You're viewing the un-styled version of this site in which the content is displayed without the design structure. This may be because your browser doesn't support the Web Standards for which this site is designed.
Please consider upgrading to a more modern browser—we support Internet Explorer 6.x and newer, Firefox and Safari; other browsers may or may not work.

PRIMARY NAVIGATION ZONES
INTRO
BLOG
SERVICES
CONTACT
random imagerandom imagerandom image
REPORT subnavigation:
CURRENT
PREVIOUS
PODCASTS
VODCASTS
RSS
Currently viewing:
2007 > November > 20 > MediaSnack-snack-snackers#22

MediaSnack-snack-snackers#22

snacked

[SUMMARY—Quotes which illustrate.]

(WORLD) MediaSnackers are being served more and more ways to snack on their chosen media than ever. It's hard to differentiate between companies and start-ups enabling snacking or the snacking trends driving media platform development, but here are a couple of quotes from the 'experts' to sum it all up for any 'MediaSnacker-virgins':

One of the things our grandchildren will find quaintest about us is that we distinguish the digital from the real, the virtual from the real. In the future, that will become literally impossible.
The man who coined the phrase 'cyberspace' talking about ubiquitous computing.

We are very confident it will change people's lives.
Beatbullying chief executive Emma-Jane Cross explaining the importance of a new video campaign on YouTube.

More than four in 10 teens, or 43 percent, who instant message use it for things they wouldn't say in person, according to an Associated Press-AOL poll released Thursday. Twenty-two percent use IMs to ask people out on dates or accept them, and 13 percent use them to break up.
What teens are really using IM for.

The line between TV and PC is being blurred. Today's consumers no longer care about the conventional definition of a gadget. They just want one that fits their lifestyle
Judy Pae of LG hitting the nail on the head.

The reason children quickly adapt to the latest digital devices is because they have no fear of learning and unlearning. But our policymakers are constrained by their orthodox approaches to problems, a side effect of their age and reluctance to adapt to changing realities. The solutions they propose are suitably staid.
Sounds like the opening lines of mediasnackers.com summed up here.

MediaSnack-snack-snackers #1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 & 21.

Filed by DK on November 20 2007

« previous entry  next entry »

Viewing 'MediaSnack-snack-snackers#22', you may also explore current and other entries, search or get our newsreader feed.

Currently viewing:
REPORT > 2007 > November > 20 > MediaSnack-snack-snackers#22