Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and so is the beauty and value of art. In the olden days, before the communications revolution, it was a few assorted experts, art critics and art galleries that decided what was art and how desirable it was. Anyone who did not have access to those experts and galleries had essentially no chance to have their art seen and discussed by an audience outside of friends and family. As a result, many great artists were never discovered and their art languished in their studios, seen by no one. This is really an unacceptable situation. Art should be accessible to anyone, and people should be able to discuss it, comment on it, and even submit their own art in places where artists and art enthusiasts gather.
Fortunately, the increasing availability of the Internet is changing the ways in which artists can present their work and invite feedback and discussion. The "Web 2.0" concept is all about using web technology to bring people together and create communities and social networking. This means that individuals are no longer relegated to being simple consumers of whatever information is out there, but that they can generate information and content, including art, themselves. When you look at trends in entertainment, you see that traditional monolithic information providers such as commercial TV and newspapers are in the ropes while user communities and user-generated content flourishes. I myself rarely watch commercial network TV anymore. There is so much interesting stuff on the web that commercial-interrupted TV has completely lost its appeal.
The information revolution is also a massive boon to contemporary artists. Instead of waiting to be "discovered" by traditional galleries and art collectors, contemporary painters can simply display their work in one of the many online art galleries and communities. This does not guarantee fame and fortune, but it provides what many artists desire most: getting feedback from peers and enthusiasts and to be able to make their art potentially available to millions, no matter where on the planet they may live.
There are any number of ways in which artists can take advantage of the web. They can use one of the major social networks, they can join special art communities and forums, or they can even create their own interactive online art galleries to display anything from landscape painting to portraits, sketches, abstract art or anything else they may specialize in. Visitors can browse the site and buy art directly from the artist. They can also interact with the artists via chat, discussion boards or other means of communications. Online gallery artists may also do video interviews or presentations, polls, classes or lead discussion groups. Site visitors may commission art from artists whose work and style they like. The opportunities are endless.
The bottom line is that artists now have entirely new ways to exhibit their work and communicate with art connoisseurs and potential buyers. There are no geographic limits, no artificial barriers, no waiting for galleries, and no reliance on connections with important people. The Internet and web are providing opportunity and access to everyone.
Interactive Online Educational Games
We have seen some great changes in online advertising arena in last couple of months. Advertisement networks are trying to communicate with the visitors rather than just showing a text or image based advertisement. The trend was somewhat initiated by Google AdSense when it started showing two arrows in the ad slots to show more related ads. By adding two arrows in the Ads, Google introduced user interactivity in online advertisement.
What are the reasons behind such claims?
Earlier, webmasters actually tried to hide those text based ads within the post body or tried to camouflage them with other links in the page. This trend necessarily points out that, they wanted visitors to click on the links unknowingly. However, when Google introduced those two arrows, perhaps, it wanted users to interact with the slot for more related ads. This also means that - it somewhat determined end of camouflage. The conversion mainly depended on the ad copy and relevance with the content.
After that we have seen some more changes introduced by another major player in the market - AOL's Platform-A that announced Goowy widget-based advertising tool. Though AOL's module is primarily widget based, but it is connected with user interactivity to a high extent. The Best thing about Goowy is that it allows the end user (the visitor) to add the widget (powered by yourminis) in any other web page (like his or her blog or website). However, we are yet to know anything about the success rate of such ad formats. Seasoned search marketers believe that, non-profit organizations would gain more mileage from this format.
However, Facebook has taken the whole concept to a different level. They have just introduced another online advertising format called - 'Engagement Ads'. Though it is still open to only a few advertisers in their network, it has already created a lot of hype in the online marketing and advertisement network. They are still experimenting with this format of advertisement. However, that does not mean that they are saying goodbye to regular advertising formats like text or image based ads.
According to a popular advertising magazine, Mike Murphy (VP of Media Sales; Facebook), said that "Web advertising has been all about demand fulfillment" and ads run by Google are not at all social network friendly. To add to this, he also mentioned that other social network sites also run low performing text based ads and banner ads.
Now how these advertisements are different from others? The main difference is that in this process, the focus shifts from product selling via ads to brand development and promotion.
As soon as some user starts associating his or her likings with a specific brand, it works as a recommendation to his or her friends in that network. It won't be wrong if we say that it works in the same mechanism as word of mouth advertisement. And the best thing about these ads is that the visitor does not require leaving the page to endorse the product. To add to it, he or she can also add a comment on the product that would be visible to other people too.
Time would say if this ad format would be successful or not but what could be a better place to launch such advertisements but a social network like Facebook!
Both Chris Robertson & Steve Mcmains are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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