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Sunday, April 29
by
Chris Gilbey
on April 29, 2007 12:06PM (EST)
I was talking to one of the engineers at Vquence early last week. He has a PhD in data mining. He told me how concerned he is about the amount of available information 'out there'. As a result he declines to blog or to comment on anything on line. He is very careful to ensure that anything he does is absolutely untracable to him.
His view is that anything that anyone says on line remains in place forever and that anyone who puts the information out there is likely to be held accountable at some stage. I said to him that I totally understand the concept. The problem is that if we all acted that way we would all become totally compliant to what we think authority wants us to do. Isn't that what East Germany was about? In spite of the knowledge that there may be forces in governments or corporations or elsewhere that want to control the way we think, speak, act - it is entirely counterproductive to do what we think that they want us to do. We need to work toward the greater good. We can not afford to be paranoid about what "they" may think about what "we" say.... It certainly means that what we do should be able to withstand the "front page of the Telegraph" test. But it doesn't mean that we should resile from saying what we think. Saturday, April 14
by
Richard McKinnon
on April 13, 2007 09:42PM (PDT)
After Vquence debuted there was followup. Using such secret search engines as Google, Yahoo and whatever else, mentions were checked. There was one colorful blog, a husband and wife effort, a consulting company, a geek aware twosome, that mentioned Vquence positively.
One blog lead to another. His. He wrote about Linux. Computers. Tech stuff. Get the picture? So when this was released, Mr Blogger was dropped a friendly email with the release attached. Within hours the email came back. "Where" he asked "did you get my name and address from?" It makes you wonder? The web and blogs are not private. When you put yourself out there surely you have to expect contact and feedback and followup. We do. Why didn't he? Tuesday, April 10
by
Richard McKinnon
on April 10, 2007 12:26AM (PDT)
For a while we've been talking about video, China and incredible growth. Today, we bring the three together, along with contributors to this blog, Chris Gilbey (Sydney) and Chris Broad (Hong Kong). Startups need to operate across the globe right out of the gate. Vquence is running fast. Read the press release Video Search Company Opens Hong Kong Office. Vquence is a
technology leading video search engine. When launched, users will easily and
intuitively discover relevant video content. An authoring toolset then permits
easy creation of a playlist of thin sliced videos (or ‘vquence’). The vquence
is presented through a specialized video player. This playlist will play in any
Web page. Users will be able to cut and paste the code for their vquence into a
blog or web page. Dynamic insertion by Vquence places ads into the vquence
based on relevance. “Video is the centre
of the internet’s next big leap forward. Vquence will be a key accelerator.”
Gilbey said. “That’s why Vquence has appointed
Chris Broad as Based in “In China our focus is on advertising and content opportunities moving away
from old print media, pc’s, and traditional TV to the web, and handheld
devices. Our goal is to facilitate that transition and help content owners
easily monetize their content.” Broad said “My role is to
introduce Vquence into “ Known for innovative
strategic marketing and business development, Broad has been tasked by Vquence
to develop media relationships in Hong Kong and “Injecting Vquence
and its unique business model into Vquence was formed in
July 2006 by Gilbey and Dr Silvia Pfeiffer, a former CSIRO research scientist.
Gilbey is a long time entrepreneur in the content and technology arenas.
Pfeiffer is a leading authority on Digital Media Analysis; helped develop
Annodex, an open source platform for video distribution; and has developed
application algorithms to analyse and mediate video content. “Vquence’s technology
and business model aim to turn today’s video assets and costs into online reach
and revenue. Our model is to unite consumers, publishers, and content owners.”
Gilbey said, “We facilitate social networks,” Gilbey said, adding “Consumers
find and aggregate video, then share it widely. They get paid. Content creators
and publishers are rewarded from embedded ads in the vquences their communities
share.” The Vquence move into
“We change market dynamics. We work with media
companies where there is an established chain of title to the IP and then help
them monetize it. Consumers become legitimate distributors of the video asset
rather than pirates.” Gilbey said. “Community drives the opportunity – the
wisdom of crowds determines what is truly viral content. We provide the
acceleration.” The Vquence R&D
team is internationally spread and headquartered in Further Information;
About Vquence: Vquence is a video search, socialization, and advertising company that
has a comprehensive model of monetizing video for content
owners to consumers. Demonstrations of the technology are being conducted under
NDA. The Vquence website has more information on the company. www.vquence.com.
The company has offices in Sydney
Australia; |
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According to Wikipedia a perceptron is a type of artificial neural network. Ergo a “Perceptric” is a person who creates or uses a neural network. The Perceptric Blog is where Chris Gilbey posts thoughts, ideas, and links intended to stimulate thought and accelerate the transfer of ideas. Chris is available for consulting work with the premise that it is not technologies that are disruptive so much as the people that use them. The Perceptric mission is to help companies and people reach their goals and exceed their expectations. This will often mean offering counterintuitive conclusions. Our view? The shortest distance between two points is not necessarily a straight line. It's the number of people needed to be present in a human network to influence and deliver positive decision making. Login
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