Video – The Customer as God: A Vision for the Future of Commerce – WSJ.com

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It’s a Saturday morning in 2022, and you’re trying to decide what to wear to the dinner party you’re throwing that evening. All the clothes hanging in your closet are “smart”—that is, they can tell you when you last wore them, what else you wore them with, and where and when they were last cleaned. Some do this with microchips. Others have tiny printed tags that you can scan on your hand-held device.

As you prepare for your guests, you discover that your espresso machine isn’t working and you need another one. So you pull the same hand-held device from your pocket, scan the little square code on the back of the machine, and tell your hand-held, by voice, that this one is broken and you need another one, to rent or buy. An “intentcast” goes out to the marketplace, revealing only what’s required to attract offers. No personal information is revealed, except to vendors with whom you already have a trusted relationship.

Click to read the whole article - Video – The Customer as God: A Vision for the Future of Commerce – WSJ.com.

This is an interesting article touching on the power the consumer now has, and how that will continue to grow into the future.  We used to be tied to our local brick and mortar stores and to the prices they set.  Now, with the Internet, the consumer goods market has become a global adventure.  You can buy a desired item from almost anywhere in the world.  With the Internet, we now have smart phones that give us shopping power from anywhere.  Having options, especially in mature markets, allows shoppers to choose where they go.  Just look at the smart phone market.

A few years ago a cell phone carrier was tied to a particular model, allowing numerous cell phone makers to prosper.  The iPhone created such a high demand that every cell carrier wished to carry it.  This led to intense competition to innovate new mobile technologies.  This brought more options to a single cell phone provider.  It has caused prices to drop on smart phones and tablets as the competition has become so intense.  Apple is even working on a smaller version of the iPad, and they continue to sell older iPhone models at cheaper prices.

Another market that consumers will be able to dictate, thanks to the Internet and advancing technologies is in training and education.  Prices for attending a four year university have skyrocketed over the past few years.  Now, with cloud computing, the speed of service, and the mobile platforms to access from anywhere there is a dogfight brewing over providing a cost-effective education online.  The University of Phoenix is one such school to offer a cheaper option online.  Many traditional colleges, such as the University of Maryland school system have created online programs.  A step further is traditional colleges offering free, introductory classes online.  Such classes can be found on Apple’s iTunes U, and now also with a new start-up, Coursera.  There are also numerous free and cost-effective ways to learn online, such as with Codecademy, a site that teaches you the basics of computer programming.  The Internet provides educational options, and this will allow the consumer to choose, which should eventually lead universities to find new ways to restructure and cut costs to meet the changing demand.

There are many ways the Internet has impacted us, giving us the power to choose.  Over time the impact will be even greater.  Maybe gas prices and rental housing will drop as well.  Maybe cable providers will finally offer customized packages.  Maybe one day we can immediately get competing offers on AC repairs when internal sensors notify us and contractors that the AC has malfunctioned.  Power to the people!

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Calling All iPhoneographers -- Foap Wants To Get You Paid

Reblogged from TechCrunch:

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Did you know that the word iPhoneography has its own Wikipedia entry? Me neither (look quick before it gets deleted). It's the art of creating photos with an Apple iPhone, apparently -- a phenomenon that a new Swedish startup hopes to cash in on by enabling iPhoneographers to do the same.

Launching its iPhone app officially in the US and UK today, …

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Get paid for iPhone photos? Sell those embarrassing moments for some cash? I am in! I wonder if prices could change. $10 seems pretty cheap for giving someone the rights to use or publish your photos. This could save those celebrity gossip sites a lot of money if they are able to find $10 celebrity photos on this app. This could also deeply hurt professional photographers if this app were to really take off.

Lovely renders of next iPhone in white

Reblogged from 9to5Mac:

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Martin Hajek managed to fool the Web when his black iPhone mockups were taken for the real thing. Gizmodo is a good sport and now features his work on a white iPhone mockup, which looks pretty darn good to our eyes. The renderings are inspired by leaked photos and video of what most believe to be the next-generation iPhone’s metal back.

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Fancy!

Verizon to Phase Out Most Existing Phone Plans

Reblogged from Business & Money:

NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless, the nation's largest cellphone company, is phasing out nearly all of its existing phone plans and replacing them with pricing schemes that encourage customers to connect their non-phone devices, like tablets and PCs, to the Verizon network.

Read more… 795 more words

Verizon is making a massive change to their plans allowing a single data plan to cover multiple devices. This should save families money with multiple phones, and will also encourage those considering wi-fi only devices to make the jump to pricier 4G models. So in some way or another they hope to attract more customers who spend just as much, if not more than they currently do by adding on the data plans to their cellular services. How will AT&T and other services follow?

With iOS 6, Apple and Facebook unite for non-stop social networking

Reblogged from VentureBeat:

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At the dawn of a rekindled relationship status, Apple has deeply integrated Facebook into its latest operating system, iOS 6, to be released to consumers later this year.

"We have been working very closely with Facebook to create the best Facebook integration ever in a mobile device," Apple's senior vice president of iOS, Scott Forstall, said while demonstrating iOS 6 at the annual…

Read more… 401 more words

Time to rethink that Facebook stock that as of late has only been seen as bathroom reading.
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