April24
I’ve recently read an article about a graduate level university program in which they send emails. The name of the university was not mentioned for protection. It was also emphasized in the article that teaching in the corporate world and the public school system takes time to develop a quality standard curriculum just for ONE class.
What would happen it we had a primary teacher and then a semester or more before hand we contacted industry professional to work on “pieces” of the puzzle of the curriculum. We could have an “idea” box to drop emails in to start off with and then maybe have a virtual affinity diagram session with a service like GO TO MEETING. Another component of the crowdsourcing system could have a check in / check out feature. The students using a comment system on the universities intranet system could do the grading, but the professor would have final decisions on the grade given.
Just think of the marketing angle for the university, ” Our Human Computer Interaction graduate level curriculum is developed by industry professionals using the crowdsourcing model.” If I were (using the subjunctive grammar rule here, my sister is smiling somewhere) the marketing director for a university trying to sell prospective students on why they should attend this university as opposed to the other, this would definitely be a unique selling point.
Continue Reading The Full Article Here
April23
In 1998, when our company MphasiS was only a handful of believers crammed in two tiny offices in LA and Mumbai, we got our first real consulting gig. ICICI was at that time a semi-government Indian bank primarily operating in the corporate market. The company was managed by the charismatic K.V. Kamath, who set the Bank on a new course in the relatively uncharted waters of retail banking. This market was dominated by State bank of India, then a horror of bureaucracy. Foreign banks like Citibank and HSBC had made inroads and introduced modern products and services, but they were severely constrained by regulations. Kamath laid out a vision to bring state-of-the-art banking services to all Indians. He put Shika Sharma in charge and hired Jerry Rao and myself to help realize his consumer banking strategy. Years before, Jerry, as a young Citibank executive, had done the unthinkable: he had introduced two-wheeler loans. This was the first product for a market segment largely ignored by other banks. It changed India. Suddenly millions of people could afford a motor cycle and have their self confidence and mobility dramatically improved. Now Kamath wanted to do something similar on a larger scale: create a bank that could ultimately serve hundreds of millions of customers. And..have the foundation up and running in nine months! So Jerry and I went to work on the program plan. We proposed a “broad and thin” presence with focus on customer relationships and products that fit with the different market segments. Kamath wanted to leverage technology as much as possible: from branded phone booths and simple ATMs to flag ship branches in the metro areas.
Article created by Jeroen Tas, continue reading the full article here
April23
Different crowdsourcing based websites have different ways on how they will award the price for the winner. like for instance Lunar X Prize, which will be awarded to the first privately funded team that sends a remote-controlled robot to the Moon, drives it 500 meters, and collects video of the trip by Google. Back here on Earth, the $10 million Archon X Prize is being offered to the first team that can build a device that sequences 100 human genomes in 10 days or less, and the Wellpoint Foundation is proposing a $10 million Healthcare X Prize for the first organization that figures out how to deliver a 50 percent improvement in the cost-effectiveness of community healthcare over a three-year period. Right here in the Boston area, Waltham, MA-based InnoCentive is using the prize model to attract solutions for dozens of problems, ranging from improving the fire resistance of polyurethane foam to accelerating the growth of soybean shoots.
But in Glastonbury, CT, there’s a company called TopCoder with a prize-based business model that predates all of these efforts. It’s using the model to create products that are arguably more relevant to our economy in the short term—better software applications. And it’s doing it for far less money; first-place winners rarely take home more than $3,000.
Companies like AOL, ESPN, Ameriprise, Ferguson, Geico, and LendingTree have outsourced thousands of software development projects to TopCoder’s worldwide freelance community—”from something as simple as a Web page all the way up to full-blown enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems,” in the words of company founder and chairman Jack Hughes.
Continue Reading the Full Article Here
April22
Brain Reactions: Crowdsourcing Problem Solving and Business Innovation
Crowdsourcing is an example of innovation because its a new idea, model and technique which is embrace by many in doing a certain project or task which is develop rapidly. I’m quite fascinated by the trends toward open innovation, particularly crowd sourcing which leverages the wisdom of the crowd to help make better decisions. There are several companies that are in the crowdsourcing for business space.
A new example of crowdsourcing. A startup Brain Reactions just launched and has a ton of activity according to their Compete analytics data (although Quantcast suggests a lower user base at 126K but still very sizeable number with 29% of traffic from 18-34 year olds and 45% from 35 to 49 years old ). A company can get one free question per month and the next level of around $49 allows you to ask 3 questions. (You can see an article about the CEO in Business Week)
Predictify and Linked in Answers are two similar services, although there isn’t a direct overlap. If you are interested in crowd sourcing, check out Jeff Howe’s book by the same name, We are Smarter than Me, or Wikinomics by Dan Tapscott.
Enjoy Reading This Article? Continue reading the full article here
April21

ITC Foods is a website that used the concept of crowdsourcing—inviting the crowd to give its snack brand Bingo Amd Angles an identity of its own which is unique and will create an equity for the Brand. As I always believe “Markets are Conversations”, ITC approached Contests2win, an online activation agency which then decided to approach the consumers, asking them to design the campaign for Bingo using the angular shape of the chips as the central theme, and win prizes in return.
ITC Foods develops and produces packaged foods, confectionery products, staples, and snack foods. Its products include ready-to-eat cuisines, curry pastes, conserves, chutneys, biryanis, desserts, salt, spices, and instant mixes, as well as snack foods, such as biscuits, crackers, and cookies. The company distributes its products in Northern India, Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad, Baroda, and Surat. ITC Foods was founded in 2001 and is based in Bangalore, India. ITC Foods operates as a subsidiary of ITC, Ltd.
April21

A new crowdsourcing website, Electron Innovations is conducting an experiment about a cube console with the help of the crowd worldwide up to now. They discovered the garbled text was actually an image, discovered by Squid808 the one who posted it to the forum and their site want to thanks to the group who started transcribing the text by hand to figure it out.
Bertram has now created a way for all who have offered to help to interact directly with the cube. I’m still amaze what is the main purpose of their experimentation and I’m eager to know the results this coming week. I will update this post once i’ve hear a news from them. You may visit their site at Electron Innovations.
April20

While I’m searching for a good article I’ ve found this website named OLPC (One Laptop per Child). This website uses crowdsourcing model where in its main purpose is to help the poor children to have a low cost but useful laptop which they can use for their education. You can donate directly or send money via paypal.
The site mission statement says:
Mission Statement: To create educational opportunities for the world’s poorest children by providing each child with a rugged, low-cost, low-power, connected laptop with content and software designed for collaborative, joyful, self-empowered learning. When children have access to this type of tool they get engaged in their own education. They learn, share, create, and collaborate. They become connected to each other, to the world and to a brighter future.
This kind of crowdsourcing project is really magnificent and i really enjoy seeing how crowdsourcing can help these little children with their education. Thanks for this kind of crowdhelping campaign and i hope that as crowdsourcing grows many website will not just think focus on their own sake rather will concentrate on the welfare, especially these little angels.
April19

A new study by network analysts suggest that mobile phones may soon pass a critical threshold, after which viruses could become a crippling fact of life.
Academic paper here, supporting web material here, and a very good CBC summary here.
From the CBC article:
There have been no major outbreaks of computer viruses among smartphones because no smartphone operating system is popular enough to let a virus to spread effectively — yet, a new study suggests.
The data also predict that once a single smartphone operating system gains a critical percentage of the entire mobile phone market, viruses could start to pose “a serious threat” to mobile communications, said the study released Thursday in Science Express.
Smartphones “are poised to become the dominant communication device in the near future, raising the possibility of virus breakouts that could overshadow the disruption caused by traditional computer viruses,” said the paper by Pu Wang and other researchers at Northwestern University.
Crowdsourcing has discussed mobile mapping, and similar mobile technologies for the crowd. Now the crowd will facing a serious problem if this thing happens. But i know that the crowd will think of a way how to get rid of this phenomena.
And based on my experience antivirus protection for mobile are not that effective, thus developers should be focusing with mobile antivirus that can detect even the newest virus released.
You can view the Original Article Here. Feel free to post your opinions here.
April18

Aardvark is a crowdsourcing website that allows the crowd to ask contextually based questions of each other through instant message or email without viewing personal information.
When you sign into Aardvark they ask you some personal information, including your IM name and service, and tyou need to choose some categories you consider yourself able to answer questions in. You can add or remove categories whenever you like that’s all to get started.
One good thing about Aardvark is that it doesn’t allow spam which most of the Question and Answer sites does. That is because of Aardvark smart-filtered crowdsourcing. Try to read this success story through the help of Aardvark. Aardvark solves my Gmail problem.
The only thing that Aardvark misses is the idle spectator benefits — there’s serendipity that they miss by not letting people seeing all the questions and their answers fly by.
The IM interface also seems a bit bolted on by an engineer. After using it for a couple days, the IM interface gives real-time interaction with answerers, though, and results in faster results to the question. Geeks may not mind using a cheat sheet to get Aardvark to do their bidding, but it seems like it would be an easier and more intuitive user interaction if they had a web interface to ask questions and submit answers, too.