Friday, October 18, 2013

Health Care Law Turns To Social Media In Illinois


CHICAGO (AP) — Inside a command center at a Chicago marketing agency, a small team of social media experts hunkers down to monitor online chatter about President Barack Obama's health care law, answer questions on Facebook from discouraged consumers and post information and advice on Twitter.


They are holding down the fort for a $33 million ad campaign planned for Get Covered Illinois, the new health insurance marketplace that's a cornerstone of the law, also known as "Obamacare," in what is arguably the biggest social media campaign rolled out by the state of Illinois.


As the state-contracted agency pivots away from a full-force marketing barrage because of early technical problems with the law's federal website, the social media team has assumed responsibility for educating consumers and tending to their frustrations in Obama's home state.


"Application has been pending for days. #gettingimpatient," read one incoming tweet last week, a few days before The Associated Press was given an exclusive peek inside the command center at FleishmanHillard.


"We're making sure we're listening and we're supportive and we're there for them when they're having difficulties," said Meg Poulelis, 28, who leads the team and worked previously on social media accounts for Gatorade and Chevrolet.


Compared to other states, Illinois is in an unusual spot, with millions to spend on promotion but no control over fixing the federal site's technical glitches. Most of the other 35 states relying on Washington to run their marketplaces are led by Republicans who've been hostile to the law and have done nothing to promote it. States promoting the law generally are running their own marketplaces.


Months before the rollout of the law's marketplaces, one for every state, Illinois officials envisioned a social media marketing push aimed at uninsured healthy young adults, a key demographic for the law's success.


The campaign would use Twitter, Facebook and YouTube to convince young people to buy health insurance. It would be part of an ad blitz with TV, radio, billboards and other paid advertising.


Now, nearly three weeks after the launch, the social media campaign is underway, but it's muted. Paid advertising is on hold. With technology problems plaguing the federal website, state officials decided there's no reason to boost traffic now.


While most Republican-led states are taking a hands-off approach, Illinois sought federal grants that could be used for advertising. The $33 million campaign is funded entirely by those grants.


Get Covered Illinois' social media launch — compared to some other Democrat-led states — got a late start. Kentucky's campaign started tweeting May 15, Minnesota's on May 10 and Washington state on April 16.


Illinois went live with Twitter and Facebook on Oct. 1, the same day the federal healthcare.gov site launched — and then failed under a crush of users. Illinois relies on the federal government to run its insurance-shopping site because state lawmakers didn't approve a state-run system.


Consumers understandably are seeking answers from Get Covered Illinois, said social media strategist Dave Kerpen of New York-based Likeable Media, who isn't involved with the Illinois effort.


"Given people's frustration with the federal website, Get Covered Illinois has to be able to respond promptly and with great care to their customers," Kerpen said.


They may have missed an opportunity with Chicago attorney Andrew DePaul, 58, who followed Get Covered Illinois on Twitter seeking information. He hopes to lower his family's insurance costs, but the problems with the federal site have kept him from even seeing his options.


On Oct. 11, he was the one who tweeted to Get Covered Illinois about his frustration and included the hashtag: "#gettingimpatient."


The social media team tweeted back to him more than three hours later: "Thanks for reaching out. To clarify, are you on the http://healthcare.gov site?"


DePaul replied "Yes" and then heard nothing else. That doesn't bother him.


"I don't expect the marketing campaign to troubleshoot the problems. I want their freaking website to work," he said. "I've been a huge cheerleader for the Affordable Care Act and it's been a great disappointment."


On Facebook, the team is finessing questions about the federal site. A reply from Oct. 7: "We're in contact with our fed partners who run healthcare.gov & they are working as quickly as possible to correct these issues. We will update you as soon as they update us, but let us know if you have questions we can help you with in the meantime!"


Kerpen said the team should make its answers more personable when possible.


"It's the difference between 'Thank you for your response. We'll get back to you' and 'Thanks, I understand it's so frustrating,'" Kerpen said. "When used correctly you have the opportunity (with social media) to humanize an organization."


The social media team is just getting started, said Darrell Jursa, a FleishmanHillard senior vice president in charge of emerging media. Plans include an email newsletter, pitches to influential young bloggers and paid digital advertising.


For now, Twitter followers and Facebook "likes" are small but growing. Most important, Jursa said, more than 121,000 people have gone through the screening tool at GetCoveredIllinois.gov to see whether they qualify for Medicaid or tax credits.


"The whole point is getting people to the website," he said. "That counts in our minds as a conversion. That's something that's very healthy as far as the campaign is concerned."


___


AP Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson


___


Online:


https://www.facebook.com/CoveredIllinois


https://twitter.com/coveredillinois


http://www.youtube.com/user/CoveredIllinois


http://getcoveredillinois.gov/


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=237068705&ft=1&f=
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Keepy Raises $1.1 Million To Store All Your Kids' Artwork And Mementos

keepyInteractive scrapbook startup Keepy wants to be the place where parents go to digitally store all their kids' artwork and report cards and whatever else. To that end, the company has raised $1.1 million from a group of angels across Silicon Valley, New York City, and Israel. Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/dXHifavv9Pc/
Category: bart   Ink Master   torrie wilson   Insidious 2   Jordan Linn Graham  

Now you can watch Miley Cyrus ruin SNL on your Nintendo 3DS with Hulu Plus

Care to see a former Disney star shuck her wholesome image through the wonders of improv (and sheer tops) from the comfort of your 3DS or 2DS? Today, that questionable privilege is entirely possible, as Nintendo's made Hulu Plus available for download from the eShop, along with a one-week free trial ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/6JTDYpqouE8/
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Jonas Brothers Deactivate Group Twitter Account as 'Rift' Reportedly Deepens


Hope for a Jonas Brothers reunion is getting dimmer by the day.



Just one week after the trio scrapped plans for a nationwide tour, with the band's rep citing a "deep, creative rift," the official Jonas Brothers Twitter account has disappeared.


PHOTOS: Jonas Brothers Perform at L.A.'s Pantages Theatre


Sources previously told The Hollywood Reporter that disagreements between Kevin, 25, Joe, 24, and Nick, 21, became painfully apparent when the brothers sat down in Los Angeles to discuss plans of their long-anticipated fifth album. "Once they realized they couldn't agree on music, it became a question of, 'Why would we want to go out on tour right now?' Their thought process was to get everything straight in terms of the creative. It was not a small thing [to call off the tour]," said the source.


VIDEO: Joe Jonas on New Jonas Brothers Release: 'It's the Best Album Yet'


On Wednesday, a People report proclaimed that the rift had become "uglier than you think," with unnamed sources telling the mag that all three members had begun looking into solo projects. However, the brothers are said to remain on speaking terms.


The multiplatinum group was once a teen tour de force with its own TV shows, movies, a concert documentary and multiple tours, but has fallen off the radar in recent years. At the same time, eldest brother Kevin has been enjoying a second career in reality television as the star of E!'s Married to Jonas along with his wife, Dani, who is currently pregnant. A source tells THR that the decision to cancel their tour has nothing to do with Dani's pregnancy.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/music/~3/D_sg8FnBcYI/story01.htm
Category: Supernatural   House of Cards   Nothing Was The Same Leak   Seamus Heaney   Danica McKellar  

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Lady Gaga: Instagram is worried about me

Celebs











36 minutes ago

The photo-sharing social network Instagram is worried about Lady Gaga. 

"omg at this email INSTAGRAM just sent me," the singer tweeted on Wednesday, sharing a screenshot of an email she received from the service. She followed up with a note saying, "what the actual hell. hahahaha."

"Members of the Instagram community have raised concerns for your well-being after seeing posts you've shared," the note from Instagram read. "We're reaching out to provide you with some important safety information."

Gaga had recently posted photos of some handwritten lyrics, including the words "might not awake without you" and "I'm sorry and I love you," which could sound like she's threatening suicide to some. Instagram did not respond to media inquiries about the email.

As for Lady Gaga, she didn't let the note bother her for long, quickly moving in to tweeting fun facts and even the cover of her upcoming album, "ARTPOP," which will be released Nov. 11. The cover shows a Jeff Koons sculpture of a naked, blonde Gaga, with a shiny blue mirrored ball strategically placed between her legs.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/lady-gaga-instagram-worried-about-me-8C11415428
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Review: 3 PhoneGap toolkits tame mobile app development


October 16, 2013







Review: 3 PhoneGap toolkits tame mobile app development

Credit: iStockphoto



The very first road to the various app stores from Apple and Google was paved with native code. If you wanted to write for iOS, you learned Objective-C. If you wanted to tackle Android, Java was the only way. Similar issues popped up with all the other smaller players in the smartphone market.


Then some clever developers came to a realization: All the smartphones offered a nice option for displaying HTML in a rectangle on the screen. You have to write a bit of native code that pops up this rectangle in the native language, but everything inside the rectangle is controlled by the same languages that control the browser.


[ How are your HTML and JavaScript skills? Find out in InfoWorld's JavaScript IQ test and HTML5 IQ test. | Get up to speed on all the tips and trends programmers need to know by downloading the Developers' Survival Guide. | Keep up with the latest developer news with InfoWorld's Developer World newsletter. ]


Many developers immediately recognized the beauty of this. They wrote a generic native app with one big rectangle that took over the screen, then they handed off control to the JavaScript team. The result could run on all smartphones with only a few minor changes. Not only that, but the developers could use their JavaScript and HTML chops without learning too many details of the various platforms.


The early years weren't kind to this vision. Apple reacted harshly and banned some HTML apps from the App Store. Developers quickly found they couldn't get too creative with the JavaScript or the HTML before the phone started hiccuping and coughing. The HTML-based apps were often rougher and less polished than their native cousins.


That started changing several years ago. Apple relented and recognized that HTML was not dangerous. Then the hardware got faster, smoothing over many glitches. Today, some of the HTML-based apps I've been writing perform just as well as native apps -- and they're much easier to port.


Now these toolkits are being combined with cloud-based services that add cross-platform builds and app distribution to the mix. The leader of the movement, a once open source project named PhoneGap, is running strong and attracting competition from AppGyver, a startup that wants to make it all even easier. In the meantime, Telerik Icenium is evolving along a parallel path and offering a strong collection of development tools and UI widgets sewn together with JavaScript and HTML. All these tools open up the world of apps to developers who already are skilled in building Web applications.





Source: http://podcasts.infoworld.com/d/application-development/review-3-phonegap-toolkits-tame-mobile-app-development-228814?source=rss_mobile_technology
Category: Dario Franchitti   Canelo Vs Mayweather   Nsync Vma   Ryne Sandberg   Rolling Stone cover  

'Project Runway': A Season Of Tim Gunn Faces


Tim Gunn is the best reason to watch Project Runway, always. Gentle and supportive, dismayed and concerned, he's the uncle, stylist, and influential teacher you never had.


And so, with nothing but love, as the season comes to an end Thursday night, we present a parade of our favorite Tim Gunn faces, together with our magic mind-reading technology that has discerned exactly what he was thinking. It's foolproof, you see.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2013/10/17/236164095/project-runway-a-season-of-tim-gunn-faces?ft=1&f=1048
Category: castle   big brother   cnet   nfl   heidi klum