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E-Paper On Cereal Boxes

coastin writes "Wired Mag has an article about electronics maker Siemens, readying a paper-thin electronic-display technology. They say it is so cheap it could replace conventional labels on disposable packaging. Imagine items on grocer's shelves that flash commercials at you as you walk by. From the article: 'When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it", said Axel Gerlt, an engineer at Siemens tasked with helping packaging companies implement the technology.'"

6 of 447 comments (clear)

  1. Can you think of a better way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    to alienate parents?

  2. How utterly depressing by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > From the article: 'When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't
    > expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it", said Axel
    > Gerlt, an engineer at Siemens tasked with helping packaging companies implement
    > the technology.'

    Western culture appears to have lost its vision.

    New technology being thought of in terms of how much you can make a child coerce its parent into buying cereal?

    We're amusing ourselves to death.

    1. Re:How utterly depressing by LithiumX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Vision?

      Haven't a great many of the popular advances in the 19th and 20th century been driven by marketing, and the desire to draw attention for purposes of profit? The earliest visions of the phograph's uses were more oriented towards automated marketing than towards the memoranda and music they were actually used for. Color printing was exclusively for the purpose of making product packaging more appealing, and television only became possible as a mass-market item when it was married to marketing (to this day, commercials are the life blood of the networks).

      Early radio broadcasts were practically commerials with a thin veil of entertainment laid over them. It took a little while for radio commercials to seperate from the actual content (when they started announcing the products during frequent breaks, rather than the programs constantly hawking a product within a poorly contrived story).

      Holograms were invented simply to see it done, but the bulk of the funding came from companies who sought to apply them as the new wonder-label (which turned out to remain prohibitively expensive for some time, and just never that appealing).

      Western technology has been driven by three primary needs:
      * direct threats - be it war, disease, famine, etc. Death avoidance.
      * misguided ambition - attempting to create something unrealistic, and ending up with something unexpected (and often unnoticed for some time)
      * commerce - the inherent desire to make people give you money

      Altruism is a noble thing, but it's greed that makes the world actually turn.

      --
      Do not confuse "Freedom of Choice" with "Free Will".
    2. Re:How utterly depressing by SquadBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      All three of mine soon learned that whining was the best way *not* to get something. This remains one of the things their mother and I agree on.

      Yes it takes *seriious* time and effort to do this but it is well worth it.

      --

      Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
  3. It's much worse than that... by hackwrench · · Score: 5, Insightful

    New technology being though in terms of not how to inform consumers but how to bypass the most informed and target the least informed, depending on them to persuade the better informed. Note: the child frequently doesn't actually want the cereal itself in this particular situation, but just the pretty box.

    I can't tell you how many boxes of Frosted Flakes I ate for the primary goal of getting the Disney Afternoon figurine inside. There were also numerous times I thought I wanted something, but didn't actually know what it was.

  4. If Google has taught us anything... by Trip+Ericson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...it's that in a world where all the advertisements are flashly, the plain one stands out.