Welcome

Hypernarrative.com is the personal weblog of Wilbert Baan. I'm co-founder of SOMEHOW. On my personal blog I write about art, media, technology and things I do, think or make.

Feel free to contact me.

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Discussion

vivek parajuli: t has not good quality of data arrangement for life coverage if this will maintain the quality then...
vivek parajuli: t has not good quality of data aggregator for life coverage if this will maintain the quality then i...
Wilbert Baan: More about designing for the iPad: http://informationarchitects.jp/designing-for-ipad-reality-check/...
Wilbert Baan: Bedankt Jannes. Het is heel leuk, we zijn met een aantal hele mooie dingen bezig. Heel divers ook. ...
jannes: Cool man, succes!...

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A Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine

Wilbert Baan on November 30, 2005 at 9:04 pm, comment
Topics: On the Web

And then there was Google.

Clouds

Wilbert Baan on November 30, 2005 at 9:02 pm, comment
Topics: Photography

IMG_1241.JPG

Pimp my commercial television

Wilbert Baan on November 29, 2005 at 8:55 pm, comment
Topics: Interactive Video

TiVo gets into context sensitive advertising. The TiVo device is skipping ads to replace them with new – more sophisticated – ones… brilliant!

Warm Winter Surrealism

Wilbert Baan on November 28, 2005 at 6:49 pm, comment
Topics: On the Web

The beautiful surrealistic world of Gregory Dawson


photos: http://www.artnet.com/

Want more? Search Google image search.

Street Stickers, Poster Art & Graphics

Wilbert Baan on November 27, 2005 at 10:05 pm, comment
Topics: On the Web

Street Stickers, Poster Art & Graphics, a collection of 1388 photos.

Brighton, UK
photo: 56/1388 Brighton, UK – www.streetstickers.co.uk

Living camera uses bacteria to capture image

Wilbert Baan on November 24, 2005 at 8:29 am, comment
Topics: On the Web

A digital film that develops itself at 100 megapixels using bacteria.

You might need some patience as currently taking a shot takes about 4 hours and red light. Wait for that long sunset.

Exposing North Korea

Wilbert Baan on November 23, 2005 at 9:04 am, comment
Topics: On the Web

Time magazine photo essay: Exposing North Korea

Is the Napster-moment for television getting closer?

Wilbert Baan on November 22, 2005 at 11:12 pm, comment
Topics: Interactive Video

The last few years content distribution channels multiplied. Not only in number and different types of devices, but also in contact moments. Media got portable and on demand.

Podcasting’s greatest victory probably is that it created a new model for the next generation radio. It is giving people the power to time-shift broadcasting and making access to these broadcasts connection independent.

New generations portable videoplayers, mobile phones, pda’s and game consoles are standard enable to store, exchange and play video files. Bandwidth is ready for it, the only problem so far seems to be the access to desired content.

People want content. They might be satisfied for a while with amateur content, but in the end people want professional produced content. They want content they can talk about with friends, complex narratives, series, actors. The public doesn’t care if the content comes from a TiVo, obscure Russian mirror website or online store. Most of us just want the right content as easy and fast as possible. This content needs to be fair priced and honest.

Since peer to peer networks the relation between media and its customers became vulnerable, the owner and producer isn’t the only supplier anymore. When the price is exorbitant high or the customer is being bothered with strange right management solutions, he or she can and will get the desired somewhere else.

iTunes was the backbone of the iPod. Not just to present easy content to the buyers of an iPod but also being able to convert the distant mass of record companies into selling music online. It is not likely that iTunes will get the same control over video content.

Television has one big advantage to music and this is product placement. This almost obsolete mix of advertisement and content is impossible to break. The content is the advertising.

Volvo did a great job last year with its life on board project. And how about the impossible-to-open Zero Halliburton suitcase in the television series Lost.

The problem of product placement? People need to believe in what they see and product placement puts pressure on the credibility of a story and the intentions behind the events happening on screen. Another problem of sponsored content is measuring the results for advertisers when files are send into the world. And there is local regulation, not everywhere product placement is permitted by law.

Yesterday TiVo’s announced that it will make its service compatible with PSP’s and iPod’s. This looks a lot like the services Napster once provided. One place to find everything.

See also:
1) Harvard Offers Course Video Via iPod
2) Will entertainment content become more valuable as the methods of distribution multiply?
3) iPod DRM faces another reverse-engineering challenge

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