Blue Man Group - A must-see of Vegas.

Posted by lesseffective on December 10th, 2007

Now, I don’t agree with the advertising to get people to visit Vegas, but I do make the occasional trip for work. I just got back last Friday after a very informative PubCon 2007. As part of the trip, Joe Morin, a Pubcon evangelist and president of Boost Search Marketing, put together a “Bloggers’ night out” - tempting us with some tickets to great shows in reply for an honest review of the night. What a great idea!

The Show
Some friends and I who were attending the show were able to get in to see Blue Man Group, a quirky hard-rock meets silent film era entertainment show (you can’t well call it a play). I had a great evening - it was really something of a sensory overload at times, but was just a great show. Blue Man Group, if you’re not familiar with them, is a hybrid percussion-comedy troupe. The three men with silicone wraps on their heads don’t say a single word during the performance (or when you meet them afterwards, for that matter). But even without words, you’ll laugh and smile until your jaw just hurts.

Worth Seeing
With the flood of advertising for myriad shows in Vegas (and there are PLENTY of shows in Vegas), I probably never would have picked Blue Man out of the deluge of other options. I’m glad I got the tickets though, because it’s taken its place as a show that I will now recommend to friends and family who might be looking for something to do in Sin City.

Family Friendly?
Speaking of Sin City, there are plenty of shows I would never feel comfortable taking my family to. Blue Man Group doesn’t fall in that category. The noise from the band (it does get pretty loud) might bother smaller children at times, but that’s about the only offense of the show. The comedy is slapstick and very three stooges (sans the ‘yuk yuk yuk’) in nature, just as innocent and possibly more funny.

Thanks
A special thanks goes out to Joe Morin for hooking us up with the evening (just being a nice guy - the world needs more of that). Also, as a note, I did get the tickets for free by writing the review so if Matty Cutts is out there keeping note, it’s been officially disclaimed.


Kinset 3D Virtual Shopping - Brookstone today, tomorrow the world?

Posted by lesseffective on December 3rd, 2007

A company in Massachusetts has thrown in their 2 cents on the future of online shopping. Kinset, founded in 2006, has built a very basic 3D platform custom fit to the needs of online retailers. Basically, they’ll take a product feed and throw them into a 3D store that each retailer gets to design.

Their first major partner is Brookstone, which now advertises the ability to shop in a 3D world on their site. This seems like a pretty lofty achievement for the young Kinset, especially after you experience the Kinset interface for the first time. Let me give you a rundown:

The Good

Potential, potential, potential. I think the idea is great. No matter how easy online shopping can be, it’s still almost always a pull market, meaning that the customer goes knowing what they want and then hunting it down and price shopping. Kinset opens the door to push marketing online - where you have users who just plan on shopping as a leisurely experience and don’t necessarily have their purchase in mind. In some regards, it reminds me of the StumbleUpon vs Google argument. People go to Google looking for something in particular (and it’s great for that), but when you don’t know what you want, you hit Stumble! and not Google.

The Bad

A few biggies here for me:

1) The UI needs some aesthetic touchups before it’s really ready for mass-market appeal. People get so much out of a shopping experience with regards to pleasing the senses when in the real world - colors, easy-to-navigate stores, smells, sounds, touch, etc. When all you really have to work with is sight and sound, you better make it darn good. Kinset falls short here.

2) Learning a new UI for people who don’t know it. Having played my fair share of 1st person games, I adapted pretty quickly to the movements and view changes (although I kept wanting right mouse click to jump when it just brings up a menu). But to someone who doesn’t have the same background, I could imagine this would be a frustrating experience.

3) Long download/setup/update times. Kinda speaks for itself. I’m on a few T1s here at work and had a long download time. After initial setup it’s not too bad, provided you don’t have a required software update. I can’t imagine dialup users realistically accessing this, though.

4) No social interaction (yet?). Don’t know if these guys have heard - but it turns out the Internet is a very social medium. I don’t want people’s avatar’s standing in my way when I want to see the newest movies out on DVD, but it’d be nice to know I’m doing something other people are doing. I’d like to know I can ask them if they’ve ever seen The Prestige and what they thought of it. Add people interaction, limiting the number of people in a given store/server.

The Ugly

1) Client crashing issues. I think most of these have been resolved, but I did have the client just sporadically kapoot on me. Kind of frustrating when just playing around, but probably really irritating when you’ve just finished 2 hours of online virtual shopping.

2) Uncomfortable load times walking into a store for the first time (or the second, or third). Plus, no matter how many times you walk into that store or how recently you did, shelves are all empty until you stand near them for a significant amount of time.

I hope the guys over at Kinset are listening since I think that their technology could be the start of something beautiful. It needs some serious work, but it’s got lots of potential.