
India to the Maximum
Just when you were in between of that favorite movie of yours when there is an intimate scene between the hero and the hot chick, this idiotic washing powder commercial comes over and washes away all your interest, doesn't it feel just to kick their a** and yell them to get out of the way.
But the bad news is...its gonna be more of a thing now. Read along...
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Michael Wiles, an assistant professor of marketing at ASU, conducted the study, published in this month's Journal of Marketing. It
finds that when a product is successfully placed in feature films, the
company that makes it enjoys a dramatic boost in its stock price.
Wiles says companies have taken notice of this spike and are increasing spending on strategic product placement.
In 2005, Wiles says, marketing firms spent $722 million to get their
products on the big screen and in the hands of characters like James
Bond. By 2010, Wiles expects that number to more than double to $1.8
billion.
"It's a difficult balancing act to figure out which ones will be
worth the most," Wiles says. "You also have to avoid having too many
placements in the same film. As more brands get mentioned in a film,
the placements compete and become less valuable."
Wiles finds that the most successful product placements in history have been Pepsi in Austin Powers: Goldmember,and the Mini Cooper in The Italian Job.
Wiles says they were so successful because they were targeted at
the ideal audience, and weren't outrageously expensive like the Aston
Martins in most James Bond films.
Wiles says his study also found that product placement within
television shows or movies is becoming more successful than an actual
advertisement because, as cute as the Geicko Gecko may be, people can
fast-forward right through him these days.
"There's quite a bit of value to be gained from film product
placement because the spots are impossible to avoid," Wiles says.
"You're able to tie your product to the characters and what's portrayed
to get rich symbolic associations with the movie and pop culture."
Our head's splitting with all those products inside.
What do you eat when you're set out in space with no gravity...anti gravity Dinner. And what's most difficult out there. Just to sit and eat! You can't even have enough when you're floating upside down 3 feets above the table!!!
The combined 13-member crew of the shuttle Endeavour and the International Space Station can enjoy a joint meal when time permits, but getting everyone around the table is a bit of a challenge in the cramped confines of the lab complex.
Luckily, the absence of gravity makes "sitting down to dinner" a different sort of experience. No word yet on whether the last one to the table has to do the dishes.
The Endeavour crew arrived at the space station on July 17 and are set to leave Tuesday.
The shuttle Endeavour's seven-member crew dines with the space station's six crew members.
(Credit: NASA)
The astronauts partake in joint meals in the U.S. Unity module.
(Credit: NASA)
The combined crews pose in the Harmony module of the International Space Station.
(Credit: NASA)Western Digital announced Monday two laptop drives that offer "extreme" amounts of storage: the Scorpio Blue 1TB and the Scorpio Blue 750GB. Prior to this announcement, the largest laptop hard drive available was 500GB.
Scorpio Blue
(Credit: Western Digital)Currently, the largest desktop hard drive on the market is 2TB. The Scorpio Blue 1TB drive, though half the capacity, is still very impressive, considering the fact that a 2.5-inch laptop drive is much smaller than a 3.5-inch desktop drive. The new WD laptop drives are the first that use 333GB per platter technology.
The Scorpio Blue Hard Drives are a little incompatible, having a thickness of 12.5 mm opposed to the standard of 9.5 mm. For such reasons, WD says the new drives will be perfect for portable storage as WD's new My Passport Essential SE Portable USB Drive.
Other than capacity, the new Scorpio Blue drives also feature a set of advanced storage technologies, including:
Both new drives come with 8MB of buffer memory and spin at 5,200rpm, which is slightly slower than the 5400rpm speed of mainstream laptop drives.
The Scorpio Blue 750GB drive (model WD7500KEVT) is available now and costs $190. The 1TB version (model WD10TEVT) is, for now, only available configured into the My Passport Essential SE USB drive, but it will be available as an internal hard drive in a few weeks. It will cost $250.
However, the bigger the better!!!