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Animated Ads in a Subway Near You

prostoalex writes "A company called Sub Media claims a successful launch of motion-picture ads in New York subway. The ad agency, created by a PhD in Astrophysics, prints ads on Kodak transparencies, so that when the train speeds up, the resulting images create a full-blown motion picture. The first ever ad of this was run for Target in NY, and there is another one planned for Discovery Channel."

229 of 304 comments (clear)

  1. Danger! Danger! by swordboy · · Score: 4, Funny

    As long as they aren't pop up ads...

    --

    Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    1. Re:Danger! Danger! by fredopalus · · Score: 1

      Word to that.

      --
      Jonahweb.com has stuff.
    2. Re:Danger! Danger! by jdgreen7 · · Score: 1

      As long as they aren't pop up ads...

      If they do start using popup ads, all you need to do is hack into the New York subway system and install Mozilla.

      ;)

    3. Re:Danger! Danger! by fredopalus · · Score: 1

      Or lynx.

      --
      Jonahweb.com has stuff.
    4. Re:Danger! Danger! by martyn+s · · Score: 3, Informative

      The thing you have to keep in mind is you can't just plaster a bunch of frames on the subway walls to make it look animated. They have to use these special lenses that makes each frame always in the same spot relative to you. So the shape of these lenses do the following. You're looking at a frame and it's directly in front of you. Then you move over an inch, and it's still directly in front of you. And then another inch, and again, it's still directly in front of you. Until, the last inch, suddenly the next frame appears exactly where the last frame was: directly in front of you. So it's this continuous thing where there is always a frame *directly* in front of you. If you didn't have those lenses it wouldn't work.

    5. Re:Danger! Danger! by jovlinger · · Score: 2

      In switzerland, they just plaster up the frames on the wall at equal spacing, and then flash a stroboscope at the proper frequency. Instead of moving the film over the projector, the projector moves over the film...

    6. Re:Danger! Danger! by cespi · · Score: 1

      You are partly correct. But the Sub-Media system does NOT rely on lenses. They use a different, patented technique.

    7. Re:Danger! Danger! by martyn+s · · Score: 1

      From the video (I think I saw it on forbes.com) it seemed like they were using those lenses. How do they do it then, if not with the lenses?

  2. Flipbook by eggsovereasy · · Score: 1

    Well, at least its kinda cool

    1. Re:Flipbook by websaber · · Score: 1

      You obviously Don't live in NY. How is anybody suppose to see the ads? Yes we eliminated all crime and the subways have no more graffiti, But the subway windows are the dirtiest you have ever seen. The only graffiti they can't get rid of is people scratching messages on the windows. Who knows, maybe they'll use some of the ad revenue to clean the windows.

      --
      "A good friend will bail you out of jail. A true friend will be sitting next to you saying, 'damn....that was fun!'"
  3. Wow... by gibbdog · · Score: 1, Funny

    Will they charge for the in-transit movies?

    1. Re:Wow... by bbartee · · Score: 1

      Shhhh! Don't give them any ideas.
      -Bill

    2. Re:Wow... by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      With all the added ad revenue, I wonder if the MTA will keep on increasing the fair prices.

  4. Already done in Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    The train which takes you from Narita (the Tokyo airport) into Tokyo has displays like this. Yahoo used to have an ad that would display for a few minutes. It's pretty cool.

    1. Re:Already done in Japan by Captain+Pooh · · Score: 1

      So it is true, the Japanese are way ahead of us. Is there any truth to the talking toilet in Japan as seen on the Simpsons? "I am please to accept your waist"

    2. Re:Already done in Japan by rworne · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been on that subway, it (the implementation) is cool. they have red LEDs spread along the wall next to the tracks and the ads "chase" alongside the train as it zips down the track so it floats outside the window. Quite surreal to watch.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    3. Re:Already done in Japan by PhantomHarlock · · Score: 1

      Ah so I wasn't on crack when I was riding that train! A co-worker independently came up with this idea and I told him that I was pretty sure I saw that in action when I was leaving Narita on the train for Tokyo.

    4. Re:Already done in Japan by quimby · · Score: 1

      They are in almost any subway in Japan. Even in relatively small cities of about a million, you can see the ads on virtually every line. The LEDs give a relatively high initial cost, but a low operating cost. Of course, the LED display can be changed to accomodate different ad campaigns. The train from Aomori to Hokkaido has very many long displays... as you can imagine from that loooooong tunnel. I would say that the technology has been used AT LEAST for the last 3 years in Japan, and 5 years would not surprise me.

      --
      ...contending in vain.
    5. Re:Already done in Japan by skyhawker · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I remember seeing ads like this in the Kyoto subway system in 1984.

      --

      The best diplomat I know is a fully activated phaser bank.
      -- Scotty.
    6. Re:Already done in Japan by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 1

      I saw these on the Narita train when I went to Japan in August of 1996, so it's been there for at least 6 years.

      --
      Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
    7. Re:Already done in Japan by slipszi · · Score: 1

      It was done in Budapest's Subway as well (between Népstadion and Keleti Pályaudvar, for anyone who cares) :)

    8. Re:Already done in Japan by cespi · · Score: 1

      Be clear, Sub-Media isn't claiming to be the first. They just have a new, better technique.

      And the PhD isn't forged, but nice flamebait.

    9. Re:Already done in Japan by saskboy · · Score: 1

      When I was in Montreal [or Toronto, I don't remember] I too thought of animating an ad outside the windows, on the walls. I bet anyone does, who spends too longs staring at the wall sized ads on the platform. What about all that empty space in the "gap"? Why don't they paint something there too?

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  5. yet another reason to use a car by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 1, Troll

    I personally hate ads. We are bombarded with them on tv, on the internet, and in the real world. With ads in subways, this has gone too far... I suppose I will have to drive my suv to the local market now instead of taking the subway.

    --
    GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
    1. Re:yet another reason to use a car by MisterBlister · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Have you been in a subway for oh, I dunno, the past 30 years? There are already ads plastered all over them, in stations and on trains.

    2. Re:yet another reason to use a car by Lysol · · Score: 1

      Well you obviously haven't been on a 'Bud' or 'Sci-Fi Channel' in the NYC subway. Entire cars decked out for one or more products.
      The one that gets me the most are the Bud ads. There's this one nice lookin chick, holdin a Bud, kinda starting at the camera like "you just got lucky tonight..." I'm sure that happens all the time in Oklahoma or South Dakota...

    3. Re:yet another reason to use a car by Neil+Watson · · Score: 2

      I hate ads to but, if this gives transit authorities more revenue to expand and enhance service, I'm all for it.

    4. Re:yet another reason to use a car by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      You do realize that the advertising subsidizes the cost of the subway, right?

      Personally I would rather have advertising than higher subway rates.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    5. Re:yet another reason to use a car by swngnmonk · · Score: 1

      Yea right. Any city with a subway has billboards everywhere, along with enough people & traffic to make driving a car a pain in the ass.

      From the perspective of a NYer - now that the city has people again, the MTA can afford to be selective about advertising. I miss the late 1980s, when the MTA would take just about anything for an ad. There used to be a proctologist who'd advertise in the system with a sign reading, in 216-point type, "ANAL WARTS?". Those didn't last long. All the schoolkids (myself included) *had* to steal one. :)

      Face it. When you take the subway 30 minutes each way, twice a day, you will run out of things to read. The advertisements do get read.

      And I still miss "ANAL WARTS?"

      --

      'ARRGH! Pirate Designers of the Internet, we be!'

    6. Re:yet another reason to use a car by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      While I've only ridden BART to work for about two months now, I've found that having a book handy is a far better way to spend time than staring off into space.

      I just wish there were some pager or something you could wear which would vibrate when you got to your stop; I'm one of those people who can get so lost in a book that I'll occassionally miss my stop.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    7. Re:yet another reason to use a car by Skyshadow · · Score: 4, Funny
      Yea right. Any city with a subway has billboards everywhere, along with enough people & traffic to make driving a car a pain in the ass.

      That's why I close my eyes when I drive. Thank God for my Excursion and the custom rambar on the front.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    8. Re:yet another reason to use a car by eric6 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about S Dakota, but Oklahoma has plenty of chicks. "north to get rich, south to get married."

      --

      --
      fight global cooling

    9. Re:yet another reason to use a car by tom1974 · · Score: 1

      So you're suggesting we dump the subways and get in our cars, because of the ads., and for that you get modded insightful???

      Is that really a reason to clog the roads? contribute more to air and noise pollution?

      Don't think so.

      Think hard, before posting.

  6. Related Globe article by Greenrider · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here's a fairly recent article about this from the Boston Globe

    (Google cache link, since the original story is now archived)

  7. In the not so distant implant future... by Lysol · · Score: 1

    If I only had a way to choose 'Block Images from this Server' when riding the train..

    1. Re:In the not so distant implant future... by gmack · · Score: 2

      Just close your eyes between stops.

  8. Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by xjerky · · Score: 5, Informative

    ....which replaced the Target ad. On the PATH train from New Jersey running between 14th and 23rd Street Stations in Manhattan, left side of tunnel.

    --
    A sentence you'll never see on an Internet discussion board: "You know what? You're right."
    1. Re:Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by wyopittsa · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I recently saw the Discovery Channel ad on the PATH train too. The ad that was showing was for The Discovery Channel's Shark week, so it featured a shark swimming around. The first time I caught it out of the corner of my eye, it sort of startled me. I knew the train was under the river at that point, and seeing a shark made me think something might be very wrong with the subway!

    2. Re:Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


      What river runs across Manhattan between 14th and 23rd streets?

    3. Re:Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by saperl · · Score: 1

      Save that Discovery Channel crap for cities that care. This is New York. We want a full length animation of Dr. Z's fruit acid peel.

    4. Re:Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by Animats · · Score: 2

      Is the PATH loop under the WTC site back up already? That's good.

    5. Re:Discovery Channel ad is already up..... by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      The ad that was showing was for The Discovery Channel's Shark week

      Isn't it Shark week EVERY week on Discovery???

      I'd have been more worried if the ad HADN'T been for shark week. Then something would be seriously wrong.

  9. Phew... by bacontaco · · Score: 4, Funny

    I thought for a second they were talking about the restaurant Subway... And to think my 200-pound weigh loss diet was in jeopardy! I'd hate to see animated ads with the big old flabby Jarrod and the new, skinnier one...

    1. Re:Phew... by srvivn21 · · Score: 2

      Wouldn't that make your diet more successful? I know that seeing full motion ads of "old flabby Jarrod" would make me lose my appetite. Yeesh.

  10. And how does this sell a product? by joshua404 · · Score: 1

    How does this sell a product more effectively than any other medium? Sounds more like a cutesy way for an ad agency to bill out more hours and pat itself on the back while marveling at its own creativity.

    1. Re:And how does this sell a product? by MisterBlister · · Score: 4, Insightful
      For a while I'm sure it will be a hit because of the novelty. People will see these for the first time and the ad will really register with them because they've never seen anything like it.

      Once every subway tunnel in the world has these though, people will just mentally filter the ads out like they do with 95% of other advertising.

    2. Re:And how does this sell a product? by Embrionic · · Score: 1

      Why does McDonalds still advertise, or how about Coca-Cola? While consciously you might be "filtering" out these images, your subconscious is still on record.

  11. OB Book reference. by Cyberdeck · · Score: 1

    IIRC this technology was first proposed in the book _Time_Eenough_for_Love_ by Fred Saberhagen. Does anyone remember when that came out?

    -C

    1. Re:OB Book reference. by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      There are probably 100 others posting this right now- but hey-

      by Robert Heinlein not Saberhagen- or it is a different title if you'v got the author right.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  12. Like the rest of the country has subways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The T? The Metro? Don't make me laugh.

    In fact, the ad wasn't even on the NYC subway system -- it was on the PATH (Port Authority Trans-Hudson) trains, which is run by the Port Authority of New York and NJ. The subway is run by the MTA.

    1. Re:Like the rest of the country has subways? by xbrownx · · Score: 1

      I was about to point out the same thing - the ads are on the PATH trains between Manhattan and parts of NJ, not the city subway.

  13. subway ads... by milkid7 · · Score: 1

    OMG.... Dare we say it? Subway flip-book p0rn?

    1. Re:subway ads... by milkid7 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Watch the name calling ...

    2. Re:subway ads... by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Animated graffiti for whoever wants to put the effort into it. :-)

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  14. video clip: blatant karma whoring by bcrawford · · Score: 1

    spiffy real media demo from forbes at:
    http://www.forbes.com/2002/08/15/0815subway.h tml

  15. Why not just have TV's by TimeTrip · · Score: 1

    This seesm to me to be a rather extravagant way to achieve a simple goal. Why not just install TVs / LCDs in the cars that show ads? Of course the transportation authority would have to approve it (and lock it down.. i'd imagine and LCD panel in a subway could be very tempting...). But hey... they have animated ads in movie theaters, which are basically big LCD panels... as far as i can tell..

    Of course you'd have to put one in every car or so.. which would be alot more expensive than mounting it once in a tunnel. I'd hope that people look out the right window, because if they don't they might watch the animation going backwards.... unless its designed so that it works in both directions ;)

    --

    You crazy man? You piss off supahfly!
    1. Re:Why not just have TV's by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      I have seen ads on this, the add follow you, from youre prepective, its really cool stuff. If it was a tv and you tried to look back (ie fix a point on the wall) it would become distorded due to both a doppler and perspective.

      Ill try to find if TLC is showing it again and post if I can find it, its a great effect.

      --
    2. Re:Why not just have TV's by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      I think you hit the nail on the head -- it'd be pretty easy to vandalize any sort of screen that anyone might install (the NY subways are cleaner than they used to be, but that's not saying a whole lot).

      This, on the other hand, would be much more challenging to put out of action. Whether or not that's a good thing depends on how you feel about omnipresent advertising.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    3. Re:Why not just have TV's by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

      It's new and gimmicky, therefore will get attention for a little while. Then it'll go extinct like Burma Shave ads.

      The problem with showing commercials on LCD's is that people'll tune them out.

      I said it before and I'll say it again: How much do they think my wimpy organic mind can retain?

    4. Re:Why not just have TV's by DEBEDb · · Score: 1
      The problem with showing commercials on LCD's is that people'll tune them out.


      I read that as "commercials on LSD" the
      first time... Now that's a concept...

      --

      Considered harmful.
  16. problem by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 4, Funny

    This will be very confusing for the New York subway graffiti culture.

    1. Re:problem by Mad+Marlin · · Score: 2

      Actually, it might provide them with a totally new medium. Since the ads are merely multiple pictures on the tunnel wall, if they could get down into the subway tunnel, they could "enhance" the whole ad with nothing but good old-fashioned krylon. Imagine how amusing it would be to see full-motion graffiti!

    2. Re:problem by GoRK · · Score: 4, Funny

      Coming soon to a subway near you, ANIMATED GRAFFITI!

      Apparently, the hoodlums spray paint a bunch of individual pictures right next to each other so that passengers on a train speeding by are greeted with a pleasant short film about pimping and whoring. The effect has been likened to a giant "flip book."

      ~GoRK

    3. Re:problem by cespi · · Score: 1

      The ads aren't individual frames of a movie. If you stand still, and look at one of the images, it looks somewhat like a stereogram. No discernible image unless moving.

    4. Re:problem by rakslice · · Score: 2

      Animations by subway tunnel spray-painting hoodlums? Of what, former subway tunnel spray-painting hoodlum gore bits moving around? =)

  17. This reminds of a rejected comic by OmniVector · · Score: 1

    In the comic a little child is saying
    "I'm a consumer whore!"

    with a man behind him replying
    "And how!"

    Seriously though, we're americans. buy buy buy! consumerism! built in obselecense! liscensing! money money.. blablacorporateamericanyadayda

    --
    - tristan
  18. Ads by F250SuperDuty · · Score: 1

    They've got 'em in Philly already--either on the Broad Street subway line, or the PATCO PA/NJ speed line. The one I saw was for Dasani water, and was pretty cool. It reminded me of the toys that would come in Cracker-Jack boxes where at one angle you'd have one picture, at another, another picture.

    -Kris

  19. Boring Commute? by Allaria · · Score: 1

    No need to stare at ads, just count the piercings on the punk guy sitting across from you. Or perhaps you'd rather listen to the annoying girls talk about stupid stuff and roll their eyes at the celing (and the punk guy sitting across from you).

    Better yet, fishbowl the car and watch the people stare at the moving ads. And miss their stops. And laugh cuz it looks like the guy is picking his nose if you close your eyes halfway through the animation...

    Gotta love new forms of entertainment. Lets just hope they don't start integrating sound into them.

    --
    If a and b in c, and a can create b, and a can create a, and b can create b, and b cannot create a, then a created c.
    1. Re:Boring Commute? by Matimus · · Score: 1

      dude, I dont think that anybody will miss their stop because they are watching an ad. I beleive that the train must be moving in order for the ad to be seen. Just an observation

      --
      GENERATION 25: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social exper
  20. Sad, really... by loucura! · · Score: 1

    Wasting a perfectly good Phd in Astrophysics on marketing.It's an interesting idea, but seriously, people -don't- like advertising!

    It's why televisions have a mute button, why radios have a mute button, why anti-advertising software is so prevalent...

    Interesting concept, to be sure, but what makes a Scientist turn -that- bad? He should be designing city-busting robots, freakish monsters, hell he's an astrophysicist, he should be desiging black holes...

    Damned marketing.

    --
    Black and grey are both shades of white.
    1. Re:Sad, really... by loucura! · · Score: 1

      It's a cool technology, granted, but he's using it for evil(tm)...

      --
      Black and grey are both shades of white.
    2. Re:Sad, really... by cespi · · Score: 1

      It doesn't operate like a flip book. There are no individual frames of the image. The train must be moving for any type of image to be discernible. When sitting still, it looks like visual gibberish, somewhat like a stereogram.

  21. ObSimon&Garfunkle by Loligo · · Score: 4, Funny


    The article headline didn't go as far with it as they could have.

    "And the words of the PROFITS are written on the subway walls..."

    -l

    1. Re:ObSimon&Garfunkle by Loligo · · Score: 1


      Simon & Garfunkle did it first in "Sounds of Silence".

      -l

    2. Re:ObSimon&Garfunkle by DaytonCIM · · Score: 1

      Neil Peart paid homage to S & G with his lyric in "Spirit of the Radio".

    3. Re:ObSimon&Garfunkle by LordNimon · · Score: 1

      FYI, you're quoting Rush, not Simon and Garfunkle. S&G wrote the version that says "words of the prophets", but Rush's version says "words of the profits".

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    4. Re:ObSimon&Garfunkle by Loligo · · Score: 1

      >S&G wrote the version that says "words of the
      >prophets"

      Heh, I was waiting for this.

      Rush's lyrics in Spirit of Radio were
      "For the words of the profits are written on the studio walls"

      Simon's lyrics in Sounds of Silence were
      "And the sign said: the words of the prophets are written on the subway walls"

      Now, the joke here (and I'll go slow so I don't lose you) is that this is ADVERTISING, thus PROFIT based.

      But it's on SUBWAY walls.

      So. There ya go.

      -l

    5. Re:ObSimon&Garfunkle by Keith+Russell · · Score: 2
      Guess I'm clueless - but S & G ? I thought that line was Rush?

      Originally, it was Simon & Garfunkle:

      For the words of the prophets are written on the subway walls
      And tenement halls
      And echo with the sound of silence

      Rush cribbed the line for "Spirit of Radio":

      For the words of the profits are written on the studio walls
      And concert halls*
      And echo with the sound of salesmen

      *: At which point, they shine the lights on the audience, which promptly goes wild. Guess where I was last Tuesday? :-)

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    6. Re: ObSimon&Garfunkle by Antity · · Score: 1

      Off-topic, I know, but...

      One of the most prominent TV channels here in Germany just switched to a new jingle some months ago.

      It says: "Powered by emotion".

      Some people say that their marketing department picked "Powered by commercials" first, but this was just too real for the usual consumer. :-)

      --
      42. Easy. What is 32 + 8 + 2?
  22. question... by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    ... have you broke the news to them?

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  23. Who looks out the window? by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it just me or is this a stupid idea? Almost no one who rides the subway is actively looking out the windows at the subway walls. Hell, many of the subway seats actually face away from the walls, towards the inside of the car. That picture at the top of the ABCNews.com article is priceless: all those images are flickering by behind the commuters! Yeah, they can look out the opposite window, but what incentive is there for people to do that? It's not like TV where there's something interesting to watch and then a commerical pop up. There's nothing interesting on the subway walls so who's going to be looking there? Everyone either zones out or brings something to read on the subway.

    Advertisers must be getting desperate...

    GMD

    1. Re:Who looks out the window? by SirWhoopass · · Score: 5, Interesting
      True, not all the seats face the ads... however... a billboard only faces one direction of the highway. Ad costs are based (generally) on how many viewers will see the ad. An ad during the Super Bowl costs a lot. An ad in a small town newspaper costs a lot less. The fact that not every single person on the subway sees the ad isn't a big issue.

      As much as I hate the ads plastered everywhere these days, I think this isn't a half-bad idea. A lot of the people riding the subway have nothing better to do. As you note, they often "zone out". Those people will probably view the ad, especially if it's interesting (think of the possibilities of a long-running story type campaign). Here's a situation where a lot of people have nothing better to do-- as opposed to pop up ads where I'm trying to do something else but the ads interrupt me.

    2. Re:Who looks out the window? by PCM2 · · Score: 2
      Is it just me or is this a stupid idea? Almost no one who rides the subway is actively looking out the windows at the subway walls ... It's not like TV where there's something interesting to watch and then a commerical pop up. There's nothing interesting on the subway walls so who's going to be looking there?
      Dummy ... the idea is that, after all this publicity, people will be looking out the subway window to see the animated ads!
      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    3. Re:Who looks out the window? by rhizome · · Score: 2

      Here's a situation where a lot of people have nothing better to do-- as opposed to pop up ads where I'm trying to do something else but the ads interrupt me.

      So there's this new law of the universe that says that looking at advertising is better than doing nothing. Frankly I'm just fine standing somewhere without being sold to, and I don't think that the default use of public space (how many subways are privately funded?) is best dedicated to commerce. Call me a communist, but I don't think that people on the subway "have nothing better to do".

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    4. Re:Who looks out the window? by sporty · · Score: 2

      What incentive is there? Not to stare at other people. People on subwas tend to stare off into nowhere at times. Now we have someplace to look if we aren't reading or something else.

      Ads in books, now THAT'd be annoying.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    5. Re:Who looks out the window? by SirWhoopass · · Score: 2
      I've don't ride a subway, but I do ride a bus to work. Many times I don't have anything to do, and if some clever ad was playing on walls of the bus I'd watch it. If the revenue from the ads meant that bus service was improved I'd be in favor of the ads.

      If you have something better to do, or want to ignore the ads, you can certainly do that. My point was that I prefer ads in this environment-- where I can choose to ignore them. It's like ads in a magazine. I can skip to the next page, or I can read it if it catches my attention.

    6. Re:Who looks out the window? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


      I always gaze out the window on the subway. It's better than re-reading the ads on the inside of the subway car a dozen times, or getting in a fight with some guy because you were facing his general direction and he thinks you were staring at him...

      In particular, when I take the PATH uptown I make a point of turning towards the ad so I can see the zoetropic activity. Is it just an ad? Yes. Is it of worse quality than the average 15-second TV commercial? Yes.

      Is it a novel, attention-getting gimmick? Sure is

    7. Re:Who looks out the window? by tuxedo-steve · · Score: 2

      Those people will probably view the ad, especially if it's interesting (think of the possibilities of a long-running story type campaign).

      Oh, come on. You and I know very well that advertisers aren't going to do anything nearly so cool with this as those `possibilities' of which you speak. Do a long-running storyline? And risk alienating that large chunk of the population with the memory of your typical goldfish? I think not. It's going to be lowest common denominator, as per always.

      And yes, I am a whiny bitch. Thank you for noticing.

      --
      - SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
  24. had em here for awhile.... by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

    Phila/South Jersey has had this for about a year now. PATCO, the subway between Philly and Lindenwold, NJ started putting these in their underground tunnels in both Philly and Camden. I havent seen one, as I typically drive, but there was a news article about it on tv that described it.

    --
    The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  25. they should do the exterior of the train as well by AssFace · · Score: 2

    that way the people standing waiting on the train can see it as it pulls in, and as it pulls out (if the train is too croweded for the to get on).

    okay, okay, not as cool.

    --

    There are some odd things afoot now, in the Villa Straylight.
  26. Not that stunning... by freerangegeek · · Score: 1

    The ads they're discussing here are very short. They'd be useful for 'brand recognition'. That's all 20-30 seconds of ads, at an 'uneven' frame rate, with no sound, will give you.

    Those of you picturing the Guiness ad from Minority Report are going to be very disappointed. On the upside, at least they're not scanning your retina!

  27. coming soon to a gangland subway line near you... by Xzisted · · Score: 4, Funny

    some hood is gonna figure out how to tag these things with porn images and give full length porn movies to subway riders.

    "Yeah Joe....we just arrested another bum for pleasuring himself on the subway. We really need to get the public works dept. down there to clean the spray paint off those ads."

    --

    Honesty may be the best policy, but apparently by elimination, dishonesty is the second best policy.
  28. Re:(Title error?) OB Book reference. by Cyberdeck · · Score: 1

    I'm sure of the author. Title error then?

  29. subway ads by Triv · · Score: 2

    ads in subways are a sweetspot in the ad industry - think about it, you've got people captivated for minutes at a time with nothing to look at (books, mags, music aside)except the ads on the walls. The industry took this to a new level a few years ago by selling ad space by the half car (which makes sense - if you're sitting you can't see what's behind you) so you'll get an entire car-length of nike, microsoft or dewars. This is just an explosion of that.

    Keep in mind also, that this was demoed on the PATH line between New York and New Jersey which, until recently, was relatively ad-free. It changed a year or so ago with the installation of closed-circuit TV monitors that show powerpoint-style ads and subway information (next train in x mintues, etc.) The article says that the PATH lost 50 million last year despite raising fares by 50%. They're desperate for cash.

    Personally, i'll deal with the ads if I still get to get to jersey for a buck and change. It's a helluva lot cheaper than the commuter busses, that's for sure.

    Triv

    1. Re:subway ads by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


      PATH has relied on advertising for as long as I can remember. Stationary ads have been in stations and in cars -- it's only the PATHVISION closed-circuit TV system (actually it's running on a Windows system -- I've seen error dialog boxes pop up on the screens on several occasions) that's relatively new (~3 years?)

      The main reason PATH lost so much money last year was due to the loss of their station at World Trade Center -- not only did they not get the ad revenue from pasting Bloomberg TV ads on every flat surface, but also because the thousands of people who were accustomed to taking the PATH train from New Jersey to Lower Manhattan had to find an alternate route.

      Some continued taking the PATH across the river, getting off in the Village or Midtown and taking MTA subways downtown. Others started taking ferries across the river. Many chose to stay on NJ Transit's commuter trains all the way to Penn Station NYC, rather than switching to the PATH at Newark

    2. Re:subway ads by Triv · · Score: 2

      The key word in my original post was 'relatively.' Yes, PATH has lots of advertizing, but compared to a similar train on the NYC subway their ads are less prominant and, IMO, nowhere near as slick. That was all I meant. :)

      Triv

  30. Is this new tech? by gricholson75 · · Score: 1

    Is this really new? A Marta station here in Atlanta has had an ad like this for Dasani water since Jan. 2001, I though it was cool the first 3 times I saw it, now it's just annoying.
    -G.

    1. Re:Is this new tech? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      "First ever"?? We've had them in Hong Kong for several months. Also large-screen video ads on the walls opposite the platforms.

  31. So how we gonna block these ads? by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

    Start selling helmets with blast shields? Heh I wonder what Valenti would say to that? "People who impair their vision to avoid ads are stealing."

    1. Re:So how we gonna block these ads? by mrseigen · · Score: 1

      Low-tech is often better. I vote for a roll of duct tape and possibly cardboard (you could even write your OWN ad on it with a sharpie marker).

    2. Re:So how we gonna block these ads? by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2
      why? no really, why?
      oh that's right, commerce is the downfall of society...

      you ad vigilantes make me sick, i'm sure you scavenged for/built yourself every product you own right?


      Why the FUCK can't I make a joke without some dumbshit taking it seriously? It wouldn't be so bad if they wouldn't take it to such extremes. "You think the RIAA's charging too much for CDs? That must mean you're unwilling to pay for anything! You're the reason that society is bad!!"
  32. On the Path Train... by FosterSJC · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have seen this ad on the path train from Jersey city to, oh I don't know, 33rd st? Anyway, I was just sitting there and all of a sudden I look up, and see this full motion Target advertisement through the window above the guy across from me's head. It was pretty surreal the first time. Now me and my friends know exactly when to look up. It is worth a gander. Seems hard to install, in an in-use subway. And most people don't look out the windows in the tunnels. But the existence of the ad has spread by word of mouth. Seems like good money for the MTA, and the ads are relatively unobtrusive compared to the ones I get 5 minutes into surfing the web. Anyway...

    1. Re:On the Path Train... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1


      Nitpick... the PATH trains are run by the New York/New Jersey Port Authority, not by New York's Metropolitan Transit Authority.

  33. just wait... by sugrshack · · Score: 1

    until vandals get ahold of this... i'm sure there's some creative stuff that can be done with enough paint and patience...

    --
    I can't believe it's not lard!
  34. Sample image by Matey-O · · Score: 3, Funny

    I wanted to show you how it worked by creating an image that would animate as you used the down arrow to scroll down this discussion page but the crapfilter ate it.

    --
    "Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
  35. I would hate to be Target's 'Guest' by barnaclebarnes · · Score: 2

    Welcome to my place...Now sit down and watch this mindless f$%ing ad for the next 3 weeks on your morning commute....

    --
    [Please type your sig here.]
  36. So far, they are ok by calbanese · · Score: 1

    These are currently running between 14th and 23rd on the PATH line into Manhattan. Its not too bad. The Target one was ok because no one had ever seen them before. The Discovery Cahannel one is pretty cool. A shark swims outside the cars and seems to be about half the size of the car. Its no worse than staring at a black wall.

    But I can see a lot of boring ads in the future getting this technology. I can't wait until the RIAA buys ad space and tells me how I shouldn't down load MP3s on my walk to work.

  37. Already seen? by evalhalla · · Score: 1

    Don't know whether they've used the same system, but they've already placed something like that in the Milan Subway.

    In Milan it seemed to work: they placed the ads in such a place that most students from scientific and engineering faculties saw it, and I believe they succeeded in having people watching it.

    It was quite fun to see lots of geeks and future engineers wondering over the system they used to achieve the effect (backlighted images, frontlighted images, somebody proposed even projected images, either from the ceiling or the train...)

    Anyway, I believe that after a few months nobody pays them much attention, unless there is a new ad, probably also because the quality decreased with time.

    I don't know what could happen in a "normal" environment, though

  38. HAHAHAHA..... CAR IS NO ESCAPE... by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 1
    Take a car... so you can get away from adds.

    Billboards?

    Radio?

    Store logo's as you drive around?

    There is NO escape. There is NO spoon. Just give your money to Nike, Sony, and Microsoft! Arg!

    I do share your frustration.

  39. I saw this! by SkyLeach · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I saw this in NY when I went to H2K2. I didn't know it was newsworthy though :).

    I told my wife about it 'cause I think it spooked everybody on the train. Something about the way the adds "move" gives you really bad vertigo. You expect everything outside the Path to be dark and moving by at a good pace, instead you look out the window and see gay men and women dancing around red and white bullseyes wearing tight white bellbottoms and goofy smiles. It's like riding a train into the twilight zone.

    But, I suppose it will sell a lot of addspace.

    --
    My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so :-p
  40. I cant wait to see what the taggers by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 2

    will do with this, I personally would love to see some animated train graffiti...

  41. Leet by grub · · Score: 2



    I predict the first

    " MAKE "
    (blink)
    " MONEY "
    (blink)
    " FAST "

    ad will appear by the end of the year.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  42. Ads or hallucinations? by dachshund · · Score: 1
    Yes, these are pretty amazing. I was taking the PATH from Hoboken to Manhattan last night, and my friend was telling me about seeing this "spooky ad on the subway walls", and not being sure if it was it was just in his imagination. Sure enough, just before we reached Christopher Street, this almost-holographic moving image appears outside on the wall.

    It's great to know how they did it-- and now my friend doesn't have to worry about his mental health (though others would disagree :)

  43. Pretty soon... by Zen+Mastuh · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...it will be illegal to view an ad and not buy the advertised product. After all, you are stealing the money the company spent to bring you the ad.

    --
    "What is the sound of one belly slapping?"
  44. This will be obsolete in five years. by DaveOf9thKey · · Score: 1
    When Cambridge Display Technologies puts the finishing touches on its light emitting polymer display monitors, every subway passenger in America will be subjected to the Subway TV Network, powered by CNN.

    Insert wisecrack about Minority Report here.

    --

    Visit me on the web at Permanent4.com.
  45. Why post this in /.? by GermanG · · Score: 1

    I saw that last year...

    Here in Buenos Aires!!

  46. figures by SlugLord · · Score: 1

    I guess you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out a new way to put ads where people will notice them. ... oh wait, I guess he is a rocket scientist... never mind then.

  47. Sad, sad, sad. by ebbomega · · Score: 2

    Ads have been on public transit for years. God knows how many time's I've been inundated with the annoying "Kick the Nick" guy that the BC Health Board has for anti-smoking commercials (Christ, that ad almost makes me want to start smoking).

    This is just a revamp of an old advertising system. I personally think it's cool. At least it's not like the intrusive annoying "planted advertisers" that Sony is putting around city streets with their cameras posing as tourists.

    Driving a car won't help that.

    Personally, I enjoy a good book on transit, so I never really pay attention to transit ads anymore anyways. I can't do that if I'm driving a car...

    --
    Karma: Non-Heinous
  48. not Christopher Street, that is... by dachshund · · Score: 1

    On re-reading the article, I realize that it must have been the one between 14th and 23rd, not Christopher Street. Just a couple of stops further.

  49. Had it in Milan for a year now... by orzetto · · Score: 1

    From Loreto, where they hung the ol'pig, to Piola, where the Politecnico is.
    Was pretty cool, it showed a old guy in a jogging suit running as fast as the train, staring at the people inside it, and then running past with an expressionless face.
    It was there when I got back from Norway, July 2001.
    Dunno whether it is still there, as I moved to the other side of Italy.

    --
    Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
  50. I prefer the gizmos at DIA by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 2

    In the trains (trams, really) that connect Denver International Airport terminal to the concourses, there's kinetic art on the walls as well as "flipbook" style animated sculpture.
    I suppose it's only a matter of time until United books ad space there, but it hasn't happened yet.

  51. Re:Dupe! by superkri · · Score: 1

    Say what?

  52. The answer by ehiris · · Score: 2

    This could finally provide an answer to the "Where do you want to go today?" commercials.

    Station 2

  53. Eventually... by jcronen · · Score: 1
    Will we ever run out of advertising space?

    I can't help but think that we'll hit the point one day where there will just be no more space left. Now we have advertisements on the floor in shopping centers, in our subway tunnels, and in our school textbooks.

    How long until we have ads in the travel lanes of our roadways? When companies send up satellites with a foil "banner" with an ad printed on it? Ad tattoos?

    I would also argue that ads are like currency -- the more that exists, the less worth each one has.

    I'm not opposed to ads in general, I just wonder when every bit of our consciousness will be required to avoid them. And do they do any good anyway?

    1. Re:Eventually... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1
      Ad tattoos?

      Already happening.
      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
  54. I don't know about you all... by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

    but I would be happy to have something even mildly entertaining to fix my eyes on while riding the subway. If you've ever ridden a subway in a major city like New York, you know the first rule to safety is NEVER look another subway rider in the eyes. This just gives us something to look at. Fine with me.

  55. Bullet trains better... by CeZa · · Score: 1, Funny

    Bullet trains provide 60fps action... due to advanced techniques from nvidia... well, actually not but am i right in thinking that the ads are outside of the train?

  56. First time? by massimiliano · · Score: 1

    Well, I live in Italy, near Milano, and I've
    been seeing this kind of ads in the tube for
    some year... the 1st I remember was a runner
    that looked like racing with the train (the
    ad was for the "Adidas" shoes).

    Maybe the technology was different, but the
    effect was just the one described!

    Ciao,
    Massimiliano

  57. See it by superkri · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:See it by Patik · · Score: 1
      From that article:
      Many people like to see the display more than once. To see it again, stay on the train after passing the display. It will go to 33rd Street and reverse direction. Get off at 9th Street, cross the platform and catch another northbound train.
      Riiiight...

      "Honey, I know you taped ER for me last night, but can you rewind that part? I want to see that Pepsi commercial again."

  58. But it's the PATH train by burgburgburg · · Score: 1

    Who cares about the PATH train? Let them try it on a real subway line. Then I'll have an opinion.

  59. An Old Idea dating back to Expo 67 Montreal by mchummer · · Score: 1

    I vaguely remember this being done on the Montreal Metro at the time of Expo 67. As the train reached its programmed speed strobe lights illuminated ads in boxes on the subway walls producing a rotoscoping or animation of the ads.

    Does anyone else remember this ?

    McHummer

    1. Re:An Old Idea dating back to Expo 67 Montreal by remou · · Score: 1

      R U kidding???

      most people here probably weren't even
      in the worst nightmares (or was that
      wildest dreams) of their parents back
      then....

    2. Re:An Old Idea dating back to Expo 67 Montreal by renehollan · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I too vaguely remember this. Of course, I was only 6 years old at the time.

      --
      You could've hired me.
    3. Re:An Old Idea dating back to Expo 67 Montreal by renehollan · · Score: 1

      older... I was born on September 4, 1961. :-(

      --
      You could've hired me.
  60. this idea is sooooo old by remou · · Score: 1

    Swatch did one years ago in a train
    tunnel in Switzerland!!!!

    pretty trippy shit indeed...:-)

    remo

    1. Re:this idea is sooooo old by remou · · Score: 1

      link to google translation of some press release thingie '98

      and the good thing was you actually can smoke up in swiss trains...:-)

      really helps with the experience...

      remo

  61. In Tokyo too by sammy.lost-angel.com · · Score: 2

    I remember seeing this is Tokyo earlier this summer. Pretty odd at first. There they were advertising beer I think :)

  62. the value of education by Ravagin · · Score: 4, Funny
    The ad agency, created by a PhD in Astrophysics

    I guess a degree is pretty powerful, if it can start its own company....

    --

    Karma: T-rexcellent.

  63. I've seen them and they are actually cool. by Superfreaker · · Score: 1

    I saw one for Target on the PATH from Hoboken to NYC. It was really cool, and I despise advertising. It should be cool to do other things with it as well. The subways in NYC are so miserable anyway, we need something to quite the thoughts of suicide.

  64. I look out the window. by mosch · · Score: 3, Funny
    We have these in Philly already, and they're really eye-catching. You might not try to look out the window, but when suddenly there's a rather bright full-motion advertisement in it, you look.

    As for the incentive, of course there's the initial novelty, but it's also more interesting than reading the 'Injured? Call 1-800-BIG-MONEY!' ad that's by the subway car's interior roof, or the budweiser ad that's on the subway car's interior wall.

    Personally, I like the ads, and if I don't want to see them, that's why God invented the concept of not looking.

  65. Target Ad on PATH Train 14th, 23rd, 33rd Str by jck2000 · · Score: 1

    I saw this ad a few weeks ago on the PATH train between either 14th and 23rd Streets or 23rd and 33rd Street. Cool (though who needs more ads in life?). The first time I saw it was early in the morning before I had my coffee, the image waivered somewhat and no one else on the crowded train seemed to notice it -- it took me a second or two before I was sure I hadn't half fallen asleep and was dreaming it.

  66. Saw this in Budapest Subway by obrienb · · Score: 1

    I have to admit, it was very cool. BTW, people on both sides fo the train can see it because it gets reflected off the windows on the opposite side of the train.

  67. The company's Web site by bckspc · · Score: 2
  68. Samples and TV news stories by darsal · · Score: 1

    They've got a good set of sample movies and TV news coverage on their site (MPEG and Real Player formats).

    I was skeptical (doesn't animation like this require a shutter of some sort?). The simulations are hokey, but the TV clips show in in action more or less.

  69. Was that a 50 foot long... by shine-shine · · Score: 1

    Nothing like splicing pr0n on that puppy.

  70. Really inspires suicide... by Lurkingrue · · Score: 1

    If you think the NYTA's subway system is so miserable as to induce suicidal tendencies, you really need to travel a bit further afield. Trying to use Boston's "T" system, for example, is a truly miserable experience. Makes me actually miss the NYC subways, if you can imagine that.

  71. Way OT: PATH operating costs by swb · · Score: 2

    What percent of the PATH operating budget is $50 million? Is it like 1% or something significant? (Not that $50M isn't significant by itself).

    Do you know what it would cost if fares alone covered the cost of operating the trains?

    I heard a press conference the other day by our state's transportation department head talking about building a commuter rail line similar to the PATH trains and he made a comment that I found interesting, that few if any transportation projects ever deliver a return on investment (ie, economic value relative to their cost).

    Would the PATH trains even be economically viable if fares paid for the operating costs? I mean, nobody wants to pay $50 each way to work.

  72. Merciful Zeus! by SporkKnight · · Score: 1
    Now those annoying commercials of people dancing in a brand of underwear a certain store carries can be endured before work, on the way to work, on the way home from work, and after work!

    Pure 3vil.

  73. Gator by sdjunky · · Score: 4, Funny

    And in other news Gator today unveiled their newest advertisement product

    "We don't want to go into details about how it will work but I will say that customers who order our free Ray Ban sunglasses will be in the thousands and the impressions will be many"

    While many are buzzing about being able to get Free Rayban glasses the NY Transit authority is quite upset.

    "This is going to eat into our subway ad revenues. It's theft and we plan on pressing legal action"

  74. They should have displays *inside* the subway by hqm · · Score: 2

    In Japan, the Yamanote line has flat panel
    displays on the trains, which show news, weather, and of course lots of ads.

    I don't see the point of putting the displays on the tunnel walls, except for a "gee whiz" factor which quickly evaporates.

  75. ads are everywhere by jlv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not just on transparencies, but on Kodak transparencies . Is that a product placement right on the front of slashdot?

    1. Re:ads are everywhere by Halcyon-X · · Score: 1

      It's reporting the facts. If you saw that piece of news without the "Kodak" bit of information, you'd probably be pissed that you had to check the story just to see that. Then again, maybe it's a good idea to make users read the story... :P

      --

      .sig: Open Source, Open Mind

  76. prior art : ) by ZedNaught · · Score: 1

    I remember in the early 80's there used to be an animated mural on the D line tunnel wall inbound to NYC right before the train crossed the Manhattan Bridge. They were set up on an abandoned station platform (Myrtle Ave?) and lit with small incandescent fixtures behind a slitted wallboard . They produced the same visual effect as a flip book or nickleodeon image. I think the animations were dancing figures in a Keith Haring style but it has been a long time since I saw it ....

  77. I look at the other passengers by swb · · Score: 2

    I find subway riding in NYC fun, but the other passengers are enough entertainment for my small-minded midwest mind.

  78. You would think the U.S would be first... by mariube · · Score: 1

    ...but we've had this in a subway station in Oslo for a while now.

    To be honest, you actually have to focus to see what's going on. I don't think i'll last long. Or maybe they'll redefine "prime time" to mean periods with long delays. :)

  79. Re:they should do the exterior of the train as wel by doc_brown · · Score: 1


    Been done here in Chicago. Alot of the L cars are fully painted ads for various landmarks (Zoo, etc).

  80. atlanta by loudici · · Score: 1

    the Metro Atlanta Rapid (sic) Transit Authority has had a proptotype of this with a Dasani commercial between the Dunwoody and Sandy Springs station for more than a year now.

    L

    --
    Dev elpizw tipota, dev phoboumai tipota eimai lephteros http://euclidian.org
  81. Saw and artist's grafitti version in '92 by Morky · · Score: 1

    When I first moved to NYC I saw an animated man running using this technique in a lit portion of the tunnel between stations. I don't remember where exactly. Perhaps it's still there?

  82. Just because you have underground public transport by burgburgburg · · Score: 1
    doesn't make it a subway system. In Boston, it's like they have underground buses, for crying out loud.

    I've tried NJ, D.C., Boston, San Francisco, London, Paris and Hong Kong. When any of them approach 1/8 the square mile 24/7 coverage of what we have in NYC, I'll consider referring to them as a subway system. But the PATH? Come on, the monorail in Disney World has more extensive coverage.

  83. Re:train in reverse direction by NDSalerno · · Score: 1

    No need to go in reverse. In NYC, looking forward, subways usually travel on the right side, similiar to a car driving on the right side of the road. However, usually due to maitenence reasons, a subway train will temporarily switch sides and travel on the left side to bypass the working crew. At these times you will pass the ads such that it should play in reverse.

  84. As usual, Japan was there first by frohike · · Score: 1

    I went with a friend of mine to Tokyo for Y2K and on the way from Narita into Tokyo we saw an ad quite a bit like this in a train tunnel, for Yahoo Japan. I believe it was even LED-based, so they could reconfigure what ads people were looking at.

    Wish I had a link or a picture or something.. but this is definitely not a new concept.

    I think this will actually be quite successful though, if the ads don't get too obnoxious.. when I was in Japan that time, it was not only the first time I had seen something like that, but the first time I had ever thought of it. It really caught my attention. :)

  85. shutters or wah? by Openadvocate · · Score: 1

    Now, I haven't seen any of those new fancy thingy's. But is it not a problem that the single images slides by instead of being presented as single images with a shutter blocking them until they are in the right place.
    The only thing I can think of was those old wheels with a image inside where your would turn the wheel, but even those had(if I remember correctly) small cracks between the images so you viewed the images from outside the wheel and the the small holes made sure that you only saw it as a, mostly, still image.
    So with the windows close by the wall and the images racing by will it not only be a blur?.
    One could make a fancy device that would see when a window was at the right position to the image and then light it up with a strobe light or something.

    --
    my sig
  86. I did this in 1983..... by ex-movie-biz-worker · · Score: 1
    I can't believe it took someone THIS LONG to do it for commercial purposes.

    I did this as an undergraduate film student. I spent $250 on it !

    I also made one that worked while you were riding the PeopleMover between terminals at the Airport

    It seemed way too simple and easy to copy, so I didn't really pursue it. Especially after someone else did it for huge "art" project in NY around 1985. Nothing came of it. No interest.

    It's just like a flip card, except it stays still and YOU move. cute eh? One of my animation students made something similar where the "film" is on a large cylinder, you sit in the middle on an office chair and spin around. He called it the "Sick-O-Scope" I gave him an A.

    aww man, talk about sour grapes! where's my Jack Daniels?

  87. Done long ago by sys49152 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wish I noticed this story earlier.

    For all of you New Yorkers who rode the D train from Brooklyn into Manhattan in the late 70's and early 80's, this is old hat. I don't know when they pulled the plug on this, but between Dekalb Ave. and the Manhattan Bridge some artist had done exactly this along the abonded Myrtle Ave. stop. It depicted a 1950's style rocket ship taking off and landing.

    I must have watched this a 1,000 times on way in to high school. Of course, this was art and not an ad.

    1. Re:Done long ago by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


      I'm pretty sure the D train animation wasn't backlit, either...

    2. Re:Done long ago by Frank+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but I bet he didn't have a degree in Astrophysics! Obviously, he must have been a rocket scientist though

    3. Re:Done long ago by ZedNaught · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I found a link to the artist who did this NYC piece. There is a flash depiction of the animation - wow does this bring back memories.

    4. Re:Done long ago by cliffiecee · · Score: 1

      Thanks for that link- that made my day. Here, have a mod point!

  88. Could have sworn I've seen this before... by Em+Ellel · · Score: 1

    About 10-15 years ago, in an abandoned train station in Brooklyn.It was not an ad though, just a short art project "movie". The station's columns acted as frame separators. I think it was "D/Q" line somewhere near downtown Brooklyn on the way to Manhatten...

    Literaly prior art? ;-)

    --
    RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
  89. Re:they should do the exterior of the train as wel by AssFace · · Score: 2

    here in Boston a ton of them are painted up for various things.
    I meant paint them in a way so that as they moved it animated like the images in the tunnel...

    --

    There are some odd things afoot now, in the Villa Straylight.
  90. Re:coming soon to a gangland subway line near you. by Saeger · · Score: 2
    I doubt it; it's way too much work required for too little payoff.

    While they do manage to tag some of the most 'daring' locations, I don't imagine they'd have the patience to tag the hundreds of signs along the tunnel.

    --

    --
    Power to the Peaceful
  91. next up by slugo3 · · Score: 1

    How long before taggers start doing animated grafiti, now that would be cool.

  92. Just what New York needs by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Just what New York needs... another reason to drive a car into the city.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  93. Re:Old news- Athens, Greece by Rokewaju · · Score: 1

    These ads are also being used on the new Athens (Attiko) Metro, and have been up for at least 4 months now. Coca Cola, the 2004 Olympics and a colonge ad have been spotted in several tunnels. They are about 7 seconds long and only are shown if the train is traveling a certain direction. Who knows what systems are useing these ads worldwide

    --
    No, I don't have anything planned for you, I promise...
  94. Bradbury predicted this by kerrbear · · Score: 2

    I believe that elongated ads were first dreamed up by Ray Bradbury in Farenheit 451. You were only able to see them for what they were while traveling on the extremely fast mass transit. At least it sticks out in my mind that way- its been a long time since I read it.

    1. Re:Bradbury predicted this by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Actually, in Fahrenheit 451 the ads extend much further out because all the cars and other forms of transit move much much faster. The multi-cell animation wasn't really a piece in it.

      Great book though, personally my favorite from Bradbury. Pedestrian hunting was my favorite part...

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  95. Warning - Target BS Alert by Demerara · · Score: 1
    "Part of the Target brand is to constantly be looking for new ways to connect with our guests," said Target spokesman Douglas Kline

    If I overnight at the Ritz Carlton I'm a guest.

    If I buy a jock-strap at Target, I'm a CUSTOMER.


    Sheesh.

    --
    Backward%20compatibility%20is%20over-rated
  96. Re:Already in Atlanta by chemguru · · Score: 1

    I've seen Coke and movie ads as well...

    Old news...

    --
    --Chemguru
  97. We have something similar here by Alan · · Score: 2

    ... in the form of a large animated billboard, positioned right when you get off a bridge, and have a nice big ugly merge. It's probably not that big a deal when you're stuck in rushhour traffic and not moving, but in normal traffic it just *sucks* to have that extra little bit of distraction out of the corner of your eye. I can't wait until a family of nuns gets smeared all over the road by some guy in an SUV that is distracted by the local 7-11 big gulp prices, maybe then they'll turn that shit off.

  98. ...and bumps in the track for audio? by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 1

    Sometimes when you drive the groves in the pavement make different sounds and tones. You could do the same thing to the subway track so that the images would have a synched up audio "track"

    BTM

    --
    That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
  99. 6 month ago by Hank+Chinaski · · Score: 1

    we had those on bus stations. you could see thomas haas swing his tennis racket when you drove by. ads were placed for the tennis championship in düsseldorf/germany.

    --
    IAAL
  100. Re:Just because you have underground public transp by Cryptosporidium · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Come on! The Hong Kong subway system is to die for. Fast, clean, convenient. There are stations everywhere, and they place you within walking distance of any destination (except maybe in the New Territories).

  101. Not a new idea.... by Manuka · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Back in the 1980s, an artist created an installation in the New York Subway called Masstransiscope which essentially turned the subway into an unrolled and oversized zoetrope.

  102. Since when is an astrophysicist . . . by kalidasa · · Score: 1

    a rocket scientist? Please . . .

  103. Subliminal advertising possiblities!?! by decipher_saint · · Score: 2

    So you're on the train, watching the Discovery channel's "Shark Week" animated subway ad and suddenly you have the urge to visit the concession stand and buy a soft drink and some popcorn because some dingleberry replaced a couple pictures on the wall.

    --
    crazy dynamite monkey
  104. Running In Reverse? by Myriad · · Score: 2
    This is accomplished through a series of backlit pictures which Spodek compares to "the frames in a film reel."

    Ok, so it appears that they've basically hung a series of still images along the subway route. As you go zipping by, they blur together to form a continuous animated image. Same concept as a flipbook: draw a picture on a series of pages and flip them quickly so the images appear to be in motion. (yes, same way a film strip works, etc.)

    Fine. But this should only work in one direction. Passengers riding from point A to point B will see the animation correctly. But a passenger traveling from B to A is going to get the animation in reverse as they will be passing the same pictures in reverse order.

    I don't particularly want to see an animated feminine hygiene ad... but I really don't want to see an animated feminine hygiene ad in reverse.

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:Running In Reverse? by GutBomb · · Score: 2

      i have never been in the subways in new york, but the subways here in stockholm are one way. there is only 1 track in the tunnel. the track going the other direction is in a tunnel right next to it, but not the same tunnel, so they would only have ads going thier direction, and we would only have them going ours. this is beside the point anyway, since i have not seen the ads here, however, if the new york subway sistem is the same way i would imagine that you would never see a backwards ad.

  105. Done 35 years ago by shadowj · · Score: 1

    Saw this as an 8-year-old on the Montreal Metro, installed as promotion for Expo '67. The ad was on the long stretch of subway tunnel between the then-busiest station (Berri-de-Montigney) and the station that served the Expo fairgrounds (Ile Ste. Helene).

    If memory serves me, it was about 10 seconds long and displayed an animated character running to keep up with the train. Don't recall the product it was selling. Based on what I saw, I imagine it was done with strobe lights synched in some simple way to the train.

    As with most things related to Expo '67, the ad lingered for a few years, fell into disrepair, and eventually vanished.

    --

    --Larry

    Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

  106. The Hong Kong subway system IS nice by burgburgburg · · Score: 1
    It's also 78km, 44 stations and runs from 6 to 1.

    NYC is 398km, 469 stations and runs 24/7/365

    Thanks to MetroPlanet for the details.

  107. So how does this work? by daves · · Score: 1

    Is there some method to make the picture flash at just the right point? Otherwise, you would just see a smear.

    (something equivalent to the slits on the old rotoscopes)

    --
    People who disagree with you are not automatically evil, greedy, or stupid.
  108. Re:coming soon to a gangland subway line near you. by Keith+Russell · · Score: 2
    While they do manage to tag some of the most 'daring' locations, I don't imagine they'd have the patience to tag the hundreds of signs along the tunnel.

    A series of frames would be tough. Better to tag one frame with a subliminal message, then watch the hijinks ensue.

    Hmmm. That would make for an interesting experiment. Replace one frame of an ad with the word "thirsty", and see how many people head for a Coke machine as soon as they get off the train. Or see how many thugs get really nervous after getting the subliminal message "sharpened screwdriver".

    Some evil genius could have a field day with this! I'd try it on the Pittsburgh subway myself, but nobody would see it. :-)

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    This sig intentionally left blank.
  109. more info by chill182 · · Score: 1

    It would have been nice had the article explained how the ads work instead of devoting the entire article to "what is an ad?" and "aren't these guys geniuses?"

  110. Kodak Kodak Kodak! (NASDAQ:EK) by Ben+Jackson · · Score: 2

    Thank you for noticing the Kodak product placement. Those of us with shares of Kodak (NASDAQ: EK) appreciate your endorsement. Sure, we're still losing money, but we expect Kodak to get to step 3 -- profit -- real soon.

  111. Prior Art! by Ringel · · Score: 1

    As early as 1991, by my recollection, there has been frame-by-frame graffiti animation in NYC subway tunnels that uses the same process.

    Specifically, on the D train from Brooklyn, into Manhattan, starting a couple of stops after the Avenue J stop, and going for one full stop.

    Look out the right side of the train (w/r/t to the front). It's probably still there.

  112. This Has Been in Philly For A While by jblaze · · Score: 1

    There has been a Disani add like this in the Subway (PATCO) for a while. It's pretty impressive and definately gets your attention. Basically its like a flipbook animation.

    1. Re:This Has Been in Philly For A While by PinkFreud · · Score: 1

      I just rode PATCO out of Philly today, and noticed a Coke ad (I've ridden PATCO in/out of Philly several times now, and haven't noticed the ad until now).

      There is far too much advertising in our society today. When they start introducing new advertising on trains like this, I wonder why ticket prices never go down (though they often seem to climb soon afterwards...).

  113. Already done in Buenos Aires, Argentina last year. by Nicopa · · Score: 2

    As it was already done in other places, in Argentina it was done last year. Here is a newspaper article about this (translation by Google.

  114. saw something similar in a music video by Bartacus · · Score: 1

    It was an effect in Remy Shand's Rocksteady video.

    --
    -- he's not heavy, he's my sysadmin!
  115. Not new. by bstephenmitchell · · Score: 1

    We had this in Montreal 25 years ago. Hardly a new idea. Steve Mitchell http://www.finditincanada.ca

  116. Already on the greek subway system. by LemurShop · · Score: 1

    There's already moving ads on the greek subway system (metro)for a few months now, and they seem to be based on the same technology. From the coa-cola ads i've seen until now, they dont look that good, and the flashing probably gives a headache to most people.

    --

    This sig was cut off by the sla
  117. I remember something like this... by The_Guv'na · · Score: 1

    I saw something similar a long time ago [as in a decade+] on Tomorrows World. It was simple animations for subways in Japan, just kids stuff. The frames were made of LEDs and basically, it sucked.

    I still have an image in my mind of some little Japanese kid looking out the window and a simple flickering red and green cat, with a "What the fuck is this?" look on his face. Kinda summed up the whole article.

    Google was fruitless though, which doesn't suprise me.

    Ali

  118. Media, Mindshare, advertising and the Future by limekiller4 · · Score: 1

    I was sitting here, coding some stuff for a friend of mine, thinking about this desire the military has for the information overlays. You know, where things like opfor and escape routes are displayed over the field of vision, not to replace reality but augment it?

    I started thinking about the right of a person to say, "hey, this is public transportation, I pay for it, I don't want it riddled with ads." And of course that would never happen because advertisers help (in whatever amount) to keep fares down and/or keep the transportation system at least partially subsidized. So imagine a future where HUDs are not exacly uncommon, but a pay service is available that -- through whatever mechanism (real-time recognition of, hardwired maps, whatever) -- is capable of nulling out advertisements. Instead of seeing a billboard you see trees. Instead of hearing an ad, you hear your favorite music, whatever.

    Do we then find ourselves with anti-advertising laws designed to retain our eyes and ears? Will jamming be put into effect, rendering the providing company's economic model moot and thereby cause the destruction of such services? As absurd as it may seem, will corporations own enough of our mindshare (through media manipulation) and our representatives (through simple contributions) to actually cause public opinion to view users of such systems as "thieves"?

    I know this sounds kind of far-fetched, but each one of the steps necessary to bring this to fruition is not only wholy plausible but in some cases already history.

    Just a thought.

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
  119. Ray Bradbury did it as well by jmichaelg · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Years ago, Ray Bradbury came to town and talked about what he did besides write science fiction. Among his many enterprises, he consulted with Disney on their animation museum in Florida. They had a standard museum layout with kiosks showing various Disney cartoons but unfortunately, the room felt flat and uninteresting. So they called Bradbury in as part of a team to figure out how to jazz up the exhibit.

    Bradbury, et al., suggested using a material that was common years ago but may not be so common now - it was a type of reflector that showed a picture when viewed one way and another picture when viewed from a slightly different angle. You could flip back and forth by rotating the reflector. Their idea was that if you're going to have an animation museum, the museum itself should be animated. But since they were specifically aiming at kids, they set up the entry just for the kids.

    What happened depended on how tall you were. If you were an adult, you saw these static cartoon adult characters, i.e., Goofey, Donald, etc. following you along as you walked down the hall to the exhibit. But if you were a kid, or you lowered your eyes to kid-height, what you saw were an animated Huey, Dewey and Louie running in and out of the cartoon adult's legs.

  120. I hate ads, but I don't hate this by ShieldWolf · · Score: 2

    I am about as anti-ad as you can get in the mainstream. I have picked up adbusters a few times, I complain ceaselessly about branding of stadiums, I HATE virtual ads in broadcasts, and I use mozilla to block pop ups.
    I also hated elevator ads, until I worked in a highrise building. When you are bored out of your mind and you have nothing to do, ads can pass the time. I commute every day on the subway in Toronto and having ads on the tunnel walls would pass the time. Advertising is definately not a panacea, but in this case everybody wins. I don't see what there is to complain about.
    Now as far as Microsoft funding UofWestern...;)

    --
    just = (My)Opinion.toCents();
  121. Don't you mean... by bsDaemon · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...Sub-culture?

  122. Condusive to Seizures by raiyu · · Score: 1

    What happens when trains sometimes get rerouted, wouldnt the adds then be running in reverse?

  123. Philadelphia Subway has these by Punchinello · · Score: 1

    We've had these animated ads in the Philadelphia subway since the beginning of the summer. It works really well. It's like watching a TV commercial out your window as the train rolls by. It's one of the oldest moving picture technologies used in a new way.

    --

    Remember... ZG9uJ3QgZm9yZ2V0IHRvIGRyaW5rIHlvdXIgb3ZhbHRpbmU=

  124. Yeah, not new. by locoluis · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised this made it to Slashdot just now. There have been animated ads in Santiago's metropolitan subway for some time already.

    There was also a story in a local newspaper about a chilean inventor that proposed the idea to our subway, but that was ignored; after that, he traveled to the U.S. to propose the idea and, after a while of the appearance of animated ads in the subways of major U.S. cities, our subway decided to implement that too.

    I dunno if anything of that article is true, but I would not surprised if that was the case; we chileans have a long tradition of copying ideas from other countries instead of building on our own.

    That's part of why we're not a developed country yet... (now that was overboard...)

    1. Re:Yeah, not new. by cespi · · Score: 1

      The idea of animated ads isn't new, but Sub-Media's technique is much less complex and much less costly for the subway.

  125. You are probably thinking of... by cr0sh · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ...lenticular lens plastic overlays - and yes, the stuff is still available (Home Depot has some "NASCAR branded" credit cards that animate when you tilt them). What is neat is that not only can you use the material for animation, but you can also achieve various "3D"-like effects.

    On a similar note, I recently bought a complete set of Popular Mechanics Do-it-Yourself encyclopedias (published in 1968), and one project that was detailed was a picture done in a similar manner, except instead of lenticular lens plastic being used, three pictures were used. Two of the pictures were cut into strips that were glued back-to-back and in order. Then a third picture was placed in the frame, and via grooves sawed in the top and bottom of the frame edge, the strips were placed perpendicular to the main picture. This basically allowed three different "views" in one picture frame as you looked at it from the left, the right, and "head-on". The project was described as using portraits: A left portrait, a right portrait, and a frontal face portrait.

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    1. Re:You are probably thinking of... by DrewCapu · · Score: 1

      That sounds EXACTLY like the photos from the "3D Camera" my parents used to have. The camera had 3 small lenses and so it used 3 exposures for each shot. But the pictures were expensive and it supposedly used special film, from what I remember.

      Honestly tho, the final output hardly ever looked all that "worth-it."

      The worse part was that it _really_ got annoying when they would say: "No, go over there slightly behind your dad so that we get that 3-D effect!"

      Personally, I always preferred going slightly behind whomever was taking the picture.

  126. What do they use for a shutter? by Comrade+Pikachu · · Score: 1

    I'd like to know some more about the technology behind this. It would seem that you couldn't just put up a bunch of images in line and expect them to form a movie. The images would streak together, as if a movie were run through a projector with no shutter or sprocket holes.

    It might work if the illuminated panels behind the ads were designed to blink on and off quickly as the train ran by. They would, however, have to blink repeatedly, or else they would only target a small viewership on the train. Apparently they are backlit posters. What form of backlighting can fluctuate so quickly, and cover a poster sized area with even illumination?

    1. Re:What do they use for a shutter? by cespi · · Score: 1

      They don't use strobes or moving images. They use a special technique that produces images when you move in front of it. There is nothing dynamic about the image itself. That's one of the reasons this is getting so much press. Everyone, including Sub-Media, would admit that it isn't a new idea. But they're technique is much less complex, higher quality, and (most importantly) cheaper for the subways.

      Read about a device called the zoetrope. That will shed some light on the technique.

  127. Old tech by 0x2A · · Score: 1

    This technology was used in 1998 in Berlin. Short films and commercials were shown on the tunnel walls. They used sensors to measure the speed of the subway and installed computer controlled projectors to make sure the clips ran at an even speed, independent of the speed of the train.
    Article from 1998 (German)
    Babelfish translation

  128. Now that should be able to be patented. by fwc · · Score: 2
    This is the type of "invention" which should be able to be patented.

    Although all of us know how it works in concept, it isn't an obvious thing to come up with. Someone had to come up with the idea and do testing. I suspect they have to syncronize a flash behind each frame with the train so you don't just end up with a blur, etc. etc. etc.

    *This* is what the patent system was invented for, not for use by people to protect their "I think I'll write a program to do X which is almost like everything else you've ever seen before".

    1. Re:Now that should be able to be patented. by NeuroManson · · Score: 2

      Not at all, the concept is known as a zoetrope, and was in use as far back as the 1830s...

      Additionally, Keith Haring did such in the NYC subway in Manhatten, on the N line at 7th Ave and 50th St, wayyyy back 1980... I heard that one was done in Soho as well, but haven't seen it...

      --
      Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  129. reminds me of something I saw in Tokyo by StandardDeviant · · Score: 2

    I was in Tokyo earlier this year (late april/early may) and in one of the subways I saw something that sounds like a similar concept: a long stretch of LEDs programmed to keep the advert they were displaying (in four colors no less) in sync with the train window... So as we speed by the thing the ad (for Fujifilm iirc) was constant position outside the window... Pretty neat, really. (I don't remember where I was at the time, I want to say we were on our way to shinjuku).

  130. Bored Commuter? by MKalus · · Score: 2

    I don't know, I am never bored in a bus or a subway car. It's called a book and it works just fine.

    BTW, the idea isn't that new, I remember reading about an art installation I think in Berlin a couple of years back who did exactly the same thing.

    But I guess leave it to marketing to turn something interresting and good into something just bland.

    --
    If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
  131. Already done in Athens, Greece, as well by zyqqh · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just came back from Athens, where this is up and running, in full-annoyance mode, showing really cheesy Coca-Cola ads. FWIW, I think this was either on Grammh 2 between Panepistimio and Omonoia or on Grammh 3 between Evaggelismos and Syntagma (or both?).

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    // zyqqh
  132. Re:coming soon to a gangland subway line near you. by bugg · · Score: 2

    Except these subliminal messages were determined countless years ago (see the first lawsuits regarding subliminal messages) because the brain simply discards the information. And, when you think about it, it makes sense. Take a billboard on the street. Walk by it. Now drive by it at 60mph. Now drive by it at 180mph. As you increase your speed, you approach having seen it for the equivilient of one frame of film. Do you think it has more impact, or less?

    --
    -bugg
  133. Not so new form of advertising by vyruss000 · · Score: 1

    This form of advertising also appeared in the Athens Metro subway in 1999 or 2000. To reply to some other post, the system must have speed/motion sensors because only the correct side lights up when your train approaches it, and also the motion picture appears to be speed-adjusted (if the train slows down, the ad self-adjusts).

    Cheers, vyruss

  134. news worthy in america by misterye · · Score: 1

    Coca-cola has been running these kinds of ads in the Athens (Greece) Metro for a long time now. They're kind of creepy, look out the window and all of the sudden you see a bunch of kids enjoying Coke products where you expect to see black nothingness.

  135. This has already been done, by tisaak · · Score: 1

    ...and I'm not talking about the USA.
    In the Athens Subway (like Athens, _Greece_) during some parts of the routes (total routes: 3 ;-)) you can see on the windows flashing pictures that advertise beverages (mostly Fanta or Coca Cola).
    The flashing pictures give you the impression of a movie played bu a projector on the wagon windows, but they're actually being projected from outside the wagon. The "frame rate" is OK, but the image "shakes" a bit, due to the "frames" not being aligned.
    It's cool though. The first time I noticed it I didn't quite get what I had seen, how I had seen it, or whether I had seen anything at all :-)
    You see, it doesn't last long. Max 2 seconds.

  136. Already done in Athens (of Greece) by avel599 · · Score: 1
    In line 1 (green) of the Athens underground, in Greece, it has already been done. Between Omonoia & Victoria, there are such animated ads, of Coca Cola and 7UP.

    I turn away when I see them. (Ew... Advertisements anywhere, it's awful and ugly as hell).

    BTW, in the very-very new lines 2 & 3 of Athens Metro, there was initially no advertising *at all*. But now, they start to put up posters everywhere, for an added revenue most probably. I very much liked everything clean as it was, and with the historic background of Athens our new underground was very enjoyable - a lot of the stations were in essence small public museums.

    BTW2, I like London's underground with all its ads, because most of them have some value; they are about theatre, music, books. But, granted, most of the ads about commercial products just plain suck.

    Relevant links:

  137. Odd quote from the end of the article by Myco · · Score: 2
    "Every major city in the world has a subway system."

    Guess this guy doesn't live in the U.S. Raise your hand if you're from a major U.S. city that doesn't have a subway system. It's called urban sprawl, folks -- when you build horizontally instead of vertically, subways become prohibitively expensive (in the short run, which is all that matters to those who have the power to build them).

  138. How it works - microlouver miniblinds by kobotronic · · Score: 2
    Look at this 3M product - the Laptop privacy filter.

    It's a type of transparent screen filters with properties like microscopic vertical blinds. When affixed to the front of any backlit image, the filter restricts the viewing angle to a few degrees. From any other angle than almost perpendicular, the screen appears completely dark. The moving subway ads have the same type of screen filters attached, which means that the frame only becomes visible when it is nearly perpendicular to the train window, and it rapidly flickers out of sight as you move past it.

    The persistance of vision means the eye is tricked into seeing these brief glimpses of each frame as a continous motion picture sequence, although the blank inter-frame interval is presumably much longer than that of normal television, and the framerate is presumably lower.

    Technology aside, ads do get ever more obnoxious and intrusive, on the net and off the net. Other posts in this thread have briefly touched on future ad-blanking augmented reality applications, and I believe there will be a market for such things as we move ever closer to the nightmare situation of animated, personalized, intrusive ads everywhere, as depicted beautifully in Minority Report.

    One day every inner-city billboard will be plastered with animated ads, as the cost of printing flexible, brught polymer displays will plummet in the next decade.

  139. ben there, done that :-) by elodan · · Score: 1

    FYI, these kind of ads have been running on the red (M2) Metro line in Budapest, Hungary for many months now - since at least October 2001 when I moved there. Kinda cool, but they look really low res in action.

  140. Milano, Italy by kinkie · · Score: 2

    Milano's subway has had them for at least 6 months.
    They look like movies from the beginning of the century, just outside the subways' windows.
    Cute, and in the long run boring.
    On the plus side, there's no audio to accompany them (which instead happens in some stations). It easier to look somewhere else than not to listen.

    --
    /kinkie