Samsung Galaxy S5 Takes the Ice Bucket Challenge, and Calls Out the iPhone

With some exceptions, brands haven’t broadly embraced the immensely popular Ice Bucket Challenge craze, benefitting the ALS Association, and understandably so. You don’t really want to be seen as profiting off a charity campaign. And also—well, this could happen.

Samsung, though, doesn’t care. In the Ice Bucket Challenge, it saw yet another opportunity to slam Apple. And any opportunity like that, it does not pass up. The Samsung Galaxy S5, you see, is advertised as waterproof. The iPhone? Not so much.

Did anyone even challenge Samsung Mobile U.K.? Doesn’t matter. It made this 15-second video anyway—and gleefully calls out the iPhone 5S, HTC’s One M8 and the Lumia 930. ?

Sony’s Xperia Z1S, of course, was not challenged.



Apple's Powerful 'Your Verse' Campaign Rolls On, from Beijing and through Detroit

Apple is sticking with a good thing, continuing the rollout of its “Your Verse” campaign with two new stories about how people around the world are using iPads as tools to support their passions.

In one, Yaoband, a Beijing-based electro-pop ground, use their gadgets to sample sounds, communicate with fans, and perform live while they tour China. In the second, Jason Hall, a Detroit resident, uses his tablet to help organize Slow Roll, a weekly group bike ride through the city that draws thousands of cyclists, in an effort to help revitalize the city’s sense of community.

The 60-second TV ads for each, below, do get the ideas across, but they’re really just teasers—the deep dives over at Apple’s website make for less impressionistic and more powerful experiences.

Even those are fairly ambitious, and rely on a premise that may not be obvious to anyone who hasn’t been closely following the brand’s advertising of late. The “Your Verse” tagline launched early this year by paying homage to Walt Whitman as brilliantly recited by Robin Williams, may he rest in peace, in the 1989 movie Dead Poets Society. It has since been the foundation for some of the brand’s most persuasive ads in recent memory. But even to newcomers to the campaign, the takeaway should be clear enough, and feel consistent with expectations for good tech advertising: These are vignettes that illustrate how engineering can help enrich lives.

Plus, it’s nice to see Apple’s marketing keep reaching high while also staying grounded. Especially when that’s what people expect—or at least hope—to get from the brand. 



Apple Hires Nike Social Chief as Digital Marketing Director

As 9To5Mac reported yesterday, Apple just gave its social media marketing department a big boost with the addition of Musa Tariq as its new head digital marketing director.

Tariq arrives at Apple from Nike, where he served as global senior director of social media and community since October, 2012. Before that, he was global director of social media, digital marketing, at Burberry — a position he held for about one year before jumping to Nike.

The hire follows Apple’s recent addition of a pair of Nike FuelBand engineers to work on its own wearable technology and continues Apple CEO Tim Cook’s penchant for poaching talent from Nike. Tariq also reported directly to Apple retail and online stores chief Angela Ahrendts while they were both at Burberry, where “he was instrumental in working with Ahrendts on growing Burberry’s global brand,” according to 9To5Mac.

Of course, this move also follows Apple’s recent decision to take more of its production work in-house. Some might see it as yet another step in the brand’s plan to take greater control over its own identity.

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Apple's New iPhone Ad Shows You More Incredible Ways You'll Never Use Your iPhone

Apple’s new ad for the iPhone 5S is called “Dreams,” though it might have been called “In Your Dreams.”

Like other recent iPhone spots (and iPad spots, for that matter), it shows people using the device in pretty amazing ways—to measure wind speed, to plot the course of an airplane, to place a diamond in the setting of a ring. At the 37-second mark, you see a woman place her iPhone against the ribcage of a horse (they don’t even bother to explain it, really—all you need to know is the iPhone is horse compatible), and it hits you. You’ll never use your iPhone for any of this stuff (well, OK, the audio translation app looks pretty rad).

Is an advertisement aspirational when you don’t necessarily aspire to many of the behaviors it depicts? It’s a key question for Apple, which is riding that line between rarefied and relatable in its marketing.

The iPhone looks most impressive, of course, when it’s being used by exceptional people doing exceptional things. But the spots may connect better when they show ordinary people doing ordinary things. (There’s a reason why last winter’s “Misunderstood” ad, showing a kid doing little more than taking video with his iPhone, was so hugely popular.) It’s a tough balance. How esoteric do you want to get before going full horse-heartbeat?

“You’re more powerful than you think,” the new ads say. That line casts the Apple user as a kind of superhero in disguise, thanks to the supercomputer (and the apps written for it) in his pocket. And that’s fine, as long as Apple keeps acknowledging, in its ads, the countervailing truth—that we’re ordinary people, too.



Internet Hero Hunts Down All 74 Stickers From Apple's New Ad

If you watched that new Apple ad with dozens of stickers adorning a MacBook Air and felt compelled to track down all 74 in real life, I have bad news and good news.

The bad news is, uh, that’s a strange and unnatural compulsion you’ve got there. The good news? Someone already did it for you!

Mike Wehner at The Unofficial Apple Weblog sussed out all 74 stickers featured in the ad, and while several weren’t actually available for purchase, he came up with some pretty good alternatives.

You’d think that a brand that built a commercial around customizing its product would have planned to offer all of its examples for easy purchase, but apparently not. Maybe Apple was hoping to target people who already own cool decals and convince them to buy a nice $1,000 computer or two to go with them.



Like Apple Technology, TBWA May Be Updated Very Soon

For more than 30 years, TBWA/Media Arts Lab has enjoyed one of the most prized advertising accounts on the planet. After reports from the New York Post et al. and that entity called “Madison Avenue”agencies are salivating for a bite of the Apple.

The dirty laundry aired in the form of internal emails during the Samsung trial in April and the subsequent reports that Apple would create more of its own ads in-house may have had something to do with this latest development.

Moreover, word is that whichever outside firm may eventually work on the account will also answer to Jimmy Iovine, president and grand poobah of Beats headphones, BeatsMusic and all other things By Dre that were recently acquired by Apple.

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Samsung Pokes Fun at Apple (Yet Again) in New Campaign

Two new spots introduced by Samsung over the weekend tell us that the brand’s strategy–and that of its creative AOR 72andSunny–still revolves around knocking its archrival down a few notches.

Surely you caught the not-so-subtle insinuation that the 8.4-inch Wi-Fi Tab S, released just over two weeks ago, is more effective than the iPad in allowing users to stream distracting content for as many people as possible…at the same time.

There’s another one about (simulated) screen contrast after the jump…

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What Apple's 'Pride' Ad Might Say About How the Company Is Changing

Hey, look, the new Apple isn’t just the same old monolith after all.

A video released by the brand this week features thousands of the company’s employees, including CEO Tim Cook, and their family members all gathering to march in last month’s San Francisco Pride Parade.

It’s unusual to see Apple’s workers show up in its consumer advertising. It’s also nice, especially in support of a worthwhile cause (even if Apple does, yes, just ultimately want to sell more gadgets). Set to Coldplay’s new single “A Sky Full of Stars,” the video opens on the company’s prep for the parade, with rows of bicycles, and a barista pouring beverages, and staffers donning boxes-on-boxes worth of special Apple-logo T-shirts reading “Pride,” before the montage crescendoes to the main event. Cook’s appearance is brief, nestled among a sequence of less-recognizable faces. “Inclusion inspires innovation,” says the closing copy.

That reads, though, as more than just a corporate show of force for LGBT rights, which the company has a history of supporting in its own employment policies. Everybody always knew Cook would have a hard time replacing messianic figure Steve Jobs as the face of Apple. The perhaps obvious answer, hinted at subtly here, is that Cook is not doing it alone.

After much handwringing in recent years over the new CEO’s vision—or perceived lack thereof—the blueprint of Cook’s Apple that’s now trickling out suggests a company that’s less closed off and more collaborative than during its mythic era under Jobs, a notoriously exacting master who crafted its reputation for shrouding itself in secrecy and keeping a tight focus on products—including in its advertising.

In other words, it’s hard to imagine an ad featuring a smiling Jobs milling around with his underlings. Yet, here is Cook, doing just that.

The clip itself is a little slow to get off the ground, but the payoff, focused as it is on people—namely Apple staffers and the LGBT community writ large—is well worth the wait. That’s something of a coup, considering the company’s ill-fated detour into advertising around its corporate culture in 2013, by way of a botched attempt at a manifesto about the significance of products.

The new ad, meanwhile, also aligns with Cook’s championing, including in his CEO role, of human rights broadly defined, as well as other causes like environmentalism. Such are the trappings of inheriting a powerful company with the ability, and arguably an obligation, to contribute more socially. But back in 2011, Cook also made a point of saying that one of Jobs’s last pieces of advice to him was never to ask what Steve Jobs would do, and instead to “just do what’s right.”

Maybe those who want to can still see Jobs pulling the strings, even from beyond the grave. Subtle perception games aside, that just might mean the next great Apple product everyone’s been waiting for is just around the corner, too.



Apple Celebrates All the Ways iPhones Make You a Better Parent

Don’t worry, the future of the species is safe in Apple’s hands—just look at all the ways the iPhone can help you better take care of your kids.

With the right apps and add-ons, it’s a baby monitor, an educational aid, a thermometer and a flashlight to check for monsters under the bed. That, and much more, says a new ad from the brand.

It’s a success insofar as it does what tech ads do at their best—illustrate how products make peoples’ lives better, or at least more convenient. It also covers a lot of ground as far as variety of uses.

But it’s not particularly groundbreaking. Instead it feels like a less-streamlined version of Google Nexus 7’s camping spot from 2012. That story focused on a closer look at a single father-and-son pair. This one, more impressionistic, goes for the we-are-one-world vibe that is becoming familiar in Apple’s advertising.

Here, that includes undertones that the brand’s technology is a great unifying force at the heart of what really matters most: the children. Subtle as it may be, it does have a certain degree of power as an evolutionary sales pitch.

Strip that away, and it’s not telling us much we haven’t known for a while. Even as Apple has steadied its advertising over the past year, it’s still celebrating, if very respectably, how Apple changed the world years ago. 



Apple's 'Go, You Chicken Fat, Go' iPhone Ad Has an Odd History Behind It

Why is JFK’s youth fitness anthem marketing the iPhone 5S?

Apple has a new 5S spot out, and the musical choice is even odder than the previous 5S spot, which featured a reworked version of “Gigantic” by the Pixies (and that’s saying something, since that song is supposedly about male genitalia).

As Uproxx noted, the new ad uses “The Youth Fitness Song,” aka “Chicken Fat,” a song from President Kennedy’s national physical fitness program. Apparently this little ditty, which the creator of The Music Man came up with, was sent to school districts throughout the U.S. in the ’60s to accompany the calisthenics program.

On visuals alone, it’s clear the spot is promoting the physical-fitness uses of the iPhone, and it’s got quite a few. The tagline here, as in the previous spot, is: “You’re more powerful than you think.”

Though the song could theoretically make boomers’ nostalgic for a time when they were told to “Go, you chicken fat, go,” I found it quite confusing and distracting. Personally, I didn’t notice much of what was going on in the ad until I took my headphones off.

Welp. Hopefully there won’t be too many customers upset at the prospect of the tech giant telling them, in a questionable manner, to start exercising.



Apple Officially Takes More Ads In-House

The strained relationship between Apple and TBWAChiatDay has reached a new stage.

Two months after unflattering email exchanges between Apple’s head of marketing and TBWA’s Media Arts Lab surfaced as part of the extended Apple vs. Samsung copyright battle, Bloomberg was the first outlet to report that the company will now be creating more (if not all) of its TV spots in-house.

An Apple spokesperson reminded Bloomberg that the internal team, which “includes at least two people Apple hired away from Media Arts Lab”, is responsible for recent spots like this one:

The shift has been in the works since early 2013, with Apple deciding to take control of more production duties and build up its own team rather than search for a new agency.

Other outside hires include at least two higher-ups from Wieden+Kennedy: Tyler Whisnand and Bill Davenport.

No one at MAL–which recently went through some staffing changes of its own–offered a comment to Bloomberg, so the current and future status of the partnership remains unclear. 72andSunny CEO John Boiler did weigh in, however, calling the company’s decision to hire from within MAL “…an indication of some seriously broken trust.”

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These Intimate, Globe-Spanning iPad Ads are Apple's Best in a Long While

Apple updates its “Your Verse” iPad campaign with a pair of gorgeous 60-second spots focused on the tablet’s ability to facilitate music creation and help users travel the globe.

One ad presents London Philharmonic conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen as he uses an iPad to compose, while the other follows hearing impaired writer Cherie King as she visits Iceland, Morocco and locales in Asia.

After a year in which Apple struggled somewhat to find its advertising voice, this latest iteration of “Your Verse” finds the tech giant and its longtime agency, TBWAMedia Arts Lab, in fine form. The work does a great job positioning the iPad as a vital extension of each user’s aspirations and an indispensable partner in helping them achieve their goals.

Salomen’s iPad isn’t merely a tablet. It becomes his collaborator and confidant, allowing him to capture inspiration and perfect passages in cabs, the park, at the train station—anywhere. Meanwhile, King’s iPad is her traveling companion, providing instant information to help her find her way, communicate with locals and share experiences.

Apple never hits you over the head with its message, but the notion that Salonen and King wouldn’t want to be without their iPads is conveyed through compelling images and edits. Unlike earlier “Your Verse” spots, there’s no narration. None’s required. The action on screen carries the storytelling in a smooth, naturalist way.

Those wishing to explore further can visit Apple’s “Your Verse” page, which features robust content about Salonen and King, as well as others stars of the campaign. Special iTunes pages showcase the apps on display, including Orchestra, which Salonen created.



Istanbul’s Apple store

Voici le premier magasin Apple à Istanbul réalisé par Foster + Partners. Une architecture toute en transparence avec deux niveaux situés sur la place principale de Zorlu de la ville. Le magasin apparaît comme une lanterne rectangulaire qui brille au dessus du sol. Une magnifique création à découvrir en photographies.

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Dr. Dre pode ter confirmado compra da Beats pela Apple

Circula na mídia há algumas horas a notícia de uma suposta compra da Beats Electronics, responsável pelos caríssimos fones Beats by Dre, pela Apple, por uma quantia que chegaria aos 3,2 bilhões de dólares. A informação, divulgada inicialmente pelo Financial Times, ainda não havia sido oficialmente confirmada, mas um vídeo do ator Tyrese Gibson pode ter comprovado (sem querer) o rumor.

Em um trecho do clipe, o próprio Dr. Dre se anuncia como “o primeiro bilionário do hip-hop”, e Tyrese brinca que “vão precisar atualizar a lista da Forbes, as coisas acabaram de mudar”. Em nenhum momento a Apple é mencionada, mas o fato do vídeo ter sido rapidamente removido do YouTube dá ainda mais força à teoria de que os amigos estavam mesmo comemorando a aquisição da Beats.

Para a Wired, a compra faz bastante sentido: a Beats vende a mesma ‘aura’ de luxo que a Apple, e conseguiu transformar um equipamento bastante banal em um item de ostentação. Há quem acredite que mais do que a aquisição de uma marca de fones de ouvidos premium, a Apple estaria mesmo interessada no aplicativo de streaming de música da Beats. Considerando que o iTunes não é um dos players favoritos, dando larga vantagem para iniciativas como o Spotify e Rdio, pode ser uma jogada interessante, mas alguns analistas dizem que isso não faz tanto sentido, já que o Beats Music não é, nem de longe, um bom app de música.

beats-music

Além do app e da ‘vibe’ jovem e descolada, com a compra da Beats a Apple pode levar também 64% do mercado de fones de ouvido premium (que não necessariamente são de altíssima qualidade, mas que custam bastante) por um precinho até que camarada: a Beats foi avaliada em 2 bilhões de dólares no ano passado, portanto a compra por 3,2 bilhões não parece tão inflacionada assim.

Thássius Veloso, do Tecnoblog, especula que talvez a Apple estivesse aguardando WWDC, conferência anual para desenvolvedores que acontece em 2 de junho, para anunciar oficialmente a aquisição da Beats. Com o deslize do rapper, contudo, talvez a empresa precise dar uma acelerada nesses planos.

 

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Fubiz for iPhone iOS7

L’équipe de Fubiz et Blank est fière de vous proposer la nouvelle application gratuite iOS 7 pour iPhone, conçue pour rendre votre expérience plus fluide et vous permettre d’emporter votre dose quotidienne d’inspiration dans votre poche. Découvrez davantage d’informations sur l’application Fubiz dans la suite.

Nouvelle interface iPhone iOS7

Découvrez de manière plus fluide les articles du site, le tout trié par catégories et avec un nouveau moteur de recherche. Un nouveau design et une interface pour un accès plus simple aux médias, galeries et aux vidéos HD sur Fubiz. Une évolution accompagnée par l’ajout des partages sur les réseaux sociaux et sur chacunes des communautés Fubiz (Twitter, Facebook et Tumblr).

Lien direct iTunesSite dédié

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Retro Technology Lego Kits

L’artiste Chris McVeigh a eu l’excellente idée d’utiliser les différentes briques Lego afin de reconstituer de façon minimaliste des objets technologiques dépassés mais symbolisant notre époque. Des premières TV à la Nintendo Nes, vous pouvez refaire ces créations chez vous, l’artiste dévoilant sur son site les instructions à suivre.

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Luxury Brand for Food Packaging

Basée en Israël, l’artiste Peddy Mergui a envisagée une série d’emballages alimentaires, à partir des lignes des plus grandes marques. Chacun des aliments porte l’identité familière d’une marque bien connue tel que Gucci, Prada, Nike, ou Apple. Chaque packaging est étudié par rapport à l’identité d’une marque et du logo.

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Apple defende que somos mais poderosos do que pensamos

“Você é mais poderoso do que você pensa”. Esta é a assinatura de Powerful, novo comercial da Apple para o iPhone 5s, exibido pela primeira vez na noite de ontem, nos Estados Unidos. Ao som de uma versão de Gigantic, dos Pixies, vemos o smartphone sendo utilizado em mil e uma situações, como uma ferramenta criativa, que nos ajuda a colocar em prática o que antes apenas imaginávamos.

Com um ritmo bacana e uma boa trilha sonora, a Apple nos lembra que o mundo é um gigantesco parque de diversões , esperando para ser explorado. É claro que a chave que abre este universo de possibilidades, pelo menos neste comercial, é um iPhone 5s, uma ferramenta útil em diferentes momentos e situações.

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Apple Berates TBWA\Chiat\Day in Internal Emails

apple-logoThe ongoing Apple vs. Samsung battle looks even less flattering for TBWA\Chiat\Day after Business Insider and others gained access to more emails detailing a contentious back-and-forth between head of marketing Phil Schiller and James Vincent of Media Arts Lab.

The full exchange is worth a read for your daily allowance of Schadenfreude. Some key points:

  • TBWA proposes an emergency meeting to address matters that seem more relevant to PR than ad departments: brand likability, employee behaviors, etc.
  • The ad proposal is to “change the conversation” with a focus on differentiating the iPhone from the Galaxy
  • TBWA also proposes a regular marketing communications meeting to facilitate “more open and expansive ways to experiment with ideas”

Schiller wasn’t buying it.

continued…

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Samsung Claims Apple Almost Dropped TBWA\Chiat\Day in 2013

At least that’s what Samsung’s lawyer Jon Quinn said during opening statements in the brands’ ongoing patent trial. According to a quote in The Verge, Apple considered dropping TBWA\Chiat\Day after its rival’s campaign inspired headlines like this one, from The Wall Street Journal, pondering whether or not the company had lost its seat at the head of the popular table. Quinn told the jury:

“This new, edgy marketing strategy … it drove Apple crazy.”

The campaign in question was, of course, “Next Big Thing” by 72 and Sunny.

The series and subsequent headline supposedly unnerved Apple marketing VP Phil Schiller so much that he emailed Tim Cook and suggested an agency review, writing:

“We have a lot of work to do to turn this around.”

While rumored board meetings on the topic did not inspire a change, Quinn’s claim hardly serves as a vote of confidence — and Samsung shows no signs of reconsidering its strategy.

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