5. Razorfish Technology Summit Five
Ray Velez
Global Chief Technology Officer
How Gesture, Mobile, and the Cloud technologies are enabling a new
digital reality for consumers as well as the enterprise
6. Razorfish Technology Summit VI
Beyond the Cloud: Leverage targeting, platforms and APIs to
accelerate businesses
14. Computer Science’s Definition of
Ubiquitous Computing
“ Ubiquitous computing
gives us tools to track,
trade and share objects
much more efficiently
than any previous
technology.”
Mike Huniavsky
NASIG 2008 Annual Conference
15. What would make it
meaningful to consumers?
“The most profound
technologies are those that
disappear. They weave
themselves into the fabric of
everyday life until they are
indistinguishable from it.”
Mark Weiser
18. Agenda – Morning
8:00am – 8:45am Breakfast and Registration
8:50am – 9:30am
Opening Remarks | Pete Stein, Global Chief Executive Officer, Razorfish & Ray Velez, Global Chief Technology
Officer, Razorfish and author of Converge
9:30am – 10:15am Keynote | Piers Fawkes, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, PSFK
10:15am – 10:30am Break
10:30am – 11:00am Building for Social in a Post-API World | Rafi Jacoby, Director, Social Technologies, Razorfish
11:00am – 11:30am John Cunningham, Chief Technology Officer, EMEA, Razorfish
11:30am – 12:00pm Martin Jacobs, Group VP, Technology, Razorfish
12:00pm – 1:00pm Lunch
19. Agenda – Afternoon
1:00pm – 1:40pm Shane Dewing, Senior Director, Product Management, Qualcomm Connected Experiences, Inc.
1:40pm – 2:10pm Peter Semmelhack, Founder and CEO of Bug Labs
2:10pm – 2:55pm Keynote | Roy Fielding, Senior Principal Scientist, Adobe
2:55pm – 3:25pm David Stover, Global Solution Management Lead – Mobile, Store, Pricing, hybris
3:25pm – 3:40pm Break
3:40pm – 4:10pm The Razorfish Emerging Experiences Team
4:10pm – 4:45pm The Internet of Me and We | Jeff Bonforte, SVP, Communications Products, Yahoo!
4:45pm – 5:00pm Chris Bowler , GVP, Social Media, Razorfish
5:00pm Wrap Up
5:30pm – 7:30pm Mixers and Makers
20. Workshops – Wednesday
A How to Hack the Consumer Experience using Internet Connect Devices
Peter Corbett, CEO, iStrategyLabs
B Using Amazon Web Services to Analyze Data in Real-time
Matt Yanchyshyn, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services
C Convert More Visitors Into Customers; Secrets of High Impact Targeting
Alon Waks, Global Head of Product Marketing and Barry Lamm, Director, Center of Excellence, LivePerson
D Shredding the Wireframe
Kyle Outlaw, Experience Director, and Jake Keyes, Content Director, User Experience, Razorfish
21. Workshops – Wednesday
E
How to Combine the Power of AWS and Adobe AEM
Martin Jacobs, GVP, Technology, Anoop Balakuntalam, Head of SaaS and Cloud Services, and Rama
Konjeti, Senior Technical Architect, Razorfish
F Bug Labs Workshop
Peter Semmelhack, Founder and CEO, Bug Labs
G Visual Commerce Solutions: Shoppable Social Content
Frank Burns, Client Partner, Bazaarvoice Curations
22. TechSummit 2014 Logistics
Wifi Network: Razorfish Tech Summit
Wifi Password: Rftech14
Follow the conversation on twitter: #RFTech
Most prolific tweeter wins a …..
Share the livestream with colleagues back in the office http://bit.ly/RFTech
Ray Kurzweil from MIT has pulled together an amazing set of equations showing that the pace of change is moving at a pace never seen before in the history of man
These stats are important to help us recognize the pace of change is changing.
Why is that important? Because we need to keep pace with the change and accept that things happen faster.
People adopt technologies faster
Cloud technologies enable us to build applications faster
Most importantly we learn faster
In 2011
The Public Cloud Market Will Rise To $191 Billion By 2020 -- 20% More
Than Our 2011 Sizing
Using a new market segmentation and sizing methodology, we project that global public
cloud platform services will rise to $44 billion by 2020, cloud business services will
reach $14 billion over this period, and cloud applications or software-as-a-service (SaaS)
will hit $131 billion.
Every year, Austin, Texas hosts 200,000 people from 80 countries for the interactive, film and music festival known as SXSW. There are plenty of free concerts and drinks, but there’s one major thing lacking: convenient transportation.
As residents of Austin, we thought, how can we help? What about bikes?
So we decided to try an experiment. What if the bikes were free for anyone to use? Better yet, what if each bike had a name, personality, and twitter handle?
We wondered, would people treat public property differently if they knew it by name?
Introducing UseMeLeaveMe — an experiment in technology, transportation, and above all — social behavior.
We outfitted each bike with batteries, lights, GPS, and solar panels.
We created unique personalities for all 20 bikes, and they tweeted… where they were, how long they waited, where their riders should go, their love of great weather, and when they were damaged… they let us know that, too.
Not every bike was treated with care…and a few got lost or stolen… but most of the bikes survived the weather, the people, and even the late-night parties.
Telling us that people might treat public property better when there is a little humanity involved.