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	<title>Chris Castiglione &#187; events</title>
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	<description>Chris Castiglione, New Media, Development, Music, University of Amsterdam, New York City</description>
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		<title>PICNIC 08 &#8211; Nike&#8217;s Michael Tchao and &#8220;Connecting Shoes&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.ccastig.com/2008/09/28/picnic-08-nikes-michael-tchao-and-connecting-shoes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ccastig.com/2008/09/28/picnic-08-nikes-michael-tchao-and-connecting-shoes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Sep 2008 18:54:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris Castiglione</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Michael Tchao is the General Manager of Nike Techlab, a sports technology innovation group within Nike. Today at Picnic he presented Nike+ to show a few examples of how social and commercial networks interact. You may have heard of Nike+ in the past, they began the line in 2006 with the Nike+iPod campaign and now [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-70" title="nike" src="http://www.ccastig.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/nike-300x238.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="238" align="right" />Michael Tchao is the General Manager of Nike Techlab, a sports technology innovation group within Nike. Today at Picnic he presented <a href="http://nikeplus.nike.com/nikeplus/" target="_blank">Nike+</a> to show a few examples of how social and commercial networks interact. You may have heard of Nike+ in the past, they began the line in 2006 with the Nike+iPod campaign and now have expanded it to include Nike+Sportsband (&#8220;for those who don&#8217;t run with music&#8221;).</p>
<p>What can you do with Nike+? Basically Nike+ started to help the runner track distance, elapsed time and calories burnt during the run. A fancy pedometer you say? Well, Tchao explains how over the past two years Nike customers have been using this data to create a community of runners online.  Nike hopes to use this product to &#8220;motivate&#8221; a new generation of runners (and of course to sell shoes).</p>
<p>Tchao shows a brief history of Nike&#8217;s efforts over the years that combine running with digital technology, admitting that his team really needed to &#8220;rethink running&#8221;.  He has an example of the &#8220;classic advertisement&#8221; for how we traditionally think of running: one man running on the long open road.  But Nike+ (much like everything 2.0) wants to make running more social: &#8220;to give runners the feeling that they are part of something bigger, a group&#8221;.</p>
<p>Nike+ runners take their running data from the shoe to the web where they can also set goals, track progress and create an online history or runs.  I&#8217;m not a runner myself, but I have to admit that Tchao&#8217;s demonstration of the interactive site &#8211; shiny graphs and bubbly displays &#8211; does kind of make running look fun (if such a thing is possible).  And this is exactly what Tchao is hoping for: people like me who need extra motivation to run.</p>
<p>The social aspect of this comes in through &#8220;online challenges&#8221;. Tchao gives the example of a group of friends setting up a race: &#8220;First to hit 100 miles gets get free lunch&#8221;.  The biggest &#8220;online challenge&#8221; was a 26 city race that Nike held this past summer called <a href="http://nikeplus.nike.com/nikeplus/humanrace/map.jsp" target="_blank"><em>The Nike+ Human Race 10k</em></a>. On this one day, Nike+ runners around the world competed in the same 10k race by comparing data from each runner&#8217;s Nike+ shoes.</p>
<p>Tchao&#8217;s presentation felt like a long Nike advertisement, and he really didn&#8217;t give the Picnic audience much more than what is already on the <a href="http://nikeplus.nike.com/nikeplus/" target="_blank">Nike+ site</a> (but, then that is what I&#8217;ve come to expect from most speakers here at Picnic). What is interesting about &#8220;connecting shoes&#8221; is that it brings us <em>one step further</em> into  augmented space.  Networking is clearly moving beyond our laptops and mobile phones, striking &#8220;intellegence&#8221; into something as rudemenetry as a running shoe.  Rafi Haladijian, who spoke directly after Tchao, has the motto &#8220;First connect rabbits, then connect everything else&#8221; (refering to his adventure in networking through toy rabbits).  Haladijian spoke about how we can look forward to connecting the other 700,000 material objects in our lives &#8211; from keys to a loaf of bread.  I see Tchao&#8217;s Nike+ team as an innovator for 1 of the other 700,000+ products that are yet to be connected. If Nike+ running shoes are a financial success, then it might not be long before Nike Techlabs started &#8220;rethinking&#8221; other athletic products: digital tennis rackets? or maybe a high-tech swim suit?</p>
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