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Zynga continues to test the mobile messaging waters with a second game for Kik

Feb07
by Sindy Cator on February 7, 2014 at 9:02 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, chat apps, Insider, Kik, messaging, zygna

zynga 520x245 Zynga continues to test the mobile messaging waters with a second game for Kik

Games giant Zynga quietly launched its first title for a mobile messaging app last summer when it brought One Word to Kik, and now it’s followed that up with its second game, Words With Friends, built exclusively for the Kik platform.

Zynga used Facebook’s platform to grow quickly in its early days, and it is betting on messaging platforms with Kik. Words With Friends for Kik is essentially a ‘lite’ version of the existing standalone app, and we understand it was built from scratch specifically for Kik’s HTML5 content platform. It leverages the user graph and other APIs to let Kik users play with friends or be assigned random playmates, share scores, etc.

Unlike One Word, there’s no in-app purchase option for Words With Friends, although the Kik version of the app does feature a prominent banner that leads players to download the ‘full version’ for iOS or Android.

kikzygna 730x346 Zynga continues to test the mobile messaging waters with a second game for Kik

Kik is fast approaching 120 million registered users, half of whom are based in the US. The app has grown strongly over the past year, although it doesn’t report active user metrics. It has nearly quadrupled its userbase since November 2012 thanks to its popularity among youngsters, many of whom appreciate that they don’t need to provide a phone number to register.

Kik’s potential for anonymity has helped it become a popular way to connect on a range of services, such as Instagram — a search shows more than 20 million Instagram photos are tagged with Kik.

It’s notable that Zynga is opting to test the messaging waters with Kik rather than the competition, despite their successes.

Japan’s Line made $338 million in 2013, 60 percent of which came from games, while Korea’s Kakao Talk games grossed $311 million in half a year — but both of these companies, and a third big messenger from Asia — WeChat — connect with standalone apps and switch out a developer’s branding for their own. Kik, on the other hand, delivers content (and now even a Web browser) inside its app, meaning users aren’t redirected or made to wait for a download, while developers retain their branding and identity.

Equally, by using an HTML5 platform, developers can easily customize their games as they please. In the case of Zynga, that means a preview version that may drive users to download and use its existing standalone apps.

It’s a far smaller bet than its recent $527 million NaturalMotion acquisition, but Zynga’s continued focus on Kik might help it find new fans, engagement and revenue among the chat app’s young userbase.

Image via Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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This guy hacked a 3D printer into an air hockey robot

Feb07
by Sindy Cator on February 7, 2014 at 8:46 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Shareables

Hacker Jose Julio loves robotics and says his daughter loves air hockey. One day, he decided to build her an air hockey robot out of 3D-printer parts and a PS3 camera to make sure she could always play the game:

This is an amazing achievement: the robot doesn’t just move in two dimensions. It can also predict the puck’s movements, decide whether to block or shoot, and is adjustable in difficulty (speed, acceleration, and strategy algorithms). Check out Julio’s blog below to learn more about his air hockey robot.

➤ English | Spanish

Image Credit: Adam Klepsteen

└ Tags: syndicated
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Google Now on Android gets smarter time-to-leave cards, “Ok, Google” hotword in the UK and Canada

Feb07
by Sindy Cator on February 7, 2014 at 7:49 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Google, Product Updates

141396453 520x245 Google Now on Android gets smarter time to leave cards, Ok, Google hotword in the UK and Canada

Google updated its Search for Android app today with an improved, customisable time-to-leave system, additional language support for reminders and “Ok, Google” hands-free voice searches.

 Google Now on Android gets smarter time to leave cards, Ok, Google hotword in the UK and CanadaWhereas before flights and appointment cards would tell you the time it took to get there and your specified arrival time, the new Google Now gives more information and options about when you should be leaving. Based on three customisable metrics – where you’re leaving from, when you want to arrive and your mode of transport – the app can now offer more accurate recommendations for when to head out.

In addition, users in the United Kingdom and Canada can now trigger new voice searches with the command “Ok, Google.”

The feature was introduced for Android users in the United States last November, but it’s been mostly inaccessible for smartphone and tablet owners in other markets. Once you’ve updated the app, you’ll be able to launch the Google Search app or dive straight into the Google Now launcher and begin a voice search with the “Ok, Google” hotword.

It’s still possible to trigger this manually by tapping the microphone button in the top left-hand corner of the screen, but true hands-free search is a welcome addition nonetheless. While I don’t use voice search all that often, it’s good to know that it’s there when I’m cooking or have my hands full with the groceries.

In today’s update, Google also added support for reminders in French, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazilian) and Russian. These are small tweaks admittedly, but over time they’ll only serve to push Google Now ahead of its fiercest rivals such as Siri on iOS and the highly anticipated Cortana assistant for Windows Phone.

➤ Google Search | Android (Via Google+)

Image Credit: KIMIHIRO HOSHINO/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
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Nokia and HTC reach patent sharing and collaboration agreement

Feb07
by Sindy Cator on February 7, 2014 at 7:43 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

79015124 520x245 Nokia and HTC reach patent sharing and collaboration agreement

Nokia and HTC have settled their differences and announced a patent licensing and technology collaboration agreement. The deal puts an end to patent litigation between the two firms.

HTC agreed to pay Nokia to license the firm’s patents, while also offering a collaboration with its own LTE intellectual property. The companies also said they will “explore future technology collaborations.”

Both companies said they were pleased by the results, but one is bound to be more pleased than the other.

Nokia filed suit against HTC in 2012 alleging that it had infringed on its standards-essential patents. An ITC ruling last fall threatened seven HTC devices from being imported into the US. The firm also faced a Nokia-led ban of the HTC One Mini in the UK last December, though, the ruling was later relaxed.

The new patent agreement helps Nokia wrap up outstanding litigation before it heads over to Microsoft later this year.

➤ Nokia and HTC signed a patent and technology collaboration agreement

Image Credit: Patrik Stollarz/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
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Is ‘sales’ a dirty word?

Feb07
by Sindy Cator on February 7, 2014 at 6:31 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Entrepreneur, Insider

sales chart 520x245 Is sales a dirty word?

Justin is the Product Manager for Industry Mailout. He’s passionate about building products that delight customers, and also blogs on justinjackson.ca and tweets via @mijustin


“Making sales” feels kind of sleazy, doesn’t it?

For a lot of us, our feeling about sales stems from a bad experience with a salesperson.

The problem is, most salespeople are selling someone else’s product; they’re not directly invested in the product itself. A car salesman is a good example: he doesn’t design, build, or distribute the cars, he’s just responsible for moving them off the lot. This can lead to the kind of predatory behaviour that we dislike about salespeople:

“The salesman is the tiger, and the customer is the deer. The tiger has to eat, and you can’t eat if you don’t kill that deer. You have to go for the neck. Don’t allow him to leave. But if you try to kill him too early, the deer will wake up and run away.”

– Manny Rosales, Car Salesman from Ep 129 of This American Life.

But you’re different.

You’re not selling someone else’s product: you’re going to build your own. And that means sales doesn’t need to be sleazy.

You own the whole process: you’re going to find a pain, and build the solution. Doing this work, from start to finish, gives you the confidence to say: “People really need this; I need to tell them about it.”

It’s like a tow truck driver. A month ago, my family and I got our minivan stuck in a snowdrift. We needed to get a tow truck to pull us out. Sales can be like that: you’re helping people who are stuck, get unstuck.

stuck van 730x398 Is sales a dirty word?

Our problem, as creators and builders, is that when we do create awesome solutions, we keep them hidden away, because we’re afraid of looking like shady salesmen. But how are we going to help people find our solution if we don’t tell them about it?

Good salesmanship is finding people that need your solution, and just letting them know that you can help them. That’s it. If that’s what you’re doing, you shouldn’t feel sleazy.

Think about it from the customer’s point of view: what would a “healthy” sales process look like to them?

A few years ago, I had a fellow from a marketing agency call me up:

“Justin, I found your blog online. Can I take you out for lunch and pick your brain? I’m happy to pay your normal consulting rate.”

At the time my hourly rate was $100/hour. He took me out for lunch, we chatted for an hour and a half, and then he wrote me a cheque for $150.

Afterwards, he wrote me an email:

“Thanks so much for lunch. You have no idea how much that helped me. I was feeling so stuck: now I can move forward with this project for my client.”

The client, by the way, was paying him upwards of $20,000 on the project. For him, spending $150 to chat with me was worth it, because he was able to save a project worth a lot more.

What’s interesting is that he would have never found me, if I hadn’t “put myself out there” by writing content on my blog. He was willing to pay me for my time, because he had a real need, and felt like I had the solution.

As someone who can create things, you have the power to change people’s lives. But… if you keep your creation to yourself, you won’t affect anybody.

Finding people that need your solution isn’t sleazy. That’s sales – and it can be a good thing. icon wink Is sales a dirty word?

PS: I’m writing a new book called Marketing for Developers. Find out more here.

└ Tags: syndicated
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