Technologies of persuasion: Virtual reality and the Dream Marketing Machine – ZDNet

Anastasiya Sharkova talks about her VR experience at a SpiritualVR event.

What if we had a "Dream Marketing Machine" a way to easily and reliably churn out emotionally passionate customers for any brand? Like Apple's fanboys but much quicker and for a lot less money.

At a recent event hosted by SpiritualVR, panelist Anastasiya Sharkova said she was deeply moved by her first experience with virtual reality (VR) -- a title called theBlu:Encounter in which you go eye to eye with a blue whale.

VR and AR: The Business Reality

Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality are going to be useful for far more than just gaming. We explore the ways the technology will be used for training, marketing, product design, and much more.

She said the experience is so powerful and overwhelming that it bypassed all reason and logic. She knew it was all computer generated yet when she looked into eye of the blue whale she immediately felt a deep emphatic connection that lasted for days.

And she noticed a curious effect: she used a lot less water for the next two weeks.

This scares me. What if the Blue Whale represents a brand such as Big Blue -- IBM and I'm suddenly emotionally bonding with a commercial organization and I can't control it?

We know that VR can affect behavior because it is already used in therapeutic applications treating post traumatic stress disorders.

Its widespread use in marketing is inevitable and when combined with AI, biometric sensors and personalization -- it will become extraordinary in its effectiveness. A Dream Marketing Machine.

Dream or nightmare?

It's a dream for marketers because all they talk about is creating compelling and emotionally authentic media content. I recently spoke with Yuval Boger, CEO of open-source VR tech design company Sensics.

"We are still in early stages and the headsets and equipment needs to improve and cost less but we are seeing a lot of interest in marketing applications. There are some excellent opportunities to create powerful branded VR experiences."

- But would you willingly agree to a VR experience that you knew was designed to persuade you and manipulate your emotions for commercial gain? And then continue to influence your behavior long after the event?

- Would you allow the Disney whale to try to emotionally bond with your child?

- What if your new job required a swim with the company culture whale as part of HR's on-boarding?

- What if your government insists you swim with its patriotic whale?

Don't get hung up on these balaenopteran examples. The creature will be chosen and shaped just for you -- for maximum effect.

Total sphere of control...

Marketing is mostly confined to the periphery of our daily experience such as with online ads, billboards, etc.

VR gives creators control over the entire 360 degree sphere of the user experience -- every pixel every sound and every aspect of the narrative. Marketers have never ever had so much control.

Mass media critic Marshall McLuhan in the 1960s was alarmed by tiny TV screens.

- I wouldn't let my children into any marketing VR experience;

- I wouldn't use it;

- and I'd be mistrustful of hiring someone who had VR training at a competitor. Joseph Stalin got his US atomic bomb secrets because of spies motivated by an emotional connection to the Soviet Union and not because of money.

VR for social uses?

How about using VR for positive purposes? Using less water, getting fitter, eating better because of crafted VR experiences that work to change our behavior?

What if socially responsible VR experiences are sponsored by brands? Would that be OK? Would we trust them?

Question the future...

Society gains nothing by allowing its people to be ensnared by emotional bonds to abstract entities.

If our technologies of persuasion become too good at what they do -- and they will eventually reach that point -- then they become too good to use.

The question is: Who has the right to access our emotions? The government? Hollywood? Or anyone at anytime and in any way?

As our technologies of persuasion become more advanced the answer has to be: No one.

Until we understand that answer -- and make it work -- the world of marketing will rush into VR faster than Elon Musk in a Hyperloop pod.

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Technologies of persuasion: Virtual reality and the Dream Marketing Machine - ZDNet

A More Accessible and Eclectic Future for Virtual Reality – Hyperallergic

Neurospeculative Afrofeminism, a VR project incubated by NEW INC (all images courtesy NEW INC)

Near the beginning of the second annual Versions conference on creative practice and virtual reality, writer and lawyer Tim Wu posed one of the most sneakily salient points of the day. Discussing virtual realitys place among mass media like film and broadcast radio, Wu suggested that its possible VR is just not destined to be mass technology.

As unassuming as Wus words may seem, they actually issue a resounding challenge to a technology that is presumed to become not only a radical new medium for creative expression, but also a revolutionary computing platform with major repercussions for fields like healthcare, product design, video games, journalism, sports and live event spectatorship, social media, marketing, and more.

While new media are actually still new exciting, uncertain, rapidly changing, and overflowing with speculation and cash it can be easy to forecast their success as imminent or inevitable. Boosterism and hype, however, often tend to skirt the very instabilities, shortcomings, and dead ends that need to be looked straight in the eye if this media is to become anything more than an ephemeral novelty.

Consistent with Wus healthy skepticism, this years Versions titled Facing Reality mostly encouraged a more sober, productive, and critical probing of the cultural landscape of virtual reality, augmented reality, and mixed reality (although VR predominated in volume in both the discussion and sidebar exhibition). Held at the New Museum, co-presented by NEW INC and Kill Screen, and hosted by Julia Kaganskiy and Jamin Warren, this years conference gathered a slew of rich panels and events, assembling artists, organizers, academics, designers, and writers such as Jon Rafman, Opeyemi Olukemi, Cory Doctorow, Nick Montfort, Claire Evans, and more.

As VR becomes more familiar, both culturally and technically, the level of discourse turns more sensible and specific. At the same time, as earlier practical challenges are overcome, aspirational goal-posts can be moved further into the distance: so, there was less talk about the travails of nausea-inducing VR, but more about widening the scope of possible experiences in VR, and the range of people who can access them.

Topics of access and accessibility were front and center at this years Versions. More than addressing the obstacles inhibiting mainstream adoption of VR, Versions plunged into issues of exclusivity and the barriers to entry for creative professionals and marginalized communities. And indeed, whenever yet another article giddily announces the arrival of VR, one would do well to ask: for whom?

The days first panel, Who Owns the Future? (perhaps named after Jaron Laniers book of the same name), opened with a flurry of questions in this vein: Where are we in VRs development as a viable commercial medium? How do we make it truly democratic? How do we make it truly global? The moderator additionally let slip, How far behind are we in a no child left behind sense? Though certainly well-intentioned, these latter, bigger questions demonstrated that, when talking about VR, there can be a fine line between ethical inquiry and techno-utopian solutionism or the paper-thin addressing of real, material inequality with often vague or trivial fixes (making VR more democratic and global sounds more like corporate PR copy than actually achievable outcomes).

Where more ambitious, faintly TED-talk style questions felt a little hollow, more modest and precise ones rang far truer, if still difficult to answer, like, How do we incentivize equity of access without capital reassurance? Speaking in a later panel on agency and storytelling, Nancy Bennett, head of VR at Two Bit Circus, suggested that design and specifically user experience (UX) design could be a powerful tool for fostering inclusion in VR. And certainly, theres plenty in this area for a more socially engaged design practice to draw from. For example, Paul Dourishs writings on social computing and ethnography in design, which, instead of relying on more decontextualized cognitive data derived in laboratory-like settings, aim to account for the living social context of diverse, and often excluded, subjects. Or, more recently, Kat Holmess inclusive design, which designates disability and diversity as the very starting points for design practice, rather than an asterisked afterthought. Per Holmes: Designing for inclusion starts by recognizing exclusion.

From a more cultural standpoint, scholar and writer Judith Donath intimated that new conceptions of authorship can motivate more enthusiastic and plural participation in VR. Authoring, she said, is too often seen as the domain of experts. Donath emphasizes different standards for creation things you can author while walking down the street, using even rudimentary assets like sound and text (rather than advanced 3D modeling, etc.). Following this line of thinking, meaning-making in VR can begin to take on more folkloristic and amateur proportions, yielding a sensorium of everyday sensation collections of sounds and stories all mapped out in three-dimensional, navigable space.

Donaths points runs parallel with Versions overall interest in how we can explore and embrace new and different paradigms for cultural forms in VR. In pursuit of this, Versions later panels were a refreshing push toward the more experimental and eclectic. As the introduction for the panel Sensing Stories reads, Sound designers, cooks, dancers, and masseuses know as much about taking us on a journey as anyone and yet we rarely consult their expertise when designing for VR and AR, much to our detriment.

In Sensing Stories, Robin McNicholas, creative director of Marshmallow Laser Feast, suggested that VRs specificity hasnt been properly reckoned with. For crafting engaging experiences, you dont need much at all you just need a little nudge for the imagination to fill in the gaps One of the problems of VR is the use of restraint and respecting the audiences intelligence.

Renowned VR maven Brenda Laurel broached the concept of emergent gameplay as a way of respecting audience intelligence and creating riper conditions for freedom, experimentation, and surprise. Emergent VR experiences would resemble expansive sandboxes in which the storytelling is more ambient than actively (or intrusively) exposited.

Speaking of ambient solutions, Chandler Burr, the former New York Times scent critic, convincingly argued for the importance of scent to our perception of space, asserting that VR (or MR, mixed reality) should consider incorporating smell design just like it does sound design, plopping scent-tracks on top of soundtracks.

Whereas Burr talked about deploying scent to manipulate our perception of space, magician Marco Tempest talked about how illusionism can be used to manipulate and deceive perception more generally. Tempests experiments in fusing virtual reality technologies with magic are not only an ironic, ingenious twist on Arthur C. Clarkes dictum that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. They also hearken back to the very origins of cinema, which was significantly propelled by illusionists like Georges Mlisand scientists like tienne-Jules Marey. In many ways, its precisely this union of science and magic that needs to be bottled and tirelessly cultivated if VR is to win the favor of mass audiences. And it returns to the kind of future of VR that the Versions conference is trying to help steward: one in which new directions are explored to the fullest and most experimental degree while a dedicated ethical commitment is maintained in full view.

The second annual Versions conference, Facing Reality, took place at the New Museum Theater (235 Bowery, Lower East Side, Manhattan) on Saturday, February 25.

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A More Accessible and Eclectic Future for Virtual Reality - Hyperallergic

CNN launches a virtual reality news unit – Engadget – Engadget

CNN has been experimenting with virtual reality for years, producing more than 50 news stories in 360-degree video. It also teamed up with VR broadcaster NextVR to live stream the full Democratic presidential debate in 2015. In a Q&A on the Time Warner blog, CNN Vice President of Premium Content Video Jason Farkas said virtual reality provides an opportunity for journalists to transport their audience and leave a lasting impression.

"I believe VR is the most powerful tool we have to accomplish that goal," he said at the time. "The whole experience feels like time-travel: you put on a headset, and suddenly you are somewhere else, feeling remarkably close to the story. You are in the story - or at least your senses tell you that you are. The viewer walks away feeling the emotional impact much more viscerally, and memorably."

Other outlets have integrated virtual reality into their newsrooms as well. Huffington Post started offering VR videos last year on the web and its mobile apps. Months later, The New York Times began creating its own daily VR content in a feature called The Daily 360. In its so-called 2020 report, the Times said it's making progress in using a richer mix of journalistic forms, including VR, but it thinks it can do better.

CNNVR's first story is about the running of the bulls in Pamplona, Spain. During the 5:29 minute video, viewers can rotate the camera 360 degrees to look anywhere they like. They can get a better view of the crowds in a bullfighting arena, for example, or check out a matador's swanky office. CNNVR's videos are available on PC (Chrome or Firefox), the CNN app on iOS and Android, Samsung GearVR, Oculus Rift and Google Daydream.

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CNN launches a virtual reality news unit - Engadget - Engadget

Lowe’s turns to virtual reality for home improvement – Mar. 7, 2017 – CNNMoney

The home improvement giant is launching a virtual reality experience in one of its stores to give customers hands-on practice with a home improvement project. Lowe's may eventually create more VR tutorials and roll them out to more locations.

Initially, customers at a Massachusetts store will get a lesson in how to tile a bathroom. A customer will put on a VR headset, be placed in a virtual room, and use an HTC Vive hand controller to simulate mixing mortar and placing tile. Eventually, a broader range of tutorials may be offered in all Lowe's stores.

In a trial run, Lowe's found that customers had a 36% better recall of how to complete the project when compared with people who watched a YouTube how-to video.

Kyle Nel, the director of Lowe's Innovation Labs, told CNNTech about the advantages of VR as a teaching medium. He pointed to the tactile, immersive nature of virtual reality as allowing for better learning.

Related: Super Bowl 51 was the first available in virtual reality

Nel noted the limitations of offering in-store clinics taught by an employee. Such classes have to be given at set times, which may be inconvenient for customers. The virtual reality experience is available anytime the store is open.

"Virtual reality just happens to be the best way to give people what they want, when they want it," Nel said. "This is meant to be available to the entire country and Canada, not just those on the bleeding, cutting edge of tech."

The VR experience also lends itself to improvement. Lowe's (LOW) will monitor customers and see where they may be getting stuck. Improvements in the teaching process can be made. If Lowe's scales the experience to all of its stores, updates to the teaching process could be made overnight.

Lowe's trends team has found that millennials are forgoing DIY projects because they lack home improvement confidence and the free time for a project. For Lowe's, virtual reality might be a way to reverse that trend.

CNNMoney (Washington) First published March 7, 2017: 9:07 AM ET

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Lowe's turns to virtual reality for home improvement - Mar. 7, 2017 - CNNMoney

Cinema Expanding: MSPIFF 2017 To Hold Virtual Reality Showcase – CBS Minnesota / WCCO


CBS Minnesota / WCCO
Cinema Expanding: MSPIFF 2017 To Hold Virtual Reality Showcase
CBS Minnesota / WCCO
MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) Virtual reality is expanding the creative horizons of filmmaking, and that's being reflected in this year's Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival. The dates for the largest film event in the Midwest were announced Tuesday.

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Cinema Expanding: MSPIFF 2017 To Hold Virtual Reality Showcase - CBS Minnesota / WCCO

SXSW Will Feature 8K Video Virtual-Reality Motion Ride That Requires No Headset – Variety


Variety
SXSW Will Feature 8K Video Virtual-Reality Motion Ride That Requires No Headset
Variety
SXSW attendees next week will be able to climb into a cockpit for a virtual flyby of major Tokyo landmarks in what's being billed as the world's first virtual-reality motion ride with ultra-high-resolution 8K video. Unlike other virtual-reality ...
Explore the sights of Tokyo while in an 8K virtual reality ride in TexasDigital Trends
SXSW: Virtual Reality Tokyo Ride to DebutYahoo Movies (blog)

all 4 news articles »

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SXSW Will Feature 8K Video Virtual-Reality Motion Ride That Requires No Headset - Variety

For Prairie Village practitioner, personal experience led to interest in alternative medicine techniques – Shawnee Mission Post

Gabe and Tiffany Roberts with their daughter Arya at Back to Natures new office in Prairie Village.

After eight years traveling around the globe as a Marine, Gabe Roberts needed some rehabilitation. Suffering from PTSD and related conditions, he says he wasnt able to find real relief until he began working with healers familiar with Eastern medicine practices.

The experience got him interested in the healing arts, and he began studying for his doctor of chiropractic and other licensure. Four years ago, he started his own practice that blends chiropractic foundations with Eastern healing traditions.

The kind of medicine I practice today is what healed me, he said.

Roberts just moved his practice, Back to Nature Lifestyle Medicine, from its original home in Lenexa to Prairie Village earlier this year. His wife Tiffany, who is a nutrition specialist, works for the practice as well. The two specialize in digestive issues and auto-immune problems and chronic pain.

Most of the people who come see us have already been to see other chiropractors, theyve already been to see other functional medicine docs, Roberts said.

Among the services Roberts offers is Bioelectrical Synchronization Technique, which he describes as a higher brain adjustment intended to get the bodys own healing mechanisms in action.

My whole philosophy is, the body doesnt make mistakes, he said. The body has a remarkable way to correct itself.

The clinic is located at 4121 W. 83rd St just south of Corinth Square. You can find their website here.

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For Prairie Village practitioner, personal experience led to interest in alternative medicine techniques - Shawnee Mission Post

Abstracts: Obamacare Replacement, Alternative Medicine, and More – Undark Magazine

A roundup of science news from around the web and around the world.

House Republicans released their plan to replace Obamacare Monday. While the legislation would allow adults to stay on their parents insurance until age 26 and bar insurance companies from denying coverage or charging more based on preexisting conditions, it would also do away with penalties for not having insurance and repeal essential health benefit rules. (Politifact)

Scientists gain new insight into how indigenous peoples in the Amazon shaped their environment.

Visual by iStock.com

Are recently unearthed bacterial remains the oldest fossils ever found? If so, this discovery pushes back the birthdate of life on Earth. But as far as the scientific community is concerned, its hardly a closed case. (New York Times)

Top U.S. hospitals affiliated with Yale, Duke, Johns Hopkins, and other medical research centers are promoting unproven alternative therapies, including energy healing, acupuncture, and homeopathic bee venom. (STAT)

SpaceX is shooting for the moon with a two-man lunar mission scheduled for 2018. Some experts have their doubts about that launch date. (Scientific American)

The Amazons supposedly untouched wilderness is actually full of ancient, overgrown gardens. Clusters of domesticated tree species reveal the impact that indigenous people had on Amazonian biodiversity before Europeans arrived on the scene. (Christian Science Monitor)

Pollution from Asia wafts over the Pacific Ocean andmakes for smoggy skies in the western United States an indicationthat clean air is a truly globalissue, scientists say. (NPR)

Since the Zika epidemic, pregnant women in the United States who have Zika are 20 times more likely to bear children with certain birth defects. (Washington Post)

Artificial intelligence, meet artificial intuition. Two AI programs beat professional human poker players by using a combination of new algorithms and deep machine learning to make snap decisions. (Science)

And finally, a team of scientists grew an artificial mouse embryo from stem cells in a petri dish. Although the embryo couldnt develop into an actual baby mouse, it could be a useful tool for understanding the biology of reproduction. (CNN)

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Abstracts: Obamacare Replacement, Alternative Medicine, and More - Undark Magazine

Supplements and prescriptions: a risky combination – KOLO

RENO, Nev. (KOLO) - Pat White is fighting breast cancer and wonders if supplements should be part of her daily routine. Her doctor asks her if they make her feel better.

Oh yeah, says Pat, Ive been taking them for years.

Some supplements are known to make certain chemotherapy drugs less effective, or might increase the side effects.

Experts say that's not the only scenario where supplements and vitamins, along with prescription drugs, may result in health problems you never counted on.

I think that is probably a pretty common misperception, is that if something is natural or plant-based, that it doesn't have many side effects or risks associated with it. But in reality, a lot of our most potent or commonly used prescription medications come from natural or plant-based sources, says Amy Pullen, a pharmacist with VA Sierra Health Care.

Pullen says there hasn't been extensive research on many vitamins and supplements and prescription drugs, so many of the warnings can be theoretical. But there are knowns--like the fact that Omega 5 fatty acids, including fish oil, combined with anti-clotting medicine, could increase your bleeding risk.

Pullen says garlic or other food supplements contain concentrated amounts and could increase side effects of other medications, as opposed to eating the food alone.

The best advice is to make a list of the supplements you take, how many, how often, and when you are taking them. Take that list to your doctor or pharmacist to see if you are headed for any dangerous interactions.

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Supplements and prescriptions: a risky combination - KOLO

Amazon Launches Amazon Elements Supplements | Whole Foods … – WholeFoods Magazine

Seattle, WA Amazon.com, the largest internet-based retailer in the world by total sales and market capitalization, which started as an online bookstore, and later diversified to sell everything from video and MP3 downloads and streaming to electronics, furniture, food, and jewelry, recently launched their own dietary supplements under the Amazon Elements brand.

Amazon first announced the launch of the Amazon Elements brand over two years ago. Its 2014 press release describes the brand as a line of premium, everyday essentials with transparent origins. At the time, Amazon Elements offered diapers and baby wipes, but the brand was not very well known and the diaper line was discontinued in 2015.

Now, Amazon Elements has expanded from diapers to dietary supplements. While still maintaining its commitment to transparency, Amazon Elements has shifted its focus to the supplements industry with its initial launch of four products: turmeric root extract, calcium complex, vitamin D, and vitamin K. The products are currently available exclusively by invitation to Prime members.

Amazons initiative in the supplement space is well-placed according to Dr. Kurt Jetta, founder of TABS analytics. Jetta noted that private level supplements carry extremely high margins, and Amazon needs to find ways to improve their margins in e-commerce. With its approximately 300 million users, more than half of which are Amazon Prime members, Amazon has a large user base. And what Amazon can do better than a GNC or any other of these niche products is expand on their already-user base, and they can knock down the margins of the industry.

In addition to its large user base, the Amazon name is trusted among consumers. Amazon has built on this trust with its new QR code reader. In accordance with its original press release from 2014, the Amazon Elements brand offers consumers an unprecedented level of information. Each Amazon Elements product includes a unique code on its packaging that consumers can access through the Amazon app to learn when and where items were made, why each ingredient was included, where the ingredients were sourced and much more all at their fingertips from the time they start their shopping experience until the items arrive at their door.

Although the effects of Amazons entry into the supplement industry can be critical in the online space, Jetta doubts negative impacts on actual dietary supplement stores. We would project the impact to brick-and-mortar to be minimal, based on the fact that history has shown both e-commerce and brick-and-mortar can both grow concurrently in vitamins, he predicts.

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Amazon Launches Amazon Elements Supplements | Whole Foods ... - WholeFoods Magazine

Bruce Power Life-Extension Program ranked top infrastructure project of 2017 – southwesternontario.ca

Bruce Power Life-Extension Program ranked top infrastructure project of 2017
southwesternontario.ca
TIVERTON The Bruce Power site is about has become an even busier place since its Life-Extension Program began on Jan. 1, 2016. Recently, the Top 100 Projects (top100projects.ca/2017filters/) ranked Bruce Power's Life-Extension Program No. 1 on its ...

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Bruce Power Life-Extension Program ranked top infrastructure project of 2017 - southwesternontario.ca

The Zeitgeist Movement | New York City Chapter – Home

OURMISSION

The Zeitgeist Movement is an internationalsustainability advocacy organization focused on educating the public about the many socioeconomic problems inherent to the global market economy, and proposes the adoption of an entirely new, sustainable model known as a Natural-Law Resource-Based Economy.

TZM has no allegiance to any country or political party. The movement recognizes the Earth as an interconnected system,and our species asone human familywhich must learn to share resources & ideas if we expect to survive in the long run.

Sustainability requires a mass value shiftfrom our traditional & cultural way of thinking to a more science-based "train-of-thought". Therefore, TZM advocates the application of the Scientific Method for social concern, problem solving & governance. Decisions of the future will not be "made" by popular opinion. Rather, they will bearrived at through the careful study of data and the latest science & technology.

There are many things one can do to support this worldwide grassroots movement. TZM Chapters hold regularly scheduled meetings and engage the general public through educational projects, annual events, media expressions, non-violent activism, and charity work.

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The Zeitgeist Movement | New York City Chapter - Home

Visa shows you how #KindnessIsCashless via their latest ad campaign – ETBrandEquity.com

Visa has today launched its first long format digital film on #KindnessIsCashless, a movement created in December 2016 following the Indian Governments Demonetization drive. The campaign, launched as the nation was going through a cashless transformation, is built on the key consumer insight small acts of kindness.

Amidst the challenges faced by people, the campaign captures a highly empathetic human response - the younger generation helping hesitant elders to go cashless. The campaign started with print, outdoor, social and digital channels, and now features a new long format digital film.

Watch the spot here:

Frederique Covington, senior vice president of marketing Asia Pacific at Visa, said, Great marketing transcends functional messages and manages to capture the zeitgeist of the moment. Our goal with the Visa #KindnessIsCashless campaign was to tap into a cultural movement we saw emerging in India. We wanted to celebrate the goodness from demonetization rather than the pain points. At the heart of our work is a simple and powerful insight that the younger generation is teaching their elders how to go cashless. Our campaign aims at celebrating, and encouraging all the people creating the new Digital India.

The film is a highly emotional story of Role Reversal that captures a slice of life between a young student and his older professor, to show how through role reversal, the younger generation is teaching their elders how to go cashless. The film then invites consumers to share their stories on the Visa India Facebook page using #KindnessIsCashless.

Josy Paul, chairman, chief creative officer of BBDO India said, Everybody was talking about demonetization. But in this disruptive transformational time, something very profound was taking place. We noticed more and more people stepping forward to help. Strangers helping strangers. It was a new kind of volunteerism A unique explosion of kindness. Thats how we created the platform #KindnessIsCashless. Our film is one such evocative story.

Hemant Shringy, executive creative director of BBDO India said, We know people want to help. All they need sometimes is a small act that can make a big difference. Thats what this film is about. Making digital payments comes naturally to us, #KindnessIsCashless encourages millennials to reach out and teach someone how to go cashless.

Ajai Jhala, CEO, BBDO India said, #KindnessIsCashless is borne out of the fusion of three forces - a massive national social context (Demonetization), brave and inspirational clients who inspired us to break from the past, and an amazing agency team that challenged the category codes and captured the zeitgeist of millennials stepping forward with little acts of kindness to do their bit for society and the nation. No force can stop a juggernaut of an idea birthed from such a potent combination.

Campaign credits:

Client: Visa India Creative Agency: BBDO, Mumbai Chairman & Chief Creative Officer: Josy Paul CEO: Ajai Jhala Executive Creative Director: Hemant Shringy and Sandeep Sawant EVP Planning Rajat Mendhi Sr. Creative Director: Balakrishna Gajelli Copywriter: Hemant Shringy, Yash Modi Account Director: Shrutika Sinha Account Executive: Shonali Hazari Agency Producer: KV Krishna Director: Shimit Amin Producer: Gary Grewal Production House: Red Ice

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Visa shows you how #KindnessIsCashless via their latest ad campaign - ETBrandEquity.com

Inclusive, ‘cool’ Toronto shown in new tourism ad – Toronto Star

Toronto's new ad shows the views from the city -- a seemingly inclusive kaleidoscope of colours and cultures. ( YouTube )

Torontos new tourism ad released Monday has some marketers raving, with some calling it one of the best ads theyve ever seen for a city.

I put a spell on you, coos singer Bethany Lee in the Toronto Tourism ad that takes viewers on a whirlwind tour of the city it dubs Canadas downtown.

It runs for 71 seconds and features vignettes of Toronto ballet dancers on the TTC, Jose Bautistas iconic bat flip, the electricity of a rooftop pool bar, the citys architecture and skyline, food, a Drake performance and the Caribbean Carnival.

The views are different here, reads the fast-paced ad that captures Torontos zeitgeist, created by J. Walter Thompson Canada.

This ad is really good because it reflects sort of the energy, the diversity and also the swagger of Toronto and I think theres something in the ad for everyone and it really makes Toronto look like an appealing place to visit, said David Soberman, marketing professor at Rotman School of Management and the Canadian national chair of strategic marketing.

The quick movement through the many vignettes reduces the chances of wear out, Soberman said.

There are so many different things in it every time you watch it youll see something different, Soberman said.

Richard Powers, an associate professor at the Rotman School of Management, thought the ad was one of the best he has seen and thinks it will have a huge impact.

I think the ads going to go viral. It is that good, he said. It portrayed Toronto as a very cool destination spot: friendly, welcoming and safe. When I saw that ad, I was really proud of Toronto.

The ad also highlights a second view of Toronto its inclusivity and progressive values through vignettes of the annual Pride Parade, a same sex couple together and through phrases like Love is love is love and In this city its ok to let your guard down superimposed on scenes.

Although the ad may seem like a direct response to Donald Trumps America, the chief creative officer at J. Walter Thompson Canada says it isnt.

Even before Trump, you could feel the creep of sort of different values starting to resonate even more and I like how this campaign pushes off that not only in terms of the sort of mental views, if you will, but also the physical views, Ryan Spelliscy said. We liked this notion that this city is more than the sites, its also an incredible collection of progressive views and values.

Andrew Weir, the chief marketing officer at Tourism Toronto, said this is what Toronto is.

The views are different here and were now being confident enough to say it and I think Toronto wants to say it, Weir said. I think the people of Toronto are showing a sense of civic pride that we havent seen in years here.

Last year marked another record year for tourism in the city, said Weir, who called the growth remarkable.

There was more than a 10 per cent increase of tourists from U.S. and overseas markets from the previous year, Weir added, driven largely by visitors flying in, rather than driving.

The ad was funded by a partnership with the Greater Toronto Hotel Association and the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sports and didnt use tax dollars, said Weir.

It will run in major U.S. cities including Boston, Washington, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York City, primarily on YouTube, said Spelliscy.

There will be three more follow-up videos coming out in April that will focus on Torontos food and nightlife, arts and culture and progressive views that will run for 30 seconds each online.

The Toronto Star and thestar.com, each property of Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, One Yonge Street, 4th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5E1E6. You can unsubscribe at any time. Please contact us or see our privacy policy for more information.

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Prime Minister Trudeau, no fan of the middle class – Hill Times (subscription)

On December 20, 2016, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a ban on offshore oil and gas activity in Canadas Arctic by way of a moratorium on all new exploration and development in Arctic waters for a renewable five-year period.

The prime ministers decision is part of a trend: his tanker ban off British Columbias coast, his comments regarding the phasing-out of Albertas oil sands, and his stunning silence when then-U.S. president Barrack Obama withdrew his support for the Keystone Pipeline projecta critical element in getting one of Canadas key natural resources safely and cost efficiently to market.

The prime minister tried to justify this latest ban on resource development by warning about the risks of Arctic drilling, even going so far as to say it cannot be done safely. Those statements are both inaccurate and misleading, but another statement he made is completely correct: he admitted that his government has now closed one door of potential economic opportunity for the North.

Most galling is that prior to the announcement, neither aboriginal nor political leadership in the region was consulted on this decision. In fact, Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod said he only received word about the decisionwhich he opposestwo hours before it was announced, and Nunavuts Premier Peter Taptuna said the decision would cripple that territorys future financial independence.

I have spoken out against this decision on numerous occasions. As a senator from Newfoundland and Labrador, the proving ground and gateway for oil and gas exploration in the Arctic, I know this decision is harmful to my province as well. After all, oil companies and suppliers from all over the world have come to my home province to develop leading technologies and best practices for operating in harsh ocean environments, just like the Arctic.

Canadas northern communities deserve to determine their own futures and have cause for concern when a unilateral decision is made, without proper consultation, which affects their economy and their ability to develop their own revenue sources. Premier Taptuna said that this decision takes them back to square one, where Ottawa makes the decisions for themhistorically, a pattern that has never served them well.

In short, the North is looking for ways to break its dependence on the federal government, and this decision prevents it from doing so.

All regions should be allowed to benefit from their own resources, just as Newfoundland and Labrador has. As the former Deputy CEO of the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board, I had the opportunity to contribute to initiatives that ensured protection of the environment. In fact, the board went through a rigorous and successful process of developing robust safety and environmental regulations which allowed us to develop our offshore natural resources while safeguarding the environment. It is possible.

If Prime Minister Trudeau is so committed to environmental protection over all other concerns, then why is resource-based economic activity permitted in some regions and not others?

In the 46 years since the first barrel of oil flowed, there has never been a wellhead spill off Newfoundland. At the same time, billions of dollars have flowed into the provincial and federal treasuries, and tens of thousands of jobs have been created that contribute to the economy across the province. It has raised the standard of living and has created high quality jobs. It is a great Canadian success story.

Today, nobody would tell the people of my province we do not have a right to do that. No one, not even the prime minister, has that right to deny the same opportunities to the people and communities of Canadas North. They have the right to generate their own wealth and to make and build their own housing, schools and health and transportation infrastructure, based not on what Ottawa wants to give them, but what they can earn themselves.

The North should have the right to determine its own future in the same careful manner that we have in the rest of the country. In doing so, it will benefit from Canadas strong, world class regulatory system that focuses on the safety and protection of people, resources and the environment.

This ban is a mistake and suggests that safe development of resources in the Arctic is not possible. That is not just a ridiculous argument, but a dangerous one.

Prime Minister Trudeau is depriving the North of economic independence through this ill-informed and ill-advised decision. This is the wrong decision for the North. This is the wrong decision for Canada. And ironically, for a prime minister who claims to champion the middle class, it is wrong for them too.

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Prime Minister Trudeau, no fan of the middle class - Hill Times (subscription)

Pipelines to be a ‘fundamental’ issue for NDP leadership race: Julian – Hill Times (subscription)

Pipelines could shape up to be a defining issue in the NDP leadership race, as the partys members and provincial wings have clashing views on resource development and the construction of new oil pipelines.

During the last election, federal leader Tom Mulcair (Outremont, Que.) didntcommit to being either for or against the Energy East pipeline. Instead, he was pushing for more rigorous environmental reviews, and further involvement of First Nations in the decision-making process.

Since then, different parts of the party have been in different positions. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, for instance, has stood bythe federal Liberal governments approval of projects such as the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline twinning.

But others within the party, including the British Columbia NDP and MPs representing B.C. ridings, have staunchly opposed the project. (It is important to note that the NDPs federal and provincial factions all fall under the same party. In other parties, they have separate provincial and federal parties.)

So far, the party has agreed to disagree on pipeline projects. But candidate Peter Julian (New Westminster-Burnaby, B.C.) says its time for the NDP to have that debate because the partys position is not unanimous at all.

Candidate Niki Ashton (Churchill-Keewatinook Aski, Man.) said the NDP is at a crossroads, but that pipelines arent the only key issue the NDP needs to address, citing racial inequalities and other issues. She said the media is framing pipelines as a defining issue for the party, but she disagrees.

But, Mr. Julian thinks over the next eight months, pipelines will be a critical matter for the NDP, and that the future leaders stance on resource development, including pipelines, will affectthe NDPs chances in the next federal election.

It seems to me that this is the fundamental debate and will be one of the fundamental debates of the 2019 election, he said.

The Hill Times asked each campaign in the race so far their position on pipelines and the future of resource development in Canada.

Mr. Julian said it is very clear to him that the NDP must oppose pipelines and work towards transitioning to clean energy.

Mr. Julian says the government should refine and upgrade raw bitumen from the oilsands in Canada, instead of exporting it. The risk of spilling the diluted bitumen the pipelines carry was not worth the reward, he said.

As part of a just transition strategy, we need to make sure we are upgrading and refining in Canada, while were making the shift to clean energy. All [Justin Trudeau] is proposing is raw bitumen exports for the next 50 years, Mr. Julian said.

He said he has knocked on a lot of doors in Saskatchewan and Alberta, two oil-producing provinces that have a strong interest in building pipelines. He said people respond when he talks about value-added development and transition to clean energy.

I do not expect the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers to be in agreement, he said, but I think this debate has to happen. The NDP is the only place this debate can happen.

Mr. Julian said building refineries and using the resulting product in Canada would create more jobs than pipeline construction ever would, and it would decrease Canadas dependency on oil imports. It would also eliminate the need for pipelines, he said.

Guy Caron (Rimouski Neigette-Tmiscouata-Les Basques, Que.) said he is opposed to Energy East, TransCanadas proposed 4,500-kilometre pipeline that would transport1.1 million barrels of oil per day from Alberta and Saskatchewan to the refineries of Eastern Canada and a marine terminal in New Brunswick. Part of the route would runthrough his riding.

He thinks Kinder Morgans Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which runs from Alberta to B.C., approved by the Liberal government with conditions last year, is an example of the Liberal government steamrolling over the concerns of many local communities.

While he is opposed to those two projects specifically, Mr. Caron does not say he is opposed to pipelines in principle. He does say he thinks a complete overhaul of our environmental assessment process is necessary to ensure each project has economic, environmental, and social benefits. And, any new framework must include provincial/territorial, First Nations, and community input, and must contribute to the fight against climate change, he said.

In terms of the NDP grappling with its stance on pipelines, Mr. Caron said, the issues of energy and environment will always be a part of our political discourse, offering a diversity of viewsjust as within the NDP. He said he respects Alberta Premier Rachel Notleys passionate fight for workers in her province.

But in the long term, Mr. Caron shares his colleagues vision of transitioning to renewable energy.

Mr. Caron says the NDP cant leave out those who work in the oil industry now and are struggling with recent job losses and downturn in the sector. Our plan will help them take their place in the economy of the future.

Ms. Ashton, who just announced her candidacy for the leadership on Tuesday, said she is against pipeline projects that the Liberal government has approved, including the Kinder Morgan project. She is also against Energy East and Keystone XL. She wants to move Canada to a sustainable carbon-free economy.

We have a prime minister who talked a good talk on working with indigenous peoples, talked a good talk on the environment, and then since hes been in power, hes approved pipelines that certainly respect neither of those fundamental parts and not indigenous peoples, she said in an interview with The Hill Times.

Ms. Ashton said none of the pipeline projects that have gained approval from the federal government to date would go through if the approval process was based on the principles she envisions, including indigenous rights, environmental regulations, and Canadas climate change commitments.

On whether or not she would be worried about her electability in the prairie provinces by opposingpipeline projects, she said she knows the importance of the resource-based economy, as she is from a mining town in the prairies herself.

But, she said its not clear to me that [pipelines are] the way to create good jobs and to address the issues were facing.

She said Westerners are facing similar challenges to the rest of the country, in that there is simply a lack of diversified employment.

Charlie Angus (Timmins-James Bay, Ont.), from historically mining-dependent northern Ontario, appears to be the most pipeline-friendly candidate in the race thus far.

In keeping with themes seen in his opponents platforms, on his website, his environment platform indicates he wants to make sure developments, from dams to pipelines, have the consent of the people they will impact. Mr. Angus points out the importance of that consent for projects on indigenous land.

When he announced his bid for the leadership at the end of last month, Mr. Angus, like many of his colleagues, indicated he wants Canada to move away from fossil fuels. But, as the Toronto Star reported, he stopped short of calling for a moratorium on pipeline construction.

We dont throw a generation of workers under the bus to make a political point, he said.

Mr. Angus was unavailable for comment to The Hill Times due to a busy schedule, and his campaign did not respond to written questions by deadline.

cnash@hilltimes.com

@chels_nash

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Pipelines to be a 'fundamental' issue for NDP leadership race: Julian - Hill Times (subscription)

Industry body bats for universal basic income for women – Times of India

New Delhi, Mar 8 () On the International Women's Day, industry body Assocham advocated for introduction of universal basic income for women, saying it can lead to a significant transformation in India's socio-economic landscape.

The chamber drew the idea from the Economic Survey 2016-17, which had said: "A UBI for women can not only reduce the fiscal cost of providing a UBI (to about half) but have large multiplier effects on the household.

"Giving money to women also improves the bargaining power of women within households and reduces concerns of money being splurged on conspicuous goods," it said.

The Economic Survey 2016-17 was tabled by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in Parliament on January 31.

"While India may not be ready for an all encompassing UBI, given the country's scale of development where the difference between the rich and poor remains quite wide and it may not be an equitable thing to extend similar benefits across all strata of the economic paradigm, the women-only UBI can be considered favourably," Assocham said.

It argued that if women have money in their accounts, their economic and social status would see a tremendous uplift. In the long run, this would also bring in corrections in the adverse sex ratio as the society would see women as an empowered lot.

The concept of universal basic income entails a fixed amount being transferred to the accounts of beneficiaries irrespective of their economic or social status. It is premised on the principle that an equitable society should guarantee a minimum income to each individual for access to basic needs.

"The issues of child mortality, infant mortality and even nutrition during pregnancy can be addressed if UBI is extended to women.

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Industry body bats for universal basic income for women - Times of India

AUTOMATION: Cobot Adds a 7th Axis – Plastics Technology

The Danish maker of collaborative robots (cobots), with U.S. headquarters in Ann Arbor, Mich., displayed a UR robot arm mounted to a Festo seventh axis linear actuator at the February show in Anaheim.

A Universal Robots USA, Inc. spokesperson said the company collaborated with automation technology supplier Festo and safeguard detection supplier SICK Sensor Intelligence to create the operational mock up. In most cases, Universal Robots noted that a 7-axis setup of this style, traversing between machines, would require caging and communication of hard safety lines, including a lot of handshakes between the disparate pieces of equipment.

In this set up, a SICK area scanner detects the presence of people and slows down the robots movements at one distance, with the ability to completely stop the traversing automation if people get too close. True to the flexible nature of URs automation, the entire setup was mounted on casters, enabling it to be wheeled to different cells in a plant and repurposed as needed.

In a release, UR western region sales manager, Craig Tomita said, We see a collaborative robot as a tool on demand as neededone that can quickly be transitioned between a wide variety of automated tasks. Flexibility in manufacturing involves ability to deal with variation in volumes, design and material handling as well as variations in the process sequences.

At the show, the 7-axis display ran alongside a glue-dispensing application from UR systems integrator SP Manufacturing Solutions. The company also discussed the creation of its online Academy. The intention there is to create a free open source development space for the authoring of automation programs, with UR likening it to Apples App store. A space where UR users can create and share software for the cobots.

Okay, maybe having robots serving beer (as at this K 2016 demo) is not at the top of the list of tasks that you would consider automating in your plant.

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AUTOMATION: Cobot Adds a 7th Axis - Plastics Technology

Latin America’s Moment – Council on Foreign Relations (blog)

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by Shannon K. O'Neil March 7, 2017

While politicians have focused primarily on the effects of trade, automation is rapidly transforming the nature of work. A recent McKinsey report estimates that half of the labor done today can be turned over to machines, fundamentally changing the nature of manufacturing, retail, food services, and data processing among other sectors. They predict that China, India, the United States, and Japan will see the largest and fastest shifts as a combination of easy capital, aging populations, and falling productivity speeds the transition away from a human workforce. By their calculations, nearly 400 million Chinese and 235 million Indian workers compete with robots today. In the United States and Japan, some 60 percent of jobs are susceptible to change. Although positions may not disappear altogether, the work people do will change, as roughly a third of todays repetitive tasks could be taken over by machines.

Latin America will also see significant change with roughly half of the current labor mix in Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina vulnerable to automation, a higher percentage than the United States. Sales of robots already top $2 billion a year, showing that the shift is already underway.

Brazil looks the most vulnerable to change, as its mix of stagnant productivity, an aging population, and the infamous Brazil cost make labor expensive. In manufacturing, retail, transportation, and agriculture more than half the work done by 32 million employees could be automated.

Though Argentinas economy is slightly less susceptible to automation, its aging population combined with a decade long lack of investment could lead companies to step up capital spending on robotics under the more market friendly Macri government. Slowing the process down are strong unions and unreliable electricity. But over half of its agricultural and manufacturing jobs are vulnerable.

Structurally, Mexico has the highest potential to automate, as almost two-thirds of the work done in advanced manufacturing plastic, auto, and aerospace sectors could be phased out, affecting some five million workers. Yet the process in Mexico will likely be slower, cushioned by its younger population and lower wages.

The global question is what comes afterward. The majority techno-optimists believe new jobs will emerge for these displaced workers, following the industrial and agricultural revolutions before. They point to car mechanics, coal miners, engineers and more recently app developers as previously unimaginable gigs that have appeared. The pessimists see this time as indeed different, as with the rise of artificial intelligence making machines viable substitutes for people.

Leaning optimistic, McKinseys advice for advanced nations rings just as true for Latin America. Governments need to expand social safety nets to protect those most vulnerable to these coming labor upheavals. They also need to transform schools and educational curriculums to train a twenty-first century workforce that complements rather competes with robots, encouraging creativity, flexibility, and entrepreneurship. And governments need to support basic research and innovation, helping them shape the ongoing revolution. For Latin America especially, it means promoting these types of investments, as even though they disrupt todays status quo they will help ensure the region isnt left behind in these global shifts.

CFR seeks to foster civil and informed discussion of foreign policy issues. Opinions expressed on CFR blogs are solely those of the author or commenter, not of CFR, which takes no institutional positions. All comments must abide by CFR's guidelines and will be moderated prior to posting.

Latin Americas Moment looks at economic, political, and social issues and trends throughout the Western Hemisphere.

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Williams argues that the status quo for peace operations in untenable and that greater U.S. involvement is necessary to enhance the quality and success of peacekeeping missions.

The authors argue that the United States has responded inadequately to the rise of Chinese power and recommend placing less strategic emphasis on the goal of integrating China into the international system and more on balancing China's rise.

Campbell evaluates the implications of the Boko Haram insurgency and recommends that the United States support Nigerian efforts to address the drivers of Boko Haram, such as poverty and corruption, and to foster stronger ties with Nigerian civil society.

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Latin America's Moment - Council on Foreign Relations (blog)

CG Power sells automation business – The Hindu


Moneycontrol.com
CG Power sells automation business
The Hindu
CG Power and Industrial Solutions Ltd. (formerly Crompton Greaves Ltd.) of the Avantha Group, has announced the sale of its B2B automation business to Alfanar for an enterprise value of 120 million (more than 840 crore). The deal is effective March 6.
Crompton up over 4% on close of stake sale in automation bizMoneycontrol.com
CG announces sale of B2B automation business to AlfanarHindu Business Line
Crompton Greaves closes automation biz sale to AlfanarDaily News & Analysis

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CG Power sells automation business - The Hindu