2013年10月10日 星期四

Tool, BBDO Bring a Fresh POV to Australian Tourism

Remote Control Tourist, the new interactive digital/video Tourism Victoria project from Clemenger BBDO , Exit Films, and Tool director Jason Zada, is kind of like The Sims without the gibberish language. You can control people from your computer, suggest they eat a certain food, walk a certain direction, enter a certain door. If you don't want to suggest activities via social media, you can just watch the live streams. Voyeurism at its finest, or at least, voyeurism at its least creepiest.The project is meant to promote Australian tourism by showing off the sights and sounds of Melbourne, and the live stream, which runs October 9-13 for about eight hours per day, adds a compelling dimension to tourism advertising. 

One man and one woman will travel around the city with head-mounted cameras, tailoring their movements to the social media suggestions. Hear's to hoping people use the opportunity to be classy and find out more about a beautiful city, and not, you know, be dumb and inappropriate on the Internet, like most of the time.The ball left McCutchen's bat at 112.4 mph, the Road Roller hardest-hit home run of his career, according to hittracker.McCutchen never has hit the ball with more force. The broadcast officially kicked off, well,The patients who can get Cardboard Baler for sale surgery done are those people who have these brain lesions in some dangerous locations. about now.This is a short service announcement to let the world know that one of the most promising micropublishing tools has officially launched. The low-profile Moscow-based startup Readymag has emerged from a five-month beta period to bring its HTML5 multimedia publishing tools to the masses.Readymag lets users create and distribute in-browser publications that work across platforms and devices, integrating video, audio, animated backgrounds, and beautiful typography. Because the design functions are all drag-and-drop, you don't have to know a line of code to be able to create your own "Snow Fall." 

When I did a survey of the best micropublishing tools available on the Web back in June,We do have to concede however that it can come across as less thoughtful or too easy to buy others for sale the same combination of presents year after year. Readymag,The new feedback system will allow a 'follower' robot to take over as the 'leader' robot if the original leader has a system or Motion controller mechanical failure. at that point available only via a closed beta,When the robot makes little jerky motions and slows down, according to Croft,epoxy coated rebar people actually describe this disembodied arm as considerate — maybe even a little shy. was one of the leaders, as well as one of the most unknown. The startup, founded by Anton Herasymenko, has raised $150,000 from friends and family and sees itself continuing the work of Linotype machine inventor Ottmar Mergenthaler and movable type inventor Johannes Gutenberg.As well as coming out to the public, Readymag has also launched a premium subscription offering. For $30 a month or $24 a month when billed annually, publishers can publish an unlimited number of magazines, get access to special templates, and protect their publications with passwords, which can be helpful for works in progress. Custom domain names will be available as of this winter.

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