
C'est ici pour l'annonce LIVE
Source : Transnets
TriBeCa recherche 50 avatars dans Second Life pour le tournage d’une publicité virtuelle pour un annonceur très tendance. La publicité passera ensuite sur les écrans plats des lieux les plus branchés de SL.
Si vous êtes disponible en semaine, merci de nous envoyer vos mensurations et votre photo le plus rapidement possible. Nous vous invitons à envoyer cela à : sylvain[at]tribeca.fr
Source : Blog Marketing AlternatifPour les plus récalcitrants et pour les patients qui souffrent de troubles du sommeil, les responsables de la clinique ont prévu un programme intégrant des électrochocs de faible voltage, à travers des aiguilles placées sur le corps, en référence à la technique de l'acupuncture, précise l'AFP.
Selon le fondateur du centre, Tao Ran, cité par l'agence française, il existe en Chine près de 2,5 millions de « drogués » de l'Internet. Un chiffre important rapporté à la population d'un pays comme la France, mais qu'il convient de relativiser au regard d'un pays-continent comme la Chine, qui compte aujourd'hui 1,3 milliard d'habitants. Il y aurait, selon l'AFP, une trentaine de cliniques spécialisées dans le traitement de la dépendance au Net et au jeu en ligne.
Une fois leur traitement terminé, les patients ne sont pas à l'abri d'une rechute. Mais concernant ce point, les autorités de Pékin ont tout prévu. L'ouverture de nouveaux cybercafés est en effet interdite depuis le début de l'année 2007. Et pour les lieux déjà en activité, leur accès est désormais interdit aux mineurs.
Source : O1NetAh si nos candidats avaient de bons conseillers en communication...on se régalerait !
Dubbed Vuguru, and backed by Eisner's investment firm The Tornante Co., the studio's first series, "Prom Queen," is slated to premiere online April 2 with a roster of advertisers including beverage marketers FIJI Water and POM Wonderful.
The debut series aims to knock LonelyGirl15 off her perch as the queen of YouTube. "Prom Queen" is a scripted, serialized mystery told over 80 episodes--each running 90 seconds long--and set against the final two months of a high school class's senior year leading up to prom night.
"In the past few years, the development of exciting and innovative digital media platforms and technologies has outpaced the creation of truly great content," said Eisner, a veteran storyteller, in a statement announcing the launch.
The short-form episodes will be released daily across various Web platforms, and are aimed at young, early adopters of easily digestible media clips. The series will also have its own Web home at PromQueen.tv.
"The daily blast of short-form content has huge potential to create a tight bond between the show's characters, viewers and advertisers," said Douglas Cheney, co-founder of the independent production team Big Fantastic, which teamed with Vuguru to produce "Prom Queen."
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Paul Maidment, the editor of Forbes.com and executive editor of Forbes magazine, noted that Forbes.com's video streams reach more daily viewers than CNBC's traditional TV ops. But "they still get ad revenue in multiples, and multiples of multiples" of what Forbes receives, Maidment said. Even if online video doesn't achieve parity with traditional TV, the disparity suggests there is "a big pot of money out there" for magazines delivering online video.
In the short term, magazines will continue delivering and expanding their online video content even if it isn't a big profit center, said Todd Unger, senior vice president of Time4 Digital, recently acquired by Bonnier. "If we don't provide it," he added, "there are people in these verticals" that will. Likewise, Ann Shoket, editor in chief of Seventeen magazine, warned: "If you don't have video, you can't have viewers. It's as simple as that."
Asked what form effective video advertising will finally take, Maidment conceded, "no one has yet found a workable advertising model. At the moment, we're mimicking TV." However, this is already changing, he noted, predicting that ads will "get shorter and shorter ... you're now seeing pre-rolls getting down to three seconds. You'll see more things heading that way."