Thursday, 26 April 2007

Google

Google is an American public corporation, specializing in Internet searching and online advertising. The company is based in Mountain View, California, and has 12,238 full-time employees (as of March 31, 2007). Google's mission statement is "to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful. Google's corporate philosophy includes statements such as, "You can make money without doing evil," and, "Work should be challenging and the challenge should be fun," illustrating a somewhat more relaxed corporate culture.

Audience consumption of Google as a search engine is so widespread it has almost become a subconscious second nature. Users of Google see the site as the solid base of the internet which then branches off into whatever they are searching for. It has been increasingly common for audiences to accept Google.com as their homepage. Games, music, cars, phones and holidays are amongst many of the things that can be looked for on Google but the possibilities are endless as the audience sees Google as a portal to the outside world of the internet.

The large audiences’ love of Google is even more emphasised by my pictures. :).



Google has expanded greatly over the years with more branches growing from it as it bought into mapping technology and Youtube, the largest V-logging site costing $1.65 Billion. The institution is benefiting from the expansion in audience and the profit from increase in advertisement.


On a whole, at times Google may be seen as just a boring search engine, but this is one that has achieved many successes. Being a mainstream stem distributor of more or less everything on the net, good and bad it has been very successful in the means of ease of use of the internet.

MySpace - Music

MySpace is a popular social networking website offering an interactive, user-submitted network of friends, personal profiles, blogs, groups, photos, music and videos internationally. MySpace is currently the world's fifth most popular English-language website and the fifth most popular website in any language, and the third most popular website in the United States, though it has topped the chart on various weeks.

The service has gradually gained more popularity than similar websites to achieve nearly 80% of visits to online social networking websites. It has become an increasingly influential part of contemporary popular culture, especially in English speaking countries.

Addictive consumption of MySpace seems to be very widespread in popular culture now, just like youtubist’s and wikipedians. Initially it was used as an alternative route to interaction with friends, on the web. This quickly caught on and its popularity gave them the idea to introduce MySpace music, where musicians can promote themselves, distribute music and get in contact with people they would otherwise never dream of being able to.


This MySpace music has the signs of self promotion written all over it.

- His own music on site entry
- A flashing box ‘Click me, CLICK ME!!’
- Downloadable tracks
- Lyrics written out for fans
- Quite a few well known friends for links & network popularity

MySpace as an institution strongly benefit from the many millions of people that log on and interact day by day. The 300 staff they employ handles all problems MySpace encounters. MySpace as been the fastest growing ‘Friend site’ since Friends reunited, but surpassed them a long time ago.

Overall this is a good example of democratisation, not only now can the big shops, and superstores like HMV only offer people music but the music makers themselves. Niche audiences are springing up all the time on MySpace, when friends interact at a very high frequency it becomes increasingly easy to find exactly what they like.

Musicians, even small-time musicians now can find ways of expressing themselves for free, without the endless search for promotion. Some may say, you can sit down, create, and hope someone that likes it finds it. If you have talent, you will be found.

Youtube - Broadcast Yourself

YouTube is a popular video sharing website where users can upload, view, and share video clips. Videos can be rated, and the average rating and the number of times a video has been watched are both published.

Founded in February 2005 by three former employees of PayPal, the San Bruno-based service uses Adobe Flash technology to display video. The wide variety of site content includes movie and TV clips and music videos, as well as amateur content such as videoblogging and short original videos. Currently staffed by 67 employees, the company was named TIME magazine's "Invention of the Year" for 2006. In October 2006, Google Inc. announced that it had reached a deal to acquire the company for US$1.65 billion in Google's stock. The deal closed on 13 November 2006.



And Now here's Bush's attempt :



Videos like this are posted up by members of the Youtube audience in hope that they will be found and watched by others around the world. Anything from a talking carrot or a giant rabbit to a mini elephant can be found on Youtube. People often try to make people laugh with these videos with their amazing use of computer animation and editing. Often controversial videos are the focus of an audience for a few days and this will be displayed as a popular video on the site.

Institutions
are benefiting from the new idea of using macromedia flash to display and distribute videos for free. They can be pasted into emails and embedded into other companies sites for no cost at all. The promotion that is automatically given to Youtube is enough of a repayment for their uses.
They are also losing out in some ways. Film companies have to release DVD’s many months earlier because of the free and illegal distribution of them online. Television is gradually losing its appeal to the many millions of Youtube fans as they don’t ave to wait for the allocated time of broadcast on Youtube, people now have busy lives and like to have choice over where and when they watch what they want to watch. This may be why 40% of Youtubist’s are over the age of 30. Offices are overrun by the mountains of Youtube material that is distributed amongst workers that in some cases the site had to be barred from the office computers.

Youtube has been the replacement of TV for hardcore fans, feature length programmes being posted up get regular Niche audiences. Overall distribution and democratisation are the key concepts of the Youtube case study. Free distribution of videos and an allowance for people to express themselves for free and maybe get quite popular is the catalyst for this revolution.

Saturday, 7 April 2007

The Boondock Saints Fan Website

The Boondock Saints is a 1999 action crime drama film written and directed by Troy Duffy. The film stars Sean Patrick Flanery and Norman Reedus as fraternal twins Conner and Murphy, who become vigilantes after killing two members of the Russian mob in self-defense. Believing they are on a mission from God, the brothers with friend and former mob errand boy David Della Rocco — who is referred to as the "Funny Man" throughout the film — set out to rid their home city of Boston from the Russian mob and Italian Mafia. Meanwhile, they are pursued by FBI agent Paul Smecker, played by Willem Dafoe.

The film ‘The Boondock Saints’ is one that was poorly criticised by film critics, as a result it was only screened in a very limited amount of independent cinemas in the US when it was first released. When finally it was distributed via VHS & DVD to more film outlets & it was discovered by more people it began to gain a very large, unexpected cult status with Americans, the Irish & film enthusiasts alike.



People had seen the film and some were amazed by it, some saying it was the best they had encountered, some thought that it wasn’t such a niche category & should have been widely distributed & the writer didn’t get the credit he deserved. This website was created for all of the fans of this cult film. Some fans have gone to extremes of tattooing the ‘Boondock Saints Prayer’ onto their backs & can express their love of the film by posting their pictures into blogs featured on the page.

Features on the page include:



A space where an email & a name are to be provided is available that is provided by a company called Hot Topic to provide Boondock fans the chance to order their own replica Boondock Saints Rosemary Beads.

Soundtracks on CD & MP3, Video Clips, Trailer & blogs are just a few of the thigns that this site offers for a fan of this amazing film. The fact that a small group of fans can come together and make a site that encourages so much interaction is only possible because of the accessibility of technology in the common day and age. The internet has provided the ‘average Joe’ a chance to celebrate a film that they think deserves more credit that it initially received. People can share their views & show their appreciation because of the mass convergence within this site; they can email pictures, videos & music of many formats.



Overall democratisation has made creating a site relatively easy, even to the untrained individual. People can invite other Boondock Saints enthusiasts while also making a business out of the site visitors encouraging them to purchase fan-merchandise. Appreciation can be displayed toward the writer of the film (Troy Duffy) & he regularly writes posts on this site. Because of democratisation, interaction, with film enthusiasts & in this case even the film writer has been made easy.

Oh, and just to add, I know it may come as I surprise to you, considering I love this film so much, a character who plays a major role in this film is Billy Connolly (yes I said it, Billy Connolly).

The Free Metro Newspaper

Metro is the trading name of a free daily newspaper, published by Associated Newspapers (part of Daily Mail and General Trust) in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland. It is available from Monday to Friday each week on many public transport services across the United Kingdom and Ireland.

The paper was launched in London in 1999, and can now be found in 13 UK urban centres. Localised editions are distributed in Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, Newcastle, Sussex, Sheffield, The East Midlands, Bristol and Bath. A Dublin version, launched in conjunction with Metro International and The Irish Times, began publications on 10 October 2005. It is part of the same media group as The Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday and the Evening Standard, although in some areas, the paper operates as a franchise with a local newspaper publisher, rather than as a wholly owned concern.

The website; ‘www.metro.co.uk’ is not only a place where obviously headline are displayed, just like any other respectful spreadsheet or even tabloid newspaper does but it is a place where interactivity is rife. It provides additional sections, including ‘weird stuff’ , ‘metrosexual’ and even blogs and podcasts.

The website strongly benefits from the strong base of the paper itself, they are distributed in various places (taking london for an example) on buses, tubes, trains & other forms of transport. When people wake up to commute to work, the metro along with other, less significant free London newspapers is what they encounter, being the most dominant & well known the reading of it becomes a daily ritual. There are sections that are divided just to suit the ‘average commuter’, or they can rely on the fact that they are so widespread in what they publish that anyone would have an interest in any particular section.

Issues are raised in the sometimes issued ‘Outrage?’ section, this involves them publishing a short story that can later on be commented on via the online blog room. Headings like ‘Chocolate Christ Sculpture’ which are designed to immediately catch the readers eye are often posted in this section. This section also displays another aspect of convergence as they allow the reader to text in on their mobile phone, maybe while on the way to work, school or wherever their place of work is. The newspapers publisher does everything to warm the reader to the newspaper to encourage them to use different medias to get involved.

The Metro are part of Daily Mail & General trust and although it is distributed as a free newspaper it does receive a lot of profit, solely due to the interactivity that is involved with it. The encouraged mass convergence leads to many texts & emails being sent in, competitions are involved also.


On the site many trailers, webzines & blogs are posted to correlate with what the reader of the metro may have read in the day, they can be saved & kept in a blog of the readers choice. Videos that readers have made themselves can also be posted on the site, even news videos that have been headlines in the newspapers. Even a man that killed his wife, then tried to hide in a hospital but was finally hosed out with a police hose. As it is a tabloid newspaper the website is open to advertisement also, including news on band concerts & films at the cinema at the current time.

Overall this website is a very good example of intractivity, as the newspaper is just something that was initially published to be a 20 minute read it has done very well for itself. People now, not only pick up and read the magazine but when they arrive home they comment on things they had seen earlier in the newspaper, post their thoughts and even videos recorded from their mobiles, which just shows the amount of convergence involved in the simple activity of reading a free tabloid newspaper

For your temporary entertainment

I was in Product Design & I had just glued two (yes, two!) pieces of wood together, feeling rather happy with my self i fell into a temporary state of A.M trance (you may call it 'daydream') & to my surprise a member of the Latymer Pixie Paparazzi (Josh Cohen) snapped me. How embarrasing eh? As i know this post has caused you to be momentarily distracted from searching for evidence of the actually 'doing of my work' i feel my objective has been completed successfully. Quite good ain't I? :)

MISS B :)!!!!!

I haven't had a computer for a week, well i have bt da internet wldnt lemme sign onto da blloger.com page, long story bt im gettin it all done, i read the post you put up bt iss gettin fixed now.........