View Cesar Brea's profile on LinkedIn

My Firm

email me

Get new posts by email:

Delivered by FeedBurner

RSS

My Google Reader feed

My Twitter feed

View blog authority

View blog reactions

Related Sites

  • Cesar Brea's Weblog
    My original blog, hosted by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School
  • Octavianspace
    A Myspace experiment. May 2006 update: no friends after 6 months (Tom doesn't count). Maybe this isn't for me, though I haven't done much with it yet.
  • Marketspace Advisor
    News and comment on the cross-channel customer experience
  • Radio Free Brea
    My podcast station on Andrew Grumet's Gigadial service.
  • ESM Partners
    essays on high-tech strategy, sales, and marketing by me and Jamie Schein.

Copyright

April 17, 2008

500 Mirrors: Channeling Light Into The Business of Virtual Worlds

I connected recently in NYC with my ex ArsDigita colleague and good friend Kevin Kelly.  Kevin is (among other roles) the CEO of 500 Mirrors, an enterprise-class virtual world platform provider, and was in town for the annual VirtualWorlds Conference at the Javits Center.

For the virtual worlds crowds, these are dark days, not unlike what things were like for the web generally in 2002.  After flying high in 2006 -- including making the cover of Business Week -- Linden Labs' Second Life, the poster child for the category, has hit rough patches on several fronts, including usability and, security, and scalability.  Electric Sheep, the leading interactive agency helping corporations build and pimp out their VW experiments, recently cut back its staff significantly.  And as most of us have seen, even mighty IBM, the corporate pied piper of the VW movement, has been advertising against its own efforts.  The remaining bright spots in the "classic" rich-client VW world these days seem to be in applications for kids:  Webkinz, Club Penguin, Habbo Hotel -- virtual babysitters for kids that parents are willing to pay for, perhaps partly as diversions to keep them away from first-person shooters,  MMORPGs, or perhaps as training for earning the big bucks playing WoW.  Though 1300 people registered for the conference, things seemed quiet even for the cavernous Javits, with few attendees from big-name companies/ brands in evidence.

My overwhelming impression remains that this is an industry whose technological reach and ambition greatly exceed its grasp of imaginative use cases for which this medium is uniquely suited.  Kevin and 500 Mirrors' CTO and founder Bob Flesch get this in spades.  Kevin tells a story of a recent conference in SL that illustrates the state of things:

  • with a limited number of avatars each island (server instance) can support, the conference inevitably had an empty feeling;
  • lots of power and flexibility for moving around means too much power for newbies and the less experienced;
  • P-bombings have been an unfortunate reality;
  • functionally, the experience's complexity exceeds its theoretical information and communication advantages -- for example, it's hard to read expressions when an avatar -- if human -- is programmed by default to look ironic and bored, if hip.

500 Mirrors' name reflects an approach to scalability it has developed that has effectively solved population limits for any practical enterprise and even consumer scenario.  (Proof comes from production instances that unfortunately Kevin can't disclose without unpleasant consequences.)  On the usability front, Kevin and Bob are focused on providing more by enabling less -- pre-scripting movement sequences to get someone into the right place in the right space, for example, or by turning off flying, or by simply making it impossible to get trapped in a corner.  Finally, since each instance they set up for a client is isolated (whether hosted by 500 Mirrors or installed behind a client's firewall), attendees can't jump out to inappropriate places, and intruders find it harder to get in.

But the biggest insight comes from conceiving of use cases that make sense, and Kevin's got a separate business going that's nailed one of these.  More about this in an upcoming post...

December 04, 2007

New Rules of Engagement: Context Is King

For a flavor of some of the issues we help clients with, here's Andrew Heyward at iMedia's Agency Summit:

http://www.imediaconnection.com/summits/coverage/17494.asp

November 19, 2007

Good Podcasts I Listened To Recently

Doug Weaver on expanding interactive advertising budgets into a new slice of traditional spending on TV.  Very thoughtful way to get insight into how fast the dam will burst.

Dana Todd and Bruce Clay on SEO.  Interesting to SEO nerds and newbies alike.  The comments about getting "theme" right were especially interesting.  At a deeper level, the ideas here are metaphorically extensible to marketing in general.

Guy Kawasaki on The Art of Innovation.  Very entertaining!

November 07, 2007

I'm Liveblogging ad:tech in NYC

via my Twitter feed (I'm "borealic").

Not Dead Yet

Went to the Web Innovators Group meeting last night in Cambridge.  The ballroom at the Royal Sonesta was full, with a healthy mix of entrepreneurs, engineers, students, VC's, corporate types, etc.   Rumors of Boston's demise as a tech hub are overstated.

Memorable snatches of conversations/presentations:

  • "I hear there are assets in Germany available..."
  • "We started with a subscription model, and morphed it from there..."

and my favorite:

  • "We're a real-time mixer service, halfway between Meetup and Dodgeball.  It's 3 o'clock, you want to meet people, you sign in, and at 4 we've got you in a bar with five people you don't know... but you have something in common with!

I caught up with Paige Arnof-Fenn.  We speculated on Whether It's A Bubble.  "No, there's twenty times the money (advertising anyway) there was in 2001, and maybe 75% of the VC money invested back then," was our consensus.  What about a recession? Money flows to the most measurable media, which these days is online, so maybe this time a recession might kill off the old (golf-and-a-rate-card analog formats) instead of the new.

October 23, 2007

Update: PRSA Event Postponed to Spring '08 Date TBD

Go Sox!

October 19, 2007

PRSA Boston Panel October 30: How To Make Friends and Influence PR Plans

I'm participating on a Public Relations Society of America panel run by Jack Jackson at Bentley College on October 30.  Hope to see you there.

October 09, 2007

November 13 Boston Panel: "The Anywhere Transaction Model"

On November 13,  I'm moderating a panel on "The Anywhere Transaction Model" at the Mobile Internet World conference at the Hynes Center in Boston.   See here for details: http://www.mobilenetx.com/seminars/ (click on the "Executive Summit" tab).  Hope to see you!

Postscripts:

Video of Ford Cavallari's session, "Learning To Profit Through Anywhere Advertising":

http://bnettv.com/player.php?id=919

Video of session I moderated on "The Anywhere Transaction Model":

http://bnettv.com/player.php?id=927

Interview Condenet's Carrie Seifer (one of our panelists) did for bnettv:

http://bnettv.com/player.php?id=923

Interview I did on the session for bnettv:

http://bnettv.com/player.php?id=912

September 27, 2007

Holding Forth: Forbes "Unified Communications" Panel in NYC This Morning

http://www.forbesconferences.com/?page=eventspeakers&eventID=109

Note to self: turn cell phone ringer off :-)

Writeup to follow.

Search

e-Commerce

  • All commissions donated to charity.


  • Search Now:
    Amazon Logo

Lijit Search