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N-GEN Studios - the Next Generation of Studio Services.
Find out more here.

Here's a convenient little app from LinkedIn - it watches Twitter and catches tweets referencing keywords associated with your profile (companies, schools, etc.)
Company Buzz is an application that allows you to see what people are saying about companies and topics you care about. Company Buzz uses information from your profile such as companies and schools to find relevant discussions on twitter. Company buzz also shows you how frequently your company or topic has been mentioned and the top words associated with your company and the topic. You may add new topics and customize existing topics with new search terms to get just the results you are interested in.
(Marginally) more info here.

Over at Seth Godin's always-insightful blog, there's this great list of attributes essential to a successful marketer (now, how many of these are applicable to the leaders of N-GEN?):
Traditional job requirements: show up, sober. Listen to the boss, lift heavy objects.
Here's what I'd want if I were hiring a marketer:
The cool thing about this list is that it's not dependent on what you were born with or who you know. Or how much you can lift.
Link

Over at Social CMS Buzz, there's an intriguing list of sites built on Drupal - some of which I wouldn't have guessed (Mission Metallica? Looks like custom Flash all the way to my eyes).
Social CMS Buzz article
Here's a link to Drupal founder Dries Buytaert's more extensive - and more informative - list.

AppVee has video reviews of two new apps for Google's Android phone platform - bar code scanners that use your phone's camera for image capture. (see YouTube links at bottom).
From MIT's Ad Lab article:
These applications seem to be among the few with one or two natural business models built into them from the start. Placing contextual recommendations next to price look-up results is one; powering branded wishlists and registries is another.
MIT Ad Lab article about the apps
Previous MIT Ad Lab article about Instant price Checking at retail
YouTube videos:

Guy Kawasaki has an interview with Nancy Duarte here.
Excerpt:
Question: Why do most presentations suck?
Answer: Most presentations suck because:
- The presenter has not given the audience any idea why they are there or what the content means to them; messages are disorganized and there’s no unifying story line.
- The presenter uses the slides as a document or teleprompter and reads their slides with his/her back to the audience. This makes the audience feel like the presenter is slow or not very smart.
- The presenter is not passionate or inspired and has not connected to the audience in a uniquely human way.
Did you notice that presentations suck solely because of the presenter? Great speakers like you can get by without much visual support. Emotive qualities are the greatest assets in a live performance.
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Last month Esquire dropped the first magazine cover to incorporate e-ink technology. While the creative was underwhelming, the execution sure generated a lot of buzz.
Looks like in-store POP is next, followed one presumes by packaging (I'm betting on cereal boxes, but we'll see).
Quote:
Henkel's Right Guard is testing use of printed electronics to power flashing lights in corrugated in-store displays at Walgreens stores in the Chicago area, a first step for a technology from Arizona start-up company Nth Degree that could eventually bring low-cost streaming video to printed displays, packaging, direct mail or magazine inserts.
MIT Advertising Lab has interesting commentary on Burger King's use of video games. Here's a quote:
Burger King ... made the decision to sell the games at $3.99, an extremely low price for disc-based (as opposed to downloadable) Xbox games but, as it turned out, a potentially much better price than “free.”
By choosing to charge even a small sum, Burger King seems to have sent a message to consumers that its games had real value, unlike other advergames they might have played and been disappointed by in the past. Burger King further supported the games with a strong marketing campaign that included advertisements shown during Saturday Night Live and during NFL games. All this sent a very clear message to consumers: “There is something of value waiting for you at Burger King.”
This is actually one of a series of articles abstracting the book Changing the Game: How Video Games Are Transforming the Future of Business
MIT AdLab article Part 1
Part 2
Part 3

Here's a post on Flash banner ads that hijack your clipboard, and won't let go until you've restarted your browser (or your OS, depending on who's talking...): http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=1733
And here's the thread on Apple's support boards - seems the first user to publicize this was on a Mac:
http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=7768848

The folks at Yahoo - who own Flickr - have asked a few of their Flickr users for permission to turn their kitty photos into emoticons for the Yahoo Messenger.
Here's a link to some of the results: Yahoo Messenger blog
Here's a reaction from one of the photographers (I have reason to know she's thrilled):
Tunie is Famous!! "Talk to the Paw" Emoticat™ Icon released today!
This is an interesting twist on CGM - pull consumer-generated media from your user base (it helps if your user base is photographers :-) rather than waiting for it to be pushed to you, and meet the consumer half-way (in this case by providing illustration talent). Wonder if they did this with any other classes of photo, or is it just cat pix?
Apparently this is to support a chat environment called Emoticats - more here.
Here's where to get the Yahoo chat client.