Archive for the ‘reality’ Category:
Social Flights; A Platform For Reality
Back in the railroad days, a platform referred to the surface upon which passengers stepped in order to enter or exit the train.
In 2012, the word “platform” often refers to one of the big four data stations on the Internet; Google, Amazon, Facebook, or Apple. On the backend, those platforms sort products and people into similar categories. On the front end, they deliver products to the consumer or the consumer to the product. Everything is done electronically, in most cases, even the product is electronic.
Of Flesh and Mortar
In real life, the Commercial Aviation Hub and Spoke System is a platform too. People and airplanes are sorted into categories, then they are matched to the size of the container. The difference is that very little is electronic – real living people and hundreds of thousands of pounds of aircraft still need to perform their little platform dance consuming vast infrastructure, ground space, time, and energy.
A Platform for Reality
Compared to the Big Four who collect data behind secure walls, analyze it with proprietary algorithms, then serve up the content that is most beneficial to the platform (not necessarily the user), Social Flights is revolutionary.
Social Flights collects four separate streams of data, converts the data to a single usable form, then shares the data back to the separate streams. For example; an airplane operator submits data regarding the inventory of their aircraft. The hospitality industry submits data relative to their inventory of support services, Travelers submit data regarding their likely destinations, and event organizers submit data regarding their event.
Music is a mixture of rhythm, sound frequency, and timbre
Social Flights captures all of these streams, organizes the data and feeds it back to the market in a more usable form. Aircraft operators know the optimum use of their aircraft resources. Hospitality knows how to best allocate their inventory. Event planners have greater exposure to their markets for attendees. Finally, Travelers know the exact door-to-door cost AND TIME to achieve their objectives.
Social Value is “manufactured” because it is in the best interest of each party that the other three are successful
Advertising extorts passion
Today, nearly all social organization is now funded – and influenced – by advertising. Social priorities are driven by Wall Street priorities while advertising powerplays tout some products often at the expense of others that would create otherwise social cohesion. People do not wake up in the morning aspiring to follow the Kardashians, they aspire to follow their friends and to pursue their natural interests, and talents. Advertising is anti-social.
The Social Flights platform is revolutionary
Social Flights, while currently emerging as a simplified air transportation system, is a real and valid social value manufacturing engine. The same system can also be used for any shared experience; cars, planes, roads, infrastructure, corporations, education, and even government with the New Value data platform that we are developing.
The problem can never be the solution.
Today, we do not have a financial problem as much as we have a value problem. The challenges that face the world today are far too great to be solved with an “Advertising” platform. Whatever happens next, it must start with a platform for Reality.
Ashton Kutcher Invests in Social Travel
Investment in travel applications continues. Social Flights continues to track the convergence of these technologies and demonstrate where we fit into the new travel paradigm. This article features Gidsy.com, the “activity-booker-meets-social-networking” site - claimed to be the AirBnB of travel. Notably they are location in Berlin (not the Valley), and their lead investor is none other than @AplusK.
Venture capitalist tend to invest in businesses that they understand and businesses that they can influence. Ashton Kutcher is well known for his influence in both old media and new media – but where is the connection between that and travel?…except that Ashton needs to travel to get to Berlin. Perhaps herein lies the answer.
From VentureVillage.
“What I love about Gidsy is that they are creating a movement and a strong, credible community of likeminded people,” said supporter Felix Petersen in an interview with VentureVillage. “It’s important that like-minded businesses and individuals in Berlin cross-invest and help each other out.”
On the other hand (from the same article)
Kutcher has invested in over 40 tech companies to date, some of which remain unnamed out of fear that his own publicity would overshadow the product itself.
How important is access to information?
Access to locations and access to information about location is critical to both the success of the people who live there as well as the people who go there. In this light, products like Gidsy take on new meaning and impact for communities and travelers.
Gidsy.com allows users to offer paid-for activities and courses to other members of the community, as well as full social networking integration. Initially launched for the Berlin area, Gidsy now covers Amsterdam, New York and San Francisco, with London to follow soon. Gidsy’s business model (charging 10% of each transaction) differs from similar US services like SideTour in NY (which charges a higher 20%) and Vayable (available in six cities, charging a 15% fee). How they will hold up against American competition is yet to be seen.
The Virtuous Circle
Basically, Gidsy allows people to book activities provided by real people. After listening to a recent program of TrendPOV by Dr. Amy Vanderbilt and her guest Reinhold Behringer about Augmented Reality, Gidsy.com seems to create the underlying dataset to this next level of travel technology. The ability to point your smartphone down a street and see what activities are happening is only an iPhone revision away. Proximity is a play on “location” and inherently invokes transportation. So it is easy to see that many applications and technologies are converging.
Back to Ashton Kutcher and travel
Airlines and airplanes are increasingly confined to major hub airports. Because everything is scheduled and booked far in advance, there is relatively little richness to the data that would drive an augmented reality experience in an airport. However, where schedules are fluid, and activities are localized, and people are being creative, new markets will inevitably emerge.
Not Trivial:
Social Flights provides the dataset and certification to publish flights out of smaller local airports with the flexibility of flying non-stop to other small airports. Combined applications such as Gidsy, augmented reality, and Social Flights can open up a new world of travel opportunities. Maybe the “Hollywood Augmented Reality” is not so far off the mark after all.


