Out of My Comfort Zone

My goal date is June 6, 2014. On that day, I plan to prance into the dress rehearsal dinner for the wedding of my friend’s son wearing a wrap dress by Diane von Furstenberg. For the last 40 years, I have watched one gorgeous gal after another wear that dress with pride, confidence, and moxie. I want that to be me too.

Newsweek 1976

Newsweek 1976

Most recently, actress Amy Adams, wore an original Diane von Furstenberg wrap dress in the movie “American Hustle.” It was the same green and white wrap dress that von Furstenberg wore on the cover of Newsweek in 1976.

Today von Furstenberg is celebrating her 40th year of being a touted fashion designer. This is my 47th year working. What better way for me to celebrate than try to squeeze into a wrap dress?

I want to lose another 10 to 15 pounds in order to give the dress justice. This whole desire came about after I read about the 40th anniversary Diane von Furstenberg wrap dress exhibition at the former May Company department store building on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, now part of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art complex.

I have to say that the online division The New York Times did a fabulous job covering Von Furstenberg’s remarkable career with their use of editorials and a series of videos.

Take a look how newspapers today are using a combination of media to get their point across. I really suggest you read your daily newspapers online. Otherwise, you are missing the full dimension of the way stories are being presented today.

Apple Picking

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Law enforcement officers everywhere are alerting older folks across the United States that the theft of iPhones and iPads have become so widespread it’s known as “Apple picking.”

Actually the term “Apple picking” has been around for a few years. If you Google “Apple picking,” you will read countless stories about how Apple thievery is getting worse and worse all the time. We just met with the local police in Miami Beach last night for a neighborhood town meeting. They informed us that there are gangs from outside neighborhoods that target areas like Miami Beach because of the large concentration of iPhone and iPad users.

Robbers find their victims at gas stations, the mall, walkways, and in drug stores. Nearly one in three robberies nationwide involve the theft of mobile devices, according to the Federal Communications Commission.

Just remember, as we get older, we are easy targets:

A self-proclaimed iPhone thief spilled his secrets to WNBC in New York, his face hidden and voice disguised, saying he’s turning a new leaf. In creepy detail, he described how he did it.” As horrible as it may sound, I tend to look for women — the older the better, generally,” he said. “If I think that you can’t catch me, I’m going for you.”

Take the security measures that Apple offers, such as activating Find My iPhone and wiping your data remotely. In addition, don’t stand out in the open with your cell phone. Try to be aware of those around you. Don’t leave your phones on open surfaces where it can be easily snatched. Treat your cell like you would treat your money. Only take it out in public when you absolutely need it.

Good luck!

This Will Blow Your Mind

You have to try this at home yourself. This is not magic. But it’s pretty darn close.

Everyone has been talking about the Cycloramic ever since its founder, Bruno François, appeared on Shark Tank last week. This is going to be one of the most amazing things you have ever seen. A new app is capable of turning a series of photos into a panoramic photo or video. And the phone can even do it by itself using the iPhone’s vibrate feature which has been specially calibrated by the app to spin the device smoothly around on its own steam. You can then view the photo or video on Cycloramic’s 3D viewer.

You have to watch the videos to better understand this amazing feat.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeZhnEHOMzY#t=335

The Sharks loved the Cycloramic. Mark Cuban gave Cycloramic $500,000 at a $3 million valuation. François was only seeking $90,000.

After researching information about the app, I found out that the episode was filmed over the summer. At that time, Cycloramic had 660,000 downloads and cost $.99 on the App Store. Today, it has more than eight million downloads and costs $2.99, although it is currently offered on special at $1.99. François is also developing a rotating base to allow the app to work on non-iPhone devices.

About 100,000 new downloads took place within an hour of Cycloramic’s debut on Shark Tank. The power of television? No, the power of a great product.

Driving Me Crazy

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Every time we get in our car, I remind Eliot that his job is not just to drive but to watch out for others. I guess you can call me a backseat driver. In my estimation, I have good reason to be a nervous wreck when we go out for a drive. Driver distraction has increased dramatically thanks to texting. I have watched more and more cars weave in and out of lanes. It is so unnerving I beg Eliot to be extra careful.

I am all in favor of requiring automakers to equip new vehicles with technology that lets them warn each other which way they are going. That would be such a great relief for me. I spend all my time navigating and directing. Eliot hates it.

A radio beacon can be placed on each car to continually transmit a vehicle’s position, heading, speed, and other information. All automobiles would receive the same information from other vehicles. The car’s computer would alert the driver to an impending collision.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates vehicle-to-vehicle communications could prevent up to 80 percent of accidents.

I’m all for it.

Timing is Everything, What Else is New?

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Yesterday, I told you about the fate of Egreeting cards. Today, I want to shed light on how the now defunct company Excite@Home paid $780 million for a digital greeting card business, bluemountain.com, when they really could have started one on their own for a tenth of the price.

That’s the story of my former client, Susan Polis Schutz, when Excite@Home came prancing by in 1999 and handed her and her family a whopper check for the digital part of their business that was just a few years old.

Susan and her husband Steve Schutz originally started Blue Mountain Arts in 1970 as a greeting card, poster, and gift book publisher. Twenty-five years later, their son Jared suggested they enter the digital world by offering e-cards. At the time, Blue Mountain was generating around $35 million in printed greeting cards. I am sure you have seen or even bought their cards. Susan was the poet who wrote the flowery words and they were designed with lots of pastel colors. Blue Mountain usually had its own display rack and the cards were sold in a wide variety of stores.

Steve Schutz, who had a doctorate in physics from Princeton, and son Jared worked together to build one of the first e-card sites. It was fortunate that they did. The timing was perfect. As I mentioned before, the family sold the digital division of Blue Mountain Arts in 1999 for $780 million. It wasn’t long after that, in 2001, that Excite@Home went bust and American Greetings grabbed up whatever was left for just $35 million in cash.

Today, Susan is a documentary maker, Steve runs an educational website, and Jared Polis is a United States Representative from Colorado and the first openly gay man elected to Congress as a freshman. The Schutz’s have two other adult children besides Jared.

I met Susan in 2004 and helped her promote Blue Mountain: Turning Dreams Into Reality, the story of how her publishing company, Blue Mountain Arts, and electronic greeting card website bluemountain.com were founded and developed. In the book, she describes some of the experiences she and Steve had from the time they silk-screened their first posters and lived in the back of their pickup-truck camper to when their poetry greeting cards became the number-one-selling card line in America.

I can remember sitting across the table from Susan at one of our meetings thinking about all that money in her bank account. It didn’t change her and her family very much. By the time they had gotten that big check, their print business had already bought them everything they desired.

A lot of the new money has been donated to good causes and helping those they love.

Egreetings Folds

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I was sad to learn that Egreetings is going out of business next week. It was announced on Twitter without any explanation. After so many years in existence, just a little tweet announced its demise. I remember some of the first Egreeting cards I received from friends in the late 90s. I thought they were so progressive using digital cards for all occasions.

Egreetings was one of a number of eCard companies who made a fortune during the first Internet gold rush. Big brands wanted to own Internet businesses and were willing to pay astronomical fees for promising companies.

Egreetings took a different route. It went public in 1999, even though it lost $1.5 million on sales of $22 million over a nine-month period. Egreetings was valued at more than $350 million. While folks were cheering at first. they became disillusioned over time. The business went nowhere fast.

In February 2001, American Greetings bought Egreetings for what they thought was a great deal at $28 million. This year American Greetings generated $1.8 billion in sales and a $50 million profit.

Guess what? Most of that money came from paper cards. To learn more about the financial transaction that took place, read what the tech site Re/code had to say about the matter.

Tomorrow, I will tell you about Blue Mountain Arts. They became my client after they got a check for $780 million for their young digital business.

Repeating Email Alerts Out Loud Can Cause Painful Reactions

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Philip Seymour Hoffman

So there I was shopping for one-of-a-kind, clip-on earrings in Pomegranate, an upscale, edgy boutique in La Jolla Village, CA, when I heard my iPhone chirp. That meant I had received an email alert. I usually don’t rush to check news flashes, especially when I am picking out accessories to wear.

Something made me do it this time. I couldn’t believe my eyes. The CNN alert said “Philip Seymour Hoffman Found Dead.” Then without thinking, I repeated what I had read out loud. “No!” yelled a very attractive, silver-haired woman in her late 60s who was just a few feet away from me. “That can’t be. I am friendly with his mother. I just spoke to her. I live right near her in Rochester.”

I felt so awful. My outburst had thrown this woman into a frenzy. I watched her drop the clothes she picked out to buy and reach inside her handbag for her cell. She quickly walked out of the store.

Everything seemed so surreal. I was the reason why someone else was in pain. I didn’t mean it but still felt like I did it on purpose because I wanted to share the horror of what I read.

I think a lot about email alerts because I get so many: CNN, AP, USA Today, Huffington Post, NY Times, WSJ, People, Twitter. I voluntarily sign up for all of them. When something happens in the world, they all go into action. The problem with email alerts is that they get flashed so fast you can barely read them. It is impossible to retrieve an alert because most of the time the site that sent it doesn’t even have it posted. This drives me crazy.

I looked outside of the store for the woman, but she was nowhere in sight. I walked back in to finish up the transaction I had started to purchase three pairs of earrings. There I had been joyfully buying jewelry when something tragic had just occurred. I started to feel very strange.

We just don’t know what is going to happen from one minute to the next. Scary, isn’t it?

Hope This Isn’t My Third Strike

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Something went wrong with my DigiDame email blasts for the last two nights. I am checking to see if I screwed up some setting. Anyway, I hope this works. Do let me know. And be sure to always check http://www.digidame.com if the email connection doesn’t work.

Until I am sure this works, here are some of my favorite digital signs.

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By the way, I miss my mother more and more each day. So much of what she told me has really come true. Rats!