier experience. Addressing the concerns surrounding NSA surveillance surely makes for a good starting point at differentiating itself in the competitive Cloud hosting space.


With many consumers today storing more of their digital life experiences in the Cloud, Ranajit said Bitcasa wants to do things differently than its competitors. The biggest priority remains providing unparalleled privacy with private key encryption, support for large files, unlimited amounts of storage, and regionalized storage and access across all devices from Android, iOS, Windows, and Windows RT to Mac OS X, Linux and the Web.


Guest post by Byron Gordon


Byron is a content marketing specialist, blogger, and consultant to businesses looking to expand their visibility via the social web and increase their levels of engagement and sales. His personal blog focuses on the topics of content and social media marketing, including cats. You can find him on Twitter @ByronG.


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  





Bitcasa is the creator of infinite and secure storage across all devices. The company provides infinite storage, anywhere streaming access, instant sharing and automatic backup with built-in client-side encryption to ensure privacy. Bi... read more »



iCloud in a box: Bitcasa CloudFS API gives devs — and users — control, privacy, ownership

Baidu brings its search engine to Brazil

Baidu brings its search engine to Brazil
Image Credit: bfishadow/Flickr

Baidu has turned on its search engine in another country outside its homeland of China.


Brazil’s flavor of the Baidu search engine went live this morning, giving it a presence in one of the growing BRICS countries and helping it stand out more against competitors like Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft’s Bing. The Baidu search engine has also popped up in Egypt, Japan, and Thailand.


The Brazil rollout comes a couple years after Baidu opened up shop in Brazil. Next up, we can imagine an operational Baidu search engine in the United States, the home of the top search engines in the world.


After all, Baidu co-founder and chief executive Robin Li harbors ambitions of making the company a brand name in half of all countries in the world, according to a 2011 report in PCWorld.


Baidu opened a lab in Silicon Valley two months ago. Artificial intelligence smarts for a U.S. version of the Baidu search engine could certainly be possible, given that Baidu hired Andrew Ng, founder of Google’s deep-learning project and director of Stanford’s artificial intelligence lab (and a co-founder of massively open online course provider Coursera). And the Baidu lab is hiring.


Publicly traded Baidu’s capability spans far beyond web search. The company offers Chinese-language news, mapping, music, video, and picture-searching services.


As of late 2012, Baidu was second only to Google in the global search engine market, according to comScore data.


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  





Baidu was founded in 2000 by Internet pioneer Robin Li, creator of visionary search technology Hyperlink Analysis, with the mission of providing the best way for people to find what they’re looking for online. Over the past decade we... read more »



Baidu brings its search engine to Brazil

The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet?

Ah, these mystery1riddles2never stop3, do they? To celebrate the launch of the SmashingConf Whistler4, our very first conference in Canada, we’ve prepared a yet another riddle, and of course this time it’s not going to be any easier!


So, how does it work this time? Well, below you’ll find the first of a few hidden animated GIFs that contain a secret Twitter hashtag. Your job is to deconstruct that hashtag as fast as possible. To do that, you have to pay attention to the file name and count objects within the GIF (for example, “3 chairs”) and search for them on Twitter (i.e. #3chairs).


If your guess is right, you’ll find a tweet leading you to the next level. Once you’ve reached the last level (oh, you’ll know when), just tweet out all the hints in one single hashtag to @smashingmag5 on Twitter! Not that difficult, right?


Alright, let’s get to business. Are you ready? Action! (And good luck!)


Smashing Book Mystery6
Tip: Watch out for a hint in one of the frames in each of the GIFs. Large view.7


So, What Can You Win?


We’ll raffle a quite extraordinary, smashing prize (and a couple of other Smashing extras, see below) to the first couple of readers who tweet out the correct hidden hashtags to us!


  • a roundtrip flight to Whistler, Canada,

  • full accommodation in a fancy hotel,

  • a ticket to the Smashing Conference Whistler 20148,

  • any Smashing workshop ticket of your choice,

  • full access to the Smashing eBook Library,

  • a signed edition of the Smashing Book #49,

  • a truly Smashing laptop bag,

  • your very own Smashing caricature, designed just for you.

Please notice that to avoid spoilers, comments are closed for this post. And sorry, we aren’t going to make it too easy for you. The winners will be announced on Saturday, July 19th.


Alright! Let’s get to work. Or have you already figured it out? ;-)



The post The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet? appeared first on Smashing Magazine.



The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet?

Google Showing Far Less Video Snippets in Search Results

If you use rich snippets to markup your videos, you may want to double check that Google is still showing them. Reports indicate a huge reduction – with estimates as high as 44 percent – in the number of video snippets from Google's search results.
Google Showing Far Less Video Snippets in Search Results

What We Learned This Week

This week we learned why Neil Armstrong was given one of the greatest honors in human history, how we marry the wrong people and why iced coffee is so crazy expensive.
What We Learned This Week

Facebook Executives, Directors Exercise Restricted Stock Units, Sell Off Shares

Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Product Officer Chris Cox, Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer, Vice President and General Counsel Colin Stretch, Chief Accounting Officer Jas Athwal, and Directors Reed Hastings and Erskine Bowles exercised restricted stock units and sold off shares to cover their tax withholding obligations, they reported in Form 4 filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday.


(more…)


New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.




Facebook Executives, Directors Exercise Restricted Stock Units, Sell Off Shares

Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review

Mobile Marketing The Week in Review2 Mobile Marketing: The Week in ReviewIn case you missed it, here are some of the top stories in mobile marketing and advertising we’ve been following this week.


Looking for a practical and knowledgeable guide to creating effective and successful mobile video ads? The team at Tremor Video — an advertising technology company — and the Mobile Marketing Association are here to help.


The bottom line of marketing has always been simply this; what’s the return on investment or ROI? Before the digital age it was much easier to figure this out but, even with the amazing amount of digital technology we have today, determining the ROI of any digital marketing campaign is still difficult at best.


comScore has released the latest data from comScore MobiLens and Mobile Metrix, which serve up a host of stats for the U.S. smartphone industry as of May 2014. Most impressively, 169 million people in the U.S. owned smartphones (70 percent mobile market penetration) during the three months ending in May, up 4 percent since February.


When Jessica Shyba posted a photograph of her infant son napping with his puppy, she became an instant online success, her photo and the blog she posted it on going “viral.” She had become an online “influencer,” and brands sat up to take notice.


It’s been exactly 2 years since ThriveHive successfully closed a seed round of $1.5 million and now, two years later, the company claims that their “everything in a box solution” to small business marketing needs is ready to be rolled out.


Want to get the latest MMW news and insight delivered straight to you inbox every morning? Click here to sign up for our free newsletter.


37b97aafe3aee5bffdcf85f98539a0fa Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review


Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review

What We Learned This Week

This week we learned why Neil Armstrong was given one of the greatest honors in human history, how we marry the wrong people and why iced coffee is so crazy expensive.
What We Learned This Week

Space Invaders Movie? Pew-Pew-Pew!

Space
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The biggest leap ever made between a narratively barren brand and a successful Hollywood film has got to be The Lego Movie, which Warner Bros. somehow fashioned into a raucously fun time at the cineplex for all ages and sensibilities. Even Universal's megaflop Battleship had more "story" for its filmmakers to work with.


Now the studio that made colorful plastic bricks into a $467 million worldwide box office smash is hoping to do it again with Space Invaders, the classic video game that was just a couple of pixels better than Pong.


SEE ALSO: 'Lego Movie' Bloopers Prove Even Mistakes Are Awesome Read more...

More about Movies, Video Games, Space Invaders, Entertainment, and Film


Space Invaders Movie? Pew-Pew-Pew!

'Star Wars' Minecraft Movie Combines Geek Dreams

Minecraftstarwars
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If you thought Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope was low-res before, just wait until you see this version.


A Star Wars fan is recreating the classic movie entirely out of stills from Minecraft. The painstaking process has already been three years in the making, and some of the individual scenes took six months to build.



No word on an official release date, but 90 minutes of the film has been created. It will be free to view when it is finally released.



Read more...

More about Video, Movie, Viral Video, Star Wars, and Minecraft
'Star Wars' Minecraft Movie Combines Geek Dreams

A Big, Bold Prediction for Marvel's 'Expanding' Cinematic Universe Plans

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Oh, what a Comic-Con this is going to be for Marvel fans. Marvel Studios dropped the news Friday afternoon that they've secured five new dates for upcoming films through 2019, and if there's one thing we know about Marvel, it's that they always have grand, detailed plans that constantly run five years in advance.


It also means that — and this is if you add the known films and previous dates to these new ones — there are now 11 (eleven!) new Marvel movies on the horizon between now and five years from now, including an unprecedented three films in 2017. Yet somehow, it's not enough to squeeze in everything. Read more...

More about Movies, Marvel, Comic Con, Entertainment, and Film
A Big, Bold Prediction for Marvel's 'Expanding' Cinematic Universe Plans

TalkAndroid Daily Dose for July 18, 2014

TalkAndroid_Daily_Dose


With hectic schedules, it can be hard to keep track of everything in your news feed. That’s why we created the TalkAndroid Daily Dose. This is where we recap the day’s hottest stories so you can get yourself up to speed in quick fashion. Happy reading!!


Reviews


LG G Watch and Android Wear review: The smartwatch revolution has begun


Apps


Amazon announces Kindle Unlimited subscription service


Facebook testing new Buy Button for purchases within the social platform



Gaming


NVIDIA will announce the Shield Tablet on July 22nd alongside a wireless controller


Phones


Battery cover image leaks for unknown Motorola device


[Deal] Motorola offering up to $125 off Moto X — deal expires next week


Leaked list of Samsung Galaxy Note 4 APK files suggest new features on the way


Smartwatches


HTC to enter the smartwatch game, according to new leaked photo


Tablets


NVIDIA will announce the Shield Tablet on July 22nd alongside a wireless controller


 



Come comment on this article: TalkAndroid Daily Dose for July 18, 2014



TalkAndroid Daily Dose for July 18, 2014

Five SEO Tips for Global Marketers

If you want to boost your website traffic overseas, you need a localized strategy for each market. Here are five SEO tips to keep in mind during that localization process. Read the full article at MarketingProfs
Five SEO Tips for Global Marketers

4 Ways to Prepare for the Future of the Inbox

With all the changes coming to the email channel, it's easy to lose sight of what you need to focus on to both optimize what you're doing today and strategically plan for continued optimization tomorrow.




4 Ways to Prepare for the Future of the Inbox

Content Marketing

* If you are unable to request your attendance here due to overwhelming response, kindly email to apac@econsultancy.com.


 


Content Marketing


Note: This event is exclusive to senior client-side marketers.


The Content Marketing Roundtable is your chance to share knowledge, experience and best practice on the issues, trends and developments around Content Marketing.


Attendance is limited to 14 - 20 attendees, with discussion chaired and facilitated by Econsultancy to ensure all participants get the most from the session. 


Agenda


The agenda for the day is very much driven by those attending - your priority areas and pain points. Potential topics for discussion on Content Marketing to be added shortly.


Content Marketing

ECRM

ECRM


Note: This event is exclusive to Econsultancy Enterprise subscribers.


The ECRM Roundtable is your chance to share knowledge, experience and best practice on the issues, trends and developments around ECRM.


Attendance is limited to 12 - 18 attendees, with discussion chaired and facilitated by Econsultancy to ensure all participants get the most from the session. 


Agenda


The agenda for the day is very much driven by those attending - your prority areas and pain points. Potential topics for discussion on ECRM to be added shortly.


ECRM

Marketing Attribution

Marketing Attribution Roundtable


The Marketing Attribution Roundtable is your chance to share knowledge, experience and best practice on the issues, trends and developments around this topic. 


Attendance is limited to 12 - 18 attendees, with discussion chaired and facilitated by Econsultancy to ensure all participants get the most from the session. 


Agenda


The agenda for the day is very much driven by those attending - your priority areas and pain points.



Marketing Attribution

Speaktoit raises $2.6M to build an army of ‘personal assistants’

Speaktoit raises $2.6M to build an army of ‘personal assistants’
Image Credit: Devindra Hardawar/VentureBeat

Speaktoit, a Palo Alto, Calif.-based developer of human-computer interaction technologies, announced today that it has raised $2.6 million in Series B funding.


The company develops what it calls an “intelligent companion,” which acts like Apple’s Siri, executing actions based on voice commands. Think of it as having a personal assistant who is accessible on more than just your phone or tablet.


The Speaktoit assistant starts to remember your favorite places and preferences over time. However, unlike Siri, it has a caricature that greets you, putting a face to a voice. It also works cross-platform, meaning you can access your assistant on your mobile device or computer without needing to switch gadgets.


Speaktoit will be using its funds to grow its engineering team and work with automotive, smart home, smart TV, wearable technology and robotics companies to expand the use of its technology. In the near future, you could use Speaktoit technology to give commands to your smartwatch or smart TV.


“As the Internet of things helps people reimagine what’s possible with the objects around us, we’re continuing to expand how users interact with their connected devices and gadgets,” said Speaktoit CEO Ilya Gelfenbeyn. “Our investors share our vision of the connected future, and we’re excited to work with them to ensure natural language understanding becomes a seamless, instinctive, and helpful part of our daily lives.”


Motorola Solutions Venture Capital, Intel Capital, Alpine Technology Fund, and Plug and Play Ventures all participated in the funding.


The Speaktoit app has more than 12 million users, and it is available in nine different languages. It can be used on Android, iOS, Windows, and Google Chrome.


As Speaktoit technology makes its way onto more devices, the age of the virtual personal assistant may begin to rise.


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  



Speaktoit raises $2.6M to build an army of ‘personal assistants’

Unbabel scores $1.5M to add a human touch to machine-powered translation

Unbabel scores $1.5M to add a human touch to machine-powered translation
Image Credit: swishphotos/Flickr

Computers may have solved number-crunching and turning data into digestible information, but what about the translation of human languages?


A company called Unbabel is tackling that with its combination of artificial intelligence and human crowdsourced translation, and it has just announced a raise of $1.5 million in seed funding.


Because human languages are very complex and nuanced, Unbabel first uses computers to translate a customer’s inquiry, then it splits into micro-tasks for its human translators to refine and check for errors. Unbabel then puts the text together and sends it back. Customers can send and receive their text through email, online, or through Unbabel’s API.


While the use cases are unlimited, Unbabel sees its service as a great way for companies to handle social media content, customer communication through email, and customer support forums and comments.


Unbabel is the future of translation. This incredible team has created a service which represents the shift that’s happening cross-industry using technology to empower independent workers and connect them with the businesses that can benefit from their skill sets,” said Matrix Partners general partner Jared Fliesler in a statement. Matrix Partners participated in this round.


“As we continue to see a surge in highly efficient vertical labor marketplaces, eliminating the middleman, the implications are enormous for both the global workforce and the future of innovation,” he continued.


Unbabel is not alone in working to provide efficient and accurate translation by adding a human component. For example, Smartlings, another translation company that uses human translators, recently raised $25 million. Smartling handles the translation flow for its customers by outsourcing it to more than 200 translation agencies in the world.


Currently, Unbabel’s service is available for translation from English, French, Spanish, German, and Portuguese to 15 languages including the above languages. It charges only $0.02 per word and says its editors earn on average $8 per hour.


Unbabel raised this round from Matrix Partners, Google Ventures, Elad Gil, FundersClub, IDG Partners, and many others. The company plans to use the funds to grow its engineering and marketing teams in order to improve its computer-based translation technology and acquire more customers.


Unbabel was founded in 2013 by Vasco Calais Pedro, and is headquarted in Mountain View, Calif., with offices in Lisbon, Portugal. The company was part of accelerator program Y Combinator’s Winter 2014 batch.




Matrix Partners is a US based private equity investment firm focusing on venture capital investments. The firm invests in seed and early stage companies in the United States and India, particularly in the software, communications, semi... read more »



Google Ventures is the venture capital investment arm of Google Inc. that makes financially driven investments in technology companies. Google Ventures seeks to invest in start-up companies in a variety of fields ranging from Internet,... read more »



Unbabel’s mission is to enable seamless, trustworthy written communication in different languages. The Unbabel platform combines a novel approach to machine translation with a community of bilinguals and freelance translators which r... read more »



Unbabel scores $1.5M to add a human touch to machine-powered translation

Here’s how the future of travel looks, powered by mobile & beacons

GUEST POST

Here’s how the future of travel looks, powered by mobile & beacons
Image Credit: Shutterstock

Beacons have the potential to completely automate our lives. These tiny transmitters will seamlessly give companies information about us that help them provide better service; puppeteer real-time opportunities for us to save or enjoy; and simplify the exchange of funds. They will remove many of the arduous steps we go through to get something done today. Steps which are so engrained into our psyches that we don’t yet even realize how much they are interrupting our lives. Traveling in particular is full of millions of annoyances that beacons, sensors, and other advances in mobile tech will soon help to squash. Just imagine a 36-hour business trip:


Extremely frustrated by how slow people drive when it starts to sprinkle (it’s not even raining very hard) you pull into the airport parking lot an hour after you planned to, just as the gate is about to close. You get an alert on your phone from the airline acknowledging that you’ve arrived (at least they know you’re there), which is followed up with details on the next available flight. You confirm the suggested rebooking and instantly get your mobile-ticket. As you start walking toward the terminal, a message from the parking lot has mapped out your exact parking space so you can avoid the almost guaranteed aimless search when you return.


You approach security and an Transportation Security Administration official glances down at her iPad and acknowledges your hard-earned status to skip the “normal” line, no questions asked. You have time to kill before your rescheduled flight and a welcome message from a sports bar inviting you in for half-priced beer. A reminder from the airline tells you that priority boarding is starting soon, waking you from a state of serious game watching you’ve fallen into. You make the universal “ready for my check” gesture at the waitress and a few seconds later, you get the bill on your phone. After confirming the discount has already been applied, you add a tip, confirm your credit card and payment, and walk out.


While en route to the gate you get a message from the newsstand reminding you that you should pick-up a pair of headphones in response to your distressed tweet about leaving them at home this morning. You enter the store; get directed to the exact location on the shelf where the headphones live (between the peanuts and weekly magazines), scan the barcode via an app, select your payment method, and once again leave at your own pace. No lines.


You can’t help but notice the crowd of impatient travelers that have gathered around your gate – waiting like irritated sheep for their boarding zone to be called. The headphone-buying detour made you miss your announcement, but a push alert tells you that you are welcome to board. Once in your seat, the flight attendant, having access to travelers’ profile information and preferences, brings you your preferred beverage – unprompted.


You touch down at 10 p.m. As you pass through the main terminal, your favorite car service welcomes you to the city and asks if you want a driver to take you to the hotel saved in your trip management app (note: you did not have to think about reserving a car in advance). You approve, accept the charge, and head directly to the exact door where the driver is waiting for you.


You finally arrive at your hotel exhausted and hungry. Upon walking through the door you receive a message that you are automatically checked in and can head straight to your room (your smartphone is your key). Recognizing that you were in flight during dinner, the hotel automatically pushes the in-room dining menu to your phone as you wait for the elevator. You make your selection on the ride up and have ordered before you even reach your door.


After you finish your meetings the following afternoon and head back to the hotel, you get a special discount to hit the on-premises golf-course before dinner. Too good to pass up, you confirm your spontaneous tee-time with one tap. Following your solo game, you head to your room to shower before your business dinner and remember that you don’t have any post-meal plans. You check the recommendations the hotel has sent you based on your interests. A jazz trio playing at a wine bar down the street? Sold. You reserve your ticket with one swipe and pick it up at the concierge on your way out.


The next morning you wake up, verify the details of your ride, and head to the airport. And it all begins again.


The travel industry should (and is starting to) take step towards providing messages or experiences that surprise and delight consumers while being proactive in meeting anticipated needs. While more advanced actions like preemptive rebooking are more than a year away, travel players are starting to experiment with the technology.


Low-cost airline easyJet is currently testing beacon functionality at its three busiest European airports. It has placed devices around the airport to push messages at “critical points in the airport journey.” Similarly, The James Hotels earlier this summer began using beacons to provide a “concierge-like experience” to guests, providing perks and offers tailored to specific locations.


The beacons and other sensors that will be hidden on hotel doorways, elevators, airport gates, security lines, parking lots, restaurants, and shops will trigger messages and offers, solve problems, disseminate critical information, and streamline the entire process. Every aspect of the traveler’s journey will benefit from automating procedures, personalizing every experience and predicting issues – and beacons and mobile are set to fuel this change.


Puneet Mehta is cofounder and CEO of MobileROI.


 


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  





MobileROI is the only situation- and context-aware mobile marketing automation platform that helps brands build stronger relationships, deepen loyalty and grow revenue on mobile.

MobileROI’s Mobile Marketing Cloud enables Fortune... read more »



Here’s how the future of travel looks, powered by mobile & beacons

The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet?

Ah, these mystery1riddles2never stop3, do they? To celebrate the launch of the SmashingConf Whistler4, our very first conference in Canada, we’ve prepared a yet another riddle, and of course this time it’s not going to be any easier!


So, how does it work this time? Well, below you’ll find the first of a few hidden animated GIFs that contain a secret Twitter hashtag. Your job is to deconstruct that hashtag as fast as possible. To do that, you have to pay attention to the file name and count objects within the GIF (for example, “3 chairs”) and search for them on Twitter (i.e. #3chairs).


If your guess is right, you’ll find a tweet leading you to the next level. Once you’ve reached the last level (oh, you’ll know when), just tweet out all the hints in one single hashtag to @smashingmag5 on Twitter! Not that difficult, right?


Alright, let’s get to business. Are you ready? Action! (And good luck!)


Smashing Book Mystery6
Tip: Watch out for a hint in one of the frames in each of the GIFs. Large view.7


So, What Can You Win?


We’ll raffle a quite extraordinary, smashing prize (and a couple of other Smashing extras, see below) to the first couple of readers who tweet out the correct hidden hashtags to us!


  • a roundtrip flight to Whistler, Canada,

  • full accommodation in a fancy hotel,

  • a ticket to the Smashing Conference Whistler 20148,

  • any Smashing workshop ticket of your choice,

  • full access to the Smashing eBook Library,

  • a signed edition of the Smashing Book #49,

  • a truly Smashing laptop bag,

  • your very own Smashing caricature, designed just for you.

Please notice that to avoid spoilers, comments are closed for this post. And sorry, we aren’t going to make it too easy for you. The winners will be announced on Saturday, July 19th.


Alright! Let’s get to work. Or have you already figured it out? ;-)



The post The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet? appeared first on Smashing Magazine.



The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet?

Facebook Executives, Directors Exercise Restricted Stock Units, Sell Off Shares

Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Product Officer Chris Cox, Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer, Vice President and General Counsel Colin Stretch, Chief Accounting Officer Jas Athwal, and Directors Reed Hastings and Erskine Bowles exercised restricted stock units and sold off shares to cover their tax withholding obligations, they reported in Form 4 filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday.


(more…)


New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.




Facebook Executives, Directors Exercise Restricted Stock Units, Sell Off Shares

What We Learned This Week

This week we learned why Neil Armstrong was given one of the greatest honors in human history, how we marry the wrong people and why iced coffee is so crazy expensive.
What We Learned This Week

In The World's Interconnected Airspace, Flights Over Conflict Zones Are Common

Conflicts that seem remote in the daily news are much less so on a map of global flight paths. Parts of the world that feel disconnected from us — by politics, by war, by sheer distance — are much harder to isolate from the intricate web of the world's logistics.
In The World's Interconnected Airspace, Flights Over Conflict Zones Are Common

Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review

Mobile Marketing The Week in Review2 Mobile Marketing: The Week in ReviewIn case you missed it, here are some of the top stories in mobile marketing and advertising we’ve been following this week.


Looking for a practical and knowledgeable guide to creating effective and successful mobile video ads? The team at Tremor Video — an advertising technology company — and the Mobile Marketing Association are here to help.


The bottom line of marketing has always been simply this; what’s the return on investment or ROI? Before the digital age it was much easier to figure this out but, even with the amazing amount of digital technology we have today, determining the ROI of any digital marketing campaign is still difficult at best.


comScore has released the latest data from comScore MobiLens and Mobile Metrix, which serve up a host of stats for the U.S. smartphone industry as of May 2014. Most impressively, 169 million people in the U.S. owned smartphones (70 percent mobile market penetration) during the three months ending in May, up 4 percent since February.


When Jessica Shyba posted a photograph of her infant son napping with his puppy, she became an instant online success, her photo and the blog she posted it on going “viral.” She had become an online “influencer,” and brands sat up to take notice.


It’s been exactly 2 years since ThriveHive successfully closed a seed round of $1.5 million and now, two years later, the company claims that their “everything in a box solution” to small business marketing needs is ready to be rolled out.


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Mobile Marketing: The Week in Review