Thursday, November 6, 2008

Cool Calculator Example


(From Venessa:) I like how the map presents different scenarios visually.

Especially, how users can make smaller decisions (like clicking on individual states and choosing who may be victor there) and see how that decision affects the race overall picture.

Very in line with how we like to serve up info.

Check it out! http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/calculator/

Flash 10 is Coming!

From Venessa:

Adobe just released flash player 10 for developers and early adopters, since we do a lot of flash work I thought I’d share what we have to look forward to once the masses adopt.

1. 3D effects – much easier to create 3D elements that would work faster since they’re created in flash and not a third party program

2. Dynamic sound generation – Rather than a sound we pick, sounds/music can change automatically depending on user’s input (mood?)

3. Oh glorious Text controls! - Typography has always been Flash’s downfall but not anymore! The new version offers font control we could have only hoped for (and would have saved a lot of headaches for our Cymbalta Fibro team). There is now kerning, automatic flowing of text in multiple boxes (incase users need bigger fonts) or around images, and tracking control. In all, I think this is the feature that will benefit us the most.

4. Many other features that have to do with performance and API

If you’d like to take a look for yourself go here (just need to download the new version):http://www.adobe.com/products/flashplayer/features/


The adoption of flash player 9 was faster than any player before it – with 95% of all PC users adopting it. If the same holds true, then I predict we can start offering applications, in this latest version, to our clients by mid next year.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Play video games while raising $$ for cancer

Faced with today's economic uncertainties, none of us can afford to take anything for granted. Yet, as difficult as life can be in these times, it's important to understand that learning to be appreciative of what we do have is a gift. At The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS), we continually learn of blood cancer patients and families who endure terrible uncertainty as a way of life and still take what life has dealt them and manage to turn the proverbial lemons into lemonade.

Along those lines, today, I'd like to share with you Taylor Carol's story.

Taylor Carol, of Dana Point, CA, was a typical 11-year-old boy, into sports and video games. But when he got hit by a pitch during a baseball game in March 2006, his world turned upside down. Follow-up testing revealed something more ominous than an injured elbow - leukemia-a particularly lethal form of the disease--one that does not respond to normal treatment.

During the long grueling months that Taylor was in the hospital fighting for his life, his father, software designer Jim Carol, CEO of Game 7 Entertainment Inc., focused his energy on finding a way to help Taylor and other children going through this ordeal. The result was Pledgeplay (www.pledgeplay.com), an innovative, customizable, online, casual games and fundraising platform.

LLS recently launched Play2Cures ( lls.play2cures.org ), which employs the Plegeplay platform and allows participants to play casual games online while donating money to help find cures for leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma. The site lets players purchase online tokens - $1 per token and a minimum of $10 - to play a variety of games, with more to come. Each token will help fund blood cancer research, provide critical information and support to patients and their families and help LLS advocate for issues impacting blood cancer patients. Tokens can also be given to friends and family, and participants are encouraged to compete against each other for top scores. Carol envisions Pledgeplay as a way for families to bond with one another while doing something positive for other families.

Carol's son Taylor played a major role in Pledgeplay's creation. "For one year Taylor worked hard helping me start this company as our video game expert while he was hospitalized," says Carol. "It was an awesome distraction and motivator. He was our VP of game evaluation."Now, Taylor is back in school. Although there is still uncertainty, he and his family are full of hope and happy that he is recovering. Meanwhile, Carol devotes himself to raising awareness about childhood cancers.This family is a great example of how good things can come from bad situations.