Saturday, November 25, 2006

Shop Comparison on Your Mobile Phone with Scanbuy Shopper

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Price Compare on Your Mobile Phone while You Browse the local Shops.Now all you need is your cell phone in your pursuit of the hottest deals! SCANBUY Shopper enables you to instantly check the best prices. Check out products by entering their barcode number. Compare online prices, access reviews, and redeem coupons. Get the best deals and start saving now! This seems a simple tool, once you download this on a Java Enabled Mobile phones. As you browse the shop, you just enter the barcode number of the product, it will give you the reviews and prices, so you can check quickly before you buy the product from the store. Here is a list of compatible Phone types for this tool.

Friday, November 24, 2006

Using Cell Phones for Food Traceability

When the E.coli spinach scare swept the nation, we talked a bit about the importance of knowing the backstory about the things we eat and buy. Article PhotoThe best way most of us have to do this is by purchasing food directly from the grower at farmer's markets and through CSAs.
But in Japan, it's becoming more and more common to be able to trace the history of your food using your cell phone. The Japanese Food Safety Commission, which was established in 2001 after a Mad Cow Disease (BSE) outbreak, has been working to put food safety in the hands of the consumer by tagging products (even fresh farm produce) with RFID or QR codes that can be read with a cell phone. It's something we talked about a bit last year, but the idea seems to be gaining wider favor, as most Japanese phones produced today come equipped with a QR code reader. According to FOODEX JAPAN's Trend & Info page:
Consumers can trace back the vegetables until the day of harvest, when and where they were packed, how they were shipped, etc. Many of the local producers have followed this example and some even go as far as displaying a picture of the farmer to bring a sense of proximity as additional reassurance to the consumer.
The Food Safety Commission has found that Japanese consumers are choosing to purchase local food over imported food primarily because of the improved ease of traceability. For foreign food producers who want to capture the Japanese market, the ability to offer a backstory through technology increases their chances of success. Of course, we'd argue that any cause for purchasing more food locally is a worthy cause, but it's an interesting finding and it's driving companies -- domestic and foreign -- to take accountability for their practices.
One frequently-cited case study into the use of QR codes on food is Ishii Foods Corporation, which has been posting information about their products online since 2002, "including the retraceable history of the raw materials, the ingredients, production, etc." Digital graphs like those that Ishii puts out are even available on display screens in some supermarket aisles.
This trend makes me wonder what kind of cultural differences make knowing a product's backstory so much more apparently valuable in Japan than in the U.S. Both countries have had nasty foodborne illness outbreaks over the years, and both have relatively good systems in place for regulating quality and safety. Yet it's hard to imagine the standard American shopper taking their QR-equipped phone to CostCo to be sure what they're bringing home to the family passes muster. If we were to gain more advanced means of tracing our food's history, if we were able to see a photo of the farmer who grew our lettuce, would we? What's the key factor in getting people to appeciate the equation food + backstory = increased probability of good health?

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Jeff Bezos' Risky Bet


Amazon's CEO wants to run your business with the technology behind his Web site. But Wall street wants him to mind the store.
It was one of the Web's typical flash frenzies, a gaggle of geeks seeking the new, new thing. At 2 a.m. on Aug. 24, a new venture called Elastic Compute Cloud quietly launched in test mode. Its service: cheap, raw computing power that could be tapped on demand over the Internet just like electricity. In less than five hours, hundreds of programmers, hoping to use the service to power their MySpace (NWS ) and Google (GOOG ) wannabes, snapped up all the test slots. One desperate latecomer instant-messaged a $10,000 offer for a slot to a lucky winner, who declined to give it up. "It's really cool," enthuses entrepreneur Luke Matkins, who will run his soon-to-launch music site on the service. The creator of this très cool service: Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN )
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Next came an epiphany: If the new computer setup allowed folks inside to be more creative and independent, why not open it up to outsiders, too? So in 2002, Amazon began offering outside software and Web site developers access to selected Amazon data such as pricing trends, gradually adding more and more until this year. Now it's basically getting free help from more than 200,000 outside Web developers, up 60% from a year ago. They're building new services on top of Amazon technology, further feeding back into Amazon's core retail business. One service, Scanbuy, lets people check Amazon prices on their cell phones to see if they're better than prices in a retail store.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

MSN debuts marketing strategy for coming months


There is one fun widget Windows Live currently has in Beta. Extremely popular in Japan, QR codes allow a user to scan a 2-dimensional barcode picture which contains a large amount of encoded text. This is useful because it means a small picture on a business card can be photographed by a mobile or handheld device which is then converted into a ready-made, ready-formatted contact that can be saved with no manual data input. This potentially offers a hugely valuable time-saving device.
The new beta product offers the facility to convert either plain text or pre-made business card text into the QR code creator, which can then be used by mobile devices in the following fashion. There is wide scope for such codes, especially in the usage of novel promotions and marketing - research is already underway to think up a fun marketing campaign that people can view by scanning it into their phones (such as scavenger hunts and guerrilla marketing on the side of bus-stops, etc).