Samsung Rains Paper Airplanes From Space
itwbennett writes "Note to Samsung: If you want to prove how reliable your SD memory cards are, don't hire 'the U.K.'s leading paper plane professional' to build you 100 special paper aircraft. And then definitely don't use a giant helium balloon to send them 122,503 feet into space. Because while some of the planes will fly as far as Sydney and Bangalore, chances are that all the press you'll get will be about the crazy stunt and no one will remember a thing about the SD cards."
They dropped a bunch of SD-card-carrying paper airplanes over Germany from 122,000 feet. Some of those planes glided all the way to Australia and India!
Who cares if it was an effective media campaign or not? It's frigging cool.
this is an awesome stunt. There is a lot of things t talk about, lots of science. But no, here no /. we just poo-poo and nit pic interesting things to death.
Clearly the stunt was a fail because no one is talking about it~
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
"It's a helicopter, and it's coming this way. It's flying something behind it, I can't quite make it out, it's a large banner and it says, uh - Happy... Thaaaaanksss... giving! ... From ... W ... K ... R... P!! No parachutes yet. Can't be skydivers... I can't tell just yet what they are, but - Oh my God, Johnny, they're turkeys!! Johnny, can you get this? Oh, they're plunging to the earth right in front of our eyes! One just went through the windshield of a parked car! Oh, the humanity! The turkeys are hitting the ground like sacks of wet cement! Not since the Hindenburg tragedy has there been anything like this!"
Star Trek, there maybe hope.
Come on, admit it. The little kid inside you thought this was really cool. :D
If this doesn't bring a smile to your face, then you're not a real geek.
"Man is nothing without the works of man" -- Helvetius
Actually, if you would read the entire blog, there is a good photograph of the final airplane design, except without the fancy printing.
For those who are link-challenged, here is a link to the blog entry:
http://projectspaceplanes.com/post/1222772296/weve-finally-decided-on-the-space-plane-design-to
and this is a link to a picture of the airplane itself:
http://s3.amazonaws.com/data.tumblr.com/tumblr_l9mhq6XVFB1qdcoh8o1_1280.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=0RYTHV9YYQ4W5Q3HQMG2&Expires=1297285744&Signature=Hvs3kCBFGFbuQYaDS2iMFyR%2BH7k%3D
This is Samsung's method for targeting slashdot.
1. Put the engineers in charge of marketing for a day.
2. Have someone assess the marketing value of the mess and write an article.
3. Submit said article to slashdot.
4. ???
5. Profit!!
6. Laugh maniacally as you patent a business method for bypassing adblock via social engineering and interdisciplinary cross-training.
Hey buddy, can i bum a karma? ~}CinderellaManson{~
Sure ... AFTER everyone stops talking about the crazy stunt ... people will probably stop talking about Samsung SD cards. And in a couple weeks people will stop talking about Super Bowl ads ... and its the most expensive advertising time in the world. But in both cases, a lot of people will have already bought the product before they attention fads away.
Thats how marketing works. Thats WHY marketing exists ... to get people information about your product and get people interested in it. No press is bad press when it comes to marketing. If people are looking at you for just about any reason, they aren't looking at your competition.
While the submitter may be too much of a poser geek to be interested in things like the paper airplane design and the course something would take to find its way to Sydney from Germany or any of the thousands of other neat things that can be learned from this event, I will certainly be spending some time looking into it and that means I'll most certainly see a whole bunch of Samsung SD cards and advertisements along the way.
The fact that you posted this story to slashdot more or less entirely invalidates your summary statement. We're talking about their SD cards right now. It worked.
Note to submitter: You probably should ever consider taking up a job in public relations or marketing.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
I thought SD cards could fly.
"Nobody knows the age of the human race, but everybody agrees that it is old enough to know better." - Unknown
A CompactCard survived a bridge explosion with the photo: http://www.digitaltrends.com/photography/blast-destroys-camera-flash-card-survives/
Another card one survived the collapse of one of the Twin Towers, with photos from the photographer that perished: http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0111/biggart_intro.htm