From a PR email: "We?d love to see a post of it on your site for feature and/or preview. The show could best be described as ?The Darwin Awards meets Faces of Death,? telling the true stories of actual deaths and recreating them through awesome comic-book style graphics, acting, CGI, and colorful narration....If you do feature the show, can you please send us a link?"
It's online ad forecasting season, and we really would like Jupiter clients input. The survey on our site is too small to be useful -- so I'm not posting any results except to say it looks mighty bullish to me (a plurality says 25% growth or better), and the results otherwise are all over the map. So come on, Jupiter clients, let your voice be heard.
YouTube's announcement of rudimentary buzz-targeting -- that is, placing its ad overlays on videos as they become popular -- strikes me as at least the most important tech news that broke yesterday. I mean, c'mon, Carl Icahn? Craigslist lawsuits? Yet, most of the tech blogs, and all of MSM have nothing on it as of this morning.
Cnet re-wrote the press release early
Alleyinsider ...
I like this post by Microsoft's Mesh team, too. It makes a great case for "fat client" personalized UI engines that manipulate data that is temporarily stored locally. It seems that locating that data in the cloud would solve a lot of the sync problems created by multiple local data stores. Yes, in some ways, syncing is a problem, not a solution.