Category Archives: Andrea MacLean

Now You Can Be Big Brother

Phillips In Sight (2)By Andrea MacLean

Have you ever left the house in a hurry and later worried whether you remembered to turn off the electric coffee maker? Are you a mom who wishes she could sneakily check in on the babysitter? Do you have a roommate you know is borrowing your things without asking, but you just can’t seem to catch him or her in the act? If you’ve answered yes to any of these questions, you may want to consider a wireless home monitor.

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Motion Sensing Invades the Sports World

By Andrea MacLean

Motion sensing is infiltrating just about every aspect of technology these days – from TVs to game consoles to mobile devices and now even athletic equipment. With Smart TVs, gesture recognition capability enables consumers to gesture with their body, hands, face etc. and navigate a user interface without pressing any buttons on a remote control, or even without need of a remote. The same can be done today with mobile devices, particularly smartphones, and game consoles, such as Microsoft Kinect and Nintendo Wii.

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Summer TV Guide: For Your Streaming Pleasure

By Andrea MacLean

Believe it or not, we’re almost halfway through 2012 already and summer is just around the corner. But if you’re stressing over a lack of summer plans on your horizon, don’t worry, there are plenty of options available:  host a barbecue, attend a free summer concert or two, take a day trip to the beach or catch up on this season’s TV shows – there were some REAL goodies this past fall. Continue reading

Is Facebook Trying to Make Me Look Like A Dork?

By Andrea MacLean

First of all, when I heard about the new changes to Facebook my immediate reaction was, “Yikes. I better post some more interesting pictures and content fast!”  For those of you who are likely way cooler than me, however, you probably don’t need to worry about that so much. Continue reading

American Teachers Are Hot For Tech

By Andrea MacLean

We Americans love technology, especially if it makes our lives easier or is sleek and shiny and matches our outfits. So, it’s no surprise that the latest and greatest in high tech consistently tops our wish lists for holiday, birthdays and back-to-school. But students aren’t the only tech-craving members of the back-to-school crowd. Continue reading

Sneaking a Peek at Designer Brands

By Andrea MacLean

Last night, one of my favorite startup clients, sneakpeeq, put on its first trunk show event in San Francisco, enticing fashion and lifestyle bloggers around the Bay Area to come out in droves and lust after sample apparel, accessories, bags and cosmetics from hot and up-and-coming designers. Continue reading

Smartphones Really DO Make You Smarter

By Andrea MacLean

Mobile devices seem to be increasingly indispensable to us in our day-to-day lives, and it’s true – they are great for so many things. You can communicate in a million different ways; you can shoot videos, share pictures, work, shop and much more. But one of the things I’m really beginning to love about my iPhone is that it actually helps me learn and makes me smarter, or at least seem smarter, anyway. Continue reading

Dear Social Media Addicts, This is An Intervention

By Andrea MacLean

Dear [INSERT YOUR NAME HERE],

Now, don’t be alarmed. It’s okay. You’re in the circle of trust among friends and family who love you and want to help you. We think you might have a problem … Continue reading

My iPhone Saved My Life

By Andrea MacLean

Okay, so I admit that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but it definitely did come through for me in a pinch. You may have heard the expression, “It’s PR, not ER,” but what those of us in the business of public relations understand better than anyone is that our career is at times a very stressful one and full of those classic descriptive terms, such as “deadline-driven” and “fast-paced” and “weight gain inducing” – that last one could just be mine. In fact, PR almost always makes those fun little top ten lists of the most stressful careers. But I digress. It certainly felt like an ER situation when I was working from home yesterday and my Internet cut out. NOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooo!

Once I convinced myself this predicament was not really worth a complete nervous breakdown, calmed myself a bit and was through cursing the day Comcast was ever born, a thought occurred to me. OMG! My iPhone has that nifty tethering feature, so I can actually turn my mobile device into my own personal Wi-Fi hotspot with the flip of a touch screen switch! I’m SAVED! I won’t bore you with my frustrations about having to pay $80 a month for cable and Internet that only work when they want to and an extra $45 a month for this, albeit super cool, tethering capability on my iPhone. Nonetheless, it saved the day, not to mention my bank account from potentially exorbitant ER bills.

The point is, isn’t it amazing how much we’ve come to depend on technology in our day to day lives? I mean, we NEED it for just about everything these days: work, entertainment, shopping, talking, eating, sleeping, and waking up. We need it so much and there are so many cool new ways to leverage it in development that consumers, manufacturers, carriers, etc. are having a hard time keeping up, hence the occasional Internet service outage.

At any rate, it was a happy end to a scary story for this PR practitioner, that is until hubbie and I decided to watch something on Netflix or Amazon Video on Demand on the flat screen later that evening, but couldn’t. Alas, my little iPhone couldn’t rescue our Internet TV …. yet.

Disclamer: No mobile devices or other technology were harmed during my panic attack yesterday and the Internet finally did decide to work again after hubbie performed what I assume was some sort of cable whispering.

Stop the hype, hype-y

By Andrea MacLean

I spent the past two days at the APPNATION Conference in San Francisco for a social messaging app client, called CloudTalk. One of the most interesting parts of the conference, aside from the special people you meet at a trade show, was the closing keynote panel titled, “Postcards from the Edge.” Right about now, you’re probably asking, “How in the world did APPNATION get people to stick around for a closing keynote?” Well my friends, the answer is quite simple – they provided free beer!

But I digress. The panel wasn’t interesting because it focused on the future of mobile technology and where this obsessive connectivity is headed. (We all know where it’s headed – future generations will be born with touch screens, QWERTY keyboards and app stores integrated into their central nervous systems and it will mean the end of humanity, obviously.) Nor was it enthralling thanks to the ranting of one panelist who shall go unnamed. What was really fascinating was the conversation and set of questions generated from the participating audience and one in particular – “What is the most overhyped mobile technology in existence or on the horizon?” Oh my, quelle scandale.

Let’s skip the obvious “Google killer,” “app wall,” “Internet of things” silliness and my personal disdain for the “check-in” (I don’t care if you’re shopping at Macy’s or getting your naughty on in a bar) and get right to the drama. One audience member bravely skipped up to the microphone thinking, I’m sure, how she was about to blow our minds with her amazing and thought-provoking question and said “What’s going to happen to Groupon with the launch of Facebook Deals? ” She then proceeded to talk about how Groupon was overvalued and should’ve taken the $6 billion acquisition offer. Eeek! Gasp! Not so much, peeps.

This seemingly provocative pseudo question, in my opinion, is right up there with the infamous “Google killer” declaration that we saw every time a new search engine launched and claimed to be on the verge of eating Google’s lunch. Now in all fairness, it was usually the media that created this hype and continues to do so very irresponsibly, I might add. Asking this type of question, however, doesn’t help us find the next cool technology, it sets the next cool technology and even current cool technology up for failure by setting unrealistic expectations. The ravenous panelists proceeded to take this poor unsuspecting young lady down a peg or two by launching into an interesting POV about why Facebook Deals will not kill Groupon, at least not right away.

Groupon seems like such a brilliantly simple idea you might think that Facebook could easily replicate it and do even better with its humongous user base and social reach – and the fact it seems like such an obvious next step for Facebook. To do what Groupon does, however, you need to have regional and national sales and marketing teams (among many other things, which I won’t bore you with now)that are out there every day building relationships with local businesses and on-boarding them one baby step at a time, holding their hands the whole way and showing them the value of their participation each and every time. Facebook just isn’t built to do that yet, and Groupon is way ahead of the game.

So, before you jump on the bandwagon of Groupon death harbingers, Facebook probably won’t cream them (again, at least not for a while) because, contrary to popular belief, Facebook isn’t good at everything, just like MySpace wasn’t before them, or Google before them or Yahoo! before them. Do you see a pattern here? There’s always the possibility that a new kid on the block could eat your lunch, but predicting it will happen every single time something new and marginally cool comes along is just silly. And so, in the words of one of the APPNATION conference closing keynote panelists – “I think hype is over-hyped” – mobile or otherwise.

What do you consider to be an over-hyped mobile technology or mobile rumor?

A little bit more about me: I begrudgingly love my new iPhone. I’m having an on-again off-again fling with technology – it’s on when it’s actually useful and off when it’s just the latest way to waste time. Admittedly, I have a mobile shopping addiction problem, but am getting help. It hurts my feelings when reporters don’t respond to my amazing pitch emails, but I’m secretly envious of them, since they get to spend their days writing about cool stuff. I like piña coladas, have two kitties that just turned three and they’re my babies.