Published by Robert Scoble
I give you a front-row seat on the future. Focusing most of my efforts now on next-generation augmented reality and artificial intelligence, AKA "mixed reality."
SUBSCRIBE TO MY NEWSLETTER: http://clevermoe.com/scobleizer-news/
BUY OUR NEW BOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Fourth-Transformation-Robert-Scoble/dp/1539894444 "The Fourth Transformation: How augmented reality and artificial intelligence will change everything."
WATCH MY LATEST SPEECHES:
State of VR with Philip Rosedale (done in VR itself, very cool): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zAA1EVGUZU
At GEOINT, June 2017: http://trajectorymagazine.com/glimpse-new-world/
Augmented World Expo, June 2017: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4xHILvLD8E
At Leade.rs, April 2017: https://youtu.be/52_0JshgjXI
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BIO:
Scoble gives you a front-row seat on the future.
Literally. He had the first ride in the first Tesla. Siri was launched in his house. He's been the first to share all sorts of technologies and companies with you, from Flipboard to Pandora to Instagram.
Today he's focusing on mixed reality, AKA "next-generation augmented reality" which will include a new user interface for EVERYTHING in your life (IoT, Smart Cities, driverless cars, robots, drones, etc).
That's based on his view thanks to his past experience as futurist at Rackspace.
Best place to find Scoble? On his Facebook profile at https://www.facebook.com/RobertScoble
He has been a technology blogger since 2000, was one of five people who built Microsoft's Channel 9 video blog/community, worked at Fast Company Magazine running its TV efforts, and has been part of technology media businesses since 1993.
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SPEAKER PITCH:
Apple and Facebook now have revealed their Augmented Reality strategies, which means your business needs one too. Rely on Robert Scoble, the world's top authority on AR, to bring to your conference what businesses should do next.
SPEECH ABSTRACT #1:
TITLE: The Fourth Transformation: What's next in mixed reality (AR and AI) and the future of technology?
Here's an example of this talk at Leade.rs in Paris in April, 2017: https://youtu.be/52_0JshgjXI
Why "the Fourth Transformation?"
Soon we will have phones and glasses that do full on augmented reality. Everything you look at will potentially be augmented. This world is coming in late 2017 with a new iPhone from Apple, amongst other products. Microsoft is betting everything on its HoloLens glasses that do mixed reality and the industry is spending many billions of dollars in R&D and funding new companies like Magic Leap.
This future will be the user interface for IoT, Smart Cities, autonomous cars, robots, drones, and your TV.
This is a big deal and Robert will take you through what mixed reality is and how it will change every business.
Learn more about Robert's speaking style and contact his agent at http://odemanagement.com/robert-scoble/Robert-Scoble.html
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SPEECH ABSTRACT #2:
"The Next Two Clicks of Moore's Law."
Over the next four years, or two clicks of Moore's Law, a ton about our technology world will change. Scoble will bring you the best from his travels visiting R&D labs, startups, and innovators around the world.
He views the world through his rose-colored-mixed-reality glasses, which will be the new user interface for self driving cars, Smart Cities, IoT, and many other things in our world.
He'll send you off with some lessons for companies both large and small.
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SPEECH ABSTRACT #3:
"Personalized Meaning: What is Augmented Reality For?"
As we enter a far more technological world where even cars drive themselves, I predict we'll see a blowback toward the analog, more authentic world.
What role does augmented reality play in both worlds?
Get Scoble's insight into where augmented reality is going, see tons of real-world demos, and understand what he means by 'personalized meaning.'
CONTACT:
If you are looking to contact me, email is best: scobleizer@gmail.com.
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ENDORSEMENTS:
IZEA Top 25 Tech Influencers: https://izea.com/2017/07/07/25-top-tech-influencers/
Time: One of the top 140 Twitterers!
FT: One of the five most influential Twitterers!
Inc. Top 5 on list of Tech Power Players You Need to Know: http://www.inc.com/john-rampton/30-power-players-in-tech-you-need-to-know.html
Next Reality: #4 on top 50 AR influencer list: https://next.reality.news/news/nr50-next-realitys-50-people-watch-augmented-mixed-reality-0177454/
View all posts by Robert Scoble
When I start getting “Make million$ blogging from home!” spam, I’m blaming Scoble 😉
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When I start getting “Make million$ blogging from home!” spam, I’m blaming Scoble 😉
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I believe the same ad was posted in Times Square.
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I believe the same ad was posted in Times Square.
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http://flickr.com/photos/davidking/83057291/ pictures here.
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Robert, you’re great guns on the tech evangelism front, but leave the MarComm to others (*grin*). The ad isn’t stupid, it’s positioning. Given the recent trial ballons that the carriers have floated about differential pricing for traffic from major ISPs and bandwidth users, I see this as them telling customers: “We provide you the blogging experience.” Which is true because they own the pipe that delivers the content.
A bit similar to the way MS could say to Google’s customers, “Google’s search results. Delivered by Windows (and AT&T…)”
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http://flickr.com/photos/davidking/83057291/ pictures here.
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Robert, you’re great guns on the tech evangelism front, but leave the MarComm to others (*grin*). The ad isn’t stupid, it’s positioning. Given the recent trial ballons that the carriers have floated about differential pricing for traffic from major ISPs and bandwidth users, I see this as them telling customers: “We provide you the blogging experience.” Which is true because they own the pipe that delivers the content.
A bit similar to the way MS could say to Google’s customers, “Google’s search results. Delivered by Windows (and AT&T…)”
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Time to invent Web3.0
Web2.0 -not cool anymore. The world has caught on.
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Time to invent Web3.0
Web2.0 -not cool anymore. The world has caught on.
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I wish you had full text articles in your RSS feed. 😦
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I wish you had full text articles in your RSS feed. 😦
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Hmmm.. wait, I spoke too soon, it looks like my reader is only showing me the “description” section of your XML. Sorry about that, I should have looked further before I posted.
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Hmmm.. wait, I spoke too soon, it looks like my reader is only showing me the “description” section of your XML. Sorry about that, I should have looked further before I posted.
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I doubt that at&t would get any good PR from bribing bloggers to be their shills.
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I doubt that at&t would get any good PR from bribing bloggers to be their shills.
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Scoble, your blogging rants are unfocused hype. What’s the big deal with blogging, per se? It’s not new: the macintosh community had blogging before blogging was even a word: my first experience with a blog was O’Grady’s powerpage (http://www.powerpage.org) in 1997 or so. Sure, the technology has changed (you use web-based forms to upload content, there’s places for public comment, etc), but the medium is not new.
Blogging is an informal method of public communication.
Next, I find that the responses to blog entries are more important than the text of the blog itself.
Are you asking for a raise or something? You need to change your argument from “blogging is important”. What are you going to do once you understand that being an anti-Microsoft evangelist makes you more popular and read than being a Microsoft evangelist?
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Scoble, your blogging rants are unfocused hype. What’s the big deal with blogging, per se? It’s not new: the macintosh community had blogging before blogging was even a word: my first experience with a blog was O’Grady’s powerpage (http://www.powerpage.org) in 1997 or so. Sure, the technology has changed (you use web-based forms to upload content, there’s places for public comment, etc), but the medium is not new.
Blogging is an informal method of public communication.
Next, I find that the responses to blog entries are more important than the text of the blog itself.
Are you asking for a raise or something? You need to change your argument from “blogging is important”. What are you going to do once you understand that being an anti-Microsoft evangelist makes you more popular and read than being a Microsoft evangelist?
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anon,
Ahhh, you johnny-come-lately.
I was into this informal method of public communication on a computer way before that. There was this guy called Tim Berners-Lee, and he had this thing where instead of using web forms or anything like that, you just used this markup language called HTML and it allowed you to publish all these things online.
Sure, it didn’t have a place for public comments and at the start you had to write the HTML markup language yourself, but the medium isn’t new, or even new to an Apple-history-revisionist.
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anon,
Ahhh, you johnny-come-lately.
I was into this informal method of public communication on a computer way before that. There was this guy called Tim Berners-Lee, and he had this thing where instead of using web forms or anything like that, you just used this markup language called HTML and it allowed you to publish all these things online.
Sure, it didn’t have a place for public comments and at the start you had to write the HTML markup language yourself, but the medium isn’t new, or even new to an Apple-history-revisionist.
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Yes, all one billion was spent on one billboard, or in other words, Scobie is a fool. Robert, Apple had 80% the billboards around the Coliseum (hell, all of the Bay Area) for months and their iPod campaign totals much less than 1 bill.
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Yes, all one billion was spent on one billboard, or in other words, Scobie is a fool. Robert, Apple had 80% the billboards around the Coliseum (hell, all of the Bay Area) for months and their iPod campaign totals much less than 1 bill.
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The term “jumping the shark” has jumped the shark.
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The term “jumping the shark” has jumped the shark.
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Goebbel, Scoble’s saying nothing like that. “one of the new at&t campaigns” doesn’t say “The New Billboard they spent $1bil on, man what a rip-off”.
On the billboard, interesting to see what reaction this will provoke in the lay community. Google (or MSN Search :P) for Blogging and you get a fairly mixed bag of results.
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Goebbel, Scoble’s saying nothing like that. “one of the new at&t campaigns” doesn’t say “The New Billboard they spent $1bil on, man what a rip-off”.
On the billboard, interesting to see what reaction this will provoke in the lay community. Google (or MSN Search :P) for Blogging and you get a fairly mixed bag of results.
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I saw the ad too on our buses here in LaCrosse,WI. I find it funning that I mention podcasting and people say yeah I herd about that or listen. I mention I blog too and the go hugh? Seems to me that podcasting has reached the main stream before blogging and bloggin has been online longer. What is up with that?
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I saw the ad too on our buses here in LaCrosse,WI. I find it funning that I mention podcasting and people say yeah I herd about that or listen. I mention I blog too and the go hugh? Seems to me that podcasting has reached the main stream before blogging and bloggin has been online longer. What is up with that?
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Response to 10: Hi, Cider. Did you respond to the message I wrote or did you just respond what you think I wrote?
this thing where instead of using web forms or anything like that, you just used this markup language called HTML and it allowed you to publish all these things online.
That’s what I was talking about.
but the medium isn’t new, or even new to an Apple-history-revisionist.
I said the medium isn’t new. And Apple-history-revisionist? Me?
The only thing my post had to do with Apple is this blog a guy named Jason O’Grady wrote well before there was any such word as “blog”. It happened to be about Apple, but as far as I know it wasn’t financed by or developed at Apple.
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Response to 10: Hi, Cider. Did you respond to the message I wrote or did you just respond what you think I wrote?
this thing where instead of using web forms or anything like that, you just used this markup language called HTML and it allowed you to publish all these things online.
That’s what I was talking about.
but the medium isn’t new, or even new to an Apple-history-revisionist.
I said the medium isn’t new. And Apple-history-revisionist? Me?
The only thing my post had to do with Apple is this blog a guy named Jason O’Grady wrote well before there was any such word as “blog”. It happened to be about Apple, but as far as I know it wasn’t financed by or developed at Apple.
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karan, I’m perfectly aware of what Scoble is saying: he is claiming a handful of silly bloggers could achieve more advertising than a large ad campaign. I get that. In my post is the inherent but unstated critique that Scoble has peddled, pimped, whored himself to advertise a ton of lousy iPod imitators for 3 years with zero success whereas Apple has had a very successful (and costly but much cheaper campaign than AT&Ts) without any PAID bloggers (which I thought he was against and/or had said paid bloggers aren’t as effective as independent ones. Hence, the assertion that just because he was driving on 880 the other day, he has no clue how effective this campaign will be, what forms it will take, and/or whether or not hiring his cheap, slutty ass to pimp the company would be effective since re-branding, the primary purpose of this campaign, requires exposing existing clients (not just a bunch of geek blog-readers) with the new image and goals of the company going forward.
Yes, my post skipped most of that, but Scoble knows what I’m talking about. I didn’t have to lay it out for him that he’s a cheap corner whore working International Blvd with no understanding of advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
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karan, I’m perfectly aware of what Scoble is saying: he is claiming a handful of silly bloggers could achieve more advertising than a large ad campaign. I get that. In my post is the inherent but unstated critique that Scoble has peddled, pimped, whored himself to advertise a ton of lousy iPod imitators for 3 years with zero success whereas Apple has had a very successful (and costly but much cheaper campaign than AT&Ts) without any PAID bloggers (which I thought he was against and/or had said paid bloggers aren’t as effective as independent ones. Hence, the assertion that just because he was driving on 880 the other day, he has no clue how effective this campaign will be, what forms it will take, and/or whether or not hiring his cheap, slutty ass to pimp the company would be effective since re-branding, the primary purpose of this campaign, requires exposing existing clients (not just a bunch of geek blog-readers) with the new image and goals of the company going forward.
Yes, my post skipped most of that, but Scoble knows what I’m talking about. I didn’t have to lay it out for him that he’s a cheap corner whore working International Blvd with no understanding of advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
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Eastside Business would like to get our hands on some of those advertising dollars as well – it could help us expand our Microsoft and Tech sections as well as spread the good word about blogging and webcasting.
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Eastside Business would like to get our hands on some of those advertising dollars as well – it could help us expand our Microsoft and Tech sections as well as spread the good word about blogging and webcasting.
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You guys are all funny. I didn’t realize I could get so much controversy going just by saying “give me the money.” Heheh.
Goebbels: out of thousands of posts made here how many have been about ANY MP3 player? 15? 20? Maybe 100 (if you count all the times I mentioned iPods)?
Yeah, I guess that’s whoring. Especially when I tell you I bought my wife an iPod instead of any other player.
>advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
Works for at&t!
Only Microsoft didn’t have to spend much money to get me and you come here voluntarily where you don’t look at at&t’s billboard voluntarily. At least not if you live in Oakland.
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You guys are all funny. I didn’t realize I could get so much controversy going just by saying “give me the money.” Heheh.
Goebbels: out of thousands of posts made here how many have been about ANY MP3 player? 15? 20? Maybe 100 (if you count all the times I mentioned iPods)?
Yeah, I guess that’s whoring. Especially when I tell you I bought my wife an iPod instead of any other player.
>advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
Works for at&t!
Only Microsoft didn’t have to spend much money to get me and you come here voluntarily where you don’t look at at&t’s billboard voluntarily. At least not if you live in Oakland.
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“out of thousands of posts made here how many have been about ANY MP3 player? 15? 20? Maybe 100 (if you count all the times I mentioned iPods)?”
The number has dropped since I have routinely kicked your ass and your company and others you have attempted to pimp continue to clearly fail. I admit that.
“Especially when I tell you I bought my wife an iPod instead of any other player.”
I’m fully aware that even you have enough reason, or at least can listen to you son’s reason, to make a good decision now and then. But that doesn’t make you not a whore.
“Works for at&t!”
Ahh, deflection. And hypocrisy. You can claim that blogging will save your soul because you’ve been doing it senselessly for years, but AT&T can’t. Fine.
“Only Microsoft didn’t have to spend much money to get me”
And? The question is: could giving you (and even 999 others) one million dollars be an effective way for SBC/AT&T to rebrand and revitalize their business? Anyone not smoking crack, and/or not whoring for “blogging”, would say, quite easily, NO!
“and you come here voluntarily”
and mock you as a fool. Yeah, that would be an effective way to advertise to me: foolishly give someone I consider a fool a million dollars to further prove he’s a whore! Brilliant!
“where you don’t look at at&t’s billboard voluntarily. At least not if you live in Oakland.”
Huh? Because I come here, it’s impossible for me to voluntarily or involantarily see a billboard? I come here for about 20 minutes while I would be insider anyway… How does that little bit of eyeball time invalidate massive outdoor, on air, on TV, on the internet advertising which, in fact, does include paid bloggers? It doesn’t. And by the way, I can look out the window while typing this and see 2 billboards. They aren’t AT&T’s but certainly I can be advertised to involuntarily while reading your tripe…. Your just to much of a geek and blogging geek to see the rest of the world going on around you.
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“out of thousands of posts made here how many have been about ANY MP3 player? 15? 20? Maybe 100 (if you count all the times I mentioned iPods)?”
The number has dropped since I have routinely kicked your ass and your company and others you have attempted to pimp continue to clearly fail. I admit that.
“Especially when I tell you I bought my wife an iPod instead of any other player.”
I’m fully aware that even you have enough reason, or at least can listen to you son’s reason, to make a good decision now and then. But that doesn’t make you not a whore.
“Works for at&t!”
Ahh, deflection. And hypocrisy. You can claim that blogging will save your soul because you’ve been doing it senselessly for years, but AT&T can’t. Fine.
“Only Microsoft didn’t have to spend much money to get me”
And? The question is: could giving you (and even 999 others) one million dollars be an effective way for SBC/AT&T to rebrand and revitalize their business? Anyone not smoking crack, and/or not whoring for “blogging”, would say, quite easily, NO!
“and you come here voluntarily”
and mock you as a fool. Yeah, that would be an effective way to advertise to me: foolishly give someone I consider a fool a million dollars to further prove he’s a whore! Brilliant!
“where you don’t look at at&t’s billboard voluntarily. At least not if you live in Oakland.”
Huh? Because I come here, it’s impossible for me to voluntarily or involantarily see a billboard? I come here for about 20 minutes while I would be insider anyway… How does that little bit of eyeball time invalidate massive outdoor, on air, on TV, on the internet advertising which, in fact, does include paid bloggers? It doesn’t. And by the way, I can look out the window while typing this and see 2 billboards. They aren’t AT&T’s but certainly I can be advertised to involuntarily while reading your tripe…. Your just to much of a geek and blogging geek to see the rest of the world going on around you.
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Please don’t use the lame phrase “jump the shark”. Actual Happy Days fans can tell you that some of the best (and highest rated) Happy Days episodes came *after* Fonzi jumped the shark.
Besides, the existance of such a billboard should just tell you that providing a place for people to blog has become a basic service like web and email that every ISP must offer.
Jorgie
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Please don’t use the lame phrase “jump the shark”. Actual Happy Days fans can tell you that some of the best (and highest rated) Happy Days episodes came *after* Fonzi jumped the shark.
Besides, the existance of such a billboard should just tell you that providing a place for people to blog has become a basic service like web and email that every ISP must offer.
Jorgie
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and mock you as a fool. Yeah, that would be an effective way to advertise to me: foolishly give someone I consider a fool a million dollars to further prove he’s a whore! Brilliant!
Not nice at all, not nice at all. You’re right, but keep the personal attacks on low and don’t turn this blog into a sewer.
Scoble makes plenty of mistakes and does plenty of shilling for his convicted monopolist employer. How he does this is obvious to all and a textbook on how Microsoft “competes”.
This blog is a light on Microsoft so the public can see its dirty works.
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and mock you as a fool. Yeah, that would be an effective way to advertise to me: foolishly give someone I consider a fool a million dollars to further prove he’s a whore! Brilliant!
Not nice at all, not nice at all. You’re right, but keep the personal attacks on low and don’t turn this blog into a sewer.
Scoble makes plenty of mistakes and does plenty of shilling for his convicted monopolist employer. How he does this is obvious to all and a textbook on how Microsoft “competes”.
This blog is a light on Microsoft so the public can see its dirty works.
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I didn’t have to lay it out for him that he’s a cheap corner whore working International Blvd with no understanding of advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
Gawd, good to have you back. Bit too harsh for my style, but I love it perfectly, even so.
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I didn’t have to lay it out for him that he’s a cheap corner whore working International Blvd with no understanding of advertising and rebranding but just a cheap, foul perfume to sell called “blogging.”
Gawd, good to have you back. Bit too harsh for my style, but I love it perfectly, even so.
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I found it telling that the cell phones used on this season’s 24 are from Sprint, while at&t is left to advertise during the breaks.
If the cell phone carrier isn’t good enough for Jack Bauer it isn’t good enough for me.
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I found it telling that the cell phones used on this season’s 24 are from Sprint, while at&t is left to advertise during the breaks.
If the cell phone carrier isn’t good enough for Jack Bauer it isn’t good enough for me.
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Yes, I saw this on the way to Vegas as well in the middle of CA. This was funny since when I talked to the AT$T people at CES, they could not understand why and how could AT$T use blogs for their PR or to sell it as services (W2.0). Check my post and a pic of the ads. http://vassko.blogspot.com
vassil
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Yes, I saw this on the way to Vegas as well in the middle of CA. This was funny since when I talked to the AT$T people at CES, they could not understand why and how could AT$T use blogs for their PR or to sell it as services (W2.0). Check my post and a pic of the ads. http://vassko.blogspot.com
vassil
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BlogReader: did you see the Tablet PCs used on 24?
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BlogReader: did you see the Tablet PCs used on 24?
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Comment No. 5: check out the latest A List Apart article =)
Goebbels, I have to say that despite Microsoft’s recent advertising attempts (“Start Something”), it’s been Scoble’s openness, along with various other things Scoble has pointed to, that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing. I’ve only been reading for six months.
Blogging & the internet is changing the nature of advertising, so why won’t you admit it?
Scoble, keep up the good work, and ask for a pay rise some time =)
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Comment No. 5: check out the latest A List Apart article =)
Goebbels, I have to say that despite Microsoft’s recent advertising attempts (“Start Something”), it’s been Scoble’s openness, along with various other things Scoble has pointed to, that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing. I’ve only been reading for six months.
Blogging & the internet is changing the nature of advertising, so why won’t you admit it?
Scoble, keep up the good work, and ask for a pay rise some time =)
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What at&t doesn’t mention is that their service sucks. Long distance is dead, they are they same old phone company. I hate at&t and no amount of advertising, especially this lame campaign is going to change my opinion about them. Perhaps if they had a billboard that said “VOIP” Delivered or “IPTV” Delivered, but really “Blogging?” c’mon, they don’t create content, that’s like the power company claiming to deliver your computer because it supplies power. Power to Vonage, power to Word Press, Power to SKYPE, power to all the companies that actually deliver.
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What at&t doesn’t mention is that their service sucks. Long distance is dead, they are they same old phone company. I hate at&t and no amount of advertising, especially this lame campaign is going to change my opinion about them. Perhaps if they had a billboard that said “VOIP” Delivered or “IPTV” Delivered, but really “Blogging?” c’mon, they don’t create content, that’s like the power company claiming to deliver your computer because it supplies power. Power to Vonage, power to Word Press, Power to SKYPE, power to all the companies that actually deliver.
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that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing.
Is that so? Hey, in that case, special price on this bridge in Brooklyn, reduced, must-sell-now. Song and dance and blogger smokescreens, all it takes to convince you that things are changing? Then the marketing puppets can count you as a smashing success, the overall picture is differing however; just talk to the CIOs on the Software Assurance front-lines.
And if blogs are what did it, then venture to Mini-Microsoft, the worst enemy is them, themselves, even the harshest press critics are mild in comparison to that self-whipping. But I would argue THAT’s true openness, telling like it is, without fear of being blacklisted or labeled. What you get on Scoble’s blog and the countless others like it, is only a bad photocopy of reality, filtered thru nose-level view marketing, posing as new frontier openness.
Blogging is just the latest wrinkle in Internet media, it will change and expand, it always does, and once you reduce the revolutionary hype triumphalism talk from the self-appointed incestuous toolmakers, it becomes all commodity adapted and industry-consolidated. Simple history will tell you that; just usual boom and bust to commodity cycle. Nothing new under the sun, just lottsa upper crusts making a killing offa selling the story and writing books, all Amway and MLM-style.
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that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing.
Is that so? Hey, in that case, special price on this bridge in Brooklyn, reduced, must-sell-now. Song and dance and blogger smokescreens, all it takes to convince you that things are changing? Then the marketing puppets can count you as a smashing success, the overall picture is differing however; just talk to the CIOs on the Software Assurance front-lines.
And if blogs are what did it, then venture to Mini-Microsoft, the worst enemy is them, themselves, even the harshest press critics are mild in comparison to that self-whipping. But I would argue THAT’s true openness, telling like it is, without fear of being blacklisted or labeled. What you get on Scoble’s blog and the countless others like it, is only a bad photocopy of reality, filtered thru nose-level view marketing, posing as new frontier openness.
Blogging is just the latest wrinkle in Internet media, it will change and expand, it always does, and once you reduce the revolutionary hype triumphalism talk from the self-appointed incestuous toolmakers, it becomes all commodity adapted and industry-consolidated. Simple history will tell you that; just usual boom and bust to commodity cycle. Nothing new under the sun, just lottsa upper crusts making a killing offa selling the story and writing books, all Amway and MLM-style.
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Just in from the Media Bistro folks…
IDEA OF BLOGGING OVERSOLD (ADAGE)
Simon Dumenco: There is no such thing as blogging. There is no such thing as a blogger. Blogging is just writing-writing using a particularly efficient type of publishing technology. It’s just software, people! The underlying creative/media function remains exactly the same. WaPo: Schools warn teen bloggers. Riverfront Times: Video blogging, or vlogging, is taking the web to the next level.
http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=47467
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/16/AR2006011601489.html
http://www.riverfronttimes.com/Issues/2006-01-11/news/feature.html
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Just in from the Media Bistro folks…
IDEA OF BLOGGING OVERSOLD (ADAGE)
Simon Dumenco: There is no such thing as blogging. There is no such thing as a blogger. Blogging is just writing-writing using a particularly efficient type of publishing technology. It’s just software, people! The underlying creative/media function remains exactly the same. WaPo: Schools warn teen bloggers. Riverfront Times: Video blogging, or vlogging, is taking the web to the next level.
http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=47467
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/16/AR2006011601489.html
http://www.riverfronttimes.com/Issues/2006-01-11/news/feature.html
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I wish this blog had karma points like slashdot so I could give a +5 insightful to Chris’ message #28.
Mr. Scoble, does slashdot count as a web 2.0-ish or “blog” thing? I’m puzzled why “web 2.0” is suddenly a “new thing” when these tools and implementations have really been around since the late 90s.
Is “web 2.0” Microsoft’s sly rebranding of past innovations/functionality as if it were their own?
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I wish this blog had karma points like slashdot so I could give a +5 insightful to Chris’ message #28.
Mr. Scoble, does slashdot count as a web 2.0-ish or “blog” thing? I’m puzzled why “web 2.0” is suddenly a “new thing” when these tools and implementations have really been around since the late 90s.
Is “web 2.0” Microsoft’s sly rebranding of past innovations/functionality as if it were their own?
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one thing
http://artivated.com
regards
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one thing
http://artivated.com
regards
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Guzzard, I don’t get it.
Why would IPTV or VOIP be acceptable to you “if they don’t create content”
They don’t create the TV/Video content for IPTV and they certainly don’t create the voice conversations for VOIP.
But they run the network and the pipe to your home to DELIVER them. Just like blogging. I believe this is part of their “Your World. Delivered” campaign.
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Guzzard, I don’t get it.
Why would IPTV or VOIP be acceptable to you “if they don’t create content”
They don’t create the TV/Video content for IPTV and they certainly don’t create the voice conversations for VOIP.
But they run the network and the pipe to your home to DELIVER them. Just like blogging. I believe this is part of their “Your World. Delivered” campaign.
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I am saying that they should offer these things as services. I am saying that they are *just* repackaging the same ol’ same ol’. They continue to worry more about image than service and quality. They are more of a NETWORK company, true, however delivering a BLOG, who cares. Combine the over-bearing ad campaign with something NEW! Overpriced, crap is what at&t is selling.
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I am saying that they should offer these things as services. I am saying that they are *just* repackaging the same ol’ same ol’. They continue to worry more about image than service and quality. They are more of a NETWORK company, true, however delivering a BLOG, who cares. Combine the over-bearing ad campaign with something NEW! Overpriced, crap is what at&t is selling.
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Plus, Scoble, Jumping the Shark is frakking lame.
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Plus, Scoble, Jumping the Shark is frakking lame.
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“Goebbels, I have to say that despite Microsoft’s recent advertising attempts (”Start Something”), it’s been Scoble’s openness, along with various other things Scoble has pointed to, that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing. I’ve only been reading for six months.”
In other words, you are a sucker for advertising. Why do I care? Scoble has NO decision-making ability, he has few high-level information or even contacts. He’s a marketer, and you’ve decided that since you like the guy, you like the company. Am I supposed to be impressed? I’m not.
“Blogging & the internet is changing the nature of advertising, so why won’t you admit it?”
No, it hasn’t. Advertising still wants to create an image for the consumer, it still wants to explain how its products or services work and are desirable to the consumer, it still wants to convince the consumer through flash, appeal, testimony, whatever that the consumer likes the product.
What we have here is a clear example of where blogging cannot achieve the purpose: one of the most massive rebrandings ever. (And let’s not forget: this is SBC which purchased some of AT&Ts assets renaming themselves AT&T; not AT&T.) Rebranding requires creating an image (literal and figurative) with the user and hammering over and over. There is no way even 10,000 bloggers could achieve what this very simple ad, in addition to many, many others can via billboards, direct mailers, magazine ads, tv ads, and numerous other advertising outlets (including blogging). What is clear is blogging is just one mode of advertising, but that it works in the same way as traditional advertising. (It may have particular strengths and weaknesses as any mode of advertising does have.)
But… just because the ad says “blogging”, it’s Scoble’s absurd theory that paying 1,000 bloggers 1 million dollars each would achieve a massive national and even multinational rebranding? Absurd. The purpose of the ad is primarily to say: remember SBC, remember AT&T, well we’re now one company, this is our new logo, this is a new tag line, we’ll be harking various services via the “Word. Delivered” tag (not just blogging) to try to create a new mission and image for our company going forward.
I do not know a single blogger that can reach all of the demographics that SBC must reach; I do not even imagine 10,000 bloggers put together have the same reach that SBC must achieve. And I think it’s clear that some silly bloggers typing away about SBC cannot achieve rebranding goals: make the audience aware of the new name, logo, and vision as well as visual ads.
So, Scoble, the alleged marketing wunderkind for Microsoft (when he is actually just a low-level tech evangelist who makes movies and writes poorly thoughtout blog entries) makes the silly mistake of claiming that SBC/AT&T is behind the times, wasting money on something that could be accomplished soley through blogging because the ad mentions “blogging” when “blogging” is in fact almost entirely irrelevent to the campaign.
So I’ll leave you and Robert with this simple question: are you asserting that this massive rebranding can be accomplished soley through blogs? And, is yes, are you aware of how irrelevent and foolish that makes you sound to anyone who knows a piss about advertising?
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“Goebbels, I have to say that despite Microsoft’s recent advertising attempts (”Start Something”), it’s been Scoble’s openness, along with various other things Scoble has pointed to, that has me convinced things are Microsoft are changing. I’ve only been reading for six months.”
In other words, you are a sucker for advertising. Why do I care? Scoble has NO decision-making ability, he has few high-level information or even contacts. He’s a marketer, and you’ve decided that since you like the guy, you like the company. Am I supposed to be impressed? I’m not.
“Blogging & the internet is changing the nature of advertising, so why won’t you admit it?”
No, it hasn’t. Advertising still wants to create an image for the consumer, it still wants to explain how its products or services work and are desirable to the consumer, it still wants to convince the consumer through flash, appeal, testimony, whatever that the consumer likes the product.
What we have here is a clear example of where blogging cannot achieve the purpose: one of the most massive rebrandings ever. (And let’s not forget: this is SBC which purchased some of AT&Ts assets renaming themselves AT&T; not AT&T.) Rebranding requires creating an image (literal and figurative) with the user and hammering over and over. There is no way even 10,000 bloggers could achieve what this very simple ad, in addition to many, many others can via billboards, direct mailers, magazine ads, tv ads, and numerous other advertising outlets (including blogging). What is clear is blogging is just one mode of advertising, but that it works in the same way as traditional advertising. (It may have particular strengths and weaknesses as any mode of advertising does have.)
But… just because the ad says “blogging”, it’s Scoble’s absurd theory that paying 1,000 bloggers 1 million dollars each would achieve a massive national and even multinational rebranding? Absurd. The purpose of the ad is primarily to say: remember SBC, remember AT&T, well we’re now one company, this is our new logo, this is a new tag line, we’ll be harking various services via the “Word. Delivered” tag (not just blogging) to try to create a new mission and image for our company going forward.
I do not know a single blogger that can reach all of the demographics that SBC must reach; I do not even imagine 10,000 bloggers put together have the same reach that SBC must achieve. And I think it’s clear that some silly bloggers typing away about SBC cannot achieve rebranding goals: make the audience aware of the new name, logo, and vision as well as visual ads.
So, Scoble, the alleged marketing wunderkind for Microsoft (when he is actually just a low-level tech evangelist who makes movies and writes poorly thoughtout blog entries) makes the silly mistake of claiming that SBC/AT&T is behind the times, wasting money on something that could be accomplished soley through blogging because the ad mentions “blogging” when “blogging” is in fact almost entirely irrelevent to the campaign.
So I’ll leave you and Robert with this simple question: are you asserting that this massive rebranding can be accomplished soley through blogs? And, is yes, are you aware of how irrelevent and foolish that makes you sound to anyone who knows a piss about advertising?
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On my way home from work, they have one of these billboards off of Montague Expressway (in Milpitas, Calif.) as you head onto the 880.
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On my way home from work, they have one of these billboards off of Montague Expressway (in Milpitas, Calif.) as you head onto the 880.
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I saw the same bilboard (in Detroit) a few days ago but it wasn’t up for long. AT&T has replaced it with another bilboard but I forgot what the newer one has on it. Obviously the newer one didn’t capture my attention like the blogging one did.
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I saw the same bilboard (in Detroit) a few days ago but it wasn’t up for long. AT&T has replaced it with another bilboard but I forgot what the newer one has on it. Obviously the newer one didn’t capture my attention like the blogging one did.
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>So I’ll leave you and Robert with this simple question: are you asserting that this massive rebranding can be accomplished soley through blogs?
If at&t gave out a billion to bloggers the press would go into a feeding frenzy. The people reached would be far more than just who reads my blog.
By the way, how did Google or Amazon happen? They don’t even advertise.
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>So I’ll leave you and Robert with this simple question: are you asserting that this massive rebranding can be accomplished soley through blogs?
If at&t gave out a billion to bloggers the press would go into a feeding frenzy. The people reached would be far more than just who reads my blog.
By the way, how did Google or Amazon happen? They don’t even advertise.
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“If at&t gave out a billion to bloggers the press would go into a feeding frenzy.”
And? How the hell would that accomplish rebranding SBC? Where I live I’ve received two mailers, their are TV commercials every commercial break on most major channels, and many billboards, and many newspaper articles. And it’s about re-branding: solidfying the new image, not just a silly tizzy because they foolishly threw money at bloggers.
“By the way, how did Google or Amazon happen?”
Umm, several guys formed businesses based on millions of venture fund capital and opened for service. Is it your theory that SBC can provide cellphone, traditional phone, business services, internet access, cable access via a website or something?
“They don’t even advertise.”
Yes, they do. Jesus.
Each statement of yours gets progressively dumber and dumber.
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“If at&t gave out a billion to bloggers the press would go into a feeding frenzy.”
And? How the hell would that accomplish rebranding SBC? Where I live I’ve received two mailers, their are TV commercials every commercial break on most major channels, and many billboards, and many newspaper articles. And it’s about re-branding: solidfying the new image, not just a silly tizzy because they foolishly threw money at bloggers.
“By the way, how did Google or Amazon happen?”
Umm, several guys formed businesses based on millions of venture fund capital and opened for service. Is it your theory that SBC can provide cellphone, traditional phone, business services, internet access, cable access via a website or something?
“They don’t even advertise.”
Yes, they do. Jesus.
Each statement of yours gets progressively dumber and dumber.
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By the way, I should add: isn’t it massively lame and pathetic to switch from saying that “blogs could do it” to “well, admittedly blogs would not do it, but it would create atizzy in traditional media outlets which would be both more impactful and larger than the relatively paltry effect of the bloggers”?
Aren’t you essentially admitting bloggers couldn’t do it? That traditional medias commentary on the blogs would do it?
Pathetic and foolish.
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By the way, I should add: isn’t it massively lame and pathetic to switch from saying that “blogs could do it” to “well, admittedly blogs would not do it, but it would create atizzy in traditional media outlets which would be both more impactful and larger than the relatively paltry effect of the bloggers”?
Aren’t you essentially admitting bloggers couldn’t do it? That traditional medias commentary on the blogs would do it?
Pathetic and foolish.
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Each statement of yours [Scobles] gets progressively dumber and dumber.
Yeah, I’ve noticed that too, downward spiral, but the weebles wobble, yet don’t fall down — ends up writing a book that sells out to the saps, making a major mint. Irony, that. But the progression of dumbness, is backpedaled and excused over with ‘don’t feed the trolls’. And merry merry onto the next new new thing.
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Each statement of yours [Scobles] gets progressively dumber and dumber.
Yeah, I’ve noticed that too, downward spiral, but the weebles wobble, yet don’t fall down — ends up writing a book that sells out to the saps, making a major mint. Irony, that. But the progression of dumbness, is backpedaled and excused over with ‘don’t feed the trolls’. And merry merry onto the next new new thing.
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Goebbels – What a dumb dick you are!
I would not be suprised if you and scobleizer are in bed together as all advertising/PR is hype for crap companies (or people in this case) want to make you think you need thier product,service (a blog is a communication service at it’s fundemental level). Your continued rants doing nothing more to raise the scobleizer hype.
Who’s the real idiot!
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Goebbels – What a dumb dick you are!
I would not be suprised if you and scobleizer are in bed together as all advertising/PR is hype for crap companies (or people in this case) want to make you think you need thier product,service (a blog is a communication service at it’s fundemental level). Your continued rants doing nothing more to raise the scobleizer hype.
Who’s the real idiot!
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Hey Goebbels:
You weirdly assume that rebranding is all a numbers game. Who is AT&T trying to reach? Is it little Suzy going to school? The luddite parent? Out of town visitors?
Or maybe, just possibly, would it be better to reach key IT decisionmakers, early-adopter geeks, trendsetters, etc. Gee, you think maybe those sort of people pay attention to blogs? Just possibly?
Maybe if you spent a little less time foaming at the mouth, knee-jerking against Scoble, you’d actually take time to acknowledge some of the benefits of blogging as it pertains to PR (hint: there’s a lot there, despite the hype).
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Hey Goebbels:
You weirdly assume that rebranding is all a numbers game. Who is AT&T trying to reach? Is it little Suzy going to school? The luddite parent? Out of town visitors?
Or maybe, just possibly, would it be better to reach key IT decisionmakers, early-adopter geeks, trendsetters, etc. Gee, you think maybe those sort of people pay attention to blogs? Just possibly?
Maybe if you spent a little less time foaming at the mouth, knee-jerking against Scoble, you’d actually take time to acknowledge some of the benefits of blogging as it pertains to PR (hint: there’s a lot there, despite the hype).
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Adam, since the bulk of SBC’s business is local telephone service and business data services it is everyone (not just old ladies, kids, etc…) in a large southwestern region of the U.S. primarily. Just reaching bloggers wouldn’t help them at all; they have to reach ALL current and possibly future customers.
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Adam, since the bulk of SBC’s business is local telephone service and business data services it is everyone (not just old ladies, kids, etc…) in a large southwestern region of the U.S. primarily. Just reaching bloggers wouldn’t help them at all; they have to reach ALL current and possibly future customers.
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Vaspers Spots “Blogging Delivered-AT&T” in Peoria!
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Vaspers Spots “Blogging Delivered-AT&T” in Peoria!
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n2E7l2pwTlyUcn xUJ23sojpvVs 6lZpgMB0cjm
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n2E7l2pwTlyUcn xUJ23sojpvVs 6lZpgMB0cjm
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In the Philippines, too many companies try to sell *online* services using *offline* marketing tactics.
I see the US isn’t completely rid of such insanity.
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In the Philippines, too many companies try to sell *online* services using *offline* marketing tactics.
I see the US isn’t completely rid of such insanity.
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