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This Week In: The Future of Web is Streaming Video

Jason Calacanis, Internet entrepreneur and “L.A.’s brash tech superstar,” thinks the future of the web is streaming video and he’s willing to put his money where his mouth is. Literally, since his mouth is on “This Week In Startups,” one of the shows featured on streaming...

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On The Verge of a TV Revolution

Posted by triptych | Posted in Public Relations | Posted on 14-07-2010

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Written by MX News – Photograph by Steve Pohlner

Image of producer and cast members on The Verge

The Verge producer Adam Ben Lomsargis with Matt James Deane and Laura Meldon

A Twilight vampire and a classical singer are two of the actors featuring in Brisbane online TV show The Verge.

Matt James Deane and Laura Meldon play share-house 20-somethings in the series that is being launched at The Edge tomorrow night.

Three episodes have been filmed around Brisbane, but Meldon, who has sung to 23,000 people in Asia, says the acting doesn’t stop when the cameras are switched off.

“Just like any other share-house of young people, we’re all on Twitter and Facebook and sometimes we get into fights, or chat.” she says. ‘We were given the freedom to extend our characters online and explore the dynamic between their relationships and people can become friends with us, ask us advice, anything.”

Deane, who played a newborn vampire in Twilight Saga: Eclipse, says the interactive medium creates quick turnaround times behind the scenes. ‘We want people to watch an episode, vote what they want to happen, and then we film it.” TripTych Concepts managing director Adam Ben Lomsargis says the show will also let viewers vote for alternate season endings. ‘That’s the beauty of online television,” he says. “I think we’re going to be seeing a lot more of it too. I think the Internet is going to revolutionise ‘TV.”

The show will be available at www.videozoo.tv.

“In Australia, there are quite a few webisode shows but there aren’t really any that do it professionally to a standard that you could see on one of the major stations,” he says.

“I think (reality show) Oz Girl does a great job, but I wan t hundreds of thousands of people around the world to see our show.” The Verge is being launched at The Edge tomorrow from 6pm.

To see the first episode, RSVP to contact@triptychconcepts.com.au

Will Devices Dictate The Future Of Creative Thought?

Posted by triptych | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 14-07-2010

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Steve Jobs in 1984

Steve Jobs and the Macintosh in 1984

It’s a valid invention, the Apple movement is. And what a bummer it can be when you don’t have one. Among friends, workmates and peers, it’s easy to feel left out of the party when not being able to access what seems like a limitless world of potential creative permeation.

But it can be a caustic way of life. The product and innovation cycles by which we can measure our progress in work, social settings and play have easily affected our psyches and the industries renowned for original, thoughtful ideas.

The Denver Egotist’s Felix Unger speaks to this point in his recent piece, where he dissects many of the often-pondered habits of today’s advertising folks:

“Why?

Because in advertising, you go big on ideas and small on technology. At first, anyway. You throw down as many ideas as you can, as quickly as you can, and to my knowledge no one has invented something that helps you do this that’s better than paper and a pen/pencil.

Your big ideas stay big by being loose. They have endless possibilities. The sketch does not paint you into a corner. There is no elaborate work that people are afraid to comment on, because it’s finished already. The client feels like part of the process too, because they are along for the ride to help shape that big idea into the finished ad. And as several great designers and advertisers have said, it’s hard to kill a baby if you birthed it.”

The trending methodology behind new work has morphed, Unger points out, to teams channeling creativity through the computer rather than the conception, which greatly discounts the natural progression of ideas and the relationship with clients, where big-picture execution has suffered greatly:

“If you’re a “modern” CD, you have no doubt become accustomed to seeing work that’s of a more finished level in the initial stages.

You know as well as I do what happens when you present something that looks like a finished ad to the client; they comment on the intricacies of the ad. They don’t like the color, they don’t like the texture on the background, they think the smile on the guy’s face is off brand, and they have an issue with the size of the logo. They can’t see the big idea because you’ve hidden it under technique (and if the technique IS your idea, I hate you and everything you stand for).”

And on Unger’s advice to today’s creative professionals:

“Here, the emphasis is on thinking. And if you want to be thought of as someone who has great ideas, you need to cut the cord between you and your Mac when you’re concepting.

Blow the dust off those Prismacolor grays. Break out the bleedproof marker pads. Buy a big box of Sharpies (my preference, as a writer, is for Ultra Fine or Extra Fine) and write down ideas until your pens run dry.

So, sorry Steve Jobs. As much as I love your products, they should be banned from the thinking process; even in 2010, the pen is mightier than the Mac.”

ABC Radio Interview 891 AM

Posted by triptych | Posted in Public Relations | Posted on 21-06-2010

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The following excerpt was taken from the ABC Radio Interview with our Board Member Ian McFadyen on the 17th of June, 2010.

Triptych Concepts is Ready for the Action Online

Posted by triptych | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 15-06-2010

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Ready for the action online
Written by Mark Fenton-Jones from The Australian Financial Review – Tuesday 15th June, 2010.

Feature article on Triptych in Australian Financial Review – 15th June 2010, p17

Triptych Concepts plugging TV into the net

Posted by triptych | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 15-06-2010

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The following article appeared recently in the Brisbane Business News.

Article featuring Triptych in Brisbane Business News June 2010

Please note corrections to the above article are italicised below in bold:

* Lomsargis says research shows the online video industry will be worth $6.5 billion in 2011, with expectations it will make up 90 per cent of the world’s internet traffic by 2013…

* …So far the company has $100,000 from investors and is raising a further $1.6 million.