Monday, 1 October 2007

At Starbucks, Songs of Instant Gratification


Like that song you hear playing at Starbucks, but just cannot wait until you get to a computer to download the song?

Starting tomorrow at certain Starbucks stores, a person with an iPhone or iTunes software loaded onto a laptop can download the songs they hear over the speakers directly onto those devices. The price will be 99 cents a song, a small price, Starbucks says, to satisfy an immediate urge.

“For the customer it’s an instant gratification,” said Ken Lombard, president of Starbucks Entertainment. “You’ll hear the song, be able to identify what it is and download to the device.”

And it’s just the tip of the iced latte. Businesses are using new technologies to enhance the impulse buy so consumers can purchase their temptations whenever they want, wherever they are, before the urge passes.

Amazon.com pioneered one-click shopping to speed purchases, whether made at home or on an employer’s time. But the development of more capable gadgets, coupled with mobile payment mechanisms, is allowing people to buy not just media, like music, videos and ring tones, but also hard goods, on the go.

This evolution follows the popularity of debit, gift and refill cards, which allow buyers to fill accounts and make cashless payments. Payments made with those cards exceed the payments made by cash and check, according to the Nilson Report, a credit industry newsletter, which used Commerce Department data.

Credit card companies in particular are experimenting with ways to turn the phone into a conduit for card purchases and to offer incentives, like coupons, for mobile purchases. Visa, for instance, is developing technology that will allow people to wave their cellphones in front of a reader to pay for items under $25 without a signature. (Swiping the card through a reader, an innovation several years old, is apparently too much of an impediment.)

The idea is no waiting, cashier or other buying barrier — aside from the charges that show up on a credit card or cellphone bill. And there, along with challenges revolving around security and business models, lies a chief rub.

The mobile-payment technology can create a desensitizing and seductive purchase experience, said James Katz, director of the Center for Mobile Communications Studies at Rutgers University.

“The more people think about a purchase decision, the more likely uncertainty creeps in,” he said. “One frame of mind is you’re helping create in consumers’ mind a source of pleasure, and enabling them to fulfill that pleasure,” Mr. Katz said of the mobile impulse temptation. Another is that “they’re preying on our materialistic souls.”

For now, the new Starbucks service’s preying capabilities will be limited. The concept is being introduced in around 600 cafes in New York and Seattle only, though Starbucks, based in Seattle, and Apple, of Cupertino, Calif., plan to offer the service in other major cities late this year and in 2008.

Impulsive music lovers will have to sign onto the cafe’s Wi-Fi network to discover what song is playing over the Starbucks speakers. With a few taps, users can download the song onto their iPhones (which double as an iPod), or the new Apple iPod Touch with its wireless connection. The 99-cent charge will appear on their phone bills.

Other coffee drinkers who have iTunes software loaded on their notebook computers can do somewhat similar things. When they open their laptops while sitting in a participating store, a Starbucks icon will pop up, giving them a chance to click and buy.

Starbucks said it was the first retail outlet to offer such capability. It is certainly not on the cutting edge of the downloadable music experience. For more than a year, Verizon Wireless has offered technology that lets consumers buy songs over the air. Other carriers, including Sprint and AT&T, allow over-the-air downloads.

Roger Entner, a communications industry consultant with IAG Research, which advises mobile carriers, said Sprint and Verizon were each offering around 60 million songs a month for downloading.

Verizon and others also allow users to buy video, pictures, wallpaper, ring tones and games — none of that revelatory anymore. Verizon also experimented with music fans’ buying concert tickets over the phone, then turning that phone into a bar code for concert entry.

John Harrobin, senior vice president for digital media at Verizon, said, “The fact that when you want something, you can get it instantly through the phone is something we believe in.”

Mr. Entner said the sticking point on the growth of the phone as a full-service payment device had less to do with technology, which is adequate, and more to do with business questions. He said that all the potential participants — phone carriers, retailers, credit card companies, music labels — wanted a cut of the action, and it was not clear how the money for over-the-air payments would be divided.

For example, he said, the mobile-carrier profits for downloadable songs were about 3 cents a song, which he deemed “razor thin.”

Visa, which takes a piece of the action of credit purchases and would love to see buying opportunities blossom, introduced a new microcard last week. It works like a credit card, but it is small enough to fit onto a key chain. At merchants equipped with wireless payment systems, consumers wave the card to pay; purchases under $25 do not require a signature.

Visa is also rolling out a “mobile payment platform.” That’s marketing-speak for software that not only lets consumers pay by waving their phones, but also lets merchants beam coupons to their customers on the go. For instance, Visa has experimented at its headquarters in Foster City, Calif., with sending employees coupons for discounts in the company cafeteria.

The plan got a strong reception by consumers, said Pam Zuercher, Visa’s vice president for innovation.

“Think about this as an extension of direct mail, but you have a much lower chance of leaving your coupon at home,” she said, adding that the technology “provides the ability to influence experiences within a retail location.”

Ms. Zuercher said Visa planned a test of its mobile payment system with its partner, Wells Fargo. It is already testing the system in South Korea and Taiwan. (Some of the mobile payment systems are more advanced overseas, where wireless networks are faster, allowing more complex services. But, Mr. Entner said, the United States may wind up in the forefront because credit payments are so tied up with consumer culture).

The prospect of coupons by phone, or location-based advertising, might give shivers to people already distressed by seeing every nook and cranny of public space crammed with commercial messages.

They are getting trade-offs. Services including the Internet and e-mail, like television before it, are subsidized by advertising and those who respond to it.

“One of the great steps forward for denizens of the online world was the development of one-click buying,” Mr. Katz from Rutgers said. Before that technology, “there was a vast amount of evidence that a small percentage of people who started the checkout process actually
completed it.”

In the mobile world, the barriers fall further. No checkout aisle, cashier or money changing hands. Just an impulse — click and a buy.


This article by Matt Richtel of the New York Times.


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Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Who is Cheaper?

I know this is rather childish, but it made me laugh, so I could not resist posting it here. Please comment and leave your views below.

Friday, 21 September 2007

Man Admits Planting Computer 'Bomb'

A computer administrator at one of the nation's largest prescription drug management companies admitted Wednesday he planted an electronic “bomb” in the company's computer system, according to the Associated Press.

If the so-called “logic bomb” had gone off at Medco Health Solutions Inc., it would have wiped out critical patient information, authorities said.

Yung-Hsun Lin, 51, of Montville, N.J. pleaded guilty to one count of transmitting computer code with the intent of causing damage in excess of $5,000. The crime carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Authorities said Lin was angry at the possibility of losing his job at Medco's office in Fair Lawn after the company was spun off from Merck & Co. in 2003.

Yet another case of "Revenge of the Redundant".

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Tuesday, 18 September 2007

Google Docs - Presentations

In April Google announced that they were working to bring presentations to Google Docs. (Astute readers may recall learning about this even earlier, which caused a bit of excitement around Google.) And ttis week they are unveiling the new Google Docs presentations feature and invite you to try it at documents.google.com. Maybe more than any other type of document, presentations are created to be shared. But assembling slide decks by emailing them around is as frustrating as it is time-consuming. The new presentations feature of Google Docs helps you to easily organize, share, present, and collaborate on presentations, using only a web browser.

Starting this week, presentations -- whether imported from existing files or created using the new slide editor -- are listed alongside documents and spreadsheets in the Google Docs document list. They can be edited, shared, and published using the familiar Google Docs interface, with several collaborators working on a slide deck simultaneously, in real time. When it's time to present, participants can simply click a link to follow along as the presenter takes the audience through the slideshow. Participants are connected through Google Talk and can chat about the presentation as they're watching. Not wanting anyone to feel left out, Google have made the presentation feature available in 25 languages; Google Apps customers can also access it as part of Google Docs.

Google hope the millions of people who already create and share documents and spreadsheets will find presentations a welcome addition to the Google Docs family, and they plan to add even more features and enhancements.

If you're new to Google Docs, watch this video to learn more about creating and collaborating on documents (and now presentations!).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRqUE6IHTEA

Metrologic Releases New Vertical Mini-slot Scanner – the MS7820 Solaris™


Blackwood, New Jersey – September 17, 2007

-- Metrologic Instruments, Inc. today announced the release of its new vertical mini-slot scanner engineered to increase productivity with an unmatched feature set. The MS7820 Solaris aggressively scans high-density codes (five mil) and fits easily into any existing enclosure found in small-item, high-volume retail environments. It is designed for a variety of retail environments, including convenience,liquor (off-license), specialty and grocery stores.

“We developed Solaris to increase system output and lower the total cost of ownership,” said Taylor Smith, product manager for Metrologic. “It scans the widest range of bar codes from high-density to poor quality codes, and its troubleshooting visual diagnostic indicator and optional protective window reduce on-site service costs and downtime.”

Solaris sets itself apart from other comparable devices with its unrivaled feature set and advanced decoding architecture which enable operators to scan all standard bar codes on the first pass with minimal concern for orientation or print quality.

Multiple on-board interfaces make Solaris compatible with most POS systems,while automatic detection of the interface cable expedites system configuration. For investment protection, all Solaris scanners come standard with an integrated RF antenna and interlock compatibility for both Checkpoint and Sensormatic EAS systems. The scanner’s multifunctional RS232 auxiliary port provides a single point of communication for either a hand-held scanner or external scale.

While the scanner’s innovative flat-screen design maximizes scanning effectiveness by preventing debris accumulation, touch-screen technology minimizes wear and tear associated with standard scanner switches.

Metrologic complements the design and engineering of Solaris with superior technical support and an industry-leading warranty. Solaris symbolizes Metrologic’s four-decade commitment to producing advanced and reliable bar code scanning technology.

About Metrologic

Metrologic Instruments, Inc. is a global supplier of choice for data capture and collection hardware and software. Metrologic has been delivering innovative products that are cost effective, reliable and supported by a superior level of personal service for nearly 40 years. Metrologic products are sold worldwide through sales, service and distribution offices located in North & South America, Europe, Australia and Asia. For more information, please visit Metrologic.com.

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Tuesday, 11 September 2007

Revenge of the Redundant

These photos highlight the problems that can be caused when you terminate someone's employment, then ask them to work their notice period!

There has to be a moral here somewhere, perhaps someone could supply it?

By the way, which photo do you like best? Please leave a comment......




Monday, 3 September 2007

Wireless in Stores: Savings, Efficiency, and an Open Nose

This report by Steve Rowen, Research Analyst from the Retail Systems Alert Group, makes interesting reading.

Wireless technology is everywhere. In fact, as I write this piece, I am currently using two wireless devices, and there's a good chance you may be utilizing one or two while reading it.

In stores, wireless technologies have become so pervasive that often times retailers take them for granted. They reduce costs. They increase efficiency. They make the customer's shopping experience more enjoyable. But without proper consideration to security, they are incredibly dangerous.

Take for instance the unfortunate souls over at TJX Corporation. As more is unearthed on the events of that company's breach, it appears that the entire affair began from a simple interception of an unsecured wireless signal from a single retail location.

The criminals allegedly sat outside of Marshall's store near St. Paul, MN, picking up the signal that bounced freely between employee handhelds, wireless POS devices, and the store's mainframe system. Once they had decrypted the signal's simple encryption, the perpetrators are then reported to have installed software on TJX's central database in Framingham, MA, siphoning (at least) 45.7 million credit cards, with projections that number may climb to as many as 200 million. And while issuing banks prepare their legal case, the Wall Street Journal reports that the total cost over five years could exceed $1 billion.

RSAG has had the opportunity to interview several individuals closely involved in the TJX case, and while we thoroughly believe the retailer's bill will not reach anywhere near the $1 billion mark, it is a fair to predict that the company's ultimate financial beating will be exponentially greater than the jab it would have taken to pre-emptively shore up wireless security.

Which brings me to this point: Today's technology vendors are racing to find better, more cost effective ways to secure the wireless signals of devices that retailers are already using both in the store and the distribution center: those which they simply cannot revert to living without. Legacy hardware: wireless payment systems, computers, POS systems, anti-theft systems, hand-held devices, phones, PDA's - even 900 MHz devices (yes, they're still out there) - each of these posts a real, viable threat to each and every retailer who has come to leverage their value.

This race ultimately benefits retailers who are already diligently working toward their PCI compliance mandate, and is being led by such players as Aruba Networks, Cisco Systems, AirDefense, Columbitech - the list goes on and on. And while it is only a short matter of time until the next high-profile data security breach resulting from wireless signaltheft, we strongly urge retailers to pay due dilligence: aligning the IT and corporate vision, researching the available solutions, and most importantly, transforming the security of customer data into a Board Room discussion.

If you would like further information about this subject, click on the link below and download the report: Retail Systems still vulnerable. Please leave your comments.......

http://www.esterlinavinyards.com/report-retail-systems-still-vulnerable_43162.html




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