We caught up with Daniel Rublin to talk about the ZutaLabs’ Zuta Pocket Printer, a Roomba for printing, and how portable printers linked with mobile phones can revolutionize the way we print.
Tag: print
The Trigger SXSW: Daniel Rubin, ZutaLabs
We caught up with Daniel Rublin to talk about the ZutaLabs’ Zuta Pocket Printer, a Roomba for printing, and how portable printers linked with mobile phones can revolutionize the way we print.
Barnes and Noble to Close 1/3 of Stores
Recognizing competition from digital competitors Amazon and Apple, bookseller Barnes & Noble has announced it will close 1/3 of its stores at a rate of 20 stores a year for the next decade. This hardly comes as a surprise as tablets and e-readers like the Apple iPad and Amazon’s Kindle Fire become increasingly ubiquitous, and digital continues to encroach on print markets. The strategy is expected to increase demand for Barnes & Noble’s Nook e-readers, which saw shrinking sales last quarter.
Esquire Turns Print Mag ‘Interactive’ This Month – emedia and Technology @ FolioMag.com
Netpage App Makes Esquire’s Print Edition Interactive
Is This The World’s Most Interactive Print Ad?
More Americans Getting News From Mobile and Social as Print, TV Decline [STUDY]
Wall Street Journal offers free Wi-Fi in NYC and San Francisco — paidContent
Wall Street Journal Offers Free Wi-Fi in NYC And San Francisco
Twitter Users React to Controversial ‘Time’ Breastfeeding Cover
Twitter Users React to Controversial ‘Time’ Cover
Meet the next generation of retail shopping
As reported this week in Forbes.com, IPG Media Lab along with our parent company, Mediabrands is joining forces with AOL to create the next generation of retail shopping tools. Our hope is to make it easier for shoppers to get the information they need to make smart choices while harnessing the best of traditional retail advertising with the latest in online and social media technology.
We want not only to build a better, smarter experience for consumer, but a more effective advertising vehicle for retailers themselves. With average circulation of larger newspapers on the decline (down nearly 8.7% according to an Audit Bureau of Circulations study) the media has spent much time wringing its hands over the future of print. What we don’t talk about is what that might mean for retail advertisers. Retailers have spent billions of dollars over the years teaching shoppers to look in the Sunday newspaper for the latest news about what’s on sale in their city. Retailers have relied on print because it has a focused immediacy that online can’t provide; it promotes timely sales, serves as a metaphor for the retail season and even educates sales people. Television, radio, and even banner ads have never been able to make up the difference from a low-tech free standing insert or full page ad in the daily and Sunday papers. As a result, for decades, very little has changed in the regular weekly newspaper insert, or the coupon mailers that go to American homes each week. Continue reading “Meet the next generation of retail shopping”
CES: The power of the printed word
The 2010 Consumer Electronics Show this week in Las Vegas is crammed with the latest gadgets, all blasting out light and noise and motion in high definition goodness. Much of the news this week will be about 3D TV, motion controlled video games, and the blending of Internet and broadcast on traditional television platforms.
There will also be a lot of press around e-readers. They are everywhere – CES has an entire section of the show floor dedicated to e-reader developers; most major CE manufactures will also have branded e-readers. And of course, the rumor mills churn with the news of an Apple iSlate, though there have been no formal announcements yet.
These little flat, grey-scale tablets seem to have little to compete with the walls of flat screen monitors in every booth. Although e-readers offer lots of consumer benefits, the actual experience is not as exciting as 3D, not as immersive as new gaming technology. It is just reading, after all, right? Continue reading “CES: The power of the printed word”