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  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 04/05/2012 0 Comments

    Your World, Augmented

    The promise of incorporating augmented reality into more than just our phones is becoming realized. Well, at least it now takes less imagination to imagine how such technology could manifest--thanks to Google. 

    Project Glass aims to integrate all of the computing convenience of your smartphone (and more...yikes!) into your existing visual field. The meeting industry implications are so blatant I'm getting ill...start with trade shows and how info could be personalized so there's no more visual "noise," no trade floor spam, you are only ever aware of the relevant. Yeah...that's a nice start.

    It's still creepy to think that some over-arching net will be so visibly transmitting and storing all of this information. But can't go hiding from it now...

    In an effort to pre-emptively embrace our android overlords, you may want to attend the Augmented Reality Event, May 8-9, at the Santa Clara Convention Center.




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 03/09/2012 0 Comments

    Google Maps - Indoors

    This is Mancini's Char House in St. Paul, Minnesota. The restaurant has a pretty good steak (I'm told) and can be rented out for private events. How can you get eyes on the venue in a digital presentation that you're already familiar working with? Google Maps Indoors.

    The Indoors inclusion in Maps is a couple of months on now but getting increased notice by the masses mostly with restaurants.

    Now if only Google can add a traffic layer to real-time indoor trade show movement!




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 11/29/2011 1 Comments

    Google Maps Indoors

    Every day it's looking more and more like you won't need to carry a paper guide with you at a conference. You can already get session descriptions and speaker bios via event apps, and now Google is bringing their excellent map-making skills indoors. It's only a matter of time before it's available at conference centers around the world. Everywhere, trees are rejoicing. 




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 11/28/2011 0 Comments

    Circle Us! One+ on Google+

    I know it's Cyber Monday, and you're all scanning for the best deals found on the Web. Pardon me, then, if I disturb you for one brief moment to let you know that One+ is on Google+. It's like a match made in heaven, those two pluses holding hands. 

    Anyway, please add us to your circles when you get a chance today (or tomorrow or the next day...). Your Cyber Monday deals will be there when you get back. Thank you.  




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 08/30/2011 1 Comments

    Google <3 Face2Face

    Google knows the value of face-to-face meetings.

    Vint Cerf, Google's vice president and chief Internet evangelist, was asked how technology is changing travel and what to cite a positive change on the subject:

    The biggest upside is face to face meetings that are often far more effective than teleconferencing, videoconferencing or email. Of course, there is also the thrill of discovering a new city or a new restaurant and chef!!



  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 07/15/2011 1 Comments

    How the Internet Affects Memory

    Here we go again with another story about how the Internet is ruining us. This time, though, instead of making us more stupid, it's messing with our memories. 

    “Since the advent of search engines, we are reorganizing the way we remember things,” said Columbia University psychologist Betsy Sparrow. “Our brains rely on the Internet for memory in much the same way they rely on the memory of a friend, family member or co-worker. We remember less through knowing information itself than by knowing where the information can be found.”

    Sparrow’s research reveals that we forget things we are confident we can find on the Internet. We are more likely to remember things we think are not available online. (Hmm, that sounds familiar.) And we are better able to remember where to find something on the Internet than we are at remembering the information itself. This is believed to be the first research of its kind into the impact of search engines on human memory organization.

    Sparrow’s paper in Science is titled, “Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips.” With colleagues Jenny Liu of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Daniel M. Wegner of Harvard University, Sparrow explains that the Internet has become a primary form of what psychologists call transactive memory—recollections that are external to us but that we know when and how to access.

    The research was carried out in four studies.

    First, participants were asked to answer a series of difficult trivia questions. Then they were immediately tested to see if they had increased difficulty with a basic color naming task, which showed participants words in either blue or red. Their reaction time to search engine-related words, such as Google and Yahoo, indicated that, after the difficult trivia questions, participants were thinking of Internet search engines as the way to find information.

    Second, the trivia questions were turned into statements. Participants read the statements and were tested for their recall of them when they believed the statements had been saved—meaning accessible to them later as is the case with the Internet—or erased. Participants did not learn the information as well when they believed the information would be accessible, and performed worse on the memory test than participants who believed the information was erased.

    Third, the same trivia statements were used to test memory of the information itself and where the information could be found. Participants again believed that information either would be saved in general, saved in a specific spot or erased. They recognized the statements that were erased more than the two categories that were saved.

    Fourth, participants believed all trivia statements that they typed would be saved into one of five generic folders. When asked to recall the folder names, they did so at greater rates than they recalled the trivia statements themselves. A deeper analysis revealed that people do not necessarily remember where to find certain information when they remember what it was, and that they particularly tend to remember where to find information when they can’t remember the information itself.

    According to Sparrow, a greater understanding of how our memory works in a world with search engines has the potential to change teaching and learning in all fields.

    “Perhaps those who teach in any context, be they college professors, doctors or business leaders, will become increasingly focused on imparting greater understanding of ideas and ways of thinking, and less focused on memorization,” Sparrow said. “And perhaps those who learn will become less occupied with facts and more engaged in larger questions of understanding.”

    (Story materials provided by Columbia University.)




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 07/06/2011 1 Comments

    Google Plus: For Businesses

    Another new project from Google, trying to leverage the social media-sphere. By the numbers, I presume you, dear readers, haven't had the chance to explore Google+, indeed, many people who received invitations to the beta launch couldn't even sign up because the demand was so significant.

    Despite that, ReadWriteBiz shares some valuable insight into how businesses can start getting involved with Google Plus (or fail that, get started thinking about integrating your brand with this new offering).

    In their push to bolster usage and interest in Google+, the tech giant is even retiring some much-loved brands, such as Blogger and Picasa, by integrating them into the Google+ beast...which hopes to take on Facebook.




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 06/22/2011 0 Comments

    Payment via Smartphone

    When Google announced its first smartphone enabled with near-field communication (NFC), late last year, it felt to me like they were jumping the gun a bit. NFC was in its infancy in the U.S., after all. But a lot of activity (and funding) has since been thrust into developing the market, infrastructure and possibilities of using your smartphone like a credit or debit card--a convenient mobile payment system.

    Now, Austin, Texas, and Salt Lake City, Utah, have been named as the first testing grounds for Isis, a joint NFC project from AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon in partnership with local businesses. Isis will take flight early next year and, as long as the hardware is widespread (there are already several NFC-enabled Android smartphones and depending on the news story, the iPhone 5 may or may not have NFC--this seems to change ever week), NFC will be an outstanding technology for meetings and events.

    The following video shows the variety of current possibilities for NFC...at a special event, no less.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 05/30/2011 0 Comments

    Google Adds Flight Info in Searches

    Google has now added flight information to its search results. 

    "If you have a particular destination in mind, you can now quickly find out which airlines serve that specific route and when they fly," wrote Petter Wedum on Inside Search. "For example, if you search for flights from San Francisco to Minneapolis, you’ll see a selection of non-stop flights and the airlines that offer them. To see a full timetable, click on 'Schedule of non-stop flights.'"

    Wedum says that searchers can also see all the destinations with non-stop flights from a particular airport. 

    "If you’re in Buffalo, New York, and need ideas for a weekend getaway, search for 'flights from Buffalo' to see popular travel destinations from Buffalo," he wrote. "By clicking 'Show all non-stop routes,' you can get the full list of destinations, and from there, you can click to get more flight details."

    The feature currently only works for non-stop flights. I'm sure, though, that Google will waste no time to include connecting flight information in the future. 




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 04/28/2011 0 Comments

    The Mobile Movement

    There's no doubt that mobile technology is changing lives and markets. In fact, a new survey says that 74 percent of smartphone users make a purchase because of their smartphones.

    “The Mobile Movement: Understanding Smartphone Users"—a study from Google and conducted by Ipsos OTX, an independent market research firm—shows that 71 percent of smartphone users search because of an ad they've seen either online or offline; 82 percent of smartphone users notice mobile ads and 88 percent of those who look for local information on their smartphones take action within a day. The study featured 5,013 U.S. adult smartphone Internet users.

    Let's take a look at the key findings:

    General Smartphone Usage: Smartphones have become an integral part of users’ daily lives. Consumers use smartphones as an extension of their desktop computers and use it as they multitask and consume other media.

    • 81 percent browse the Internet, 77 percent search, 68 percent use an app and 48 percent watch videos on their smartphone
    • 72 percent use their smartphones while consuming other media, with a third while watching TV
    • 93 percent of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home 


    Action-Oriented Searchers: Mobile search is heavily used to find a wide variety of information and to navigate the mobile Internet. 

    • Search engine websites are the most visited websites with 77 percent of smartphone users citing this, followed by social networking, retail and video sharing websites 
    • Nine out of 10 smartphone searches results in an action (purchasing, visiting a business, etc.)
    • 24 percent recommended a brand or product to others as a result of a smartphone search


    Local Information Seekers: Looking for local information is done by virtually all smartphone users and consumers are ready to act on the information they find. 

    • 95 percent of smartphone users have looked for local information
    • 88 percent of these users take action within a day, indicating these are immediate information needs
    • 77 percent have contacted a business, with 61 percent calling and 59 percent visiting the local business


    Purchase-driven Shoppers: Smartphones have become an indispensable shopping tool and are used across channels and throughout the research and decision-making process. 

    • 79 percent of smartphone consumers use their phones to help with shopping, from comparing prices, finding more product info to locating a retailer
    • 74 percent of smartphone shoppers make a purchase, whether online, in-store or on their phones
    • 70 percent use their smartphones while in the store, reflecting varied purchase paths that often begin online or on their phones and brings consumers to the store


    Reaching Mobile Consumers: Cross-media exposure influences smartphone user behavior and a majority notice mobile ads which leads to taking action on it.

    • 71 percent search on their phones because of an ad exposure, whether from traditional media (68 percent) to online ads (18 percent) to mobile ads (27 percent)
    • 82 percent notice mobile ads, especially mobile display ads, and a third notice mobile search ads
    • Half of those who see a mobile ad take action, with 35 percent visiting a website and 49 percent making a purchase

    That's a lot of numbers and info to take in. Bottom line, though, is this: If you don't have a presence on mobile technology, you may as well be dead to the world. 




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