Posts Tagged ‘iPad’

Apple’s Advertising & The Truth

14 Oct 11

We love it when we identify fellow subscribers to the Sawtooth philosophy of “truth” – particularly heavy hitters like Bob Garfield. He noted in last week’s Adage that the reason he placed Apple’s advertising campaigns among the best of the century is due to one simple fact: that they are true.

The most compelling piece of the article for us is the articulation of the relationship between ethos of the consumer and the truth inherent in the Apple brand as espoused by Steve Jobs.

Until recently, I had failed to notice the central genius behind the Apple ethic.

It was true.

Not just shrewd, not just potent, but literally true. So admirable was the advertising for understanding the iconoclastic psychology of the audience and for flattering random graphic designers as heroic subversives, I never noticed that the positioning was rooted in reality. Steve Jobs was a bona fide liberator. A revolutionary. A visionary leader. First, he liberated his customers from DOS. Then from Windows. Later he would use digital technology not to speed up and quicken cel animation, but to Pixar it into near irrelevance. Then, with the iPod, he consigned the recording industry and much of terrestrial radio into similar near oblivion. His iPhone revolutionized the hand-held world and his iPad is only just beginning to alter publishing on a grand scale. And with each such effort, he pried the thumb of some Big Brother-like monopolist off our slavish selves. He wasn’t merely a canny psychologist with an eye for design. He was Moses in a turtleneck.

Read the full article here.

Social Media Makeover

22 Jul 10

Are you a magazine lover? Prefer flipping through glossy pages rather than scrolling down an endless computer screen? Well, now you don’t have to wait for your monthly subscription. In fact, you can get your magazine fix as fast as your friends are posting stuff on Facebook and Twitter.

Yesterday, Flipboard launched as the “world’s first social magazine.” The new app, created only for iPad, is changing the way we view our constantly updating, sometimes cluttered social media spaces.

Flipboard syncs to your Facebook and Twitter accounts, as well as other popular news sources you choose. It then searches those feeds for highly engaged items, ones with the most likes, comments and retweets. Once it finds everything of interest, it displays the content in a cleanly designed magazine-like layout on your iPad. You can read everything your friends are reading with the flip of a page.

Flipboard is backed by some pretty heavy hitters, including Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and Ashton Kutcher. Its creators Mike McCue, former CEO of Tellme, and Evan Doll, a former iPhone engineer at Apple, are hoping the app will revolutionize the way we browse multimedia.

I’m all for giving clunky social media sites like Facebook a facelift, but for right now that would require me owning an iPad. Someday…

Big Fork, Little Folk

16 Jul 10

Kraft Foods shows other brands how they can use new media to really engage with their consumers.

With the introduction of their new app, only for iPad, Kraft is targeting young parents to help them involve their kids in mealtime. Big Fork, Little Fork teaches children valuable cooking knowledge and smart eating habits. The app is loaded with recipes, how-to-videos and educational games. Now that’s kid-friendly food for thought.

iCan’tBelieveApple

6 Apr 10

Building a new web site? Modernizing your current site? As if those two tasks weren’t daunting enough (and having done this a lot with clients, we already know the answer), now it seems Apple went and muddied up the waters even further. Here comes the iPad, Apple’s new tablet entry. It does everything (better digital book reading, better digital content viewing, etc). It does everything except for one small thing: it isn’t compatible with Flash. Darn it, Apple. You’ve messed everything up, because everyone knows Flash is the only way to do cool stuff on the Internet (isn’t it?). In fact, the New York Times has already built an iPad-ready version of it’s site, with The Wall Street Journal and NPR following suit. Now what?

First off, breathe. While you inhale/exhale/repeat, let’s review. Sure, the iPad’s lack of compatibility with Flash is pushing companies not only to rethink web development but to actually execute sites specifically designed for the Flash-less tablet. This is seen as a huge boon for HTML5 and to mean the imminent demise of Flash. But before we storm Apple with torches raised, let’s remember that the rise of HTML5 and the death of Flash isn’t a web development revolution that begins with the iPad. Designers, developers and information architects have been hating on Flash for quite some time, and while HTML5 (which has been in development for over 6 years) indeed appears to be a welcome alternative, the iPad didn’t start that fire. Maybe it stokes it a little, but it certainly didn’t bring the kerosene and the matches.

What’s this mean for you, new site wanter? Honestly, nothing. And that’s a good thing. Developing a site from hereon out will not be affected by the iPad because the issues don’t stem from the iPad itself, but rather industry standards. Sacrificing the glitz of Flash for clarity of information architecture is the king nowadays anyway. This site itself as well as another site we are just finishing now (check back soon to hear about it) are nice examples of just that. As for you, current Flash-driven site owner, if the iPad audience is who you want, then a sister HTML site appears to be in your future. But, before you do that, you really need to ask yourself if that audience is worth it (my guess is they are).