Gaming, Opportunity, Convergence

So last week it was announced that the Ouya is going to have OnLive on it.  Frankly I expected to see a lot more on that, but it didn’t seem to make much of an impression.  Just another case of technology converging.

Of course the way I see this potential alliance is different.  It means a service that streams games (that don’t run on Android) is going to be playable on an open Android device.  Or in short, your $99 Ouya is going to let you play stuff that you’d normally need a far more powerful machine for.  Sure you have to pay for the service, but we’re talking quite a benefit here.

Yet, I saw a lot less speculation on it, so let me speculate more – and extend this.

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What T-Shirts Teach Us About Personal Branding

Ever know people who have a collection of T-shirts?  People who wear them constantly?  Chances are those shirts say a lot about their personalities.  If you’re a person fond of his/her t-shirts, you know they say a lot about you (or just realized they did now that I’ve got you thinking about it).

T-shirts are actually a great way to easily understand that important, elusive, yet over-discussed topic of personal branding.

Think about t-shirts.  The purchase says something about you.  The contents say something about you.  Where you wear it, when you wear it, all say something about you.

A t-shirt is a giant signal saying “this is me!”

Which in many ways is what personal branding is about – making a statement about yourself.  T-shirts are the same thing, just informal and at times with obscure LOL-cat derived humor.

So look at people you know who are t-shirt fanatics.  Look at yourself for that matter.

What do they communicate about themselves – and do they communicate it in a good way, a bad way, or a neutral way?

When do they communicate it, and what can it teach you about timing?

What other other things are “t-shirt like” in that they’re common things that tell people about who someone is?

Ask how you – and others – may react to various t-shirts you’ve seen.  How did you judge people?

These little moments of analysis teach you a lot about how t-shirts are, really, personal branding.

Now, how can you apply that knowledge to things beyond your latest teefury purchase?  Well, just ask what you learned, and then ask what it teaches you about making the right impression and communicating the right side of you . . .

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach for professional and potentially professional geeks, fans, and otaku. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/

HBO, Netflix, And Bad Relationships

Well the whole “Twimance” causing a stir on the internet isn’t the only confusing relationship.  Closer to less good-looking is the fact that HBO won’t be partnering with Netflix.  Considering they have some major properties, this isn’t good for Netflix, which is having it’s own problems as of late – and though I have confidence in them, they are in a rather rocky industry.

But hey, HBO has their own streaming, right?  And then there’s Crackle.  And Hulu, and . . . well we’re up to our armpits in various streaming services all of a sudden.  Of course they don’t all carry each other’s stuff, or in the case of some anime, everyone carries it (Really, do THIS many services need to carry “Queen’s Blade?” Wait, nevermind.)

So it’s some not-quite-walled gardens, battling it out.  This misses a larger factor near and dear to this cable-cutter’s heart.

Namely, after awhile, some people may not give a damn about series if they have to go through a lot of rigamarole to get them, or get a specialty service they don’t want, or watch something drop off of a service.  It’s like taking all the annoyances about cable and adding brand new ones.

So at some point do people stop caring about The Hot Thing?  Or waiting for the DVDs?  Or pursuing alternate media (I can just read Game Of Thrones, even if it lacks the awesome of Dinklage).

I see this as a possible danger because in trying to keep up with big things, you have to face all these service annoyances.  If you get cable, you face cable annoyances.  Really, at some point people may just not care and buy eps on iTunes, get DVDs, or just give the hell up (which in a way I kind of did). There’s enough media out there that the Big Thing is only big because others say so.

I see this re-dilution of media access actually being bad for the media companies.  It looks bad, creates ill will, and diminishes interest.

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach for professional and potentially professional geeks, fans, and otaku. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/