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More Wordless Wednesday
Source: Usingmac.com
All conjecture, minimal substance
The Singapore Digital Media Festival 2008 was held this past Friday at The Legends at Fort Canning Park. Unlike past “2.0″ events where I would attend as an interested individual, this time I attended DMFest as a representative from Microsoft, participating in one of the Web 2.0 panel discussions.
In this blog entry, I won’t be giving a play-by-play of what happened throughout the day, because of three reasons:
Instead, I’m just going to share some key takeaways and observations I had from attending the event.
DMFest was organized by the Digital Media Chapter of the Singapore Infocomm Technology Federation (SiTF). Thus, it was not surprising to see the DMFest organizers leverage social media and interactive media for both the marketing of the event, as well as the execution of the event.
On the DMFest home page are prominent links to the DMFest Twitter feed and Facebook group. The organizers also invited many local bloggers (who were credentialed as media) to cover the event. Besides Claudia and DK, Walter Lim, BL, Shalabh Pandey, Andrew Peters, and Shunjie also wrote about the event. (Shunjie was also on th Web 2.0 panel with me).
From my experience, IT events in Singapore are either very corporate (a.k.a. “enterprisey”), with very little social media coverage, or very “social media-ish”, with very little corporate representation.
Therefore, it was refreshing for me to finally see an event where although it is corporate-driven at the core, yet it still manages to bring in and involve the social media community.
Kudos to the organizers for making an enterprise event into something more cool - and the involvement of social and interactive media certainly has a lot to do with that.
(BTW, I thought the use of an interactive monitor during the event sessions was also an excellent touch. Controlled by Bill Claxton, the interactive monitor showed related articles, Wikipedia definitions, the DMFest live twitter feed, and other interesting in-context information while the speakers were presenting. Brilliant.)
Folks, this is going to be pretty big, pretty soon.
Contextual video advertising is essentially this: As a user is watching video content online, the user is presented with unobtrusive ads which directly relate to the content which the user is watching at that moment.
For example, suppose you were watching a soap opera online, and suddenly in the scene a Mercedes-Benz car pulls up to one of the characters. At that moment, a small unobtrusive ad for Mercedes-Benz may appear which the user can click on to get more information about that particular car.
Here is a visualization of what I just described:

Mercedes-Benz ad which appears if the user wants more information, while allowing the user to still watch the original video undisturbed.
(I encountered a small glitch when I showed the above demo of contextual video advertising during DMFest, so these are the screen shots!
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Contextual video advertising is very powerful, since it can present itself to the users in a way that lets the users think that it is a value-added service instead of something that takes away from their video watching experience. My demo, which was a MOBTV mock up built on Microsoft’s Silverlight technology, demonstrates precise contextual video advertising which works brilliantly together with in-video product placement.
Coincidentally, both Stefano (from Adobe Ultimate Video FX) and myself talked about contextual video advertising during DMFest. Adobe’s approach, however is to use sound-recognition technology (from Adobe Soundbooth?) to determine the video content in order to serve relevant ads. (Blinkx, one of the companies mentioned during DMFest also has similar technology, I believe.)
Regardless of the approach, contextual video advertising is definitely something game-changing which we should keep a lookout for in the next six to twelve months.
Here is what the Google Analytics for my humble blog - Armchair Theorist - looks like from early July until today:

What really stands out is the three spikes in traffic I received in the past three months. Let’s take a deeper look, shall we…
On July 12, I attended the E27 Unconference event, and promptly blogged about it on July 14. This brought in 83 unique visiters for me the next day, a then record-high. This blog post was also my most commented post ever, with 23 comments. Of course, a bunch of those comments were from me responding to people, but who’s counting anyways.
Anyway, for that post, I linked to all of the other blog entries I could find which talked about the event, and pretty much everyone reciprocated with a back link as well. Thanks to this post, I was able to interact with a few bloggers online for the first time, including the always interesting Claudia.
This post also got me a then-high 18 “pongs” on Singapore blog aggregator Ping.sg.
On September 2, the Google Chrome comic was leaked, and I promptly blogged about the impending release of the Google Chrome web browser. Again, I linked to all of the existing blog coverage of Chrome I could find, including the official Google blog.
This brought in a new record-high 136 unique visitors the next day, mostly thanks to search engine queries for “Google Chrome” as well as traffic from the Google blog.
After a day or two of downtime, I blogged again about Chrome, but this time on my experiences using Chrome once I had a chance to download it and play around with it for a bit. Again, I linked to the official Google blog, and I was able to top my previous record by registering 138 unique visiters on September 5.
The Ping.sg community was less than thrilled though, with neither blog post registering more than 4 “pongs”.
I attended a party during F1 weekend, and promptly blogged about it. In my opinion, this was a pretty crappy post, with not much content in it. But it did have a few photos of scantily-dressed lingerie models who were at the party. I also diligently labeled my post as “NSFW“.
The result was a new record-high 283 unique visitors to my blog on September 29, and over 500 visits over the next five day period.
The Ping.sg community particularly liked the post, giving me a ridiculous 43 “pongs” and placing me at the pole position of the daily leader board for the first (and likely last) time.
However, only one guy left a comment.
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