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Archive for March, 2010

From a comment on The name game Branding in the New York art world at The Economist Online

if exhibit #1. is shown at Gallery A it is worth a small fortune. If it is shown at Gallery B it is worth nearly nothing. If it is shown at Gallery C it is worth nothing but is fresh and hip and will be invited to flirt with success at a group show curated by a young dealer who shows the work of the daughter of an artist who shows at Gallery A. and so on. The so called good work is the work done by people one knows. Gossip and whispers, – branding.

The article itself only scratches the surface of a much bigger topic, the inside game of a very small world. Some of this inside the game stuff is covered here at ArtFagCity (and includes obligatory mentions of Jerry Saltz) surrounding William Powhida’s inside the tent pissing.

To William’s credit he has associated himself with two of the smartest people in the Art world using social media Jen Beckman (20 x 200) and Ed Winkelman which has amplified his own voice in a crowded noisy room.

Winkelman and Powhida have been producing “#class”, the Chelsea’s version of TED. Of course “#class” is more ironic and without the free Google Nexus One phone give away.

Disclaimer: I work for The Economist.

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Don’t wait up for me (2007)

Don't wait up for me

Don’t wait up for me (2007)
Copyright 2007 Ron Diorio
16 x 20 edition of 3
30 x 40 edition of 3
45 x 60 edition of 1
Courtesy of Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art
For more information e-mail Peter:
phh (at) phhfineart.com

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From Marc Andreessen via Tech Crunch

”No matter how many iPads the Apple sells, the Web will always be the bigger market. “There are 2 billion people on the Web,” he says. “The iPad will be a huge success if it sells 5 million units.”

Get you spread sheets open … how big does the iPad market need to be to make a long term difference to publishers and media makers? Let’s say Apple sells 10 million iPads WW, how may of those map to already paying customers of newspapers, magazines, etc. Is it new money, replacement money or just a morphine drip … I think some properties map nicely to the Apple audience. Marketers should begin to segment this important market to measure the impact of on Lifetime Customer Value.

I think I will start on a limted iPad edition of my next multimeida project now …

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The Economist launched its first iPhone application this week: Which MBA? 2009-10

The tool allows users to rate the importance of over 20 criteria to reflect their professional and personal goals.

The app gives a personal ranking based on data collected from our annual survey.


The cost of the app is $9.99 US. The application is built to be reused with new data from our annual survey. We will refresh the data in the fall upon publication of Which MBA? 2010-11.

We commissioned the custom tool as part of the relaunch of Which MBA? as a magazine (yes a new magazine!) and the companion website in October. The online tool is only available to subscribers and this application is a one off purchase from Apple’s app store. I am really interested in how we approach converting data sets into user driven tools and activities. The feedback we will get from this will help inform future product development. We will also be adding a “free” limited feature version in the next week.

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Two of my videos, Embarkation and A season wants were screened at the 6th Berlin International Directors Lounge on February 18th. It was the 1st public screening of Embarkation.

Directors Lounge

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