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Posts from — December 2010

Why the iPad will kill traditional PC sales

The iPad and other tablet computers are flooding the market and they will change the way we all think about computing.  They also spell the decline of laptop computers and possibly the extinction of desk top systems.

According to Best Buy Chief Executive Brian Dunn, the iPad has replaced as much as half of all laptop sales. Further, the little tablet is also slowing TV sales, despite the manufacturers’ desperate push to shift 3-D sets.  http://bit.ly/ce0zgX

This shouldn’t surprise anyone because it’s the same pattern the original PC followed when it replaced big main frame systems; or when laptop sales topped traditional desk top PC sales.

It’s pretty simple.  Hundreds of thousands of kids received iPads and other tablet computers for Christmas.  For many, it is their first “personal computer” and the computer they will grow up with.  They will move through High School and College with tablet computers and will learn that the “cloud” takes the place of the hard drive or DVD.  Before you know it, the laptop will be the choice of the older generation.

So, give it four years and the laptop will be the back up system, or the one used only at home.  And as all this is taking place, it’s only a matter of time before the desk top as the backup goes the way of the tube television.

1 of Many

Passion Rules!

December 30, 2010   No Comments

An American leader and Wolfpack grad!

Gen. Ray Odierno to NC State grads: Greatness is discovered in goodness, service & character. http://bit.ly/f65KF9

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Passion Rules!

December 23, 2010   No Comments

Quinlan’s views on The Brand Promise

A little over 20 years ago I bought a North Face rain slicker while on vacation in Seattle. Typical ad guy, I didn’t believe the press about how it rained a lot out there.

It cost $90. That seemed like a lot for a slicker, but they offered a lifetime warranty. And I was soaked.

I wore it 12 years before the seam tape finally lost its grip. I sent it to be repaired, which it was — excellently and with no sass.

Last fall, the ‘repair’ tape also finally lost its grip. I sent it back again, albeit skeptical as to whether it would be fixed.

Today, I received a FedEx Letter from The North Face. “Hmm, that’s certainly not my 20-year-old slicker…” I thought.

Instead, there was a nice letter saying how sorry they were that the could not repair my item — but that the lifetime warranty stood firm — and therefore please fine enclosed a $90 gift card good at any The North Face store or their website.

How awesome is that? And how long did it take me to promote their decision, and encourage everyone I know to consider their brand?

So, marketeers: Does your brand really — really — walk the talk?

Posted by Mike Quinlan

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Passion Rules!

December 22, 2010   No Comments

Turns out Santa has neuroimaging capabilities beyond your wildest dreams. He really does!

Santa going over some recent research results at the NPL.

Everyone knows that Santa Claus makes a list and checks it twice, but just exactly how does he figure out who’s been naughty, and who’s been nice? New research from a North Carolina State University team reveals that Santa and his elves have neuroimaging capabilities far more advanced than those available outside the North Pole. Larry Silverberg, an expert in unified field theory at NCSU’s Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, joins host Frank Stasio to talk about the findings of a special team of visiting scholars that has been studying this year at Santa’s Workshop-North Pole Labs (NPL)  http://wunc.org/tsot/archive/You_Better_Watch_Out.mp3

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Passion Rules!

December 20, 2010   No Comments

Student Media at NC State is rockin’

From Student Media Adviser Bradley Wilson:

t’s cold and miserable outside. So, here’s some good news. No, finals
are NOT canceled.

The Agromeck yearbook (edited by Bryant Robbins and Michele Chandler)
and Windhover literary and arts magazine (edited by Helen Dear) have
both been named finalists for the Crown award and were the only North
Carolina college media outlets named as finalists for the highest
national award. Tons more info at http://ncsu.edu/sma/

1 of Many

Passion Rules!

December 16, 2010   No Comments

“I have a homework assignment about PR…”

I love spending time with students on campus and as the end of the semester draws near, I get a lot of questions about the role of pubic relations at NC State and in our society.  It’s an especially busy December for us, but I wanted to post a quick response to a request earlier this week.  Sometimes short and sweet is the best way to go, eh.  Let me know what you think.  And please understand, this is not intended to be a full discourse on public relations.  Just a “thought of the moment” kind of response to a student’s questions.

STUDENT:  I have a homework assignment for which I have to ask PR professionals some questions about their experiences with social media.  If you could answer them for me in an email, I would really appreciate it!  The questions are below:

1)      How has social media changed the way public relations is carried out professionally?
Social media is just a tool, like the typewriter, camera or video recorder.  It provides yet another way to “distribute” messages and influence audiences.  Here at NC State we have incorporated social media in a variety of ways to help tell our story.


2)      What social media applications do you use most often?
Twitter is the most successful tool we have.  We use Twitter to inform the media and other interested parties about research and discovery (aka ‘news’) at NC State.  We also post event updates, general information, etc., on Twitter.  We also use Facebook for much the same purpose.  Facebook gives us more flexibility however.  We can post longer story lead ins, photos, and videos.  We also have a YouTube Channel for NC State, though it does not receive as much attention from us as the other two.  And then there’s the Web.  Not necessarily a social media tool, but without it, we’d be nowhere.  We post everything to the Web using a variety of university Web pages and sites.
[Read more →]

December 14, 2010   No Comments

To centralize or not! That is the question.

An old debate is rearing its head again.  At least according to Inside Higher Ed  (http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/12/13/budget) it is and given what’s going on in North Carolina, I’d have to agree with them. Just take a look at Gov. Bev Perdue’s recommendations to streamline state budgets highlighted in last week’s post, “Consolidate & Privatize State Agencies.”

The two primary camps of higher education budgetary strategy have for years been wrestling over whether it’s better to dole out revenues from a central administration or allow individual colleges to control their own financial destinies. With an economic crisis now draining dollars from college coffers across the country, that question is yet again top of mind on several campuses.

The debate over the two models essentially boils down to whether colleges or academic units within a university should bear their own expenses and keep their share of tuition, grants and gifts – “Each Tub On Its Own Bottom,” it’s often said – or be given a share of resources from the central administration based on established institutional priorities.

Kind of gets you thinking doesn’t it.

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Passion Rules!

December 13, 2010   No Comments

Consolidate & Privatize State Agencies

That’s only one recommendation from NC Governor Bev Perdue.  The others:

Eliminate, Review, Freeze.

Take a look.  http://www.governor.state.nc.us/SetGovStraight/default.html

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Passion Rules!

December 9, 2010   No Comments