Unicast Claims Success With Internet Commercials 284
LightForce3 writes "Remember that trial run of full-motion commercials on sites like ESPN.com and MSN? The BBC reports that Unicast, whose caching technology makes these ads work, is claiming a strong favorable response from Internet users who viewed the advertisements. It looks like they could now be making long-term deals with clients (the article mentions Forbes.com and weather.com). As a dialup user, I am less than thrilled about the idea of an extra 2 MB download each time I visit one of these sites."
Simple solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Then don't go to their websites.
Boycotting is still an effective tool, unless of course you are in the minority, which you may be, since I'm sure there are a couple million sports freaks who won't mind the commercials.
Wait for it: (Score:2)
I admit I would be more excited about the advertising arms race if something interesting came out of it, besides finding exciting new ways to connive people into watching a commercial for your product.
Re:Simple solution (Score:2, Insightful)
So really you are saying that it is not effective?!
Blocking the commercials is probably the only way to prevent them downloading
Re:Simple solution (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, if it was easy/cheap to set up a transparent proxy (so that your grandma could do it) then ad/commercial boycotting could be so effective that you'd have to start swiping your credit card to surf a site (pay-per-page).
Like many others, I use Privoxy along with Squid [squid-cache.org] so that I cache everything that is static non-ads.
Re:Simple solution (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Simple solution (Score:4, Interesting)
I only wonder 1 thing... Couldn't these ActiveX, JVM 1.1 geniuses who "invents" a thing which will result in more users filtering ads, code a small (64kb) bandwidth test BEFORE sending them 2mb?
Re:Simple solution (Score:4, Interesting)
Question then: has anyone experienced any bandwidth problems that are associated with these types of ads?
Re:Simple solution (Score:3, Interesting)
You just feed them a very large yet invisible background image on their first visit, and have a program feeding the image. Program knows how long it took to feed the image, therefore which category the user is *probably* in, and puts the IP address in a database and a cookie on the machine.
If the cookie is there you put that speed value in the DB (again with the IP address).
Over time
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
That's fine, and I agree with you. However, a dialup user doesn't really have a choice in this matter - downloading a 2MB (or whatever it is) video clip to go to the next page is simply not practical as part of a browsing session on dialup unless you are an extraordinarily patient person.
Furthermore, is there any kind of warning [for the dialup user] that you're downloading a 2MB clip to give someone a chance to back out? Or does the page just sit there with nothing happen
Funny (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Funny (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Funny (Score:2, Informative)
Not ESPN motion (Score:3, Informative)
CBS.Sportsline.com is much better anyway with extensive personalization. Unfortunately for me, some games are only on ESPN.
Do we have to miss out on this on Linux? (Score:5, Funny)
What a shame. I use Linux!
Technical Background? (Score:4, Interesting)
Frames could be an option (have a invisible subframe keeping on storing stuff), but this would mess with the URLs, which I think is not the case here.
Any insights? Thanks!
Re:Technical Background? (Score:5, Informative)
It downloads and installs client software that runs 24/7 in the background, downloading the latest content. So if you ever happen to go to the site, the videos are ready to play right from disk.
As far as I can tell, you have no options for configuring when or what it downloads.
Re:Technical Background? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not anymore (Score:2, Informative)
In Windows 2000, it was added to the SP3 EULA. It was removed from the SP4 EULA.
I don't know about any other version.
Re:Technical Background? (Score:5, Informative)
go to www.unicast.com, click on "gallery" - it's a page with the shockwave object embedded - when you click on the "View ad" button it starts downloading the clip in the background. Presumably some sites will keep the shockwave embedded in a zero height frame which will go fullsize via client side scripting once the whole advert is downloaded ready to play, while others will use in page, or half page, via iframes or whatever.
You can get hold of the shockwave file direct at http://www.unicast.com/gallery/previewpane/galler
Doesn't work for me (Score:2)
Wow. That is one heck of a url!
But anyway... It doesn't work in Opera nor in MSIE, even on my 100mbit connection. And this is Windows XP, so I dunno...
However I haven't updated Windows Media Player in ages, simply because I don't want any of those new "features" MS keep saying i need in order to enjoy high-quality media.... So it migth be a WMP-issue.
I don't want, nor need, Windows DRM Media, and if the reason the ads don't work is because they use this technology, well I got one thing to say:
T
Please (Score:5, Funny)
Keep this person away from me. Thanks.
My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:2)
use the adblock extension (Score:3, Informative)
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:4, Insightful)
And that is why they do it. No one (except for microsoft) honestly assumes that every one will want their products. But they to this broad form of advertisement to catch the person who is interested in that product.
So you can deal with these broad adds or have companies install spyware on your computer to learn you interests and give you more compelling adds that fit what you want. I myself much rather have a bunch of uninteresting adds then spyware.
If you were to truly boycott these adds you will need to stop clicking on the adds that you like as well. That is the point of a boycott.
But expect to have these adds of some form or another until there is a way to operate a website at a profit or for free. Some sites sell website related products online like homestarrunner.com and others are just online store. But most of the informational sites that want to offer there service for free will need to give adds to help support there work.
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:3, Interesting)
On the same no
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:2)
However more generally I think people still have a right to express a preference for the ammount and kind of advertising thrown at them. Otherwise we would all have tvs bolted to our heads with constant advertising twenty four hours a day. We have a perfect right to "circumvent the cost factor of these websites" if it involves choosing what advertising we want to see.
Also it should be possible to withold private informati
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:2)
We have a perfect right to "circumvent the cost factor of these websites" if it involves choosing what advertising we want to see.
Certainly, its called "refraining from viewing the website". Dont try and say you have a right to do anything else.
Also it should be possible to withold private information from businesses if we choose to.
Again, its called "refraining from viewing the website". Does a great job in both the situations.
It is a matter of freedom of the individual to choose without coerc
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:2)
No? Why not? Does it actually say somewhere in a contract which I agreed to that I must not download content from NYT or slashdot or any other site without first looking at the ads or registering? I've never seen such a notice anywhere on slashdot, and I don't recall seeing one on NYT although I don't look at the registration page that hard. Why don't I have the right to only download some images on a page but not others? Why don't I h
Re:My eyeballs aren't for sale (Score:2)
The "Flash Click-To-View" extension for FireFox/FireBird is pretty sweet - it replaces all flash objects with a big grey button that doesn't play the flash animation until you click on it.
There is is only one proof. (Score:2)
have tried it RENEWING THEIR ACCOUNT.
Nothing else matters.
Strong Favorable Response (Score:5, Insightful)
Never ask the sales person how good their product is, all you'll get is whatever they can spout off the top of their head as the newest sales line.
"Our stuff is great, people love it and can't seem tio live without it" - Every sales person that ever lived
Heck, why bother asking the originating company when you already kn ow what the answer is going to be. 1. The company will say the customers love it, 2. The customers will be pissed off at yet another intrusion and time wasting tactic when all tey want to do is see the content they came to see. This isn't TV ya bastards.
Re:Strong Favorable Response (Score:4, Interesting)
Never ask the sales person how good their product is, all you'll get is whatever they can spout off the top of their head as the newest sales line.
So true. This is the problem with the advertising industry as a whole. The people telling you how effective the advertising is are the same people selling you the advertising. People, wake up! Believing them is not a good idea. It never ceases to amaze me how intelligent business people are hoodwinked by the advertising charletans. Even before the click through debacle. Now that we have seen how that littel beauty worked, surely this kind of crap cannot be taken seriously?
The sites mentioned are drooler sites anyway (Score:4, Insightful)
The MSN crowd is largely the same, except you can drop "sports fans" and replace it with "reality TV fans". Same neaderthal content, same neaderthal reaction. "MMMM..TV PICTURE WITH FUNNY COMMERCIAL...AND ME NOT EVEN WATCHING TV...MMMM...MIRACLE..."
I'm sure I'll get modded down as flamebait, but is ANYONE surprised that ESPN fans and MSN fans like commercials? Given the dreck they otherwise watch, it's hardly surprising.
Never works for me... (Score:5, Informative)
Windows
Internet Explorer
Windows Media Player
Microsoft (not Sun) JVM
You can try it yourself here [unicast.com]. If you do, be sure to comment what it's like, because I've never seen it!
Re:Never works for me... (Score:3, Funny)
Why Unicast requires the Microsoft JVM (Score:2, Informative)
Unicast is committed to ensuring that all ads either play perfectly or not at all.
At times, we make temporary decisions to exclude certain browser and/or configurations that contain known bugs or perform inconsistently in our testing and quality assurance environments.
Unicast has temporarily blocked the Sun JVM as a result of some modifications made with the most recent Sun releases. Unicast has seen consistent instability with this configuration and will continue to eval
Re:Never works for me... (Score:2)
More commercials?!?!?!?! (Score:4, Funny)
As opposed to the real highway? (Score:2)
Me neither.
Evil users.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the internet is not a mature medium, until it is as braindead as TV and purely satisfies corporate interests.
A medium that gives the user control is clearly evil and most definetly encourages evil. That will have to be counter-eviled.
How is it that the people making decisions fail to realize that the internet (or web that is) isn't a push-medium, but pull-medium?
You'd think people get that by now? Or am I to optimistic?
adblock (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:adblock (Score:4, Informative)
Someone please correct me if I'm wrong here; IANA Programmer and am not sure if there are tricky Java-based things they could do to get around regular ad blocking measures.
The lesser of two evils (Score:3, Interesting)
After all, content producers need to get paid, and ads are among the few ways to achieve that without subscription services. As long as there are no feasible ways to internationally pay for content safely I'll put up with ads rather than loose the information I can get completely.
A possible solution (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe you could set your Internet Options to restrict the space for temporary files to be less than 2 MB?
Re:A possible solution (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A possible solution (Score:2)
Re:A possible solution (Score:2)
Suit speak (Score:5, Interesting)
Ok, first of all, I'm pretty sure that number is way too low. But even if it's correct, would you place a technology on your website that's proven to annoy at least 1/3 of your potential customers?
Re:Suit speak (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Suit speak (Score:2, Funny)
Sssshhhhhhhh (Score:3, Funny)
Internet Commercials (Score:3, Insightful)
I am in no way willing to pay ridiculous amounts of money to WATCH advertisements. Don't get me wrong. I am totally pro-advertising, I do understand that advertising is a way for content providers to make some money, but I prefer textual targetted advertising.
So what would I do? Firstly, I will try to find a way to block these ads. If this fails, I will just boycott these sites and find alternate sites. And I figure a lot of people will do the same.
So these people will lose the audience to gain revenue. Doesn't sound logical now, does it?
Success! (Score:2)
"We removed all negative feedback and all we were left with were three glowingly positive emails! They were from upper management, but who's keeping score anyway..."
If you can't believe the people who are implementing an idea in order to make money to be honest about their success, then who can you trust? yeesh.
Personally.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, these people need to understand a lot of people are going mobile now, and with b/w usage fees, people are going to be getting hefty bills from their mobile providers. Also, people with internet with very low caps pay over for usage, and probably arent expecting that the news sites they read are feeding them 2mb ads.
Or, "Why fast WAN will never be cheap." (Score:4, Insightful)
1xRTT, 1xEvDO, 3G GSM, 4G, you name it. It's because of things like this that most users won't be able to afford wide-area broadband connections. Why do content providers never consider the sensitivity of the connection the user is on?
Will I only be able to access new and exciting services wirelessly with a PDA or cellphone, but not with my laptop? A simple weather check for an unknowing user might suck away 10% of their bandwidth allotment. I mean, forcing dialup and ISDN users to endure this is bad enough, but what about poor Joe Schmoe with his laptop on the road hooked into his cellphone with packet data service? These are oft-visited websites! Either:
I'm not saying that the sites are wrong for doing this, but I am suggesting that some attention should be given to actual connection speeds and types. With laptops outpacing sales of almost everything else, a browser cookie is most certainly no longer good enough.
--Jasin NataelOnly 28% of respondents were annoyed (Score:4, Interesting)
That's almost a third of those surveyed found the advertisments annoying. Who would want to piss off a third of thier users?
And how do they count the number of users so annoyed that they go off the site and don't bother filling in the survey?
Tk
What an achievement (Score:3, Funny)
The company behind the trials said that people found the commercials much less irritating than other ads on the web.
So it's less annoying than DHTML animated adverts that move around getting in the way of what you're trying to read or those red/yellow flashing "You've won" banners in the middle of an article. What an achievement.
You have to wonder at the mind set of advertising executives. "People aren't taking notice of our adverts. What can we do?" "I know, lets make them even bigger,more intrusive and waste megabytes of our potential customers bandwidth as well". A serious case of needing to stop bailing and plug the leak.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Opera (Score:2, Informative)
Opera will disable/enable plug-ins with one click, and yes, that includes windows media and flash. i have mine set up this way, as well as animated gifs turned off and javascript disabled unless i request it.
I know everyone is in love with Mozilla, but honestly, what's not to love about Opera? i'm HOOKED on the mouse gestures and the ability to emulate a text-browser if i feel nostalgic.
also, it's available for linux (though i haven't tested it on a lin
Re:Opera (Score:2)
It's not free. If this were 1996 you might have a valid point in getting us to buy a copy of Opera, but there are a bazillion web browser out there that cost absolutely nothing (yes, I consider watching their adware version to come with a cost as well). I'd rather just use Mozilla or IE.
Re:Opera (Score:2)
Re:Opera (Score:2, Interesting)
My main browser is Firefox/Firebird/BigBird/Bird/etc etc. I install one of the smallest icon themes I can find, hide both of the toolbars, and place all the needed buttons on one horizontal. I then install mouse gestures, ADblock and Click to view flash and RSS reader. I have a very large screen area, IMHO, fa
PopUp Cop Promises to Stop Them (Score:2, Insightful)
The fine folks at PopUp Cop assured me that UniCast was NOT using any new and they would definitely be able to block any ads, especially those requiring a download. So there!
Besides their is always Mozilla, Opera and Netscape. Besides if this "new" advertising method requires a client-side download how are they going to
Rape my eyeballs, why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
With the proliferation of adverts on every spot you can imagine (I can't even enjoy the view on a public bus ride no more with the massive eye-searing ads bombed across the windows), there has to be a point at which the average consumer no longer conciously registers an ad. So then what's the point of advertising?
Favorable Response my ass (Score:2)
More marketing fraud if you ask me.
I, personally, will be boycotting any company that uses this form of advertisment.
Much as also avoid anyone that provides me with a popup or spam.
Regardless if it was them directly or thru a 'e-marketer'... Same result.. they lost a customer for life.
Pay my bandwidth? (Score:2, Funny)
We're not given the choice of whether or not we want to view it (as with all advertisting, it's thrust in our face without concern for whether or not we're interested), and we're paying to watch it.
I feel for the Telstra Cable customers on 300Mb p/m plans who generally won't know any better and will visits sites containing these ads which may very well contribute significantly to their download limit. Worse, once they hit their limit they're charged AU 20c per MB.
Somet
Commercials? (Score:3, Interesting)
I might enjoy internet comemrcials (Score:3, Insightful)
Rule #1: I can turn them off
There are some other rules, but they aren't as important as the first so I won't list'm.
Some TV spots are rather entertaining at times. I believe if internet spots were at least as entertaining, people would watch them. Now I understand that a lot of slashdotters here are generally against anything commercial and I respect that, but I also recognize that gobs of people respond to spam and other interent advertising that isn't half as nice as a voluntary commercial ad.
Some of these things, if done well, would be something worth sharing from time to time. One case in point is the famous farting woman from
A lot of great things can be done even on dialup using Flash or similar technologies by the way...
Advertising the Works (Score:3, Insightful)
But more importantly I think the article fails to mention why people are ok with the ads: Because they are the cream of the crop, best ads out there. You are talking about Gatoraid, Nike, SportsCenter and car commercials that have a better production value than 99% of anything on TV or the in theatres.
As soon as McDonald's starts running those terribly unhip, awkward and just plain dumb "I'm lovin' it" ads, I think they'll find people's opinions changing pretty quick about putting up with ads on those sites.
In other news... (Score:3, Interesting)
And finding one kind of intrusive web add less annoying than another is like finding Gallagher less annoying than Pauly Shore.
-Carolyn
The web is not TV (Score:5, Insightful)
It's almost too obvious a point, but apparently it bears repeating: The more the Web is like TV, the less we need it. TV already does a pretty effective job of delivering what Net content people call "broadband multimedia information and entertainment" to the home, and most consumers already own the hardware. What sells the Internet to newbies is its promise of things TV can't deliver: "many-to-many" communication via bulletin boards and e-mail; interactive services that go beyond catalog shopping; quirky content unavailable on TV's limited number of channels; specific, accurate information that's there when you need it, whether it's sports stats, stock quotes or plane-ticket availability.
from: http://archive.salon.com/march97/21st/webtv970327
Seven years later, and it still counts. Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it. People will either block those ads, or go to other sites. Just like TCP, they will learn to route around the problem.
The web is not TV, it is not a one way communication channel where you can shove as much commercial bullshit to the other side as your CFO requires you to do. You don't have regulations on the number of channels, you have an unlimited number of them, and they get popular or less populer in a matter of days/weeks/months.
TV commercials on the internet? Absurd. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Favourable" response? (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously, am I expected to believe that anyone likes Internet advertising?
I tried to read an article on GameSpot yesterday (yeah, first mistake there...) and they had some sort of streaming video ads embedded in the pages. But, of course, the streaming video ads had to play a streaming video ad indicating that the streaming video ad would start soon. I wasn't that i
Option to reduce ads (Score:3, Informative)
Life without banner ads, No longer do I need to read "Meet HOT singles in your area today".
Firefox/Mozilla (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:3, Insightful)
The mplayer mozilla-plugin works just fint with windows media. Mozilla is in no way a "less-capable" browser.
These sites do have the right to show commercials just as much as we have the right to avoid them.
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:4, Insightful)
If they want to waste 2MB of bandwidth for every vistor who's placated enough to sit through it that's up to them, but I know which sites I'll be either ad-blocking or not visiting...
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:2)
Since I don't trust ActiveX at all, my IE is set to promt me for every ActiveX applet. I usually say no, but sometimes they are nessecary. It's not that much bother and easy to set up.
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:5, Informative)
Safari users take note (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:3, Interesting)
works for most modern Operating systems and Windows based operating systems.
we added it at work and it made a 20% reduction in bandwidth use on it's own.
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:5, Informative)
Prixovy - http://www.privoxy.org
Proxomitron - http://www.proxomitron.info/files/index.shtml
Also, get a patched hosts file from here,
http://remember.mine.nu
And run Edexter to fill in the banners.
http://www.pyrenean.com/edexter.php
Ad-free pop-up free content. On dial-up, it's like sweet freedom.
Re:Supress these commercials? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Dialup woes (Score:2, Insightful)
It is a WORLD wide web, not a north american wide web.
Mozilla tip (Score:5, Informative)
http://extensionroom.mozdev.org/more-info.p
(Remove the space inserted into the link by Slashdot)
With the plugin, the browser loads the Flash content but displays a blank button with the text "click to view" instead of the animation. So now you can go to the site that require flash, but won't be bothered unless you want to.
With regards to the full motion video - where do they find the drooling idiots in the test group who want the net to resemble TV more? Do you believe the "only 28% of users found it annoying", or are the advertisers lying? (And why not, it's basically their job anyway)
Suprise: Stupid people want stupid things (Score:2)
Doesn't suprise me at all. People want things simple, let's agree on that at least. And what is more simple than TV? And people so stupid that they don't see anything wrong with things like DMCA, PATRIOT-act and so on... Well, there seems to be a lot of them, and they'll probably want things as dead simple as possible.
Not everyone appriciates the wonders of interacti
Re:Yay.. (Score:2)
Re:I appreciate these commercials (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can't they be blocked out? (Score:2)
Apparently someone had time on their hands: adblock [mozdev.org]
It works great for getting rid of those annoying banner ads and inline ads on sites. Blocks flash or images based on a URL pattern. i.e. http://*.doubleclick.*.
Re:Just block all add type content! (Score:2)
See a pattern? (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's an exercise:
Radio used to be usefull... Then it went commerical. Then all the stations tried to reach the same (most profitable) audience and turned very much alike. Then they turned even more alike as they embraced formating the broadcasts. Then big "evil" business bought all the radiostations and they all uses the same formating. And now they are ad-ridden with intrusive ad's at double the volume (fuck sake) of the ordinary broadcast.
Radio is now useless and braindead.
TV used to be usefull/entertaining. TV went commercial... And blahblahblah..... Now? Useless, braindead shit. And I can't even stand TV any more. Fuck it.
Internet used to be free for everyone and usefull. And it wen't commercial as well... Guess what?
See a pattern forming, anyone?
We'll have to invent a medium commercialism can't ruin. And patent it. And copyprotect it. It's the only way to be sure!
Re:Cynics have suggested ... (Score:2)
Only for the clueless? (Score:2)
This can not possibly work if the user blocks all PARAM and EMBED tags. Personally (emphasized), I don't see any use for these tags whatsoever for any ordinary web-usage.
So... With plugin-support entirely removed, tell me again, how can this work?
Oh... I forgot. This is probably aimed at the clueless WinXP, MSIE, WMP-users who doesn't mind that their mediaplayer controls you, not visa-verce, and is tied into the kernel and the webbrowser. They probably also doesn't mind that the webbrowser is tied in
Re:none for me, thanks (Score:2)
Dear Advertisers
I don't have most of those, but I do occasionally use Windows. Would it be possible to change it so the requirements are:
Thank you in advance,
Yours faithfully
I confirm I am not a...impulse buyer