Posts Tagged ‘Baltic Sea Region’

More of the manifestos

Monday, October 24th, 2011

It is a bit like the dotcom-bubble and the web 2.0 hype…
The real money was not earned with the business itself, but rather with dreaming up a cool thing and heading for the exit.

Transmedia right now seems to be at the same point right now in a way.
Innovative businessmodels are not really established enough to work on a broader basis and the traditional roads need to be traveled in that aspect.

Best business in transmedia right now seems to be a consultant. Do not get us wrong here, we are not judging, just observing.
And cosultants are also very much needed right now as helpers along the way to sustainable transmedia.

But we wanted to share more than one manifesto, so here is two more of them. And we will post even more, because in our mind,the trick is in seeing what knowledge sticks to your particular project and can be beneficial for that.

The first one to share is even called transmedia manifest and it is laying out eleven theses. Check them out here

The next one are some insights by Thomas Mai and you do not have to read, you can watch :-)

Martin Luther had 95 theses….The trend nowadays seems to be more retro than that and is more in tune with Moses.
That can be observed. The rest…ovserve yourself :-)

One of our products: Handbook on cluster landscapes

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Hi all,

as one of our outcomes of the research into the particular needs of audiovisual clusters, please have a look at this short video introducing our handbook on cluster landscapes, aimed at cluster managers as a hands-on tool to further improve their clusters. It was developed by Filmby Aarhus and The Alexandra Institute, based on First Motion research done together with Innovation Centre HTA Lodz.

There is a printed version available through us, if you get in touch, a pdf for download and also the handbook does have an interactive part on www.clusterlandscapes.com.
You can also read it online here

But check it out yourself:

Very special niche interest, but successful: 134hour livestream from Norway

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Its a cruise. And they broadcast it live. 24hours a day, the whole cruise. 134 hours total.
Nearly half the Norwegian population watched it last weekend. Not the whole time, admittedly, but at least in parts.
And on the internet it is even more successfull.
It is neatly different media forms and formats, tying in with tourism efforts and marketing the cruise and the country.

Have a look at it yourself here.

Cross/Trans Art/Advert oN/oFF

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

the lines are blurrying…
Take this as an example:

Build Anything from Studiocanoe on Vimeo.

This is an advert for LEGO, but in the blogospehere it is often received as art.
(Well whatever it is, it was done by Temujin Doran)

It is not yet transmedia or particular crossmedia, but I wonder whether LEGO is already working on the augmented reality app for everybodies favorite smartphone where you can superimpose some prefabricated lego stuff on reality and snap your own pictures…
Or maybe even have somebody do some brick movies with LEGO and publish them, so people can use them in-app to do their own mixedmedia shorts…
Of course you would have to interlink this with some social-media platform, build a community around it and voila, there you have a direct line to all the dedicated, creative LEGO freaks worldwide…

Results 2nd call

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

We got so many great projects and it was a real hard decision.

Thank you all for submitting your great ideas to us and making it a real tough decision.
The chosen ones you can find here on our website
To all others we wish the best for your projects nonetheless and hope to see them appear without our support.

Live from Aarhus: workshop broadcast through bambuser

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

Hopefully this works (we are trying this out)

otherwise please click on the link

EDIT: Now this is no longer live, but coming from the archive. It starts of in Swedish but switches to English pretty soon, so just fast forward at the beginning, if it sounds like gibberish to you :-)

the world is full of interesting things…

Saturday, October 16th, 2010

and at least a hundred of them are in here.

Or maybe even more.
Depending on you.
Please spare a minute, but be prepared to spend more time on this.
I assure you, you will find something new/inspiring/wonderous/…

See what technology did to media the last year and get inspired for the years to come.

Retrospective: Now is digital

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

Now is digital took place in Aarhus on 2nd of September with the help of our project partner Filmby Arhus.
If you have not been there, we now provide you with the recordings of the seminar

Check it out.

Monique de Haas oplæg, NOW is digital from Mediehus Århus on Vimeo.

All videos can be watched here

It is summer in the city

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

First Motion in Tallinn

And last week we had our Summer LAB in Tallinn. A workshop for and with representatives of the projects we selected in our first call. We also had a big partner meeting for First Motion in general: to discuss where we are at, where we want to go and how we gonna get there.

Setting for both events was Tallinn´s beautiful Old Town – in sweltering heat though. That everybody was always at the events and not sneaking of to some nice little café speaks for the dedication of the participants and the quality of the Summer LAB.

The mornings were spent with lectures, the afternoons were operated by Andreas Breiler and Jonas Michanek two Swedish process leaders who will be doing the “Autumn LAB” in early October where the focus will be on getting to the core of each project and pushing it to a further level.

So who was there lecturing:

First day lecturers were Indrek Ibrus from the Baltic Film and Media School (BFM) and a First Motion partner, Carlos Scolari and Chris Hales. Second day was Kai Pata and Eija Timonen. Both afternoons were spent with Andreas Breiler and Jonas Michanek. The third day had Michael Rüger, Benedikt von Walter, Shenja van der Graaf and Nuno Correia.

Then the LAB was finished, but participants leaving the day after also had the opportunity to attend more lectures, as the BFM were having their Summer School same week and invited everyone still hungry for knowledge. A nice offer, greatly appreciated and well made use of by many.

We, as First Motion partners were tied up in our own meetings, but by starting earlier and working longer we managed to have some breaks in between and attend some of the lectures – as all venues were conveniently close.

That is how we came to take this nice group picture. (LAB crowd and First Motion partners)

In our meetings we focused on a public procurement document for the Baltic Universe tender and on fine-tuning the work package 5 research-design – besides the normal project management issues. (Check our website in the next week for the procurment information)

The evenings were spent networking. LAB crowd intermingling with the Summer School crowd, intermingling with First Motion partners…discussing projects, meeting the Baltic media scene, well, you know. So basically it was a 24-hours-a-day thing and everyone went home with their head buzzing from all the people and ideas. I guess the weekend coming up came in handy… J

The application is open for Baltic Sea Forum for Documentaries 2010

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Our FIRST MOTION project partner National Film Centre of Latvia is organising a market of ideas for documentary films for all distribution platforms with international potential.

The Forum takes place on September 7-12 (pitching session on September 11-12) in Riga. The final deadline for submission of projects is June 28.

Find out all about it here on their website.