Google’s New Chrome Games Are a Dream Come True. Is That a Good Thing?

Visiting the video arcade at my neighborhood mall in the '80s was both exhilarating and a bit scary. On the one hand, I feared that bigger kids would try to take all my change. (And I mean a physical shakedown, so quarters would spill from my pockets onto the pizza-smeared floor.) The adrenaline rush came from the games themselves. Asteroids, Space Invaders, Radar Scope … I loved them all. As I played, I rarely paid attention to my score. I just grooved on the sights and sounds, thrilled to each synthesized pop! bleep! and ping!, riding waves of pixelated excitement for hours on end. I wanted to meld with those machines and live in that world. Magic machines everywhere! That's what I wanted the future to be like. That was a scary thought, too, but no less wonderful for that.

Fast forward to Google's latest Chrome Experiments—two games designed to show off the advanced capabilities of the company's browser. They took me back to those arcades of my youth in ways both good and bad. This is partly because the games, "Roll It" and "Racer," are self-consciously retro. (The latter's soundtrack is by Giorgio Moroder, still taking his passion and making it happen after all this time!) Despite the nods to yesteryear, both games are cutting edge and let users play across multiple screens—phones, tablets and computers. "Racer" lets you drive a car across as many as five mobile devices. Watch it speed from the phone you're holding to the tablet in your buddy's hand! With "Roll It," you control the trajectory of a virtual skeeball on a desktop or laptop screen by moving a smartphone handset this way and that.

"Racer" and "Roll It" are both fun and absorbing—impressive slices of techno-magic that fulfill the promise of those crude arcade screens from the mall. They're like yesterday's dreams come true, brimming with possibilities for our digital tomorrows when synced systems running Chrome will conquer space and time. Still, I can't help feeling ambivalent, even dispirited about the proposition. For one thing, the joviality feels forced and works a tad too hard to sell happiness on a microchip. "Grab your phone, some friends and get ready to roll," says the "Roll It" promo clip. "No apps. No downloads. All you need is Chrome."

Booyah, Google's got the fun! It's daffy doodles, rad robots, animated animal rock groups and games all day long. Just follow the bouncing Chrome ball across screens of every shape and size … because the company now demands our attention on multiple platforms, as if retargeting humanity one screen at a time wasn't enough fun.

Ah well, there's no point in bemoaning "Big Bad Google," because I can't imagine a world without its products and services. Sure, Google's scary—but it gives us wonderful stuff, and its output has become an indispensable part of our daily existence. Maybe that's my problem. We've melded with the machines more thoroughly than I'd ever imagined, and now there's no escape. Our cursor-driven workplace tasks are essentially problem-solving games, complete with somewhat more sophisticated pops! bleeps! and pings! There aren't any shakedowns per se—just data-driven commerce. We can all groove to that, right?

I got the future I dreamed of all those years ago. So, why can't I shake the feeling that I'm the one being played?

    

The 10 Most-Viral Ads of 2013 (So Far)

A forensic artist drawing a picture of a baby Clydesdale shipping its pants? Now that would be a viral commercial supernova.

Dove, Budweiser and Kmart all rank near the top of Unruly Media's just-released list of the most viral commercials of 2013 so far. Those brands are joined by Pepsi MAX, Evian, Ram Trucks and more, as Unruly celebrates the commercials with the most pass-along value through the first five months of the year. And as the numbers show, it's been a very strong year for online video, as compared to 2012.

See the full list at this link:

The 10 Most-Viral Ads of 2013 (So Far)

Unruly counts shares of videos across social media—a metric that is often at odds with sheer view counts. For example, Microsoft's "Child of the '90s" video for Internet Explorer would place fourth on this list in terms of YouTube views (with more than 34 million), but its approximately 630,000 shares are good for only ninth place.

Conversely, Kmart's "Ship My Pants" and Budweiser's "Brotherhood" spots both have fewer YouTube views than Evian's "Baby & Me" or Pepsi MAX's "Test Drive"—but they rank higher on this list because of better share rates. (The top video on the list, however, leads in both views and shares.)

We left a couple of videos from Unruly's list off this one—including the Biting Elbows music video and the Miami Heat's Harlem Shake clip—to focus on brand advertising rather than more entertainment-based content.

    

Microsoft Hammers Google in Leaked Parody of a Chrome Ad

Microsoft takes a break from perfecting its blue screen of death to ape Google's ad style—abundant white space, bouncing Chrome ball, Beethoven's Fifth on the soundtrack—in this anti-Google video that was reportedly intended for internal use but was conveniently leaked to the universe just in time for Google's big I/O developers conference. Tagged with the same "Don't get Scroogled" line that Microsoft uses whenever it needles the only digital company more reviled than itself, the spot warns, "With Google Chrome, everything everywhere is tracked. To target you with ads. To monetize your personal info. … Google watches everything you do and uses it to make a profit off of you. Chrome has you commercialized." Cool. Google can trash my privacy and pick my pocket as long as there's some value added. ("Commercialized" is a good thing, right? I can always Google it and find out. See—value added!) What's Microsoft done for anyone lately? Since they took away the Windows start button, I just stare at a blank PC screen and write all my stories on a Mac. Though Google did give the world Glassholes, so I guess they're just as bad.

The original Google Chrome spot:

    

O redesign do Google+

Durante sua conferência I/O para desenvolvedores nesta quarta-feira, o Google anunciou o redesign da rede social Google+, com 41 novas funções, e uma timeline dividida por colunas. Confira no vídeo acima.

Google+

Porém, talvez o maior destaque do evento seja a unificação da ferramenta mais popular do G+, o Hangouts. Agora esse será o serviço integrado de mensagens do Google, conversando entre os apps para Android, iOS, Chrome e Gmail.

O comercial abaixo promove o Hangouts como plataforma independente, seguindo o mesmo tom emotivo e familiar de outras campanhas da empresa de Mountain View. A filha apresenta o namorado, e futuro noivo, ao pai através do chat, destacando justamente a integração entre diferentes meios.

É um filme indolor, claro, mas que na minha opinião mostra mais uma vez como o Google está monotemático em sua linha criativa. Aliás, a visão romântica da tecnologia aproximando as pessoas tem se tornado lugar comum também para Facebook e Apple nos últimos meses.

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Google homenageia Saul Bass

Em seu novo doodle, o Google homenageia o designer Saul Bass, que completaria 93 anos de idade hoje.

O logo da empresa de Mountain View foi animado com o estilo característico de Bass, ao som de “Unsquare Dance” de Davi Bubreck.

Bass é bastante conhecido pelas sequências de abertura (e posters) dos filme de Alfred Hitchcock e Martin Scorsese, mas também criou identidades visuais icônicas, como a da Bell.

Google Saul Bass

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Google comemora o Dia das Mães

Reunindo diversos clipes virais maternais em um único vídeo, o Google celebra o Dia das Mães dizendo “obrigado”.

A campanha (http://g.co/mom) incentiva que filhos do mundo todo agradeçam suas mães, utilizando os produtos Google para entrar em contato se ela estiver longe, ou comprar flores e fazer uma montagem com fotos e vídeo, por exemplo, utilizando a tag #HeresToTheMoms.

Google

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Google Celebrates Moms With Poignant Ad for Mother’s Day

Google traditionally does a special Google Doodle for Mother's Day. This year, it's adding another gift—the commercial below from creative agency Whirled, saluting moms for everything they do. As Procter & Gamble has learned in recent years, you really can't go wrong in giving mothers some love. And in fact, it's becoming a specialty for Whirled, too. After the jump, check out a second Mother's Day spot the agency did this year—for the ASUS VivoBook touchscreen notebooks.

    

Man Killed and Stuffed Down Toilet at Ad Agency, Google Photos Suggest

Google Business Photos is an interesting service through which companies can pay to add interior shots of their offices to Google Street View. The temptation to abuse the service by posting goofy or shocking photos would seem to be irresistible to creative agencies—and indeed, many of them have apparently been uploading prank images. The most curious so far have come from British agency Ideas by Music, which staged a gruesome shower-stall murder for one photo—and then showed the body stuffed unceremoniously into a toilet stall a few doors down. The same agency also staged a Shining tribute by putting a red tricycle in the middle of a hallway, and a mysterious girl standing nearby. Ideas by Music doesn't mind if you stumble across these disconcerting images—on the contrary, the agency's website is the Google Street View of its interior. Let's see if some U.S. agencies can step up and have some fun with this. Via The Atlantic.

    

Google Chrome’s Ad With Stewie From Family Guy Is Super Irritating

Stewie Griffin, the 1-year-old prodigy from Family Guy, is a lovable character, but man can he get annoying. In this 15-second spot from 72andSunny for Google Chrome, he proves just that. "Mom! Mom! Mommy! Ma!" he cries, as Lois stares off in a tormented haze. Ah, the gifts of parenthood. The spot makes its point, though. Google Chrome can't stop you from being interrupted, but it can let you pick up where you left off. What is it with Stewie being so repetitive in commercials? Now, someone please find Rupert so Stewie can finally shut up.

    

Google Street View Hyperlapse

Au sein de Teehan+Lax, Labs est une unité qui cherche à développer des usages créatifs de la technologie pour les différents clients de l’agence. Leur dernière invention permet de créer un « hyperlapse » en se basant de tous les clichés capturés et générés sur Google Street View. Une initiative à découvrir en vidéo.

Google Street View Hyperlapse5
Google Street View Hyperlapse4
Google Street View Hyperlapse2
Google Street View Hyperlapse1
Google Street View Hyperlapse6

Glamour Makes Good Use of Google+ Hangouts

I don’t know how they did it, but Glamour magazine has gathered a massive audience on Google+. With 1.5 million readers on this platform, the door is now wide open to sponsored content opportunities.

Glamour Magazine - YouTube

According to Mashable, the fashion title is using the Goggle+ Hangout feature in new ways:

Glamour magazine is launching a month-long series of Hangouts featuring staffers, online personalities — and products. Eight of the nine Hangouts are sponsored by a company, whose products are featured centrally in the content. In a Hangout for Unilever-owned Suave, for example, DIY blogger Erica Domesek will show how to make hair accessories for hair styled by Suave stylists. A L’Oreal-sponsored Hangout with Glamour stylist Annabel Tollman will show viewers how to wear ombré hair, as colored by Loreal’s Féria Wild Ombré product.

Some of the Hangouts will invite viewers to converse; others will be closed sessions, during which users will be asked to comment on social media networks using hashtags.

In other Sponsored Content news, The New York Times unveiled some interesting tidbits about Mashable’s successful use of sponsored posts. For one, Mashable sees its sponsored posts as something other than advertorial.

“These are not advertorials,” said Lance Ulanoff, the editor in chief at Mashable. “I know what an advertorial is. These are pure editorial.”

Semantic argument, or no, the price for a sponsored series on Mashable can run close to six figures. A sponsored series of posts on AdPulp, however, is considerably more affordable. So, I ask you — yes YOU — what topic do you want to “own” and consistently present to AdPulp’s sophisticated MarCom readership?

If you run a search firm, we can run a weekly series on SEO. If you’re a headhunter, we can run a weekly series on job hunting. If you’re an editing house, we can run a series on working with directors and editors. And so on.

Unlike banner ads on the site, a sponsored post on AdPulp.com reaches our 6500 RSS subscribers. Inquire within.

The post Glamour Makes Good Use of Google+ Hangouts appeared first on AdPulp.

Google lança serviço de entrega express

Google lançou um serviço de entrega express (realizada no mesmo dia do pedido) para competir com a Amazon Prime e o eBay Now, chamado Google Shopping Express.

Ainda funcionando como piloto apenas em São Francisco, qualquer pessoal local pode registrar seu interesse em usar o serviço, preenchendo este formulário.

Os usuários-testes terão 6 meses de filiação gratuita, para entregas ilimitadas feitas no mesmo dia, de algumas marcas e lojas locais como Target, Walgreens Toys “R” Us.

googleshoppingexpress-1

Quando o serviço for oficial, matérias sugerem que será em torno de $10 a $15 mais barato do que o serviço similar da Amazon, que está em $69 por 12 meses de uso.

De acordo com o Google, os usuários poderão encontrar todas as lojas locais em um lugar só online. Além disso, será possível escolher uma hora específica para a entrega chegar.

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Busca olfativa, fim do YouTube e outras pegadinhas do Google no 1° de abril

O Google é, notoriamente, um dos mais engraçadinhos adeptos do 1° de abril. Todo ano, divisões da empresa em todo mundo entram na brincadeira, seja divulgando notícias falsas, lançamentos impossíveis ou simplesmente adicionado eastar eggs em produtos Google populares.

Além do revolucionário Google Nose, no vídeo acima, um sistema de buscas de cheiros, aqui estãá uma seleção de outras pegadinhas de Mountain View nesse dia da mentira:

Fim do YouTube

Google Maps com modo Caça ao Tesouro

Gmail Azul

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Google Play, uma arma na guerra dos tronos

Ao som de O Fortuna, da ópera Carmina Burana, começa Retribution. A seleção de músicas que se segue também dá dicas sobre o usuário, um certo personagem de Game of Thrones. E o que este personagem pesquisa na Google Play?  Livros de Leo Zeibert e Maquiavel, games como Kingdoms of Camelot e um certo filme, digamos, educativo. Armas importantes para a guerra dos tronos.

Diferentemente do filme do começo do ano – quando o Cookie Monster buscou ajuda no Google Play para emagrecer -, desta vez é preciso estar familiarizado com a trama de Game of Thrones para entender a ideia. E apesar da simplicidade – e de seguir a exata receita do primeiro comercial, até que o vídeo é simpático.

Mais uma vez, a criação é da Mullen.

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Google Chrome Turns Any Website Into a 3-D Marble Maze Game

Google's latest innovation in time-wasting fun—this time out of Japan—is the Chrome World Wide Maze, a browser experiment that turns any Web page of your choosing into a 3-D marble maze. You need a smartphone for this to work properly (and, of course, Chrome for Mobile), since it becomes your controller once you've synced it up with your computer. The mobile-phone-as-game-controller idea has promise, and isn't much different from the Wii U's current setup. But they'll have to do more than this to make up for axing Google Reader. Jerks.

Google Glass Reaches New Level of Cool as Pauly D Puts Knockoff Version in Music Video

This is surely what Google was going for with Google Glass—a product so irresistibly fashionable that Pauly D, the Jersey Shore alum, DJ and general arbiter of taste, is trying to borrow its cool by planting a knockoff pair in his latest music video, "Back to Love," with singer Jay Sean. The faux-electronic eyewear are worn by the story's obligatory perfectly styled love-interest. A model, she wears the glasses in the dressing room at the beginning of the video, and then again on the runway, circa 2:30. According to gender-and-technology guru Sergey Brin, that should make her seem less emasculated (if a woman can be emasculated) than if she were using a smartphone. Really, it just makes her—and anyone else walking around with a camera casually attached to his or her face—seem more ridiculous than if they were using a smartphone. Muting while watching is recommended.

Números atualizados da Guerra dos Navegadores: Google Chrome lidera disparado na América do Sul

Disputada majoritariamente por quatro oponentes, a Guerra dos Browsers ganhou novos dados com o mais recente estudo lançado pelo Pindgom.

Internet Explorer e Firefox continuam perdendo terreno, abrindo espaço para o Google Chrome dominar em quatro continentes. São números que seguem tendência do ano passado, baseados em estatísticas de mais de 3 milhões de sites.

Num cenário global, o Chrome subiu de 31% para 37%, mas impressiona mesmo é o domínio no nosso continente. Segundo a pesquisa, o navegador do Google responde por 59% da navegação na América do Sul, sobrando 20% para o IE e 18% para o Firefox.

Depois de passar bons anos com o Firefox, migrei integralmente para o Chrome desde 2009 e sou fã da ferramenta. Poderia até dizer que a evolução técnica do browser do Google explica essa popularização, mas não tenho dúvidas de que outro departamento é o grande responsável pelo crescimento meteórico: marketing.

Confira a pesquisa completa do Pingdom.

Browser War
Browser War

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The Peanut Gallery: Google demonstra API de reconhecimento de voz com clássicos do cinema mudo

O Google continua sua série de experimentos com o Chrome, agora para testar sua API de reconhecimento de voz.

O site “The Peanut Gallery” permite a inclusão de intertítulos em cenas de clássicos do cinema mudo. Basta escolher o filme e falar em alto e bom som para ver a mágica acontecer.

Depois de criar o clipe, é possível salvar para compartilhar com amigos nas redes sociais. A Web Speech API do Google é capaz de reconhecer mais de 30 idiomas. Faz um teste: peanutgalleryfilms.com

Peanuts

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Google promove Nexus com mais um comercial sobre pais e bebês

Se o Google já se repetia em seu último comercial, “Brand New Baby”, o que dizer de mais uma vez o mesmo tema na “nova” criação para o Nexus?

Ou as equipes de marketing dos diferentes departamentos não se conversam, ou a empresa deseja mesmo forçar o conceito da tecnologia em favor das conexões humanas. Relembre “Jess Time” e “New Dad”.

No comercial para o Nexus 10, um casal que espera pelo primeiro filho se informa e diverte através do gadget, contando com uma ajuda até para escolher o nome do bebê.

A criação é da agência Mullen.

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Google e Adidas lançam o tênis que fala

Um protótipo lá de 2010 já apresentava a ideia do tênis que faz check-in automático no Foursquare. Agora em 2013, Google e Adidas pretendem levar essa conversa calçado-internet

É o tênis que fala, mostrado na atual edição do SXSW: um pequeno speaker instalado no “The Talking Shoe” informa sua velocidade, performance e ainda dá palpites do que você deve fazer, com frases de incentivo ou conselhos para diminuir o ritmo.

Além de falar, o tênis pode publicar nas redes sociais tais informações. Agora teremos que saber também quando alguém pisa em algo que não deve? Fica a dúvida.

Google e Adidas não pretendem vender o produto, mas considera tornar a tecnologia open source. A ideia faz parte do projeto “Art, Copy & Code”, dedicado a reimaginar a publicidade.

The Talking Shoe

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