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June 1st, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Sky calls on citizen journalists with iPhone app

skyphoneSky has launched a free iPhone app that not only helps you keep up-to-date with the latest news, but lets you make it too! The application features the ability to send short news stories and pictures, along with your contact details, to the Sky newsroom, should you see something newsworthy.

Citizen journalism has really taken off in the last few years, with the ubiquity of camera phones and the growing use of the mobile internet making it possible for anyone to report the news.

Just a couple of months ago, a passenger on the plane that crashed into the Hudson river jumped straight into citizen journalist mode and posted a picture of the crash on Twitter, alerting some of the world’s top news providers to the story.

Right, I’m off to stand outside the Priory with my iPhone to see if I can snap Susan Boyle doing something strange.

Update: Econsultancy have published a review of this app here.

May 29th, 2009 by admin

Hanging them out to Superdry

The Primark retail chain have been taken to book by one of my favourite design brands Superdry for copying elements of one of its best sellers, a leather jacket, named ‘the Brad.’ It has been worn frequently by the iconic uber-celebrity, clothes horse, chiselled jaw on legs and part time sportsman David Beckham. According to the Guardian “it has become something of a classic since Beckham first stepped out in it in 2007, with 70,000 sales to date and 25,000 on order for this autumn.”

Now there is plagiarism all over the shop, whether it’s university students copying colleagues’ assignments, that annoying bloke down the pub who steals your best jokes or someone squatting on the ‘Britain’s got Talent’ Twitter accounts. But, what I find increasingly difficult to get my head around is when you are working in an industry as visual as high street clothing, why would you take the risk? Any consumer, let alone intellectual property rights lawyers, can see the blatant similarities.

Call me cynical, but Primark designers must know what they are doing, by copying a brand as high profile as Superdry aren’t they almost fishing for this type of PR controversy? Firstly, due to all the free publicity they receive in high profile media, but also reinforcing the idea that you’re getting designer clothing at Lidl prices, so much like the real thing that they get taken to court for their trouble. In my humble opinion the count down is on for the next Primark copyright case, my guess is 29/08/09, so watch this space.

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May 8th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Susan Boyle may cost economy £10m+

In just three weeks the Britain’s Got Talent star may have cost the economy more than £10m in lost productivity, according to my research. Since her performance on the ITV show, more than 100 million users around the world have watched her sing ‘I dreamed a dream’ on YouTube, many of whom opting to do so while at work.

At present the top two Susan Boyle videos viewed by users on YouTube have been watched 73,630,639 times. If just one in 10 of the users that viewed these video were British and watched them in full at work, they will have collectively wasted 831,370 hours – just short of 30 billion seconds!

Based on an average hourly pay of £12.77 that equates to £10,619,378.70.