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  • 10Apr

    Microsoft has accompanied the third of its anti-Apple commercials with a creative document detailing what it calls the ‘Apple Tax’.

    The latest ad follows the same theme: ‘ordinary’ shoppers (this time a mother and son) head out with a $1,500 budget and wind up choosing a PC over a Mac. This time the requirements are for a fast computer suitable for gaming, though the child is swayed to a PC laptop because of its Blu-ray capabilities. As usual, the Mac is dismissed as pretty but inadequate and expensive. Here is the ad:

    With the shock value of the direct attack gone, online reaction has been somewhat muted. It seems that for future ads to have much impact, Microsoft needs to tweak the concept, perhaps getting much more specific about why a particular PC is better than a particular Mac.

    Meanwhile Microsoft has taken the concept of the Apple Tax, a line created by the firm’s consumer marketing chief in an interview last October and turned it into a very literal marketing program. The firm has put out an 11-page study claiming that an average family buying two PCs rather than two Macs would save $3,367 over the following five years, and even produced a dummy IRS form itemising the costs.

    The Apple Tax

    Only around half the supposed savings come from the purchase price of the machines. The rest come from software, support and various upgrades. However, several points are either confusing or plain misleading. For example, when it comes to office software the study assumes the buyer already has a copy of Microsoft Office from owning a PC but would have to pay to buy Mac equivalents.

    In other words, it’s a comparison of the cost of switching from a PC to a Mac, not a straight comparison starting from scratch. That may be a realistic scenario for many would-be Mac buyers, but it’s certainly not fair: after all, a Mac user switching to a PC would face a similar ‘Microsoft Tax’ on software.

    The figures also include costs for the MobileMe service and in-store Apple care, but don’t take into account PC equivalents or free alternatives for Mac users.

    Ironically this appears to be one of the rare situations where added detail makes a much less convincing case. Close study of the ‘Apple Tax’ reports leave you with the feeling that Microsoft is greatly exaggerating the genuine price differences. The TV spots, however simplified and manipulated, at least make a more credible general point that Macs are usually more expensive.

  • 10Apr

    Laughing Alligator

    Let’s say a researcher gives you a candle, a box of tacks, and a book of matches. Your mission: affix the candle to a corkboard in such a way so that, when lit, wax doesn’t drip onto the floor.

    Nothing funny about that, right?

    But a funny joke might just help you solve this creative challenge. And laughter in general may help you write better copy.

    Not convinced? Read on.

    The Candle and the Corkboard

    This challenge comes from a famous study by psychologist Alice M. Isen. Her researchers tasked two groups of students with the problem.

    The first group was shown a bloopers reel before the test. The second watched a film about mathematics.

    Here’s the funny part: Seventy-five percent of the students who watched the bloopers solved the candle and the corkboard problem.

    Just twenty percent of the people who watched the math film beforehand solved the same problem.

    Most of the students who watched the math film approached the challenge with “functional fixedness,” or a mental block that limits people to using things in traditional ways. They tried to tack the candle to the corkboard or glue it on with melted wax.

    But the majority of students who had a laugh beforehand saw alternative uses for the objects they were given. They emptied the box of tacks, tacked it to the corkboard, and used it as a candleholder.

    Lighten Up for More Creative Copy

    Do you ever approach copywriting with functional fixedness?

    We all know how it is. It’s Monday, there’s a rote task at hand, so you conjure up a passable idea, bang it out in a flurry, and give it a quick proofreading. But the copy feels clinical, functional, dead.

    Laughter may help liven it up.

    Take a break. Watch some Funny or Die. Browse the New Yorker’s humor section. Talk to a friend or a coworker. Better yet, try to make someone else laugh.

    Do whatever it takes to lighten your mood.

    Then sit back down and look at your work. Can you punch up the subheads? Lighten the transitions? Does a more arresting lead leap to mind?

    Maybe so. Isen’s research shows that creative solutions are more likely to follow a good laugh than they are, say, banging your head on your desk.

    This can seem paradoxical. Sometimes, when you’re really under the gun, a silly distraction is the last thing you want. You want to stay focused. Determined. Serious.

    But that may be when you need to lighten up the most.

    What about you? How do you give your copy a lighter touch?

    About the Author: Michael Pugh is an ad guy who loves to travel.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 10Apr
    Google has taken a hard-line approach to link buying, but they've left the door open for another profitable niche: extortion SEO. Sites like Ripoff Report have perfected the art of maligning businesses and then charging them to get that information removed. And Google has no problem with it. ...
  • 10Apr

    Dave Arneson, one of the men who created Dungeons & Dragons, has died from cancer aged 61.

    While it was colleague Gary Gygax who specifically wrote what became Dungeons & Dragons, Arneson played a vital role in both the creation of the game and the development of the role-playing game concept. He had taken a set of gameplaying rules designed for simulating military battles with miniature figures and adapted them into games where players controlled an individual character.

    Wizards of the Coast, which currently owns the rights to Dungeons & Dragons, says Arneson deserves the credit for many of the basic concepts of role-playing games including “that each player controls just one hero, that heroes gain power through adventures, and that personality is as important as combat prowess.”

    The game is perhaps best known for using dice with more or fewer than six faces. There’s no telling how many mature, sophisticated, trendy adults have had their teenage geekdom uncovered by an uncontrollable facial reaction to the simple term “roll two D12”.

    Of course, while Arneson’s creation was no doubt motivated by artistic goals, it was a commercial goldmine thanks to its huge in-built profit margin. There’s something extremely impressive about persuading teenagers to hand over a fair chunk of cash for a box containing some dice, a booklet and an order to use their imagination.

    Gygax, who died in March 2008, had fallen out with Arneson over the game’s creation and the pair engaged in legal action, though the two later worked together. Perhaps the best tribute to Arneson’s work came from Gygax in a 1975 note quoted on the Grognardia blog:

    Dave is also the innovator of the “dungeon adventure” concept, creator of ghastly monsters, and inscrutable dungeonmaster par excellence. He devises complex combat systems, inexplicable dungeon and wilderness areas, and traps of the most subtle fiendishness…. I can not reccomend him more highly than simply saying that I would rather play in his campaign than any other.

  • 10Apr

    By Casey Lynn
    Contributing Writer, [GAS]

    My apologies for the unimaginative headline, but after reading several news stories yesterday with titles that involved Leonard Nimoy “beaming up” or “trekking over” to FOX’s show Fringe, I simply couldn’t perpetuate the lameness. (And I should note that what follows should not be considered any kind of spoiler for the show, as it has been fairly clear since the first episode that the character would show up eventually. Unlike recent Doctor Who casting spoilers.)

    So yes, Nimoy has been cast as a peripherally important character that has yet to appear on-screen in the show - William Bell, the founder of the ominous Massive Dynamic corporation. My first thought was: isn’t he a little old for that role? But then I realized that though the character was once colleagues with John Noble’s Walter Bishop, I suppose there has been nothing to imply that they are the same age.

    Still, I kind of dig the idea of him for that character; it makes me think of when he played Mustapha Mond in the made-for-TV version of Brave New World years ago… scientist-turned-all-powerful. Though my concern is that this might mean that the character gets short-changed, since I find it unlikely that Nimoy would be gearing up to be a regular on a TV series (though I could be wrong about that). I thought it was pretty tragic when Christopher Eccleston’s invisible man character on Heroes (one of the most interesting of the series, in my opinion) made a rather abrupt exit - and since it also seems unlikely that Eccleston will make a serious return to American television, it seems like a missed opportunity.

    In any case, if you’re a fan of Nimoy and haven’t been watching Fringe you should check it out; you can catch up on Hulu, at least part of the way. The show’s really not bad at all - it’s been described as an X-Files wannabe, which is fairly accurate, but I think it’s entertaining enough to stand on its own. And Joshua Jackson is a decent enough actor that I’ve stopped having Dawson’s Creek flashbacks.

  • 10Apr

    The opening act has the toughest gig in town. The audience isn't here to listen to you. They're restless. Perhaps you'll get a few seconds to earn their attention, but not much. Your gimmicks will fall flat and you might even get booed off stage.

    The rock star, on the other hand, has the crowd chanting for him before he shows up. He starts a song and people applaud. They sing along. They finish his lyrics for him.

    Most marketers are opening acts. The ad or blog post or tweet is a desperate attempt at attention, at keeping people from switching it off or booing. The posture of the marketer who is an opening act is unstable and a little sad.

    Some marketers are rock stars.

    How'd that happen?

    I'd argue that the two keys to becoming a rock star marketer are:
    1. settle for a tiny audience that views you as a star, not an opening act. Then grow that audience.
    and
    2. Be really good.

    I just went to see Keller Williams in concert. Without a doubt, he's a genius and a rock star. If he tried to pull this stuff as an opening act for someone else, he'd be booed off the stage. But he doesn't. Because he's a rock star. If he was selling something, I'd buy it.

  • 10Apr
    Gmail's rich-text editor has never been very powerful, especially if you look at other web applications like Google Docs or Zoho. An important missing feature is inserting images in a message: you can attach photos, but they're usually displayed at the bottom of the message and not all mail clients show thumbnails. One workaround was to upload the images to a website, open it in a different window and then drag it to Gmail's editor.

    Now you no longer have to do this since Gmail added inserting images as a Labs feature. After enabling the feature, you'll notice a new photo icon when you compose a message using the rich editor. You can insert images from your computer and images published online, by typing their addresses. Unfortunately, Gmail doesn't use the new Flash uploader, so you can't select more than one photo at a time.

    "Keep in mind that Gmail doesn't show URL-based images in messages by default to protect you from spammers, so if you're sending mail to other Gmail users, they'll still have to click Display images below or Always display images from ... to see images you embed," mentions the Gmail blog.


    To enable the new feature, go to Gmail Labs, search for "inserting images", select the "Enable" radio button and don't forget to click on "Save changes".

    Tip: if the uploaded image is too large, click on it and choose from the available sizes (small, medium, large) or resize the image by dragging one of the corners.

    { Thanks, Niranjan. }

  • 10Apr

    IE6 CSS Fixer is a free web-based tool to decrease the monkey work when starting an IE6 CSS fix file.

    It is not a magical one-click solution that will solve every possible problem, it can even create new errors, but it is a handy solution that offers customized fixes for commonly known problems.

    IE6 CSS Fixer

    The tool simply checks your CSS file & creates new CSS rules for the possible problematic objects. New rules can be inserted as a seperate CSS file easily to check if they cause any problems.

    Some CSS fixes it offers are:

    • adding display:inline to floated elements
    • converting min-height values
    • fixing negative margins & more.

    Special Downloads:
    Free Admin Template For Web Applications
    jQuery Dynamic Drag’n Drop
    ScheduledTweets

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    Tags:

    Related posts

  • 10Apr

    IE6 CSS Fixer is a free web-based tool to decrease the monkey work when starting an IE6 CSS fix file.

    It is not a magical one-click solution that will solve every possible problem, it can even create new errors, but it is a handy solution that offers customized fixes for commonly known problems.

    IE6 CSS Fixer

    The tool simply checks your CSS file & creates new CSS rules for the possible problematic objects. New rules can be inserted as a seperate CSS file easily to check if they cause any problems.

    Some CSS fixes it offers are:

    • adding display:inline to floated elements
    • converting min-height values
    • fixing negative margins & more.

    Special Downloads:
    Free Admin Template For Web Applications
    jQuery Dynamic Drag’n Drop
    ScheduledTweets

    Advertisements:
    SSLmatic - Cheap SSL Certificates (from $19.99/year)
    Dreamhost $50 Discount Code: WRD
    Follow WebResourcesDepot At Twitter And Get More Resources!

    Tags:

    Related posts

  • 10Apr

    In the following video presentation, microbiologist Bonnie Bassler explains how she discovered that bacteria “talk” to each other, using a chemical language that lets them coordinate defense and mount attacks. The find has stunning implications for medicine, industry — and our understanding of ourselves.