It’s true. I can’t help myself. Over the last year or so, I seem to have developed an unexplainable love of Matt Damon films. Is it the lack of emotion? Is it the single facial expression? Is it the fact that he gets paid $29M per movie? I mean, The Good Shepherd was really long, [...]
Entries in 'Product launch'
Blu-ray campaign of distributed assets and social media
August 30th, 2007 by Leo Ryan · 3 Comments
Earlier this year we launched the sexy Flash site for Sony’s Blu-ray site designed and developed by Hi-Res!. And while its a pretty young thing that will work beautifully as a destination site it’s not doing much to get out and engage with consumers. The next stage of this campaign has been to actually get [...]
Blu-ray Embeddable Flash Player
August 30th, 2007 by Leo Ryan · 5 Comments
table.SBDPlayer td.SBDPlayer tr.SBDPlayer th.SBDPlayer { background-color:#000000 !important;vertical-align:top;margin:0 !important;padding:0 !important;border:0 !important;}
A while back I wrote enthusiasticaly about the Nike Embeddable Flash Player. Imitation being the sincerest form of flattery we’ve worked with Hi-Res! to develop something similar for the Blu-ray Campaign for Sony. The significant advantages over using something like YouTube’s embedddable player is that we [...]
Pinger: the new Twitter?
August 21st, 2007 by Matt Rebeiro · 3 Comments
I suppose it was only a matter of time before someone developed a voice-mail version of Twitter and here it is: Pinger.
Whilst it is a service low on original thought, it is a service with a fair degree of potential. One simply calls up the Pinger number, chooses who they want to receive the message [...]
Eggs, coffee and blogs
August 13th, 2007 by Leo Ryan · No Comments
Following in the footsteps of Russell Davies’ infamous eggbaconchipsandbeans blog comes something with a view to the less greasy end of the spoon. Declaration of interest - its my sister, Shelagh and she’s launched her blog scramblingeggs, to act as a record of her adventures in setting up a breakfast cafe in London. Shelagh’s self [...]