All posts tagged ‘foursquare’

by SarahAugust 13, 2010

Tweetworthy: Foursquare Swag, Everything is Clickable, IKEA QR Assembly, and More

1. Foursquare launches official store, get your buttons and swag http://bit.ly/9FDSYa

2. Apple hints at future haptic feedback tech http://bit.ly/9B7x0I

3. Good futures thinking around augmented reality: "Everything is Clickable" http://bit.ly/aI2Iev

4. Can QR Codes Make Assembling Ikea Furniture Easier? http://bit.ly/9qpZ6z

5. Keiichi Matsuda - Augmented City [in 3D] http://bit.ly/cYz9dQ

6. The story behind the 2010 startup success: Siri (why it’s so important to Apple’s future) http://bit.ly/9Yxylp

7. This QR Code is made from a 56 oz bag of M&M's http://bit.ly/cjGp9Y

8. Museum of Natural History demonstrates the power of mobile by properly integrating http://bit.ly/abmIVN

9. Coca Cola intro'd first printed coupon in 1887, see what has changed since then w/ "the mobile coupon guide" http://bit.ly/bZu1J0

10. Tour of SimpleGeo reveals why location services can’t get along http://bit.ly/cH2mGN

Tweetworthy is a weekly roundup of the most shared tweets from @MobileBehavior. You can follow us on Twitter here.

by MBJuly 29, 2010

Perspective: Carnegie Mellon's Jesse Schell on Mobile and the Art of Game Design

Jesse Schell is a professor at the Carnegie Mellon Entertainment Technology Center, and the CEO of Schell Games. He wrote a book called "The Art of Game Design: A Book of Lenses" and has been involved with several innovative research projects involving mobile games. He is currently working on a few new mobile games at his studio.

In your talk at DICE, you call the iPhone a "modern digital Swiss Army Knife." Yet we see the iPad and an ecosystem of screens. What are your thoughts on the current state of convergence and how will this affect the way games are designed?

Convergence is mostly a myth. Technologies generally do not converge, they diverge. That's why it will not be strange for people to have a game console, a laptop, an iPad, and a smartphone. The number of screens in our lives will continue to increase. The cool part about this for games is that it gives us all kinds of new ways and places to create games.

As an expert on game design, you are able to see through the hype. What are Foursquare's current flaws? What about EpicWin? Will turning our to-do list into a game actually work?

Anyone curious about this should read the book "Punished by Rewards" by Alfie Kohn. Turning our to-do lists into games only works in very limited situations, and generally only for a short time -- soon, we get sick of it, and it doesn't seem fun anymore, it just seems like work.

As for Foursquare, its main flaw is that it provides little actual value right now -- it is primarily a novelty, like the Tamagotchi was. Once the world understands a novelty, the world moves on. Now, some people say, "well, soon they will add fantasy elements -- the whole world will become an RPG." But you know what? Foursquare + Fantasy = Larping. And I think you know how the world feels about larping.

Foursquare's future path most likely lies in advergaming. They will cut deal after deal with companies that are trying to make a splash with some novel new Foursquare game that has products for prizes, and it will be great fun, until the world gets bored of it. I know I sound negative, but that's just my gut reaction. Maybe the Foursquare guys will figure out something clever and find a way to become an essential part of our everyday lives -- but right now I don't see it.

We recently took note of this commentary on gaming in an Adweek Digital Special Issue:

Nicholas Christakis calls the defining paradigm of the digital age: "massive, passive data collection." Simply put, with technology invading all parts of our lives, we're leaving digital footprints of our activities. Combine that data trail with an increasingly robust social graph and what results is the ability to visualize behavior patterns -- eating, sleeping, walking and driving -- and make a competitive game out of them.

It reminds us of  the idea of earning points by brushing our teeth. What opportunities do you think lie here? Will we tire or burnout from all of these point systems? Are there alternatives?

It's all about the game design. Bad designs will wear us out, good ones will spur us to challenge ourselves. In the coming decade there will be thousands of experimental examples -- some big, some small. Most will fail -- but a few will succeed -- and their success will be because they have found a way to enrich our daily lives in a way that wasn't possible before.

Finally, what are a couple of things you have your eyes on in the mobile and tech space? What have you been thinking about?

I've been thinking a lot about augmented reality. I've been thinking about how very soon all the scattered data about us on the web will be consolidated in ways that will shock us. Someone will hold their smartphone up as they walk by my car, my house, or my person, and suddenly get information about my life, my interests, and my family. This is going to make us feel like our privacy has been violated, even though no new data is being shared -- rather, the old data that is already out there on Facebook and on the web is going to be consolidated in unexpected ways. We'll be like Adam and Eve biting the apple, and suddenly realizing that we're naked.

That, and I've been thinking about using GPS to play pac-man while I drive!

by CalebJuly 22, 2010

Proximity Awareness: Skyhook's Real-Time Heat Map for San Francisco Marathon

Skyhook Wireless is demonstrating the power of real-time location data for the upcoming San Francisco Marathon. Using SpotRank, it is presenting a heat map of popular places around a specific event.

ReadWriteWeb describes the magic:

Imagine being able to look blocks or miles away from where you are and see how many people are hanging out at an intersection - in real time. Add a layer of precisely located Twitter messages, Foursquare check-ins, Flickr photos and other social data and what have you got? That sounds like a super power right out of a comic books to me: remote vision of where people are gathering and what they are saying.

The opportunity for using real-time data points in marketing and advertising is enormous. For example, they can make the consumer part of the brand's story. In March, Pepsi and SimpleGeo provided SXSW attendees with a visualization of their movements throughout the conference. They can also engage the people through real-time interactions. For Discovery Channel's Shark Week, area/code turned GPS tagged sharks into a game. This is exactly how brands and agencies should be thinking about Foursquare's API too.

by CalebJuly 21, 2010

Wearable Computing: Check-In Here on Foursquare (via Nike+)

When it comes to the Internet of Things, Nike+ is probably the most cited example of successful consumer application. In fact, Adweek named it Digital Campaign of the Decade last December. Together, a $20 sensor, iPhone/iPod, and iTunes enable users to track their running progress and compile a quantified self.

We've said it before: If anyone can make wearable computing cool, it's Nike. They've already triggered change by making the connected shoe a reality. Now we look to designers, hackers, and artists who have been reprogramming Nike+ sensors to provide insight into what could be next.

In early June, Fast Company reported on Nike+ 26, a project by designer Michael Robinson. Using the Nike+ sensor, Michael not only collected running data, but was able to visualize it in a glanceable fashion. Every mile the wearer runs, one of the 26 lights turns on, symbolizing progress during a marathon.

My idea is about exploring the broadcasting of the NIKE+ information that has so far always remained private to each runner. For each mile you run, a light goes on from the back of the trainer to the front so that when you pass someone running, they know you’re faster and have gone further.

Michael considered not only the collection of data, but also its use. We are reminded of the importance of feedback loops, the value in the architecting and presenting of data in ways that affect behavior.

Another interesting hack for your Nike+ shoes involves Foursquare. Casey Halverson's setup lets him to automatically check-in to a venue by just walking in the front door. How he does this is extremely rudimentary, but it demonstrates what's possible. Location aware sneakers remind us of Blue GPS shoes, or satellite-monitored footwear for hikers and soldiers who fear being kidnapped.

Taking it to the next level, what if Nike+, or a platform like it, was completely open source? The same thing that is happening to the desktop and mobile web would happen to what we wear on our feet. Innovation. Our shoes, what we do, and where we go with them would become part of the programmable web, APIs and all.

by CalebJuly 2, 2010

Tweetworthy: QR Cloud Project, Foursquare Funding, iAds, and More

1. A VC: Some Thoughts On Foursquare http://bit.ly/9aLaus

2. Why Your Credit Card Will Soon Follow the Audio CD http://bit.ly/9xRlHf

3. The QR Cloud Project http://bit.ly/cLnc2Y

4. Testing Times Square: 'What is Foursquare?' http://bit.ly/9w26fc

5. RecreateMyNight Enables Collaborative Post-Show Memory Creation http://bit.ly/9HyMCe

6. iAds Are Here Today. This Is What They Look Like. http://bit.ly/cyCWI4

7. Yahoo! Launches Android Apps, Plus Web Apps for iPhone http://bit.ly/cOScFi

8. AdMob Data Illustrates Why Feature Phones Aren’t a Strategy for the Future http://bit.ly/cwl0Hb

9. New York’s Museum of Modern Art activates traditional ad campaign with mobile http://bit.ly/bo454P

10. Unlocking the elusive potential of social networks http://bit.ly/cjifdM

Tweetworthy is a weekly roundup of the most shared tweets from @MobileBehavior. You can follow us on Twitter here.

by CalebJune 29, 2010

Foursquare Window Decals Help Businesses "Socialize" Location

In speaking with users, the most common complaint we hear about Foursquare and similar "check-in" services is that people forget to use them. The act of checking-in upon arriving someplace needs to be prompted and conditioned before it becomes a reflex. To help solve this rather large problem, Foursquare has sent out window decals, or clings, to thousands of business owners that they can use to advertise the service and remind people to check in.

The clings — designed to stick to window storefronts to remind patrons to check in on Foursquare — are now arriving at stores everywhere, even big businesses like Whole Foods.

The grocery chain retailer has agreed to place the Foursquare clings in 30 of its stores’ windows, a gesture that serves as an important handshake with the location-sharing startup.

A Foursquare call-to-action is one example of how a business, large or small, can "socialize" their venue. Both Facebook and Google have sent out similar stickers, encouraging users to "like" and share places. These stickers help businesses use traditional POS marketing to promote their digital efforts, raising awareness and driving participation. This sort of cross-channel integration is key to the success of any digital strategy.

[via mashable]

by CalebJune 24, 2010

Barcodes: QRcheck.in Provides DIY Foursquare Call-To-Action

QRcheck.in is a service that lets venue owners generate a barcode-based Foursquare call-to-action. With it, mobile users are able to scan a QR code to check-in, conveniently skipping a step in the process.

It reminds us of Google Favorite Places (also QR codes) and Facebook "Text-To-Like" decals. Apparently Foursquare check-in stickers are also on the way. These all provide small businesses with a simple way to promote and "socialize" their location. It's only a matter of time before this becomes commonplace.

[via everydayux]

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