Doctors give advice on dermatology via MMS

skin

Got a skin related condition and considering whether you should take a few hours off from work to go see your doctor? Well, from now on, all you have to do to get a first opinion from a doctor is to snap a photo with your cell phone and send it to iDoc24 via MMS to 72500. Experts in dermatology promise to get back to you with a reply within 24 hours with advice on for example the patient should seek self-treatment or go see a doctor.

iDoc24 is a new Swedish service which is a complement to the traditional health care system. The cost for the service is currently 10 kronor per MMS. The user can be completely anonymous which may be an additional advantage if your skin problems are located on a part of your body that you prefer to keep private.

Photo by natfly.

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Traditional media plan to invite readers even more

It might seem strange now, but it wasn’t very long ago that traditional media did not do much in order to reach out to the audience through journalist blogs and other means. RSS feeds is also a feature that most media outlets have not used for more than a few years. Back in 2005, this blog had more incoming links that the website of Göteborgs-Posten (159 vs 134 for www.gp.se), the largest daily in Sweden’s second town. TV4.se had the same amount of incoming links as my blog had, according to Technorati. In 2005, Sweden’s largest daily Dagens Industri didn’t even keep links to online articles for more than a few weeks or months. This is what I wrote in January 2005.

“Links to articles on its web site di.se, disappear soon after they have been published. A search on Google for a random word like “Tallinn” on di.se gives us only 11 hits, and the first article in the list (hit #5 in Google) is from April 2004, and it’s a dead link. This message is a common greating on di.se (“the page has changed address”).”

Today, the situation is entirely different. Any media worth its salt has a number of blogs and invite the audience to participate in the news process. Media link to comments on Twitter and some journalists even ask for news tips on Twitter. The list can be made much longer. Much of the commentary on blogs today revolve around news stories in traditional media, although there is also a significant portion of the online discussion that is entirely separate from the old media model. If we look at the number of incoming blog links today, this blog has 522 but TV4.se has 2,855 and www.gp.se has 5,381.

And more will come. There was an interesting article yesterday on E24.no about the future of traditional media. Gunn Enli is a media researcher at the University of Oslo. She has some good quotes about how media will invite the audience in the news process.

“There has been a media revolution that we can no longer ignore. We have become so accustomed to be invited to participate and to express ourselves that it is not possible to lock those channels again,” Enli says.

Espen Egil Hansen, the responsible editor at VG Nett agrees. He says:

“The control culture in locked rooms is gone. The times when you could be a journalist alone in your office and be brilliant is over. Either you communicate with the world around you or you die.”

Both NRK and VG will introduce more participatory features in the near future.

“We will take functionality from for example Facebook or Nettby and build it into the editorial products,” Hansen said about the plans for VG Nett the coming six months.

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Back on track with new web hotel

As regular readers would have noticed, I haven’t updated the blog for a while and that is mainly due to the fact that my web hotel Spray suddenly decided that they were closing down their hosting service. All domains and web pages that were hosted on Spray had to move elsewhere and that is part of what has kept me from blogging. Now everything seems to be up and running again except for my email account which I will fix as soon as possible. Hopefully activity will pick up here again now.

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ABBA downloads now available on new site

As I wrote on Monday, ABBA today launched an online music store on their site. But not only that, the entire site has been rebuilt and has a bunch of features that I suspect are new. It has an AddThis button for sharing on social sites and a section called Picture of the Week where fans can send their photos to be included on the site. Here I am missing information about the terms of the publishing of photos. Fans should know beforehand if their photos are published with a copyright note or not (not that that has stopped people from stealing photos online, but for formality’s sake).

ABBA of course has had a YouTube channel for a long time, so now both the king and the Dancing Queen are on YouTube.

And as noted in my previous post, there is a new online music store that you easily can embed on your blog or on a social networking profile page. Songs are sold for 0,99 USD a piece in a 320 kbps format. However, downloads are currently only available in Sweden. The rest of the world will have to turn to Itunes until the store is released internationally.

http://apps.dimest.com/main/store/widget/get.ihs

Overall the site has a very sleek design and nice feel to it.

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ABBA to launch online music store

There was an interesting article in Dagens Industri today (online, but subscription required) about ABBA, the Swedish music group. On Wednesday the band will launch an online music store on its website where it will sell ABBA songs directly to fans. One of the smart features of the music store is that fans will be able to embed it on their blogs or Facebook profiles, literarily creating tens of thousands of ABBA stores online.

With the store, created by the Swedish company Dimest, the band will be able to keep as much as 90 percent of the revenues from the sale. The songs will be sold as mp3 files in higher quality than Itunes and without copyright protection.

ABBA has more than 175,000 members in its online community and leveraging the fans is a smart strategy.

See also “Ace of Base relaunch with fans as fourth member“.

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The king of social media announces royal wedding on YouTube

No other news story in 2009 can be bigger than the announcement today that the Swedish crown princess Victoria is getting engaged to entrepreneur Daniel Westling. When Expressen broke the story this morning, media and blogs have been buzzing about the rumours until the news were confirmed at about 2 PM. It was announced that the king and the government approve of the engagement, as is required by the constitution. The wedding will take place in spring of 2010 and will probably be an event of such magnitude that it will have a positive impact on the sales of tabloids and gossip magazines during the coming year or so.

But the really interesting aspect from a communications point of view is that while the website of the Royal Court crashed under the pressure today, the announcement was also broadcasted via YouTube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7fMsvsZe_c

The British Royal House has had an official YouTube channel for more than a year, but I’m still surprised that an institution as old and conservative as the royal family is able to dive in to social media in a way that most commercial enterprises are not even near yet. I’m sure it wasn’t announced on YouTube first, but either way: very well done. So, the king is on YouTube, why aren’t you?

Follow blog posts about the engagement on for example Technorati (RSS) or Twitter search.

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