![]() The discussion will be led by Thibaut Munier, co-founder and co-CEO of Numberly, a digital marketing company. She will also present the main implications of the rise of digital platforms and ecosystems on competition and innovation. Her speech will focus on the value creation and innovation mechanisms of these companies and their ecosystem. Recommended for primary and intermediate users.Faculty, PhD students and all SKEMA students interested in the interactions between artificial intelligence and the ecosystem of the digital economy are invited to participate in the seminar "Digital platforms and ecosystems: the news dominating organizational forms of the AI-driven digital economy", on 17 November at the Grand Paris campus and online.Īnnabelle Gawer, chaired professor in digital economy at the University of Surrey and director of the Center of Digital Economy (CoDE) will give a lecture on the consequences of the arrival of AI on the major digital platforms, particularly in the field of management and organisation. The Numberlys, an animated short film from Shreveports Moonbot Studios, is among 10 films to be shortlisted for the 2015 Oscar for best. Visit the official website for making-of videos.Īvailable for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad (requires iOS 5.0 or later) $5.99. There are a few logic gaps in the story - how do the number-minded Numberlys think up the letters' sounds and names? why does a number-based reality make food unpalatable and the world colorless? what is the connection between letters and color - not to mention jellybeans? - but users will be having too much fun to care. The tutorials preceding each activity are brief and helpful. A turning gear in the menu allows users to select from thumbnails of the action on each screen and easily navigate through the narrative. The app is user-friendly access the settings menu at any point during the story to turn narration, music, all sound, or the activity tutorials on or off. Morris Lessmore, 2012) has created an industrial city where, since only numbers exist, there are no words for colors or feelings or food. The Numberlys is an App and an animated storybook in one created by Brandon Oldenburg and William Joyce. ![]() Excellent sound effects and an epic score add to the app's cinematic feel. In a kiddie homage to Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, Joyce (The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. ![]() I wasn't a fan of the narrator’s faux-German accent, but found the Numberlys themselves (who speak in long strings of numbers, inflected with plenty of emotion and personality) charming. Occasionally the text strains to include the featured letter(s), as when the letter U "take considerable 'umph' to unfurl." In other instances the text is unrelated to the means of creating the letter, e.g., the text "A bit of jujitsu at just the right juncture would readjust the I into something more jaunty" introduces the letter J, when to form the J users actually shoot Numberlys like human cannon balls at the letter I. Producing each letter of the alphabet gets a little long, but turning off tutorials once you've got the hang of the activities helps pick up the pace. The letters are formed in various whimsical, often mechanical ways: the Numberlys (usually rotund #3) jump on shapes as though on trampolines to burst them, direct falling numbers against gears to chip off pieces, and wind cranks to pull shapes apart. ![]() The bulk of the app invites users to help the Numberlys construct letters by tapping and swiping their device. Other sections require user interaction when and where to touch is indicated with red icons glowing against the gray backgrounds. Some parts of the app function like a movie, automatically advancing the narration and film-caliber animation from page to page.
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