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Geez, give me a break.
It's been interesting to see a couple of posts lately on your blog about advertising (visual marketing on your drive through Idaho, and now this.)
Working with such amazing creative people has given me a greater appreciation for the work that goes in to creating advertisements - especially viral marketing like this Windows Vista demo.
I sent it to someone to show someone how visionless Vista is.
It seems like Microsoft has come up with the hunk of junk comprised mostly of scar tissue and now they're trying to figure out what to do with it and how to sell it.
I like they way they avoided the web designer's classic trap of re-implementing scroll bars that behave in a different way to the standard ones. Oh no, wait, they totally failed to avoid that.
I also like the way that as I'm typing this, I keep getting nagged via audio because I'm not clicking on anything. They obviously didn't know that Vista allows more than one application or window at the same time!!!11
And Tom sounds thrilled indeed.
It looks pretty enough otherwise. No real substance though.
[EMBED]
Even a 'noscript' tag to say that you need flash to see this would be nice.
Come on, I can do 3D modeling in XP too but maybe poorer compared to Vista. The value of running Vista is not apparent. Consumer ad - yes, viral - far from it.
Tom Skerritt is completely unexciting, isn't the idea of viral marketing to create excitement? Does Microsoft not want to get people excited about Vista? I can't help but wonder who this is meant to be targeted at because it's all over the map showing what the possibilities are.
My main problem is, I didn't see anything about what Vista can do for me that can't already be done with existing and previous iterations of Windows. I also don't think that anyone other than developers need to know what WPF and any of the other technologies behind Vista are, only what they can do for us.
Actually, I'd like to see the breakdown by hours. If it really is that bad (can't view it here, sorry) then I'd suspect the majority of hits were soon after posting, then it dropped off. If it's good, then you get a few hits at first before absolute explosion.
And how many has it gotten since?
What kind of advance marketing did they do for this, ie were there a ton of people who thought it would have some scoop on Vista and were waiting with baited breath for it to come out? I doubt they just plopped it on the web to see what happened.
As expected, this site has been picked-up and read by a lot of very technical people. However, it's important to note that we explicitly DID NOT target the messaging to deeply technical people. Most of the technical folks have already heard about the features in Windows Vista. This site is a way to show what our partners and customers are already building on top of our platform. They're meant to be inspirational in nature.
Although I agree that the site doesn't have any "community" to it, if you were able to talk to these early adopters, you'd find a bunch of passionate people who are excited about the applications they can build in record time.
It's interesting to argue about how these could be built using other technologies on other systems. As always, with enough time, effort, money, and skill, almost anything can be built on any system. In this case, though, most of the power of these applications is provided by Windows Vista, so development is extremely productive.
You'll hear more technical details as we get closer to launch. In the meantime, look at the applications that can be built...and this is well before the actual operating system will even ship! I'll be curious to "take the temperature" of this crowd again as we see the applications evolve closer to launch.
Thanks again for your frank and candid feedback!
That is one seriously annoying site.
Amen, just your basic drecked ad agency flip up. But Web 2.0'isms would make it thrice as annoying. Would Tom Skerritt, on the intro and later on, get his hand outta his ass? That pose is maddening. And that's gotta be the worst bit of acting in his career ever, bored to tears is the overall impression, at least SEEM INTERESTED!! Tom's got Fallen and Bonneville, why bother with lame Microsoft infomercials. And this was FAR FAR from viral, just lightly seeded...
@26.. So the goal of the video was to fool the unwashed masses into believing they need Vista to get all that "cool" stuff they were seeing?
Verdict: NOT viral. No legs.
as someone who is hard of hearing, i want to be able to look at what action is going on on the screen while being able to read the captions with ease. whomever designed that part of the UI made it impossible by putting the captions and the action in two distinct parts of the screen, which makes me decide what i prefer to experience: the content, OR the pretty pictures. (instead of what i should be experiencing: both.)
conclusion: the captions were an afterthought. it's very nice that they were added in and i was pleased to see it available as an option. they are badly designed, however, and it's clear that no hard of hearing person actually worked on helping the design team with this.
The example apps don't show ANYTHING that isn't being done today and there is no discussion of what Vista brings to the party. I also found the crazy camera flyovers of Vista screens nauseating and annoying.
I've learned that Mercedes has a model called "AMG"(?) that I can drive and something about buying ski jackets. And doctors using computers to help with their work.
Because Windows XP and any other OS couldn't let you look at websites. And nothing but Vista can have programs made that help doctors.
Wait what's the point of that site again?
Note to self...don't hire Tom Skerritt to promote high-tech product.
-M