Wednesday, Aug 29 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Our friends at Portland-based
Jive Software are holding a
preview show and tell of the new version of
Clearspace, a collaboration software. The entire
Portland blogging, podcasting and influencer
community is invited to attend the sneak peek
dinner on Tuesday, September 11 at 5:30 p.m. at
the Jive Software headquarters. You need to
RSVP.
Jive has a lot to celebrate, since it just grabbed
$15 million in investment from Sequoia Capital.
-posted by Rachel
Wednesday, Aug 29 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| media(tion)
Everyone's gotta have a marketing niche. The National
Science Foundation, the Public Library of Science and
the San Diego Supercomputing Group are debuting
SciVee, which is being billed at
the YouTube for scientists. SciVee enables
researchers to upload technical papers and video
presentations that demystify the more
complicated topics. First up: “Structural
Evolution of the Protein Kinase-Like
Superfamily.” I don't think
Obama girl has a lot of
competition here...yet.
-posted by Rachel
Wednesday, Aug 29 2007 | Author and
categories:
Lindsay Stril
| random sparkly
things
Ever catch yourself dreaming up a new gizmo and
praying it will come to market some day? Maybe I've
been living under a rock, but Engadget just brought
the
Sony Reader to my attention (...a
concept I thought I had invented some time
ago...). The Reader is the size of a paperback
book, carries around 80 full-length titles and
provides enough battery power for 7,500 page
turns. The display looks like old fashioned ink
on paper and the text size adjustable. While you
can't make calls from it, the Sony Reader does
allows users to upload your favorite photos for
sharing.
-posted by Lindsay
Thursday, Aug 23 2007 | Author and
categories:
Justin Hall
| client news
Well, I would be remiss to not do a blog posting on a
new game being released from one of our clients,
Sandlot Games. Cake Mania 2,
follow up to the most downloaded casual video
game of 2006, will be available to the public on
8/27. More than 40 million people have
downloaded this game and the new release is set
to carry the momentum forward. You can check out
the mini-site that will launch on Monday, or hit
up Sandlot's newly designed website to download
the game.
In the meantime, here are some exclusive pics from
the new game, enjoy...
-posted by Justin
Thursday, Aug 23 2007 | Author and
categories:
Adrienne
Lenhart | NW tech news
Want to get the inside scoop on your favorite TV
show?
BuddyTV, a start-up out of
Seattle, offers communities around TV shows
featuring inside news, celebrity interviews and
gossip. You can also read a recent nPost
interview with BuddyTV CEO David
Niu.
-posted by Adrienne
Thursday, Aug 23 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Last month on its corporate blog, Kirkland-based
CatchTheBest announced it will be
releasing its applicant tracking solution for
the small business sometime this fall. Seems as
if the human resources tools space is getting
very crowded in the Seattle tech arena, what
with
Ascentis and others already
fishing for clients in this market. We'll be
watching for the CatchTheBest launch to see how
its product differentiates itself.
-posted by Rachel
Thursday, Aug 23 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| media(tion)
As a writer for WIRED,
Josh Davis has covered the
Internet from top to bottom. Now he has a new
challenge: in 12 months, find the next big thing
in the Web 2.0 world and turn it into something
at the level of YouTube and Flickr. He'll be
using his own money to start but, in return,
hopes to witness at ground zero how the
pressures of running a startup can be rewarding.
Initially, he's selecting three startups to help
find initial funding: one in the UK, one from a
digitally developing country (think Estonia) and
one from anywhere else. He'll negotiate his own
equity in each firm (this is where the reward
comes in).
Patrick Sullivan at lov.li, who
used to be with our friends at
Marqui is helping Josh out and
posted more about the project at
LinkedIn. This is one of the more intriguing
projects I've heard about lately.
-posted by Rachel
Monday, Aug 20 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| media(tion)
Interesting
article in the NY TIMES on the
new
wikiscanner service, which
identifies the source of edits to various
Wikipedia entries. This of course means that
anyone can track changes made by non-objective
parties – for example changes made by an
ExxonMobile employee regarding the Valdez spill.
It brings to light interesting questions
regarding the ethics and objectivity involved in
writing and editing Wikipedia entries. We often
get involved in the creation of wikis on various
client products, etc., but if our employees or
clients ever
edit a particular entry
written by somebody else, I would hope that they
identify themselves and work through the sites
"talk" mechanism. Still, interesting reading...
-posted by Paul
Monday, Aug 20 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| random sparkly
things
It's Monday, so in keeping with the intense need for
coffee I think it's time to announce our website du
jour. Check out the
Oracle of Starbucks – it
can accurately predict your personality type
based on your favorite Starbucks drink. Awesome.
-posted by Rachel
Monday, Aug 20 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Szia!
Hungarian Telephone and Cable
Corp., the second largest fixed line
telecommunications and broadband ISP in Hungary,
has a major Seattle connection. Turns out the
company is based here. Hopefully, I'm not the
last person on earth to discover this -- the
company was founded in 1992, so it's been in
town for awhile. I'm sure there's a very good
reason why the company is in Seattle and not
with its customers in Hungary, but I'm still
wondering what it might be.
-posted by Rachel
Monday, Aug 20 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| PR,
marketing and design
As long as I'm
going
down memory road, here's another update on a
former co-worker: Erick Saks. After pushing the
button to drop the ball on Times Square with
Mayor Bloomberg last January (and being on the
Carson Daly Show), he was deployed to
Afghanistan with one of the Air Force's new
Contingency Response Groups. Cpt. Saks is in
charge of his unit's public information -- and
he must be doing a great job, as he and his team
were featured last month in a
Newsweek article. We like to
think he obtained his media skills from us.
-posted by Rachel
Friday, Aug 17 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| PR,
marketing and design
Clients often ask us about company or product
awards... what's the advantage, how do you get them,
are they worth it, which ones should we go for, etc.
A major award from a reputable source can be worth
gold in terms of the validation it provides, and we
spend a significant amount of time managing award
programs for clients. Much of that time is spent
sifting through the various opportunities to identify
the awards that are worth it – in other words,
those that are reputable, on target and offer a
reasonable chance for success.
Then again, there is certainly a lot of crap out
there. So what are some awards worth?
Not so much, given that you can
win for a product that literally does nothing.
-posted by Paul
Wednesday, Aug 15 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Must be the season for CEOs to move on.
Lumera announced today that its
CEO, Tom Mino, is stepping down. At least the
company did him the honor of a press release;
embattled Zango CEO and co-founder, Daniel Todd,
just got a
company blog mention discussing
his departure at the end of August. It's
probably coincidental timing that
PC Tools today announced it won
the first round in a lawsuit instigated by
Zango. PC Tools makes anti-spyware that
neutralizes Zango's adware.
-posted by Rachel
Wednesday, Aug 15 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| PR,
marketing and design
Two of my former co-workers have individually
launched great blogs that talk about one of my
favorite things: food. At
Lunch in a Box, you can learn how
to build a better and healthier lunch,
accompanied by photographs that would make a
food stylist scream with envy. As an example,
the site recently featured cassava and wild
salmon in a nifty divided box, complete with a
cute grape-inspired critter as a garnish. Kudos
to Deborah Lamascus Hamilton for creativity
and...well...fun! And over at
Cafe Fernando, Cenk Sönmezsoy
comments on the food scene in Istanbul, again
with glorious, mouth-watering photos. But my
favorite blog entries are the ones that document
his attempts to create new and interesting
dishes, such as the smoked salmon tarte. Note to
the boss: I need more free time.
-posted by Rachel
Wednesday, Aug 15 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Our friends at
Paladin Partners alerted us to
the fact that a new animation studio has opened
in Prosser.
American Animation Studios has
its first release now available on Amazon.com,
with a second coming up this fall. Both feature
American heroes in keeping with the company's
goal of bringing historical content to 3D
animation. "Patrick Henry: Quest for Freedom" is
also available direct.
-posted by Rachel
Thursday, Aug 09 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| PR,
marketing and design
As we mentioned before, VOXUS is up for a Mobile
Village award. It's a reader's choice award, and if
you're interesting in helping out, voting steps are
below. Signing up and voting takes less than five
minutes; don't ask how we know. We certainly didn't
vote for ourselves. We would never do that.
Voting ends 9/26.
1. Visit
Mobile Village
2. Click on the top right hand "Sign Up Now" link
3. Fill in required fields and submit (“Thank
you for registering!” will appear upon
completion)
4. Next, click on "click here" and then "vote here"
to select VOXUS in the following category:
Wireless/Mobile Technology PR Firm
(you will need to confirm your email address at the
end of the ballot)
A number of other VOXUS clients are participating,
including
AirMagnet,
CipherLab and
Formotus.
-posted by Paul
Thursday, Aug 09 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| media(tion)
Here's an added take on our
earlier post about Pepcom... We occasionally are
asked by clients whether or not they should consider
participating in additional paid opportunities to
meet with the press while at major trade shows such
as CES and CTIA. There are always several functions
being offered, such as breakfasts, cocktail hours,
etc. One organizer I've been asked about is Pepcom
(www.pepcom.com), one of the more aggressive
marketers of these types of functions. I think Pepcom
just made my answer to clients a little easier in the
future, as the company has majorly ticked off a very
influential reporter -- David Berlind of CNET and
ZDNet, who is calling for a professional boycott of
all future Pepcom press events. Suffice to say,
Pepcom just shot itself in the foot by trying to pull
a power play on a journalist...you'd think the
company would more highly value its core
constituency.
-posted by Rachel
Thursday, Aug 09 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| PR,
marketing and design
Dan Rayburn of media outlet
StreamingMedia.com takes a
press release from
EdgeCast out behind the woodshed
for a
beating. Interesting reading if
you want to know how "marketing-ese" can be
perceived by the media. (And no, we didn't write
it, thank god.)
-posted by Paul
Thursday, Aug 09 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| media(tion)
There's an old adage from the bygone era when print
journalism used to be, you know, printed... "Never
argue with a man that buys ink by the gallon." Well,
apparently the owners of the Pepcom trade events have
never heard of this. At least, that's the only way to
explain their threat to "ban all CNET and ZDNET
journalists" from the trade events they sponsor. In a
nutshell, Pepcom got its panties in a bunch when CNET
hosted a free after-the-event get together,
presumably because it was parasitic in regard to the
Pepcom event. Which is ironic coming from a company
that makes its living putting on "sub-events" that
take advantage of such shows as CES and CTIA. For
more, read
this post from ZDNet's David
Berlind.
-posted by Paul
Wednesday, Aug 08 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| media(tion)
Redfin has a post up highlighting the recent
NakedTruth event.
This is how the media works.
-posted by Paul
Tuesday, Aug 07 2007 | Author and
categories:
Paul Forecki
| client news
As part of our recent launch campaign for CozyBug's
unique new local online classified service (think:
eBay and Craigslist mashup), we arranged for a radio
spot on the nationally syndicated
Into Tomorrow
with Dave Graveline show. These are always fun
to script, and you can check it out below.
Podcast
-posted by Paul
Tuesday, Aug 07 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| media(tion)
I'm sorry to read today that the
Fake Steve Jobs, an anonymous
blogger who took on the persona of Apple's
egotistical CEO Steve Jobs, has been
outed by the New York Times. It's
a sad day for VOXUS founder Paul Forecki, who
reads Fake Steve and has written about him in
our blog. He's probably at the local watering
hole now, toasting to his memory...which is why
I'm left to write this update. BTW, it turns out
the blogger is a well-respected technology
reporter that we've worked with in the past;
kudos to him for creating an alter-ego and
keeping it a secret for more than a year.
-posted by Rachel
Tuesday, Aug 07 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Yup, it's another Seattle-based startup...
Zeenami is still under wraps, but
it looks like it hopes to tap the goodness of
social networking and couple it with a regular
and talented cast of individuals to assist
individuals in reaching their goals. Zeenami
plans to become a self-improvement destination
with tools to help sort through products and
services already available. The founder is Bruce
Worrall, most recently of GalleryPlayer.
-posted by Rachel
Tuesday, Aug 07 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| PR,
marketing and design
At long last, the episode "Jerry was a Man" in the
television series
Masters of Science Fiction airs
August 18 at 10:00 p.m. on ABC. Starring Malcolm
McDowell and Anne Heche, the episode features
Voxus client
CipherLab's 1266 hand held
barcode scanner as part of the set design.
-posted by Rachel
Tuesday, Aug 07 2007 | Author and
categories:
Rachel Berry
| NW tech news
Another stealthy startup is about to launch in
Seatlle.
LiquidPlanner, formerly code
named Team46, will offer an online project
management application that somehow blends
social networking features with key project
analytics, such as budgets. The brains behind
the company are Charles Seybold and Jason
Carlson, formerly of Expedia.com. Whatever the
company is up to, it's doing something cool this
month by sponsoring the next
nPost networking event, being
held August 21 at 6:00 p.m. at the Del Rey. You
can sign up
here.
-posted by Rachel