Archives For April 2007

MIXing it Up in Vegas

April 30, 2007

Last night, Scott Guthrie and a few of us on the Silverlight product team went to see Aerosmith in concert at the Mandalay Bay – something I’ve always wanted to do and it as worth every moment!

Tonight I finally met Dave Winer in person at a Blogger meetup. Today was mostly partner meet & greets, keynote rehearsals (which look great) and a few other things. One of them was giving Jeff Sandquist a special edition Microsoft Silverlight skateboard- the same design seen in the intro video at http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight. He love skateboarding as do I. The difference is tha the can actually skateboard.

These are special giveaways for partners and customers. I’ve had to carry a few around the Venetian and keep getting stopped by security guards wanting to look at it, attendees etc. I have one extra and will probably send it spontaneously to the person who does the most impressive Silverlight-enabled app about 30 days from now. Heck, you might see a few given away at MIX07 :)

Tomorrow blogging is going to be a bit sporadic as I have a pretty tight schedule but will try to post as soon as possible – lots to talk about, so much good but will be covered elsewhere.

If’ you’re at MIX and want to meet up and discuss Silverlight’s media capabilities, feel free to text me at +1-425-442-5712 or leave vmail (sporadic notification) and we’ll try and meet up Tuesday or Wednesday.

My trusty ipod is sitting in its docking station and awakes on it’s own. I hear buzz buzz buzzing in my stereo speakers. My Cingular Blackjack is sitting right next to the iPod. What happens next?

The Blackjack continues buzzing from its data connection, picking up steam while my ipod starts to freak out- as if someone is randomly cycling up and down in the main menu, it goes into a full-on seizure. Then I realize the two are in cycle.

Holy cow… and they say these phones don’t cause cancer? Anyone else see this kind of behavior before before?

I love my TiVo Series 3. It has a great Spousal Acceptance Factor (SAF) and though the price was crazy high, it has run flawlessly in our family room for months on end and I can’t seem to fill it up with content.

If you’re interested in a Series 3, TiVo has a great deal at $499.99 + free TiVo Wireless adapter here.

Now if they can just get that whole TiVo to TiVo sharing feature running again…

Interesting post over at Allen’s Media Industry blog at Gartner. Allen is Managing VP of Gartner and covering their media/digital media beat so it was a great pleasure to sit down w/ him. Prior to our meeting, he had a chance to meet with our friends at Skinkers who have answered the question of “Will Silverlight work with P2P?” with a resounding yes, with their LiveStation product which was demo’ed in our booth and their own. (Note: Microsoft has an equity stake in Skinkers so take that into account. Gartner does not <g>). LiveStation will broadcast live stations on the Web, presumably ad-supported, using Silverlight as the client and their own platform underneath with some “special P2P” goo from Microsoft.

To quote Allen:

The demo of LiveStation, which showed a good-quality picture from the BBC in the midst of a bandwidth-hogging tech show, has another thing going for it – its ability to leverage Microsoft’s new Silverlight platform to create “content experiences” based on LiveStation’s streams. Has interactive TV finally found its way to the consumer?

It’s a good question, and I look forward to Skinker’s public beta. I’ve been playing with Joost as well, both are fine examples of what can be done. It did occur to me that the Joost UI could be done in Silverlight, making it accessible everywhere the Silverlight client resides. But for me, content is more important than the medium. And my Slingbox is safely tethered to my TiVo for PVR supports for now. :)

I’ve received so many inquiries and the team kudos about the Silverlight name, logo, and brand video internally and externally that I thought I’d post the real story of how it came together.

  • Naming research was completed in Q3 2006. We decided to hold it for a special event at a later date. “WPF/E”- the codename of Silverlight was intentionally unappealing to keep mainstream consumers from installing it until we had good feedback from the developers/designers during the alpha (CTP) preview.
  • Brand work was done by my team working with an outstanding design firm (Razorfish). We kicked this off in October, and went through many iterations before landing on the animated logo and final frame lockup. If you don’t like the frame, you can blame me Long :) The orb is a plasmic energy being held into shape by an unseen force, where it spins and flows, almost organically.
  • The brand video was done by Phoenix Edit, a group of ex-Industrial Light & Magic wonks out of San Francisco. The goal was to show many different Silverlight-enabled scenarios woven together – designer/developer collaboration, personalized e-commerce, devices, user-generated video, viral sharing, and the network effect on sales. We intentionally avoided excessive use of text or voiceover so the video will translate globally as we kick off events around the world. For the line, “Light up the Web” – you have me to blame. It’s more about illumination and blazing a trail vs. blazing anything else ;)
  • The music in the brand video is by my friend and prominent UK DJ Andy Hunter. The song is “Go” off his album, “Exodus”. Andy consulted on the project and the remix, and has considerable street cred touring with DJ Tiesto. His songs have been used in The Matrix games, and multiple movie/television show. Andy is now on Nettwerk records working on his next release.
  • Customer and partner engagement was tightly synchronized. During initial briefs, partners were shown a slide announcing the final name as “X-Plat Player Plug-in for Browsers” in Microsoft logotype, a self-deprecating way of noting that we knew the name had to be cool and were on the ball (ironically or sadly some thought that was the actual name!). We’d show the logo without the name, and always used the name “WPF/E” in our discussions and external communications.
  • For the press announce, named companies didn’t even know the final name until a matter of hours before the release hit. We intentionally didn’t publish any brand elements internally and had about a dozen people total that had access. The product management team got really tired of hearing me talk about secrecy and except for a few small nits that went unnoticed, they really did us proud.

Some day I’ll post the evolution timeline of the logo if others are interested.