Category: Innovation (Page 11 of 77)
It's time, gang — for another one of my conference live-blogs, this time for DEMOfall. Once again, as I have for the last several events I've covered, I'm using the "Cover It Live" app (see window below).
With more than 20,000 technologies reviewed and 1,500 companies selected to launch on the DEMO stage over the past 20 years, DEMO has continually searched the globe to find innovation where it lives. The DEMO Team has logged millions of miles to uncover technology '"diamonds in the rough. Some of the companies that have launched at DEMO include Salesforce.com, Netscape, VMware, TiVo, Skype (for mobile handsets), WebEx, Jajah, Boingo Wireless, BuzzLogic, Vringo, and many more. The DEMO conferences have earned their reputation for consistently identifying tomorrow's cutting-edge technologies, helping its presenting companies secure venture funding, establish critical business relationships, and influence early adopters.
The first session of this year's DEMO Fall conference at the Hyatt Santa Clara kicks off at 8:30 am Pacific on Tuesday, September 13, when my live-blogging will begin in earnest. Here's the agenda. I also have my Twitter stream set to appear in my live-blog below… meaning occasional tweets from me during the event, like to attach photos — but most of my posts will be in this live-blog iframe below.
I'm also aggregating all the real-time chatter going on by way of the #democon tab in the box to the right (powered by FanChatter), which include both Facebook and Twitter posts. You can jump in and start posting, right there, after you connect your Twitter and/or Facebook accounts! You just have to "Like" my company Facebook page first. That's the love I get for posting this great tool… :-) It's the same technology some professional sports teams are now using on their web sites, as well as such customers as the E!Online network, for red-carpet events like the Golden Globes, the Grammys, and the Oscar Awards.
I'm looking forward to a great conference! When the event is completed, I'll archive this live-blog, which switches it around to proper chronological order. And the link for this blog post will remain permanent for the live-blog archive. That's the big advantage for me to document a conference with this live-blogging tool, compared to just tweeting the event. (Have you tried going back to get an archive of your tweetstream for a certain day or event? Good luck.) Plus the fact that I can do posts longer than 140 characters. Hope you like it! Look forward to hearing your comments.
The embargo just ended! This year's DEMO Fall conference, being held in Santa Clara, CA, September 12-14, features some 80 companies taking the stage to launch their new products or concept, ranging from innovators in the enterprise space to the coolest new consumer technology. The companies are listed below alphabetically, and linked to their applicable web site (which sometimes is a product name). In addition to this great group of demonstrators, DEMO will feature some exciting speakers and panelists, as noted in my previous post (see links to speakers and agenda.)
Presenting Companies:
1calendar
1Ring
Angelsoft
Aurasma
Bees and Pollen Ltd.
BringShare LLC
Built Bits LLC
ClrTouch
Coeus Solutions GmbH
Conferize
Creaza Inc.
DailyDigital
DHE Media
EmmaActive Advertising
Fav.tv
Fitting Reality
Fluxxlabs
Get.com Inc.
Gimme!
GoSteals
Gust
HABU CO. LTD.
HE LIKES ME, HE LIKES ME NOT
Hold-Free Networks
Hookflash
Iconfinder
Imovation Inc.
INSCOS Inc.
I-POSTMORTEM
JobOn
Kleintech Inc.
KMC Software Inc.
Lifecrowd
LiveLoop
MashON Inc.
Medication Intelligence
MeMeTales
Métier
ModiFace Inc.
MyFinance LLC
Needium
Neighbor Marketing Inc.
Newman Infinite Inc.
OfferedLocal
OLogic Inc.
Orange Silicon Valley
Pinevio
Playkast
Poosh Inc.
Qwip Inc.
Schedulicity
SenseAide LLC
Shimba Technologies Ltd.
Socialbakers
Stroome.com
TEEspy Inc.
Tradepal Inc.
Upverter
uTemporis
Vidquik
Visual Software Systems
VOIPswitch
voyurl
Wantlet
We Are Cloud
Whodini Inc.
Xinosys Co. Ltd.
Zazu
zero2one
Zirtu
Alpha Pitch Companies:
Compare Metrics
disrpt (no web site yet)
GT Media
LiveAdvisors
midnox
OneSchool Inc.
TappMob
The App House LLC
trueRSVP
WinoBot (web site not yet available)
Xtreme Innovations Inc.
The big event gets underway later today at the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara and runs through Wednesday evening September 14th. I just arrived and am covering the entire event — front to back and inside out! :-) See my coverage of the last one if you need some proof. This is my 12th DEMO in a row, and 13th overall.
It's stacking up to be another blockbuster: some 80 companies launching, 100+ members of the press, 900+ attendees… and, as a recent @DEMO tweet said, it's "100% focused on product launches, no drama!" Haha, rimshot! … a bit of inside-baseball. Love that.. 🙂
The most important thing of all if you can't be there? That would be the hashtag! It's #democon and it will be one active son-of-a-gun for several days. But my live blog will give you so much more than just short tweets, so bookmark that (when I post the link) and keep coming back for all the DEMO goodness. Note there's no live stream video broadcast of the event this time — guess they decided those lazy people with fat pipes who watch it at home or in the office actually should pay to attend the event instead? Hey, it costs a lot to put these extravaganzas on!
Here's a link to the excellent lineup of speakers, and to the complete agenda. It all takes place here at the Hyatt over the next two and a half days.
I'll be live-blogging the event again using the Cover It Live app (that link will be in my next post), and I'll start doing that in earnest tomorrow (Tuesday) morning, just prior to the first day's sessions. I'll be live-tweeting, too, as I can. I've been using the #democon hashtag now for several days — as you can see on my Twitter page, @graemethickins. You can either continue to see my tweets about DEMO there, or they'll also show up in my live-blog as they happen. I'll tend to tweet more during breaks, when my live-blog is paused. I'll also post some iPhone pix via tweets from time to time, since it's faster posting photos that way, versus fumbling with my big camera. As always, I'll post all my event photos to Flickr in batches as I can upload them during each of the next few days. Oh, and I'll be posting some short videos this time, too — a first for me at DEMO — which I may do by attaching clips to some entries in my live-blog, and also will post 3-4 minute video interviews of presenting company founders as separate posts on this blog during the week.
Itching to get this party started! My next post (in a few hours) will be the one where my live-blog will be located — and will remain there as an archive afterwards. Then, tonight around 9:30 or 10:00 pm Pacific, I'll post the whole list of presenting companies with links to their web sites — right after the DEMO news embargo lifts! Don't miss that — the first coming-out party, as it were…
I had the good fortune to get my hands on a very cool, brand-new gadget in late May before it was due to hit stores in June, thanks to my friend Robert Stephens, CTO of Best Buy. He asked me to shoot video interviews at the Glue Conference, which he wasn't able to attend, and I told him I'd love to try it with a new device I'd just heard about, the Olympus LS-20M, if he could get me a review unit. He scored one for me a day or two later, and I ultimately shot 18 interviews at the conference, May 24-26 in Denver (all of which appear just prior to this post). My net assessment: I loved it!
This is one heckuva device for the money (list price $299), really unlike anything before it that I had seen. In a sentence, here's how Olympus describes it: "The new LS-20M is the first Olympus recorder that captures and edits 1080p HD video while recording 24 bit/96 hHz Linear PCM stereo sound…(it) enables users to create home movies that look and sound like professional productions in a device that’s so compact it fits in your pocket."
I like to call it a hand-held, studio-grade recorder, the same way I'm used to describing my Olympus LS-10 — but that's an audio-only device, which I've been doing interviews with for a couple of years. This adds HD video to my game (finally) and, combined with high-quality audio, lets me record much more interesting interviews at all the conferences I attend. Sure, I've had an iPhone for some time and shoot videos with that, but not for serious journalistic kinda stuff, and I somehow never got around to buying a Flip (and why would I now that Cisco killed it off?).
Summary of My Experience:
• The device was very easy to use. The review unit I received came without a manual (because it wasn't printed yet), but I was able to quickly figure out how to operate it. Of course, I had the advantage of having used the LS-10, and the controls are very similar. I just began shooting video interviews without even practicing first. (And some of my interviews show it!) I was challenged by difficult lighting conditions, and it did take me a while to get the hang of shooting with it, but I was generally pleased with how my candid interviews turned out. They averaged 3-4 minutes in length.
• Using a mini-tripod as a handle is the only way to go when doing hand-held interviews. (There's a screw-mount in the bottom of the unit.) I was used to doing this with my LS-10, to aim the device, and of course it's even more critical when shooting video! My mini-tripod is 4-5 inches high when fully closed and fits perfectly in my hand to support the device and hold it conveniently and comfortably for shooting. A mini-tripod can also double as a stand when doing tabletop interviews, as shown in the accompanying photo (this one and others copyright GizMag, and see the link to their article below). My tripod is smaller than this one and has straight legs, so it's ideal doubling as a handle.
• I bought a high-speed 16GB SD card to use with my LS-20M review unit, to make sure I'd have hours of recording capacity while I was doing all my interviews at the conference. The LS-20 comes with a 2GB card, but that won't hold a lot of video. (Note: you can alternately do audio-only recording with the unit, via a switch on the right side, and MP3s take up a lot less space.)
• The fact that the unit does not have little wheels for volume and audio level on the side is a good thing, as I found with the LS-10 that they could inadvertently be adjusted too low without me realizing it! (All such controls were thankfully made digital on the LS-20M, accessible via the Menu button.)
• The unit doesn't have built-in wifi, so there's no "Upload to YouTube" button. But in my experience at the conference (which had very good wifi), I simply pulled my SD card, put it into a reader, plugged it into a USB port on my MacBook, and quickly uploaded my short videos via the YouTube site. Then, I simply copy-pasted the URL for each video into the Typepad new-post interface, entered a title, clicked publish — and, voila, each video was published as its own post. I was able to post several videos each day of the two-day event, just by working a bit during breaks.
What Could be Improved?
• The one big issue with the LS-20M is the fixed, front-mounted lens, between the dual mics (which you can see in the top photo). That makes viewing the LCD screens a challenge when you're shooting. In order to see the shot you're framing, you have to angle the unit upwards a least a little, and shooting up at a subject is not the most flattering angle. I had to be very aware of this while I was shooting, constantly trying to minimize the angle while craning my neck to see my shot. (Otherwise, it is so crazy-easy to chop someone's head off!) I got used to that quickly, though, and was able to shoot pretty good video, adequate for my needs. Suggestion to Olympus: make the lens rotatable downward! Even just 15 degrees or so would help immensely. I will not be surprised to see that improvement in the next release of the product. It is a design shortcoming.
• The small LCD screen below the main one is okay, but I noticed the little icon for battery capacity only after I'd run out of battery in the middle of an interview! It was crammed into the upper right of the display. The charger worked quite fast, though, and I found the battery life to be good. (I didn't time it, but it seemed like several hours.)
Those were really my only complaints about the unit. It worked flawlessly otherwise, and the quality of the video and the audio is nothing short of tremendous. I would whole-heartedly recommend the LS-20M for anyone needing to do journalistic, remote/on-site interviews as I do. Beyond that usage, however, the device will surely be popular for general consumer use, including family videos. I didn't even mention (nor did I need to use) this cool feature: it comes with four different optional "Magic Movie" special-effect filters. But I will surely give those filters a try for personal videos, once I get my own unit. I do intend to make the LS-20M my video cam of choice when I want to capture serious, quality videos. The quality of cell phone videos (including the iPhone) only goes so far — especially the audio. And the LS-20M is easy to take with you in its nice, little zippered black-fabric case. One cool optional accessory is a remote control, which would be be handy in situations where you want the unit stationary or on a tripod, and you need to start and stop the recording — say at an event like a concert or a wedding.
Other sites have written about the LS-20M, at least when it was first announced. I'm not aware of any other reviews yet based on hands-on usage, however. Here are four of the best reports I read on the device, all published in early May:
• Engadget
• GizMag
The LS-20M will be available in stores and from online sites sometime in June — the company didn't say exactly when. Retail is $299, but I see prices as low as $230 already listed online, and I assume some sites may be accepting pre-orders now.
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